888-851-0953
888 area code:
Toll-free
Read comments below about 8888510953. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
- SueThis is a company called vFIX that tells you your computer has been sending error messages to microsoft and they pretend to be microsoft. IT IS A SCAM!! ask them to tell you your ip address and tell them you will call them back. check your ip and it will be different than what they told you.
- Caller: vFIX
- JamesJust received a call on my cell from 301-276 (that's all that showed) saying the Send Error Message alerted them to call me and that he (Collin, with an East Indian accent) was going to guide me through the process to correct my computer. I told him I wasn't near it and he told me to call him back when I was, at 888-851-0953.
- Heather JoJoCalled and said they were a microsoft tech center calling about my computer sending error messages and if they weren't fixed, it would crash. I was very guarded with this call. I told them I had an appointment and needed to leave. He gave me a number to call back (1-888-851-0953) and told me his name was Peter Scott. With the accent he had, why would he have an American name. Very skeptical of the call.
- Caller: Vfix
- Call type: Telemarketer
- Jack P Orlando"Microsoft Technician" from "VFix", but sounded like "WeFix". Claims to work from 9am-9pm PST. Heavily Accented male going by the name of Phillip Knight called my Work Cell Phone claiming he got my phone number from my IP information whenever I clicked "Report a Problem" to microsoft. This guy was a total moron. My iPhone (Apple product) was somehow supposed to be given to a microsoft technician. Nothing added up. Oh, and the number came in showing "301-276"...yet another red flag. I also found this helpful blog about the virus: http://www.computerrepairtips.net/phone-call- ... irus-is-a-scam/
(I don't blame you if you don't want to click it). This is an excerpt of what was shared:
"If you receive a phone call claiming to be from ‘Microsoft’ or someone claiming to work on their behalf, telling you that you have a virus on your computer which they will help you fix over the phone, It Is A Scam. Hang up the phone, do not let them have remote control access to your computer and do not give them any money.
This scam has been quietly doing the rounds in the UK and Ireland since at least 2009 but it appears to be on the rise. The scam goes like this;
Householders receive an unsolicited phone call from someone claiming to be from ‘Microsoft’ and they are told that there is a serious virus problem with their computer and the caller offers to help to fix the problem.
The householder will get the hard sell from the caller regarding all sorts of bad things that will happen to their computer if they do not sort out the problem immediately.
To try to gain the unwitting householders trust, the caller will direct them to the Event Viewer in Windows which shows details about various hardware and Windows software issues. This Event Viewer is always full of messages, even on a healthy computer, but the caller will convince them that these are the warning signs of the impending disaster.
When the caller has their trust, they ask the householder to go to a website and download a remote control program that will help them fix the problem. After downloading this, the caller will take control of the computer, the householder will see their mouse pointer move around while various programs and folders are opened. The caller will claim that they know exactly what the problem is and how to fix it.
Then they will ask for credit card details for a piece of software that will supposedly remove the ‘virus’.
Customers should hopefully already have alarm bells ringing at the mention of credit card details and end the conversation. The software that they sell to fix the computer will do nothing except tell you every now and then that everything is fine, all viruses have been removed. But in reality, it could be downloading all sorts of malware to your computer.
However, part of the scam’s damage may already have been done when the customer downloaded the remote control software. This software could well have the capability to sit in the background for months or years, stealing personal information from the computer like bank login details and other personal details that could be used for identity theft purposes. These callers could also be using this software to infect your computer with real viruses and malware.
Quote from Microsoft:
“Microsoft takes the privacy and security of our customers and partners personal information very seriously. We are advising customers to treat all unsolicited phone calls with skepticism and not to provide any personal information to anyone over the phone or online. Anyone who receives an unsolicited call from someone claiming to be from Microsoft should hang up. We can assure you Microsoft does not make these kinds of calls.”"- Caller: VFix
- Call type: Text message
- GaryRDCReceived call from 1-888-851-0953 a few minutes ago. Checked out the number on Google which brought me to this website. Good info here. Thanks!
- Call type: Telemarketer
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