There are legal ways to spoof a number, otherwise it is illegal to spoof a caller ID number. One example where it is legal is to call from your mobile phone but send out your office number as the number that shows up in the recipients caller ID. Making that legal opened up the door for spammers to use that ability to spoof a caller ID. Then on top of that originating the calls from another country makes it hard to do much about it from a legal perspective should you want to try to do something about getting these calls.
most all of this stuff is offshore. agents are in the US oftentimes,
but log into a net portal somewhere else, and that is where the
dialing for dorks is done from.
i've never gotten this stuff at night, thank god. they at least have
time called mapped for maximum answers.
VOIP is proving to be the third horseman of the apocalypse it seems.
and now, it's almost always that it picks a number near you to spoof.
i've gotten three people now who've called me up to tell me to quit
telemarketing them.
and the cute girl with the "oops, pardon me while i fix my headset....
can you hear me now?"
i've probably gotten that stage recording fifty times. it's stopped the
last few months. they overdid it, and people just hung up when they
heard the first syllables.
time to change the shill.