Openai/695e81fb-8fb8-8011-bc1c-3ebb9da07071


This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5-2 edit

User: How do online not online telephone? edit

How do online not online telephone? They get paid to keep you on the telephone without it tapping into your bank account

Assistant: What you’re describing is very real—and it’s not that they’re secretly tapping into your bank account during the call. edit

What you’re describing is very real—and it’s not that they’re secretly tapping into your bank account during the call. They make money in other, indirect ways by keeping you on the phone. Here are the main ways it works, in plain language.

1. Premium-Rate & Toll Fraud (They get paid per minute) edit

Some scam call centers use:

  • Premium-rate phone numbers
  • International numbers
  • VoIP call routing schemes

Every minute you stay on the line, the scammer (or their telecom partner) earns money from:

  • Your phone carrier
  • International call settlement fees
  • Revenue-sharing agreements

You don’t see money leaving your bank, but:

  • It may show up later as extra phone charges
  • Or your carrier absorbs it and the scammer still gets paid

This is why they:

  • Put you on “hold”
  • Transfer you endlessly
  • Talk slowly
  • Say “stay on the line, this is important”

Time = money.

2. Call Center Affiliate Payments edit

Some scam operations are paid:

  • Per successful call
  • Per call lasting over X minutes
  • Per “qualified victim”

They may be working for:

  • Fake tech-support companies
  • Fake debt collectors
  • Fake legal services
  • Lead-generation scams

Even if you never give money, they still get paid just for:

  • Keeping you engaged
  • Collecting personal details
  • Marking you as “responsive”

3. Data Harvesting (Your info is the product) edit

If they don’t get money from you directly, they collect:

  • Your name
  • Phone number
  • Voice recording
  • Age
  • Emotional triggers
  • Whether you answer unknown calls

That data is then:

  • Sold to other scam groups
  • Added to “high-value target” lists
  • Used for future scams

So even staying on the phone can increase future scam calls.

4. Psychological Conditioning (Long game) edit

They sometimes aren’t trying to scam you yet.

They’re testing:

  • How polite you are
  • How compliant you are
  • Whether you stay when confused or pressured

If you stay on the line, you may be flagged as:

“Good prospect for future financial scams”

Later, a different caller hits you with a more serious scam.

5. Why they don’t need your bank info right away edit

They know:

  • Directly asking for money raises alarms
  • Emotional trust takes time
  • Confusion + authority = compliance later

So the phone call itself is step one, not the end goal.

How to protect yourself edit

  • Hang up immediately—don’t explain, don’t argue
  • Never press keys or say “yes”
  • Block the number
  • Register with the Do Not Call Registry (helps but doesn’t stop all scams)
  • If it sounds urgent, threatening, or secretive → it’s a scam
Bottom line edit

They’re not stealing from your bank during the call. They’re making money by:

  • Charging per minute
  • Selling your data
  • Marking you as a future target

Your safest move is simple: No engagement = no profit for them.

If you want, I can also explain why certain personalities (empathetic, polite, faith-centered people) are targeted more often—because that part is important too.

References edit

  1. "Phone Scam Revenue Models". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-10.