VashPast

joined 10 months ago
[–] VashPast@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Lol! I have totally considered this! Kind of want to save it as a last ditch effort, but I'm thinking there could be some opportunity in general testing with John Doe suits. I've leveraged bigger parties against defendants in the past, it's very valid.

[–] VashPast@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This has been the method so far. I understand since big companies like Do Not Pay have worked out something like fake credit cards for situations like this, going to try to get one.

[–] VashPast@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

It's completely repeatable and I'm about to do a batch for the first time. I already thought about this and I like the way you think. A lot of times now I send a demand letter and get a settlement agreement in 24 hours.

I'll do a full breakdown tomorrow if you want.

 

Spam telemarketing has pretty much been made illegal barring some specific exceptions carved out by the TCPA. So, long story short, every time I manage to identify one of the spam callers calling my phone... I sue them and get paid. It's turning out to be a pretty nice gig. =)

It's really hard to identify some of these spam callers sometimes though. As you might imagine, they hang up when they sense any kind of danger, like asking for company names or website addresses. Right now for example, I have a call back number for this company, it works, but it has a vanilla voicemail and they are never going to call me back.

How could I get the owner of this phone number? Any advanced methods that aren't the whois sites?