Forum Discussion
WoozyPolarBear
6 years agoCoach
Does Telus fix Compromised IP address issues on my PC or should I pay the Microsoft Tech Support?
I received a phone call from the Microsoft Technical Support Team this morning stating that they have noticed my computer is running off of a compromised IP address from my ISP (which I receive from ...
- 6 years ago
That is a tech support scam. Microsoft is not calling you. Microsoft will never call you.
DO NOT give them any money.
DO NOT let them have access to your PC for any reason.
Your IP is not compromised. They word it that way to make it sound like there is a problem.
Nighthawk
Community Power User
6 years agoThat is a tech support scam. Microsoft is not calling you. Microsoft will never call you.
DO NOT give them any money.
DO NOT let them have access to your PC for any reason.
Your IP is not compromised. They word it that way to make it sound like there is a problem.
- WoozyPolarBear6 years agoCoach
They really made it convincing if it indeed was not Microsoft. The caller ID on my phone said it was Microsoft calling from Redmond Washington, and when I searched the phone number they called from on Google, it did say that phone number is for Microsoft Corporation.
- Nighthawk6 years ago
Community Power User
That is known as Caller ID Spoofing. Basically they can make any number appear on your caller ID, even your own if they so wanted. 🙂
- WoozyPolarBear6 years agoCoach
Ok, thank you for the advice. I will ignore the call. Should I call Telus to have a look at my network connection just to be safe? How did they even access my network connection in the first place. That has me kinda worried. I ran a virus scan, but it showed nothing.
- Nighthawk6 years ago
Community Power User
They never had access in the first place. That's why they would get you to install software to let them have access. 🙂 It's all part of the script they use.
- WoozyPolarBear6 years agoCoach
I kind of thought it sounded expensive. They wanted to remote connect to my computer to show me, but I didn't want to pay them before checking with Telus. If this is a scam, I won't give them any money, but that still leaves me trying to figure out how to fix the compromised IP address. How would I go about fixing this issue without involving the scammer?
- Nighthawk6 years ago
Community Power User
There is no such thing as a compromised IP address. Ignore everything they told you. They make up serious sounding problems that don't exist in order to make the problem sound like it actually exists and to get access to your PC so they can get in and do malicious things.
The modem you have has its own firewall built in. As does your PC. As long as you keep your Windows up to date (which it should do automatically anyways), and you don't download random files off the net from malicious sites, you should be fine.