First of all (the most recent of these tactics I've experienced), there's this:
Quote:
Dear Reader,
I wrote to you a while back to explain that we have been providing you with full access to The Economist's apps and website due to an error in our systems. This has been corrected so you will now have access to only a limited number of articles each week.
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If you are a subscriber and your access has been restricted by mistake, it may be that you need to activate your online account. To do so, please contact one of our customer service centres (whose details are set out below) with your name and address or go to [webshite], log in and enter your Customer Reference Number (CRN) which can be found on the address label of your copy of The Economist. I am sorry for the inconvenience.
Yours sincerely,
Nick Blunden
Publisher, The Economist online
I have no record of this guy writing to me before about this. I've not noticed that I had access to "premium" Economist stuff because, well, I've never tried to access it. I cancelled my subscription two or more years ago. This is blatant bullshit. It happens quite often with emails, actually. You get what looks to be an apology for an "administrative error" that likely never happened in the first place, and a sneaky sales pitch alongside it.
"Oh, we're sorry about that error you didn't notice, by way of apology, we'd like to offer you the chance to give us some money."
How are they allowed to get away with this? Rhetorical, of course. But this is nothing. It's spammy email rubbish. I have more examples of companies pulling shit under the guise of incompetence in an attempt to outright scam people out of money.
The PPI Scam.
For example, last week I got a phone call on my mobile from a landline number. Turns out it was a Manchester number. It wasn't an 0845 job, so I answered it. On the other end there was a hell of a lot of background noise and a lady asked for a Mr [krrrrrrrkchhcjch!]. I couldn't hear what she said after "Mr". It later dawned on me that she'd deliberately mumbled the name, but more on that in a minute.
So anyway, I ask "who?". And she mumbles it again. "Who?". She gives up this time and comes out with it. "Mr Simpson" (or something - I can't remember the exact name). I obviously responded in the negative and asked how they got my number. Turns out Mr. Simpson had given them my number and his name! It was a PPI sales pitch of course.
"I'm awfully sorry, it appears Mr Simpson has given us your number in error. My apologies, but whilst we're here, would you be interested in claiming back your Payment Protection Insurance that was potentially mis-sold?"
"No, I want to be removed from your system, fuck off."
I Googled the number immediately after the call and discover that many other people have experienced similar calls. Noisy background, asking for a name that isn't the name of the answerer, then the sales pitch.
Nobody seemed to put two and two together on those nuisance call forums, but I think I have:
They get your number from wherever these cunts get numbers from, and they make up a name. They ring you - it's noisy, she mumbles the name. They're hoping that you'll give them your real name before they have to come clean on the fact that they've made up a name at their end. If you do, they'll simply start calling you by your actual name and begin the sales pitch. If not, they do the apology thing and then start the sales pitch. Win-win. What the fuck?!
The Gas and Electric scam.
This one is so fucking brazen I can't believe Watchdog haven't been involved yet.
We moved into this property 9 months or so ago. We were signed up with a company called Spark Energy. They're fucking awful by all accounts, but regardless, we didn't have a choice because the letting agency signed us up and as far as I can tell, attempting to leave one of these companies is more stress than it's worth.
Anyway, we pay them monthly via direct debit for electric and gas. We're at 68 [Road Name]. They generate our bill and charge us automatically. It's all on their automated computer system. So why, then, do we continue to receive bills for Mr Mark [redacted] (also known as an unlucky fucker, victim of an attempted scam). These bills drop on our doormat the same day every month. The same day we receive our own bill from Spark Energy.
Now I'm about to admit to something illegal here. After a couple of months, I opened one of this unlucky fucker's letters from Spark Energy. Curiosity got the better of me. I shouldn't have done it, but I've tried to have his mail passed on via the letting agency and they don't know where he is now. They go in the bin anyway.
So this letter is a bill. For the same property we live in. For gas and electric. And it's a whopper. It's up to about £700 now. The period of the bill? The date we moved in and started paying for gas and electric until present day. They're billing our property twice to two different sets of people for the same gas and electric usage.
They're getting their money from us. Their system is undoubtedly aware of this. The only conclusion I can draw is that they're chancing Mr [redacted] panicking and paying this bill even though he hasn't lived here since August. I imagine they do this to pretty much everyone on the off-chance that people will just pay it. A nice little earner, no doubt.
So I rang them up and explained the situation. "Oh we're really sorry Mr Robson, we'll remove that from our system immediately." A month later, another bill arrives. I ring again. "Oh very sorry...". A month later, another bill arrives. And so it continues. I've given up. I feel bad for Mr. [redacted], but these clowns clearly don't give a shit.
My primary concern now is the same thing happening to me when we move on from this property.
So, anyone else know of any blatant scams that seem to toe the legal line, masked by incompetence?