![]() Many people are surprised to learn that their personal information is readily available on the dark web. Spoofing is so common that the Federal Communications Commission has laws against it. While this may seem like a rare occurrence, it happens more often than you might think. When this happens, the person whose information was used will start receiving spam calls or texts. Eventually, one of these numbers will match a real person’s name and phone number. These systems send out large numbers of calls or texts with randomly generated caller ID numbers. They can do this manually, but more often, they use automated systems. Spoofing is when a spammer fakes a caller ID to show a different number than the one the call is actually coming from. But how did they find your phone number? And how do they know your name?Īs it turns out, there are a few ways that spammers can get your personal information. Maybe it was an offer for a free cruise or a too-good-to-be-true deal on airplane tickets. And chances are, you’ve received a spam text before. Spam texts are unsolicited messages sent to your phone, often for commercial purposes. How do spam texts find your name and phone number? Keep reading until the end to find out the best line of defense you can set up against spam texts. The last thing you want is to eventually end up compromising your information. We also checked official sources from mobile carriers and government agencies to know how to report spam texts or scams. We looked at reputable sources on online safety and gathered the best tips on how you can prevent those spam texts from coming through altogether before they start causing bigger problems like identity theft. We looked into how spam texts find your number and name and the signs you need to watch out for to know that a message is spam. ![]() But how do they know your phone number and even your name? More importantly, how can you stop them? No matter what you do, spam texts always seem to get through.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |