Hi Pat,

Just a thought - are the iPhones on post-paid plans with the same service 
supplier as the landline?

If they are then it is possibly all the same problem - the supplier (or their 
automated account software) has shut/paused the account for some reason  - 
should be easy to check with them.

If the landline is a different supplier and/or the phones are pre-paid then all 
the services/accounts are, in effect, separate - so it would be a strange 
coincidence for them all to fail at the same time?

I don't think you can blame the NBN they roll out their service well before 
they switch off the landlines and that would have no relevance to you mobile 
phone coverage anyway? 

Just my 2c worth  ;o)


Cheers


Neil
-- 
Neil R. Houghton
Albany, Western Australia
Tel: +61 8 9841 6063
Email: [email protected]


-----Original Message-----
From: <[email protected]> on behalf of Pat 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: WAMUG <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 10 May 2019 at 14:49
To: WAMUG <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Something I didn't buy

    Thank you, Peter and Philippe. I have alerted the bank about this.
    
    But it never rains but it pours, according to an old saying.  And this 
strange new problem has arisen: Both of our iPhones and our Landline phone are 
not functioning. They ring on an incoming call, but when we answer, our voices 
don’t register and a recorded voice says, “connection failed”. And if we try to 
ring out, we are told that our phone is not connected.
    
    This made me think that perhaps the NBN caused us to be cut off, but 
according to the NBN map on the iiNet website our address is not undergoing any 
changes, and we can’t expect the NBN for a couple of years.
    
    I haven’t wanted to use the ‘Cloud’ for phone calls, so I wondered if Apple 
was applying some subversive influence, but surely Apple is above that and they 
wouldn’t do anything to our Landline.
    
    We are open to any suggestions of why this is happening. 
    
    Hopefully,
    Pat
    
    
    
    
    > On 10 May 2019, at 07:57, Peter Hinchliffe <[email protected]> 
wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > 
    >> On 9 May 2019, at 9:42 pm, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
    >> 
    >> I received an email today which may or may not have come from Apple. It 
says, “Your Apple Subscription Receipt” (to Netflix). But, I did not order a 
subscription. I think it is probably a scam, although it looks very authentic. 
One anomaly is that where it says ‘you can cancel a Subscription at any time: 
Cancel/Refund Subscription’  there is no URL.
    >> 
    >> The email did not say ‘No Reply’, so I did reply, but it bounced.
    >> 
    >> What recourse do I have?
    >> 
    > 
    > 1. Always, always, ALWAYS make it your first order of business to check 
the sending address of the email. If it has genuinely come from Apple, the 
sending address will end in .apple.com. If its some variant of .apple.xxx.com, 
or something else that doesn’t evem contain the word “apple”, you can be sure 
it didn’t come from anyone at Apple. Likewise, a genuine email from Netflix 
will end in .netflix.com, not some variant of .netflix.xxx.com. You can check 
the sending address byt rolling over the address at the very top of the email 
and clicking on the little disclosure trinagle that appears (assuming you’re 
using Mail). 
    > 
    > 2. Never, never, NEVER reply to suspicious emails. It’s just inviting a 
ton of trouble. It confirms that your email address is real, inviting a 
potential flood of spam from the same source or others.
    > 
    > Kind regards,
    > 
    > Peter Hinchliffe        Apwin Computer Services
    > FileMaker Pro Solutions Developer
    > Perth, Western Australia
    > Phone (618) 9332 6482    Mob 0403 046 948
    > --------------------------------------------------------------------
    > Mac because I prefer it -- Windows because I have to.
    > 
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