One ring and then they hung up? It's a sneaky scam that could cost you
An old phone scam is making a serious comeback. It happens in the middle of the night and your smartphone rings just once. You wake up and your heart is pounding because calls in the dead of night usually mean bad news. You grab your phone and see a number from the African nation of Mauritania. Or you just see a number you can’t recognize.
Many of us are savvy enough to know the call came from a scammer, but there are still people out there who will call back out of curiosity or concern. If you’re one of these people, here’s some simple advice: don’t call back. Tap or click here to find out how Facebook just opened the door for more robocalls.
If you call the unknown number back, you could end up with a bunch of charges on your phone bill that can really add up. Keep reading to find out how this scam works and ways to avoid excessive charges.
Here’s the backstory
With this scam, your phone will only ring once. If you call back, you will incur an international call charge from your carrier for every minute you stay on the line. And the scammers know how to keep you on the line. When you call, you’re transferred to an expensive toll number where costs mount by the minute.
When this scam originally hit the scene a couple of years ago it was mainly hitting consumers on the East Coast. But there have been reports of more scam calls throughout the U.S. recently.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has dealt with so many of these cases that it’s dubbed them “One Ring.” But as the FCC points out, most “One Ring” scams originate in the Caribbean, where the international code is a three-digit number followed by the usual seven numbers. That’s enough to convince consumers the calls are coming from the U.S.
“One-ring calls may appear to be from phone numbers somewhere in the U.S., including three initial digits that resemble U.S. area codes,” according to the FCC’s website. “But savvy scammers often use international numbers from regions that also begin with three-digit codes — for example, 649 goes to the Turks and Caicos and 809 goes to the Dominican Republic.”
What makes this recent “One Ring” scam so different is that it originates from Mauritania in northwest Africa. There is no attempt to make the phone numbers seem like they are from the U.S.
RELATED: Do this one thing to protect yourself from phone porting scams
How to avoid ‘One Ring’ scams
The FCC offers this advice to avoid scammers:
Scam alert: PayPal account 'limited,' phishing text claims
Another day, another phishing scam. If it seems like we’re dealing with a huge influx of scams right now, you’re right. We are.
Email and web-related scams skyrocketed at the start of the pandemic, and they’re still going strong. Tap or click here for ways scammers are using COVID vaccines to get you. Add in the other recent types of schemes, like shopping and IRS scams, and it’s clear that cybercriminals have been working overtime.
Outsmart scammers! Fake delivery and shipping text red flags
If you thought Black Friday was a big deal this year, Cyber Monday completely blew it out of the water. Adobe Analytics reports that shoppers collectively spent $10.8 billion over 24 hours, making it the single biggest e-commerce day in history.