"We aim to please. You aim too, please."
"Our aim is to keep this bathroom clean. Your aim will help."
"We aim to please. You aim too, please."
<----- If your referring to that one (note flag), you left out "idiotic" and "suicidal."My governor is a cowardly dipshit.
My governor is a cowardly dipshit.
<----- If your referring to that one (note flag), you left out "idiotic" and "suicidal."
It would fine by me if he was just suicidal but it's a real dick move to take everyone else with you.
I keep getting random spam calls in what sounds to me like one of the Chinese languages, but I'm a pure white American with, as far as I know, nothing but Europeans in my ancestry, who does not speak a word of any of the Chinese languages. I have no idea what I did to get on their call list.
One time I listened to more of it than usual, and I think I remember hearing AT&T being mentioned.
With me, it's usually a person with a heavy Indian accent claiming to be from the Microsoft security department telling me there is a problem with my computer.
First off, with their heavy Indian accent, they speak English. "Microsoft" is calling me on my German landline speaking English. That's quite a gamble on "Microsoft"'s part. Once or twice I actually pretended not to speak English, just to mess with them.
Another time, when I didn't have my computer running when they called, and just for kicks I just pretended to go along. So, they're from Microsoft, and my computer has been hacked, and I need to download something from an eMail to save my computer. So, I tell them that I don't use Windows, and I'm not a customer of Microsoft, so they must have the wrong number. But they wouldn't let up, no, I had to start my computer and go to this website in order to save my computer. At this point I wanted to know, since I'm not a customer of "theirs", how they knew my computer had been hacked. They traced the hacker. Dubious, but fair enough. How did they get my number? They connect the hacker's attacking my computer with my landline number. How? Considering I'm not one of their customers, there'd have to be violations of German as well as European data protection laws. When they didn't give an answer, and instead just repeated over and over again that I must open this link to save my computer, that's when I knew the fun was over and I hung up on them.
@Avro Arrow Sorry about the divergence; just rocking a little solidarity to a fellow inmate in the asylum.
With me, it's usually a person with a heavy Indian accent claiming to be from the Microsoft security department telling me there is a problem with my computer.
First off, with their heavy Indian accent, they speak English. "Microsoft" is calling me on my German landline speaking English. That's quite a gamble on "Microsoft"'s part. Once or twice I actually pretended not to speak English, just to mess with them.
Another time, when I didn't have my computer running when they called, and just for kicks I just pretended to go along. So, they're from Microsoft, and my computer has been hacked, and I need to download something from an eMail to save my computer. So, I tell them that I don't use Windows, and I'm not a customer of Microsoft, so they must have the wrong number. But they wouldn't let up, no, I had to start my computer and go to this website in order to save my computer. At this point I wanted to know, since I'm not a customer of "theirs", how they knew my computer had been hacked. They traced the hacker. Dubious, but fair enough. How did they get my number? They connect the hacker's attacking my computer with my landline number. How? Considering I'm not one of their customers, there'd have to be violations of German as well as European data protection laws. When they didn't give an answer, and instead just repeated over and over again that I must open this link to save my computer, that's when I knew the fun was over and I hung up on them.
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