Hi MM,
that's easy:
walk down any road, look at the adt signs, look in people's
letterboxes for their surnames, look up the normal phone book.
Or even easier:
Go to www.telkom.co.za
click on white pages (right at the bottom)
start searching for people
Or just cold call, if people say I'm not with
Hi Jonathan
What I can't get my head around is how people KNOW to phone folk who
subscribe to ADT to ask for their passwords ? ? ?
Marple-ish though I am, this one has me stumped.
On Mar 17, 11:06 am, Jonathan Endersby
wrote:
> Hi Mel,
>
> Yes, change your password.
>
> To everyon
From: "Jonathan Endersby"
To:
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 11:06 AM
Subject: [obsnw] Re: Fake ADT Calls (from Houtbay NW)
>
> Hi Mel,
>
> Yes, change your password.
>
> To everyone else, if your alarm doesn't go off and ADT calls you
> asking for your password
Hi Mel,
Yes, change your password.
To everyone else, if your alarm doesn't go off and ADT calls you
asking for your password, it's probably best to just tell them to send
the Armed Response.
PS. ADT, if you're out there, it would be REALLY good if you could get
your call center to identify itse