9 comments

  • nacozarina 6 hours ago

    article ignores the reality that the vast majority of calls anyone receives nowadays are scams of one form or another

    they aren’t the simple telemarketer scams of yesterday; many are sophisticated attacks with high-consequence outcomes that require considerable effort to navigate, if engaged.

    Disengagement is currently an important survival tool.

  • cgstark 5 hours ago

    "Robbers are mad that people started locking their doors"

    there's no way to tell if a phone call is a real opportunity at this point, and even when people can tell, the scam calls far exceed the genuine ones

    • adamsiem 5 hours ago

      All the solutions have become problems themselves now. Anyone feel in control of blocking spam calls? What do you do? Asking for an iOS-native guide.

      • arealaccount 4 hours ago

        Can try this for unknown numbers: https://support.apple.com/en-us/111106, most will just hang up

        > Ask Reason for Calling means these calls are screened (the caller is asked why they're calling before your phone even rings)

      • acheron 4 hours ago

        Pretty easy.

        1) Have a phone number with an area code from a place you haven’t lived since 2004 and nobody legitimate would ever call you from.

        2) entirely block that area code.

        That takes care of 98% of it.

        • jzemeocala 3 hours ago

          This is actually my solution

  • nixosbestos 4 hours ago

    "and it might cost them" lmao fuck right off Business Insider.

  • bigyabai 6 hours ago

    > A new survey of 2,000 Gen Zers and millennials by the self-improvement app RiseGuide

    ...so a sample of a subset of workers who are all looking for self-help? The survey might be self-selecting for people with anxiety disorders, methinks.

    • RugnirViking 6 hours ago

      indeed. Looking at their consumption of self-help content may be my personal single biggest predictor of anxiety in people.