Apparently our building elevators have a communication system that can be dialed from outside, and since they are, well, elevators, they automatically pick up the call. Now some spammers have the elevator number and the elevators being robodialed with offers for timeshare vacations that can't be disconnected by the riders.
Taking the stairs, thanks.
@fobo you know, back in high school I was once asked of the best way to secure a computer from viruses and malware.
my answer of "Don't connect it to the internet" was deemed incorrect.
Shit like this makes me all the more assured that my answer was the right one.
@BrokenBiscuit I guess it needs to be connected somehow so you can call the fire department if you get stuck, but why in the hell should an elevator be able to receive calls from non-government numbers I'll never know
@fobo @BrokenBiscuit The fundamental answer is basically that the phone companies just *don't do* special-purpose telephone numbers, on a technical level. "Private" or "specialized" lines actually have a public number somewhere that isn't published to anything. There's scads of tales of people mis-dialing and getting like... A USAF command center or some such.
The only way you genuinely get a phone that nobody unauthorized can right is to run your very own cables to everyone authorized.
@fobo Wow. I shook my head and physically covered my eyes with my hand trying to absorb the information. Who TF wrote that and thought it was a good idea?
@gemlog It's some pretty wild garbage system design.
@fobo I'm trying hard to think of a use case frankly.
Now, i've actually written voice jail things from scratch and robo callers (Nice ones! for like volunteer firefighters or PTA meetings!), but I would never leave something wide open like that. That's insane.
@fobo On the upside... it's not often that spammers make people go live healthy like climbing stairs... kudos for that I guess... ;)
@fobo -Slow claps for lapses in security...and safety-