Comment by ChrisMarshallNY
3 days ago
> How do you verify it is spoofed?
Not my job to "verify," in the technical sense.
When a call for an Indian crypto pump comes in as "SMITH, ROBERT", and a local exchange, I call that "spoofed."
3 days ago
> How do you verify it is spoofed?
Not my job to "verify," in the technical sense.
When a call for an Indian crypto pump comes in as "SMITH, ROBERT", and a local exchange, I call that "spoofed."
Mine literally come from the verified coinbase phone number and say coinbase and everything. If I didn't know for sure they are not calling me I'd think it was real 100%.
Yeah that does sound spoofed. I'd call your carrier and ask them to make sure attestation below B is blocked.
That's almost certainly not spoofed. They just own a phone number on your local exchange.
No they don't. I've called back, a couple of times, and got some guy named Bob, getting all confused. "Whaddaya mean I just called you?".
Hmm...you seem very interested in redirecting this train of conversation. Why?
I'm very interested in knowing the actual current state of affairs WRT spoofing and a lot of people make claims without evidence which makes it hard to find out. I thank you for providing your evidence here because it does sound like some carriers are still not enforcing. Which is obviously a problem.
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