• ch00f@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    We had a deaf school in our high school, so one of the payphones had a keyboard and an operator would read your messages to the other party. My friend used to use it to call his friend and see how many dirty words he could get the operator to say.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      When I managed a hardware store back in the day we got scam calls fairly regularly via these types of teletext-to-operator schemes. It was always some bullshit about somebody needing 144 chainsaws or 200 lawn mowers or some shit, and they always wanted to try to pay with a check routing number, and they always wanted it delivered sight unseen to some highly suspicious location. It must have been extra infuriating for the operators, because they know damn well it’s a scam but apparently they weren’t allowed to interject or add to the conversation in any way to tell the recipient this. Of course we knew what was up, so I’d instruct the operator to relay to the scammer the longest and most inventive list of insults I could think of to see if I could get them to giggle. The operator, that is. Not the scammers.

      I presume the scammers were connecting to the phone network via the internet, probably itself dial-up at the time.

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        weren’t allowed to interject or add to the conversation in any way

        I think the best they can do is press a button that says they’ve “become biased” and will connect you to another operator. My friend got them to do that once.