Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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I am being deluged with "Messages" most of which come from a (949) area code and some from (209). The messages vary: "Your security might be..." "Obsolete cache files are possibly..." "Recent config adjustment". I don't dare open them....nope, ain't no way. But, I do click on them, then click on the phone number at the top of the iPhone screen. The screen will then display an icon for "info", I click on that icon and receive notice to "Block this Caller"....Block Contact". Then I go back and "Hide Alerts" and activate.
All that and I still am bombarded with those stinkin' messages. How many different phone numbers can they have? How do I put a final stop????? HELP!!! |
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#2
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I don't know about the IPhone, but I have a Samsung phone. I can turn on the "do not disturb" setting and block all messages except those numbers that are stored on my Contacts list. I can do the same with phone calls.
Note that blocking specific numbers from spammers is a total waste of time. They use millions of numbers. |
#3
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I second @RetiredGuy123 Individually blocking a spam/scam phone number seems good but won't stop you getting more of them - they just use another number. Don't click on the item at all; just do a "right click" and select delete. AND, do not let non-contact numbers come through. They will hit your number and be immediately sent to spam. Only caution is if you are expecting a call from someone who is not one of your contacts, you should temporarily turn off the non-contact rule. Their call won't make it to you unless you do that. Then either add them to your contacts list or at least resume the non-contact rule after you're done. It's a pain to do all this but the spam/scam people are relentless.
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#5
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so many days is automatedly deleted. ![]() |
#6
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I also have an iPhone but do not suffer the spam calls. Usually it identifies and blocks them, and I NEVER answer the phone unless they are in my Contacts. If it is legit, they'll leave a message and I'll call 'em back. |
#8
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Thought the new LSL place, the Hawaiian restaurant, was going to have Spam. I mean, who loves spam more than Islanders?
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#9
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The will use different phone numbers and email addresses to bombard you. By just deleting or ignoring most see it as a dead account after a while. I have always had a better response that way, and get very few spam calls or mails these days. |
#10
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You most of volunteering gave your phone number to some business and they sold it? Now you’ll get calls from all over the world, you can block one, but the have blocks of numbers the randomly use. Same with emails never give company you inquired on product that you are interested in so the can contact you while it comes available they sell you’re email and now you get hundreds of emails fro around world in languages you can’t even understand.
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#11
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#12
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As I understand it, the number that appears on the caller ID screen is not the number from which the spammer called. It is a spoofed number that doesn't even exist as a real phone number. So, blocking it does nothing and has no effect on the spammer. For more information, Google "spoofing".
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#13
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Don't believe the area code number that the spam calls come from. I have a VOIP Home phone at my house in Fl that I transferred from NY. So my home phone has the same area code and phone number that I had in NY. The bad news and good news is 90% of my spam calls all come from the same area code as my NY number but the good news is I know if it has a NY area code and is showing some one not in my contact list the odds are very good its spam and I just don't answer it and they don't leave a msg most of the time (I'm on the do not call list). However, if there is a real person from my area code not in my contact list, they leave a message, and I can get back to them. Also, I recently contacted my VOIP phone provider, OOMA, and told them of the Area code problem, and I think they must have added some filter on those calls, and I'm not receiving nearly as many. Hope that lasts, but I'm not holding my breath.
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#14
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Here you go . |
#15
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There is some good information on other post such as the fact that most of the numbers are not real that are calling you. However you shouldn't block everything just because it's not in your phone book because a lot of times doctors will use other numbers to call you to remind you for appts,
However if you do want to do that that's the risk you run. The only other way to really block is to either talk to your phone company to see if they have blocking software to put on. Or to go to your app store and download something like a robo block application. Some of these will answer the phone for you and require the caller to press a number before it goes through probably. This will stop 99% . Or just do what I do and block everybody from calling you which does not stop people from leaving messages but at least then when you see the area code you can just delete it. Almost nothing is important to be able to have to answer immediately. |
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