The 2:43 a.m. Ring
Itโs 2:43 a.m. Your phone buzzes once, barely rings, and then goes silent. No voicemail. No text. Just a missed call from an unknown number. You lie there, half-asleep, overthinking: Was that real? Important? Should I call back?
Stop. Whatever your gut tells youโignore it. Donโt call back. Thatโs the trick.
The Scam You Didnโt See Coming
This isnโt a clever hack. Itโs a simple, shady scam designed to catch you off guard. The goal? Make you act before your brain fully wakes.
The โCan You Hear Me?โ Trap
Hereโs how it works:
- The call rings once, then stops.
- You call back, curious or concerned.
- A voiceโor recordingโanswers: โCan you hear me?โ
- You instinctively say, โYes.โ
Thatโs it. That tiny, automatic โyesโ is what scammers want. They capture your voice and can twist it into fake consent for subscriptions, charges, or other scams.
How They Hook You
Scammers rarely start with โCan you hear me?โ They might pose as customer service, delivery confirmations, or account alerts. They often spoof local numbers to seem familiar. That split-second rush to answer? Thatโs the trap.
What You Should Do
- Do nothing.ย If the call rings once and hangs up, ignore it. No callbacks, no Googling. Real contacts leave messages.
- Hang up immediatelyย if the first words you hear are โCan you hear me?โ Donโt ask questions or try to be polite.
- Verify independentlyย if they claim to be a bank or company. Go to the official website and find real contact info.
Extra Precautions
- Sign up for theย National Do Not Call Registryย to block legal telemarketers.
- Useย call-blocking appsย or built-in phone features like โSilence Unknown Callers.โ
- Remember: scammers adapt fast. What works now might not work next month.
Why These Calls Work
Phones are personal. A late-night ring triggers urgency and curiosity. The brief ring and casual โCan you hear me?โ sound harmless, lowering your guard. Even if they donโt scam you immediately, they might capture your voice, number, or location for later use.
Already Said โYesโ? Donโt Panic
If you already said โyes,โ stay alert:
- Check bank and credit card statements.
- Ignore sketchy links in texts or emails.
- Report suspicious activity to your bank and phone provider.
Awareness is your best defense. Scammers rely on distraction, fatigue, and surprise. If a call feels off, it probably is. Hang up. Donโt explain, apologize, or interact.
Let the Ring Go
For this scam, the best approach is simple: let it ring. Donโt call back. Donโt say โyes.โ Let it die.

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