Crime & Safety

Falmouth Resident Targeted By Fake Comcast Worker: PD

Police are warning residents about a person calling to inspect the wiring in the house.

FALMOUTH, MA — A Falmouth resident was targeted by a fake Comcast employee, according to police. The employee called and tried to set up an appointment to inspect the wiring in the home, police said.

This is a scam – Comcast, Microsoft and companies like it will not call you, according to police. Here are some tips to avoid tech support scams, courtesy of the FTC:

Phone calls

Tech support scammers may call and pretend to be a computer technician from a well-known company. They say they’ve found a problem with your computer. They often ask you to give them remote access to your computer and then pretend to run a diagnostic test. Then they try to make you pay to fix a problem that doesn’t exist. Listen to an FTC undercover call with a tech support scammer.

Find out what's happening in Falmouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

If you get a phone call you didn’t expect from someone who says there’s a problem with your computer, hang up.

Pop-up warnings

Tech support scammers may try to lure you with a pop-up window that appears on your computer screen. It might look like an error message from your operating system or antivirus software, and it might use logos from trusted companies or websites. The message in the window warns of a security issue on your computer and tells you to call a phone number to get help.

Find out what's happening in Falmouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Online ads and listings in search results pages

Tech support scammers try to get their websites to show up in online search results for tech support. Or they might run their own ads online. The scammers are hoping you’ll call the phone number to get help.

If you’re looking for tech support, go to a company you know and trust.

2 things to know to avoid a tech support scam 1. Legitimate tech companies won’t contact you by phone, email or text message to tell you there’s a problem with your computer. 2. Security pop-up warnings from real tech companies will never ask you to call a phone number.

Click here for more tips about what to do if you believe you were scammed.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.