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II2II 4 days ago

I have the fun of making outbound calls to offer people a public service and collect payment if people desire it. Most people gladly hand over their credit card details. A few years ago, someone wisely asked why they should trust me. (It only happened once in a decade!) I said they don't have to. They could look up our phone number at an easily verifiable government website, then call back; they could call any facility operated by the department; or they could visit any facility. Said individual provided their credit card details right then and there. Virtually noone cares about security.

rapind 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

I don’t trust anyone calling me who isn’t already in my contacts.

Callers from legitimate businesses treat me like i’m questioning the moon landing when I tell them I’ll need to call them at an official number.

Now try and convince your family to do the same (especially parents who are prime targets).

II2II 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

> Callers from legitimate businesses treat me like i’m questioning the moon landing when I tell them I’ll need to call them at an official number.

Not to justify their behaviour, but: most businesses are not set up to allow for callbacks or they're set up to actively discourage them. For example: they may be contracting out to call centers or employee performance may depend upon making a sale. My situation is unique since all calls our handled internally and my performance is not based upon making a sale.

That's said, the current situation pretty much dictates that a secure option should be offered to clients.

benmanns 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The trouble is, you have to place the outbound call to those contacts to trust them. People could spoof an incoming call from numbers in your contacts and it will look as legitimate to you as a receiver as if the real number was calling you. With voice spoofing, it's now possible to call someone as [grandchild] with [grandchild]'s voice with a pretty horrible story about what's going to happen if some Bitcoin or Google Play gift cards are not purchased and handed over immediately.

rapind 4 days ago | parent [-]

I'll give you an example. When the Bank calls me about something important, I tell them to give me their department / extension and I'll call them back. I then look up the bank's phone number on their website (it's actually in my phone already, and on my bank cards) and call them back.

This process doesn't care about them calling from a spoofed number. We've had big problems with spoofed number scams and the CRA (Canadian version of the IRS) recently.

0xffff2 4 days ago | parent [-]

So in other words, you don't trust any incoming calls, even if they appear to be from a number saved in your contacts?

rapind 3 days ago | parent [-]

No. If it's someone I know, and I can tell that's who they are from their voice, and they aren't suddenly trying to pry a bunch of financial information from me, then I trust them. I also don't even accept calls from unknown numbers by default, unless I explicitly turn that off temporarily because I'm expecting a call from someone not in my contacts. There are plenty of other ways to get ahold of me.

AI speech still has some noticeable quirks (I cloned my voice earlier this year to produce some tutorials). Once those are ironed out, I may increase my paranoia a bit. It's going to be hard for an AI faking a relative to get my bank password, if that even happens. There are far more lucrative targets with that level of investment.

I think just being on guard and not trusting potential anonymous sources is "good enough" for now.

intrasight 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've not once had a legitimate company not say "good for you in taking the extra security precaution of calling us back".

nothrabannosir 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

No kidding!? I have never had someone take this in stride. Responses have ranged from surprise to defensive condescension. It rarely even works at all, and the two worst offenders were both banks. One UK, one USA. I almost had the check for my rent bounce after three days of this rigmarole and ended up having to just go with it.

Where do you bank? I'm looking for recommendations.

plasticchris 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Even better, once I had a financial institution tell me I needed to read them a one time code someone would text me. They were actually surprised I had a problem with it when it’s the scam playbook.

GoblinSlayer 3 days ago | parent [-]

Isn't that just 2fa? It's not limited to web.

BobbyTables2 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

I suspect far more people question the moon landing than the authenticity of caller!

nothrabannosir 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

To be fair I give just about anyone and their dog my CC number. Chargebacks work and my life is that little bit easier for it.

Playing Jason Bourne with your credit card number is not worth the effort if you ask me.

I would even say this is a net positive for the economy: the cost of fraud is outweighed by the lower barrier to payment. I'm sure you'd have made fewer sales had people been more worried about security. Net positive then, right?

alvah 4 days ago | parent [-]

Depending on which country you're in and which bank you're with, chargebacks are nothing like as straightforward as they used to be. I just completed yet another one, which involved 2 separate phone calls totalling over an hour (so probably not worth it on a $/hour basis), accepting the risk that if Visa rejects the claim I'm liable for a further $50 charge (this is new), and generally 3 months of hassle until I got most of the money back (less the international transaction fee, as the merchant had fraudulently claimed to be in the same country as me, but charged me from the UK).

nothrabannosir 4 days ago | parent [-]

For the record what kind of chargeback are you initiating, and why does it have to go through visa rather than the bank who issued you the card? Unauthorized card-not-present transaction initiated by a third party? Some cbs are harder than others to get ruled in your favor, but the one where a criminal takes your card and uses it without your knowledge is by far the easiest one to get awarded. It involves one call to your bank and you get a new card, all fraudulent charges reversed.

If your bank doesn’t want to honor the request yes you’ll have to contact the payment network (visa/mastercard) and I’m sure there’s someone in this thread who has experienced that for an unauthorized transaction chargeback but it’s exceedingly rare.

Merchant error chargebacks , on the other hand… very different situation.

OkayPhysicist 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

The US makes chargebacks exceptionally easy. Non-Americans have a much less useful credit card system, which is why debit cards are more common in most of Europe.

alvah 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Merchant fraud this time. Done through the (soon-to-be-ex) bank but they brought up the charge from Visa.

It’s possible that my current bank is particularly bad at this, as they are bad at everything else. I have had the runaround with merchant error and stolen card number chargebacks with other banks though.

danielktdoranie 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

“I have the fun of making outbound calls to offer people a public service and collect payment if people desire it.”

Oh so you’re a telemarketer.

II2II 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

Nope. I only sell services that people previously requested, though it is often months earlier. (As I suggested, it's a government job.) Sales is just one of the things tacked onto my job description over the years.

And to further crush that cynicism: most people are overjoyed when I call them.

reaperducer 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Oh so you’re a telemarketer.

Not everyone who makes outbound calls is a telemarketer.

The healthcare company I work for has a whole department of very nice people who make outbound calls to offer free health and nutrition classes to poor people.

Yes, they're free. As an employee I am also required to take one of the classes each year, so I know what they entail. Yes, they cost our company money. No, they're not sponsored by some corporation or ad company, and no we don't sell people's information on (HIPAA and all that).

The real world isn't a tech bubble cage fight.

BikiniPrince 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

In the rare case something worms it's way to collections I just ask for the certified letter. Now in ten years that only happened once. I even called the hospital asking where my bill was and they said I didn't owe anything. Three months later collections!

nradov 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

The great thing about credit cards (as opposed to obvious scams for suckers like cryptocurrency) is that consumers don't have to care about security. They can dispute fraudulent charges and never be out any money.