559-205-0852

Country: USA
559 area code: California (Clovis, Fresno, Visalia)
Read comments below about 5592050852. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • 0
    Kristen loper
    | 5 replies
    I answered and a man said hello a few times then asked me if I could hear him. When I said I can hear you, he hung up. 5 minutes later a woman called, said hello a few times and then asked if I could hear her. I said to stop calling, she apologized and said she would put the number on their DNC list.
    • Caller: Marketer of some sort
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • 0
    Angry
    | 1 reply
    these are Criminals, wants your personal information, your social security, your medicare, your credit card and your money. let's report these Criminals to COPS and FBI, track these Criminals down and put these Criminals in jail
  • 0
    Wise to it
    | 21 replies
    Did not answer and blocked immediately.  Per Kristen's comment:  If someone asks you if you can hear them, it is likely a scam and they hoping that you will simply answer yes.  They are probably recording your voice and will call back later claiming that you agreed to something. .
  • -1
    BigA replies to Wise to it
    | 18 replies
    To which you would simply say that you didn't agree to anything.  There is nothing that they can do with one word.  But, if you are really, really, really afraid to say that word because someone might record it and use it, then I suggest that you never, ever say "yes" again for as long as you live to anyone.  After all, everyone today has a smartphone that can record conversations.  All they would have to do is record you saying "yes" and then, according to you, they would use it against you.  For instance, you go into a restaurant.  The waitress says "Do you want coffee?"  You say "yes".  She goes in the back, alters the recording to "Are you sure you want to give me a one thousand dollar tip?" Answer "yes".  See, so now you can never say that word ever again.  Or you could simply stop drinking the koolaid and start using that thing between your ears to think and reason.
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  • 0
    Katie
    Called three times in quick succession (one ring, hung up and redial two more times) at 850am. Did not answer, as I wasn't familiar with the number, no message left.
  • 0
    Antisocial
    Spam call
    • Caller: ?
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • 0
    KPR
    I did not recognize the phone number and did not answer the call. I will block it after reading a comment here.
  • 0
    Vickie  
    Called today at 8:50 am.. Did not answer becoz  I did not recognized  the number .
    • Caller: Unknown  
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • 0
    kh
    Two calls one minute apart- did not answer because I read this. Blocked the number
  • 0
    Kit
    Called two times in quick succession, hung up both times. Left no voicemail. Blocked immediately.
    • Caller: Someone in Visalia, CA
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  • 0
    Crystal replies to Kristen loper
    Do not respond with "yes" when asked if you can hear them. This is a scam. They record your "yes" and use it as verification of your agreement to their fraudulent activities.
  • 0
    Crystal replies to BigA
    | 4 replies
    It is called the yes phone scam and has made national news
    http://abcnews.go.com/Business/fcc-warns-cons ... ory?id=46405703
  • 0
    MikeHuntleton replies to Crystal
    | 2 replies
    Those News articles and warnings put out by the FTC/FCC are merely "generalized" statements  and have never documented a single person being scammed that way. Its merely a RUMOR!
    Quote:
    The 'Yes Scam' or 'Can you hear me?' scam says they record you saying yes and hang up afterwards. Then use the recording to charge you or open accounts anywhere.
    Its a rumor!
    Could you open an account  or charge something to a phone number by simply saying yes and nothing else? Try it and see for yourself how that goes!
    I think it is very irresponsible for anyone to help spread this "yes" Rumor, without first investigating and understanding any possibilities towards its validity.

    Ask yourself this:
    • What scam scenario wouldn't work with a simple yes from the scammer them self, that could only work with a recording of your voice?
    • How would a caller know who answered, it could be your wife/husband/mom/dad or anyone who answered your phone and said 'yes' that gets recorded.
    • What legitimate company would allow anyone to charge a client's phone or open an account with only a recording of someone saying yes?
    • Why would scammers spend the extra time and effort on something that is simply pointless and a waste of time? Scammers could simply record voices from the internet or even passing on the street of anyone saying yes, if they really had a scam that required a recorded 'yes', as that would be much more efficient than making hundreds of calls everyday for a simple yes.

    The Yes Scam is merely a rumor and unproven to have any validity that it could work. There may be scams where you agreed to something unwittingly and got recorded, but they need much more than a simple recording of a voice saying yes.
    Saying 'yes' alone has no impact  on pulling a scam, since a scammer could just as easily say 'yes' themselves. They wouldn't know its you or some family member who answered your phone, so recording a 'yes' is pretty redundant.

    You should beware that something is amiss and pay close attention to WHAT IS BEING SAID if you feel the need to talk to a stranger who calls you out of the blue. Read about the various scams and educate yourself, so you are better prepared for the next call.
  • 0
    BigA replies to Crystal
    Another person with no comprehension ( I can't say reading comprehension because I have no doubt you never read the actual article) but that link scuttles your story completely.  The person mentioned on that website clearly has said they haven't been scammed.  Give me an article that detail how someone was actually scammed and how.  You can't do it because it never happened and never will happen.  The more you try to prove your cases, the worse it makes you look because your "evidence" always contradicts what you are trying to prove.
  • 0
    Brett
    Received 5 calls in rapid succession.  Believe it was a robot call that the blocked pick ups caused the repeat calls. Blocked because of past calls with no messages.
    • Caller: Loan office
    • Call type: Telemarketer
  • 0
    Chris H
    BigA: There's really no need to take that tone. There's STILL a general consensus that calls like this shouldn't be spoken to -- or answered, in fact, but a lot of people aren't yet at the point where they can ignore every unrecognized call they receive. (This number just called me and gave me pause because an elderly relative of mine has friends in the Visalia area and is sometimes hospitalized there -- so I looked it up.)

    It really doesn't MATTER if "its merely a RUMOR!" or not. There is no need to lecture people who have at least paid attention to the general warnings and grasped the important bits of it. People use 800 Notes to check if a lot of others have gotten garbage calls from the same number, and they share their experiences. Why not just do that yourself, instead of going out of your way to be condescending?
    • Caller: Unknown/I didn't answer
  • 0
    Leia replies to Kristen loper
    They say that all scammers need in order to scam you is a recording of you saying "yes" because then they have a recorded "yes" when they're trying to use your info. The company will say "so and so, do you agree to this?" And your recording says "yes". That's why they kept asking if you could hear them and when you didn't answer how they wanted you to they hung up and tried again.

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