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706 points ortusdux | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.211s | source
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ddtaylor ◴[] No.42139790[source]
I love that they are weaponizing the perceived kindness of senior citizens in this way. Many of the victims of scams are some of the nicest people ever that were taken advantage of in some capacity - usually while trying to help someone. It's the digital age equivalent of staging a broken down cart and then robbing some old folks. I think most of us hate the idea of the "solution" being to not go near anyone with a broken down cart out of fear.

I'm not saying this fixes everything, but I would rather a world where scammers odds at making a living at this are so poor they won't bother versus a world where everyone has to block every number by default and live in metaphorical bunkers to never interact because you might be a scammer.

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e-khadem ◴[] No.42142505[source]
> I would rather a world where scammers odds at making a living at this are so poor they won't bother

Then what's stopping the scammers from finding another "evil" job that makes money? You have to remember that humans tend to not enjoy accomplishing thievery and the scammers most often do this out of necessity. Of course there are big call center operators who truly are terrible people, but this conclusion is true for the bulk of their workforce.

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1. CarpaDorada ◴[] No.42142891[source]
The big call center operators usually have political backing too.