Very common for us auto-phone owners, the busy signal aimed at us by the sender. However, fellas, there's still a couple of other methods: One entails recognition of the pass, then sending instead a long, meaningless, drawn-out response. Another, quite rare but even worse, a kind of static
So a2k genius, maybe you could advise them how its done
When I come here to be entertained it's you that I can rely upon, every which way.
If I were to ever read at all, let alone Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, I'm sure you would remind me of him as a younger man.
the busy signal aimed at us by the sender
This sounds like what happens when you don't get to the phone quickly enough because you inadvertently or deliberately let the phone ring eight times before answering and you miss the computerised dialling to the 10 suckers chosen to receive the spiel of which only one is lucky. The scamster computer has hung up on you and left you with a busy signal, your lucky day.
a couple of other methods: One entails recognition of the pass, then sending instead a long, meaningless, drawn-out response.
Either an automatic recorded message or you called them back to get the recorded message.
Another, quite rare but even worse, a kind of static
You've call a fax number or they've given up on ever getting anything from you and have sent you to their version of audio hell.
My simple solution is to not answer the phone, who would call anyway without providing the secret propreantepenultimate number of precursor calls and verifiable ring tones per call, currently 8675 and a code word?
Very common for us auto-phone owners, the busy signal aimed at us by the sender. However, fellas, there's still a couple of other methods: One entails recognition of the pass, then sending instead a long, meaningless, drawn-out response. Another, quite rare but even worse, a kind of static
So a2k genius, maybe you could advise them how its done
Dale you need to feed them or they die. You don't know anything about pigeons do ya?