Got my first IP Relay scam yesterday. I probably would have recognized it anyway, but thanks to Smiley and the other Relay operators on here, I picked up on it before the scammer even started in on the questions!
Srsly, though. If the "order" is three *very* well known and expensive wines, and you say you're not local and can't come in to verify the card, but have local people who can pick up the wine, then I'm gonna assume you're a scammer and treat you as such.
In the future, what can I do when I'm on the phone with the operator, if I think it's a scam? Is there some way to ask the operator to report it as such, without alerting the relay user?
(Side note - I don't speak quickly, and the operator asked me to speak slowly, so I did. Is it normal for a relay operator to have to ask the hearing party to slow down multiple times in a conversation, or repeat what they've said? I'd get three-quarters of the way through my sentence, with multiple pauses between words, and he'd keep asking me to repeat what I said, starting with the third or fourth word in the sentence. It sounded like he was having to hunt-and-pick the letters...)
Srsly, though. If the "order" is three *very* well known and expensive wines, and you say you're not local and can't come in to verify the card, but have local people who can pick up the wine, then I'm gonna assume you're a scammer and treat you as such.
In the future, what can I do when I'm on the phone with the operator, if I think it's a scam? Is there some way to ask the operator to report it as such, without alerting the relay user?
(Side note - I don't speak quickly, and the operator asked me to speak slowly, so I did. Is it normal for a relay operator to have to ask the hearing party to slow down multiple times in a conversation, or repeat what they've said? I'd get three-quarters of the way through my sentence, with multiple pauses between words, and he'd keep asking me to repeat what I said, starting with the third or fourth word in the sentence. It sounded like he was having to hunt-and-pick the letters...)






because these days, offices seem to think 45 wpm is really speedy.
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