Other than you have always had one, why does anyone have a tool free number
anymore. I can remember the last time someone asked or catered who payed.
LD is so cheap now.

On Wed, Nov 25, 2015, 3:31 PM Ken Hohhof <[email protected]> wrote:

> OK, this is kind of OT, but maybe someone here knows the answer.
>
> For a few months now, we've been randomly getting long voicemail messages,
> always some guy blabbing about government programs and stuff, almost sounds
> like a radio show, not a political message like a robocall, I'm guessing
> just constant voice to keep silence detection from ending the message.
>
> I'm sure it's either a scam, or some attempt at toll fraud, but I can't
> figure it out.  The calls come at all hours but mostly at night, and the
> caller ID will say something like NEW YORK NY or SAN ANTONIO TX.
>
> I was just looking at our Windstream bill (they redirect our toll free
> number because years ago we got that number from McLeod), and I realized
> these calls are coming in on our toll free number.  Which is really just an
> alias for our local DID which goes to our VoIP PBX.  Which had the max
> message size at default 60 minutes.  So these messages were all 60 minutes
> long.  I've changed the setting to 10 minutes, but that's still 10 minutes
> of toll free word salad.
>
> I can't figure out who is benefitting from these calls other than
> Windstream.  It's not a ton of money, but I want to stop it.  The calling
> numbers vary so I can't just block them.  I looked up a couple of the
> numbers and they seem to be from bandwidth.com thousand blocks, so
> apparently VoIP calls, but I'm not sure that means anything other than VoIP
> makes it easier to fake the caller ID.
>
> What are these guys up to?
>
>
>

Reply via email to