Extreme weirdness w/ AT&T asking if we "know" people!, page
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Topic started on 12-9-2010 @ 09:58 PM by burdenofdreams
Had something very weird happen a while back when my roommate tried to buy an international calling card from AT&T, and I'd like to know if it's standard procedure. It was really odd because it happened at a time when I was doing research on Wikileaks.

My roommate and I were planning a trip abroad and had to buy an international calling card to make a phone call to a friend in Australia. We purchased it from the AT&T website with a debit card. Got a pop-up that said the order was "being processed" and we should receive an email within 2 hours, with a PIN to use. Closed that window, tried to go to another web page, and the browser immediately crashed. Restarted the computer, and got an error message saying we need to do a repair install of Windows Vista. So, we checked his email on another computer...4 hours later, still no PIN. But my roommate's bank acct showed the AT&T charge pending...THIS IS WHERE IT GETS WEIRD...

So, he calls AT&T to complain, and eventually they give him a PIN, but they make him answer a bunch of questions of the variety "Do you know such-and-such person?" I asked my roommate WHO, like "do you know Osama Bin Laden?" -- and he said no, he didn't recognize any of the names at all. I wish he had written them down! But he is much less paranoid than I am, and just shrugged it off.

Why is AT&T making people answer questions about whether they "know" certain people before letting them use international calling cards?? Or are they just asking US for some reason? Neither one of us has any criminal record. It just seems like weird harassment - is this some standard procedure I'm not aware of? It reminds me of that old 60s movie where the phone company secretly rules the world.

ANYONE ELSE IN THE U.S. BOUGHT AN INTERNATIONAL CALLING CARD RECENTLY???

Did they ask you questions about whether you "know" certain people? Is this just normal procedure these days??


reply posted on 12-9-2010 @ 10:53 PM by davespanners
reply to post by crazydaisy



crazydaisy makes a good point, where did you get the telephone number that you called AT&T on, was it from the same email that gave you the pin?


reply posted on 12-9-2010 @ 11:59 PM by LordBucket
reply to post by burdenofdreams




I wish he had written them down


So repeat the process and write the names down. Order a card, wait four hours, and then call them and say you never received a pin.

Let us know what the names are.



reply posted on 17-9-2010 @ 06:55 PM by burdenofdreams
When it happened, my roommate just answered "no" to the list of names, shrugged it off as vaguely odd, and told me about it after he hung up. I was in the room with him while this was going on, but couldn't hear AT&T's end of the conversation. And AT&T didn't claim that he had used the card, they claimed that his credit card payment had not gone through (though it was already on his online bank account statement) and they made him give them the number for the card again over the phone. The phone number he called was definitely AT&T, and the pin email came from AT&T. The URL we used to buy a card online is: www.consumer.att.com.... I actually made him get an AT&T card specifically because I was afraid that the other calling card companies out there, which I was not familiar with, might be scams.

So, it doesn't sound like anyone else was trying to use it, if his payment had not gone through according to AT&T (though he checked his bank account and made sure he was only charged once, despite having to give his card number twice). The whole thing just seemed like some weird stalling tactic, though I'm not sure the reasons for it. My roommate is not the "tin foil hat type," at ALL, and absolutely hates things like...for instance, this website.=) He got the impression that what was going on was some sort of normal, post-9/11 security check on every U.S. citizen who buys an international calling card, which he felt was "completely understandable." I've just never seen a similar story/complaint, so I felt more like he/we were being targeted for some reason as troublemakers. (Guess I shouldn't quote Karl Marx on the Internets, even as a joke..........?)
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