[VoiceOps] Fraud

Hiers, David David.Hiers at adp.com
Thu Feb 20 12:57:48 EST 2014


That actually works out great for you.

There is a federal law that limits credit card customer fraud liability to $50.

Go to court.  There is no federal law that limits phone customer fraud.   If you don't have such a clause in your contract, you can't lose the case.    The customer may walk, but that might work out in your favor.



David

From: VoiceOps [mailto:voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org] On Behalf Of John Curry
Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2014 14:09
To: voiceops at voiceops.org
Subject: [VoiceOps] Fraud

I am new to your site. I was looking in the Archives and saw in November 2013 there were some of you who experienced fraud. We had a an Avaya IP Office customers system who got hit pretty bad. The customer is treating the fraudulent calls like credit card fraud and not taking any responsibility. Does anyone have any advice on how to persuade the customer take this issue seriously?  His bill was racked up pretty good.  Strangely and coincidentally Avaya came out with a security bulletin the end of December 2013 on this same issue.  I tried to contact Avaya with no response. It seems as though someone has built a sniffer for the Avaya IP Offices and gleaning their registrations.


This message and any attachments are intended only for the use of the addressee and may contain information that is privileged and confidential. If the reader of the message is not the intended recipient or an authorized representative of the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by e-mail and delete the message and any attachments from your system.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://puck.nether.net/pipermail/voiceops/attachments/20140220/dc8f4c3f/attachment.html>


More information about the VoiceOps mailing list