

The caller may claim that he or she is with your financial institution or even law enforcement and is investigating a fraud case. The caller may spoof your caller ID device to display false or incomplete caller ID information, or even your own name and number, to increase the likelihood that you’ll answer the call. The pretext of the call is that your grandchild is in trouble and needs immediate funds. The caller claims that he is your grandchild or is calling on behalf of your grandchild. Your caller ID device may falsely display a law enforcement agency, attorney’s office, hospital, or a cellphone. The caller urges you to allow remote access your computer to fix the supposed problem for a fee. The caller claims that an Internet trace has determined that your computer is infected with a virus. The caller claims he or she is with the IRS and you must pay back taxes immediately to avoid arrest or some type of imminent legal trouble.Ī scammer can manipulate your caller ID display to show an actual or fake computer support listing. The calls can come from individuals or robo-calling systems.Ī criminal, from anywhere in the world, can spoof your caller ID display to show an actual or fake Internal Revenue Service listing. Others may spoof your caller ID simply to increase the likelihood that you’ll answer the phone. The technique is called spoofing.Ĭriminals who spoof caller ID hope the displayed information will help convince you of their false identity and story. While caller ID can help you screen unknown or unwanted calls, callers can easily manipulate your display to show incomplete or false information - even your own name and phone number.
HOW TO IDENTIFY CALLS WITH FAKE CALLER ID HOW TO
Posted on How to recognize caller ID spoofingĬaller identification, or caller ID, is a telephone feature that enables the recipient of a call to see the caller’s phone number and name displayed before answering the phone.
