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You receive an unsolicited call or text
message on your mobile. It makes an
appealing offer, such as free ringtones
or prizes. You respond, and the scammers
start taking your money, via charges to
your mobile phone bill.
It might sound like a friend is texting
you. You may end up paying a very high
fee for every text you exchange with
them. In fact, it is even possible that
if you return their text, you may end up
paying for the messages they send you,
as well as the texts you send back.
Variations:
Competitions or Trivia by Txt Scams
These scams try to get you to start texting expensive numbers because you
hope to win a prize in a competition or
you are just having fun playing a trivia
game. It may actually be a legitimate
competition, but the prize involved will
be worthless compared with what it costs
you to take part.
Missed Call or Message Scams
Another
scam uses your phone's Caller ID
function, which lets you see who called,
even if you miss the call. You receive a
'missed call' message, so you call back,
without checking the number. It turns
out that the number is a New Zealand or
overseas premium rate call, and that
return call will cost you a lot.
The same applies to text messages.
Before replying to an unknown text
message, check the number. Is it unusual
in any way? For instance, it may be a
high charging premium rate (or 0900) number. ..Watch
out for these. If you respond, you could
end up paying a large amount of money.
Stay Safe
Unexpected text messages from unknown
senders
The safest policy is to never
reply.
Voice calls
Treat the call as you would
an unsolicited call on your landline.
Don't be pressured into accepting any
offer; don't give out your personal
details and if you feel like hanging up,
do it. Legitimate telemarketers know
that there are scammers out there, so
they are very understanding about
hang-ups. Don't let politeness put you
in danger of being pressured by a
scammer.
Missed calls
Never reply to a 'missed
call' from an unknown number unless the
number is a normal format. Check to see
if it is an overseas number or a premium
rate number. If so, avoid the risk of
high charges. Don't call back. If it was
important they would have left you a
voicemail.
Offers
Before responding to any offer,
make sure you can check a full list of
terms and conditions. You need to know
all the charges you could end up paying,
plus any charges for ending a
subscription. Call your mobile phone
company first to find out how much it
costs to call the number involved in the
offer just in case it is a scam
involving a premium rate line.
Never accept any txt-based offer or take
part in any competition that does not
tell you how to opt out whenever you
want.
Help Keep Others Safe:
If you have been targeted via your
mobile phone, please share your story
here.
We will treat your email in the
strictest confidence and remove your personal
details before posting your story on our
site.

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