WARNING! Costly AREA CODE: 809 – message is inaccurate and misleading.

kaiJuly 9, 201115min1604
809 Area Code 

We actually received a call last week from the 809 area code. The woman said ‘Hey, this is Karen. Sorry I missed you- get back to us quickly. I have something important to tell you.’ Then she repeated a phone number beginning with 809. We did not respond. Then this week, we received the following e-mail:

Do Not DIAL AREA CODE 809, 284, AND 876

THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT INFORMATION PROVIDED TO US BY AT&T. DON’T EVER DIAL AREA CODE 809

This one is being distributed all over the US … This is pretty scary, especially given the way they try to get you to call.

Be sure you read this and pass it on.

They get you to call by telling you that it is information about a family member who has been ill or to tell you someone has been arrested, died, or to let you know you have won a wonderful prize, etc..
In each case, you are told to call the 809 number right away. Since there are so many new area codes these days, people unknowingly return these calls.

If you call from the U.S. , you will apparently be charged
$2425 per-minute.

Or, you’ll get a long recorded message. The point is, they will try to keep you on the phone as long as possible to increase the charges.
WHY IT WORKS:

The 809 area code is located in the Dominican Republic .
The charges afterward can become a real nightmare. That’s because you did actually make the call. If you complain, both your local phone company and your long distance carrier will not want to get involved and will most likely tell you that they are simply providing the billing for the foreign company. You’ll end up dealing with a foreign company that argues they have done nothing wrong.

Please forward this entire message to your friends, family and colleagues to help them become aware of this scam.

AT&T VERIFIES IT’S TRUE :http://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=6045

SNOPES VERIFIES IT’S TRUE:

=====================
Brief Analysis
International call scams are real. However, the information about these scams in the message is inaccurate and misleading. The message substantially exaggerates the potential costs to victims. The information in the warning message was not issued by AT&T as suggested in the email.
Detailed Analysis
This email forward, ostensibly from American telecommunications giant, AT&T warns that consumers are being tricked into dialling international telephone numbers and thereby incurring enormous call charges of thousands of dollars per minute.There are serious inaccuracies in the message as explained later in the article. However, international call scams are real. In the US, international telephone numbers can usually be identified by the prefix “011”. However, some non-US destinations have area codes such as 809, 284, 876 and others that can make telephone numbers look like domestic calls when they are actually international calls that incur international call charges. Scammers have capitalized on this element of confusion in order to trick people into dialling such numbers. A Federal Trade Commission (FTC) articleabout international telephone number scams notes:

You could end up with a hefty phone bill if you call such an international telephone number. That’s because each country sets its own telephone rates and there’s no limit to the per-minute charge. The companies urging you to call have an incentive to keep you on the line as long as possible because they receive a portion of the international long distance charge. The more often you call —and the longer you stay on the line — the more they profit.”

Although such scams do occur, they are not a common or widespread practice. An article about area code fraud on the AT&T website that was first published back in 2004 notes:

The 809 area code scam first surfaced five years ago and continues to victimize consumers on occasion, although much less frequently than in the past. And there have been far more inquiries about it than consumers actually being victimized.

A more recent notice about the scams published on the AT&T website explains:

Periodically, e-mails warning of a scam involving calls from the 809 area code circulate. The e-mails contend that there has been fraud associated with unscrupulous pay-per-call operators in that area code. However, the message contains some misinformation, especially the highly exaggerated cost of a phone call to the 809 area code, which is a legitimate area code for the Dominican Republic. Fortunately, this scam is less prevalent in recent years as a result of work done by AT&T to eliminate access to fraudulent pay-per-call operators.

In order to avoid being caught out by International call scams, consumers should remain vigilant and be very cautious about dialling unfamiliar area codes. “Urgent” or “important” answering machine or email messages that request recipients to call a number for more information should be treated with suspicion until the number can be verified. Consumers can easily check the true destination of area codes by entering the number into a web-based Area Code Decoder.

Consumers who have no need to make international calls may be able to eliminate the risk of such scams by asking their service provider to block international calling.

Although the core claims in this email warning are basically factual, it contains seriously inaccurate and misleading information as detailed below:

  1. The message substantially exaggerates the potential costs to victims.Legitimate and factual information about the scam was published in a 1996 issue of the well respected Internet ScamBusters. However, someone began circulating an altered version of the article via email without the permission of the authors. The message further mutated as it travelled and claims about the per minute call costs incurred by victims of the scam became more and more wildly exaggerated. The current version of the message claims that callers can be charged $2425 per minute – a far cry from the possible charge of up to $25 per minute reported in the original ScamBusters article. An updated ScamBusters article about the 809 fraud published in 1999 points out that such massive charges are highly unlikely and suggests that a total charge for a scam call could possibly reach $100 – a long way short of the message’s outrageous claim of charges as high as $24,100.00. Also, the 2004 article debunking the message on the AT&T website notes:

    The e-mail also warns consumers that dialing the 809 area code will result in charges of $2,400 per minute. That simply isn’t true. The basic rate for a call to the Dominican Republic is less than $4 a minute although some 809 numbers terminate with pay-per-call services that permit the levy of additional fees.

  2. The warning that recipients should never dial the area codes discussed (“DON’T EVER DIAL AREA CODE 809, 284 AND 876”) is unrealistic and misleading.In the vast majority of cases these area codes are connected with perfectly legitimate, normal phone numbers. For example, if you happen to have friends or family living in Jamaica then it is likely that you will need to dial the area code “876” along with their domestic phone number. Although such calls will be charged at international call rates, there is no scam involved. Thus, the message’s implication that the area codes 809, 284 or 876 are only used by scammers is unfounded.
  3. The claim that the 809 area code belongs to the British Virgin Islands is now untrue.809 is the area code for the Dominican Republic while the second number listed in the message is for the British Virgin Islands. Also, the British Virgin Islands and the Bahamas are entirely separate locations and are not different names for the same place as suggested in the message. (Note that an updated version of the scam warning does correctly identify the 809 area code as belonging to the Dominican Republic.)
  4. The message was not sent by AT&T and the apparent endorsement by an AT&T Field Service Manager named “Sandi Van Handel” is entirely bogus.According to the previously mentioned “AT&T article, “the e-mail purports to originate within AT&T’s corporate offices and includes the name and partial telephone number of an imaginary employee.” It seems apparent that the bogus references to AT&T were added in an attempt to give false authority to the message. A later version of the message leaves ofF the supposed “Sandi Van Handel” endorsement but still falsely suggests that the warning was issued by AT&T.

Because of the misleading and inaccurate nature of the information in the message it should not be forwarded in its current form. A much better method of warning others about international call scams would be to simply direct them to an accurate web based report on the issue. Unlike an email forward, a website article can be updated if new information comes to hand. Furthermore a website article is not susceptible to random mutations caused by transcription errors or reader alterations. In fact, this long running email chain letter represents a very good example of why forwarding such warnings via email is NOT a good idea. As stated, the original Internet Scam Busters article was a timely and accurate advisory to consumers about international call scams. However, after being stolen from the original source and subsequently forwarded many thousands of times over a number of years and altered considerably along the way, the message’s value as a legitimate warning has been quite significantly eroded.

By all means, make yourself and others aware of the potential for fraud associated with international phone calls. However, sending on an inaccurate and misleading email about this issue is likely to be counterproductive.

http://www.hoax-slayer.com/area-code-809-scam.html

4 comments

  • kai

    July 9, 2011 at 8:42 am

    အမေရိကား နေသူများအတွက်သာဖြစ်ပါတယ်..။
    ခုတလော ဒါမျိုးအီးမေးလ်တွေ ရလွန်းလို့.. အာရွှီးတဝက်ပါကြောင်း သိအောင်တင်ပေးလိုက်တာပါ..။

    ဆိုတော့..
    ရီတန်းကော လုပ်တိုင်း သတိတော့ထားပေါ့နော..။
    http://www.att.net/s/editorial.dll?fromspage=design/CDLS10/ch/smct/articleContent.html&categoryid=&bfromind=19022&eeid=7626620&_sitecat=2009&dcatid=0&eetype=article&render=y&ac=0&ck=&ch=smartcontrol&cat=smct&topic=is

    AT&T recommends the following tips to help avoid the 809 area code scam:

    Return calls to familiar numbers only. As a general rule, return calls from numbers that contain familiar or recognizable area codes. You may call your directory assistance or long distance operator to check the area code location.
    Carefully read your telephone bill. Make sure that you only receive charges from your provider of choice. Ensure you thoroughly understand charges listed on your phone bill, have chosen to do business with all of the listed providers billing for those charges and have authorized additional fees invoiced. If your local service provider has changed, you will receive a final bill from the former provider and a notice of service disconnection.

  • bigcat

    July 9, 2011 at 9:25 am

    ဟဲလို.. ဦးခိုင်လား။ ကျနော် အမှန်တရားချစ်မြတ်နိုးတဲ့ ရွာသားတဦးပါ။ မန်းလေးဂေဇက်အတွက် သတင်းထူး တခုပေးချင်လို့ ၈၀၉ ၁၁၁ ၁၁၁၁ ကိုပြန်ဆက်ပေးပါနော်။ 👿

  • zoe

    July 9, 2011 at 12:46 pm

    တခါ လည်း ထူးဆန်း ပြီးခတ်တည်တည် ဖြီး တဲ့ telephone message ကိုနားထောင်ဖူးတယ် ။ နံမယ်တွေ၊ လိပ်စာ တွေ ,အတိအကျ ပဲ ။ တရားရုံးတက်ဖို့ ဘာဖြစ်လို့လာမတက် လည်း ပေါ့ ။ ဆင့်စာမရ ဘူး လား ပေါ့ ။ ဒီလိပ်စာကို လာပါပေါ့ ။ ကိုယ့်မှာ ဘာတရားရုံး မှတက်စရာ မရှိဘူး လို့ပြောတော့ ဒါဆိုရင် ဒီ ဖုံးကို ဆက်ပါ ပေါ့ ။ ဘာမှမလုပ်ပဲ နေလိုက်တယ် ။ အခု ထိဒီ ကိစ္စ နဲ့ပါတ်သက် ပြီး ဘာမှပြဿနာ ထပ်မဖြစ် ဖူး ။
    နောက် တခုက internet တပ်ခါစ က dial-up internet နဲ့ surf လုတ် တာ scam web-siteနဲ့မိပြီး ဘာမှန်းမသိတဲ့ ကျွန်းတိုင်းပြည် ကို overseas call ခေါ်တယ်ဆိုပြီး telephone bill ထိုင်ဝမ်ဒေါ်လာ ငါးထောင်ကျ သွားတယ် ။ telephone bill ကို bank account ကနေဖြတ်တာလုပ် ထားတော့ ပိုက်ဆံ ဖြတ် ပြီးမှ သိတယ် လေ ။ complain တက်ပေ မဲ့မရတော့ဘူး ။ ဒါနဲ့ ADSL ပြောင်းတပ်ပြီး bill ကိုလည်း bank account က ဒါရိုက်ဖြတ်တာ ကို cancel လုပ် လိုက်တယ် ။ တခြား လိမ်နည်း ပေါင်းစုံရှိသေးတယ် ။ စာတအုပ် ရေးလို့ရတယ် ။ ATM တို့ credit card တို့နဲ့လည်း လိမ်ကြ တာ ။လုပ်စားကြတာတွေ ။ 🙂
    ဒါကြောင့်dial-up နဲ့ internet တက်ကြတာကို သတိ ပေးချင်ပါတယ် ။connection လည်းမကောင်းပါ ။
    ဘုမသိ ဘမသိ ဖုံးတွေ လဲ return-call စရာမလိုဘူး ။ အနည်ဆုံးက တော့ promotion sales နဲ့ insurance sales ရောင်းတာ တွေနဲ့တွေ့နိုင်တယ် ။ 🙂
    သိချင်ရင် သူပေးတဲ့ ဖုံးနံပါတ်ကိုပြန် မဆက်ရဘူး ။ တရားဝင် telephone directory နံပါတ် နဲ့သက်ဆိုင်ရာကိုစုံစမ်း ကြဖို့ အစိုးရကနှိုးဆော်တယ် ။ အရေးယူနိုင်တဲ့ complain လုပ်လို့ရတဲ့ toll-free နံပါတ်လည်းရှိ တယ် ။

  • shwe ni

    July 9, 2011 at 2:01 pm

    ဒီမှာလဲပဲ – ကိုကိုင်ထားတဲ့ phone no. နဲ့ ပြန်ခေါ်တာတော့ကြုံ ဖူးသား ။မတူတဲ့ ဖုန်း(၂) လုံးမှာ နာမည်ရယ် network name ရယ် နဲ့ ဖုန်းတွေထဲမှာမှတ် ထားတာ။ အိမ်ကိုပဲသတ်သတ်ခေါ်တဲ့တလုံးကို incoming ဝငိလာတာ က ကိုနာမည် ။ network name နဲ့ မေလတုန်းက ဝင်လာလို့ လန့်ပြီးကိုင်လိုက်တော့ ကောင်မလေးသံနဲ့ ကို English လို ပြောတော့သူကနားမလည် ။( မြန်မာလိုပ)ဲ inactive လု်င်းမို့ ထပ်ထပ်ရောင်းတာလားတော့မသိဘူး ။ special promotion ဆိုလဲလိမ်တာများတယ်

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