Paul
Anaheim,#2Consumer Suggestion
Tue, March 15, 2005
Here's how. You need to have a separate computer that you reserve just for the internet. You don't ever put your main computer with all your important files and all your personal information on the internet. That's common sense! Assume that anything on the internet computer is available to everyone on the internet. That's why you never have any personal information on the internet computer. No names. No addresses. Certainly no telephone numbers or bank accounts. Keep all your important information on your main computer. And, never connect that computer up to the internet. That way, this never happens.
Paul
Anaheim,#3Consumer Suggestion
Tue, March 15, 2005
Here's how. You need to have a separate computer that you reserve just for the internet. You don't ever put your main computer with all your important files and all your personal information on the internet. That's common sense! Assume that anything on the internet computer is available to everyone on the internet. That's why you never have any personal information on the internet computer. No names. No addresses. Certainly no telephone numbers or bank accounts. Keep all your important information on your main computer. And, never connect that computer up to the internet. That way, this never happens.
Paul
Anaheim,#4Consumer Suggestion
Tue, March 15, 2005
Here's how. You need to have a separate computer that you reserve just for the internet. You don't ever put your main computer with all your important files and all your personal information on the internet. That's common sense! Assume that anything on the internet computer is available to everyone on the internet. That's why you never have any personal information on the internet computer. No names. No addresses. Certainly no telephone numbers or bank accounts. Keep all your important information on your main computer. And, never connect that computer up to the internet. That way, this never happens.
Donna
Walker,#5Consumer Comment
Mon, March 14, 2005
and there are no websites in my history other than sites I went to on my own. My computer is not hooked up to a phone line so even if there was a dialer on my hard drive, it couldn't dial anything. Bell South shows the number to Israel that was on my bill was not dialed from my phone line. When I called USBI a few days after I called the first time to verify they made note to give me that "one time courtesy credit", when I was hanging up, they guy says "Thank you for calling Navicomm". But I called USBI - Navicomm was the service provider USBI was supposedly doing the billing for. I want to know how the number to Israel got on my phone bill! A service rep at Bell South told me he had gotten billed for the same scam and that USBI was a reputable company? From the comments I've read here, USBI service reps are rude and liars. Is USBI being used or are they part of the scam? I am not willing to just get on with it since it can happen again! How can a number to Israel appear on my bill if the number wasn't dialed through Bell South (they're my long distance provider and the rep verified my number did not dial anything) and my computer can't dial any number anyway? Please email me at [email protected] if anyone can offer any insight! Thanks!