Diff: BobRTC
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{{Infobox website |
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| name = BobRTC |
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| logo = Bobrtc.png |
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| company_type = VOIP |
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| language = English |
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| founded = May 2019 |
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| country_of_origin = United States |
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| key_people = Kenzo |
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| url = https://bobrtc.tel |
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| commercial = No |
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| registration = Required for use, vetted by website admins |
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| num_users = <!-- or: | users = --> |
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| launch_date = <!-- {{Start date and age|df=yes/no|YYYY|MM|DD}} --> |
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| current_status = Shut down |
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| footnotes = |
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}} |
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BobRTC was an online VoIP platform created by scambaiters to combat telephone scams, robocalls, and other forms of telecommunications fraud. The platform allowed users to call verified scam numbers to waste scammers' time and gather intelligence on their operations. Leveraging WebRTC technology, BobRTC ensured user anonymity and security during calls. |
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== Earning Tokens and Calling Scammers == |
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BobRTC had a unique token system: |
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* Earning Tokens: Users could earn tokens by calling toll-free numbers for extended periods. These tokens could then be used to call non-toll-free numbers. |
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* Using Tokens: Once users accumulated enough tokens, they could use them to call a broader range of scam numbers, including those not toll-free. |
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== Using BobRTC == |
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Once registered and equipped with tokens, users could access a phonebook of verified scam numbers sorted by categories such as tech support scams, refund scams, and IRS scams. BobRTC features included: |
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* Calling Scammers: Select a number from the phonebook and call directly through the web interface. |
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* Dial Codes: Utilise buddies and sound effects during calls to enhance interactions. |
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* Voice Modulation: Adjust your voice pitch using the built-in pitch shift tool to disguise your identity. |
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'''BobRTC''' was an online calling platform used by scambaiters to call reported scam numbers through a web interface. It was associated with telephone-fraud disruption, number verification, and community scambaiting rather than ordinary consumer VoIP. |
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== Community and Collaboration == |
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BobRTC encouraged community collaboration. Users could share experiences, techniques, and strategies for engaging with scammers through forums and community features. This collaborative approach helped refine methods and improve the effectiveness of scam-baiting activities. |
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The site is now shut down. It is remembered mainly as a practical tool for scambaiters who wanted to call known scam numbers without using their personal phone service. |
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== Shutdown of BobRTC == |
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Despite its effectiveness and popularity, BobRTC was shut down on July 4th due to financial pressures on the service. Maintaining the platform became untenable without sufficient funding. |
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== Purpose == |
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BobRTC was built around the idea that wasting scammers' time could reduce the time they had to target real victims. Users could place calls through the platform, use numbers submitted to the community, and work from a telephone-fraud focused phonebook. |
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Quote from BobRTC admins:<blockquote>It's time to say goodbye. |
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A BobRTC post on Malwarebytes Forums described the site as tracking inbound numbers used in known telephony scams, including technical-support scams that pushed phone numbers to victims. |
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BobRTC will be closing its doors this July 4, 2022. |
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== How It Was Used == |
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Users generally needed approval before using the service. The platform was known for a phonebook of scam numbers and browser-based calling. Community material and tutorials described BobRTC as a free scambaiting phone service and an alternative to earlier calling tools. |
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The recent inflation and recession has put severe pressure on datacenters to generate revenue. While we were working on software changes to support even more inbound calls, our inbound call partners had started demanding $7,000+ from our carriers to basically answer junk telephone calls that they have to absorb regardless if anyone rents their DIDs or not. As a result of their strange demand, we ended our relationship and returned the DID numbers that we were lent. Many scammers have added BobRTC DID numbers to their scrub lists to prevent their scam dialers from reaching us, proving the point that if you want less scam calls to hit your phone, the only way to get a scammer to delete your number is to waste their time. |
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The imported iWiki article referred to tokens, toll-free calling, caller ID handling, dial codes, sound effects, and voice tools. Those features should be treated as historical platform details rather than current instructions, because the service is no longer operating. |
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That said, our home datacenter has also jacked up our rates to the point that no amount of donation drives would be sustainable |
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== Number Quality == |
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One recurring problem for scambaiting platforms is number quality. Scam numbers change quickly, some are dead by the time users call them, and legitimate numbers can be wrongly submitted. BobRTC material stressed that the platform was meant for telephone fraud and not for random prank calling. |
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The founder of BobRTCs have donated over $30K of their own personal funds to try to keep the project going, but given how much effort we put into it only to see rates eat up what we raise and then some, from a financial perspective it doesn't make sense to continue to rent machines at a public datacenter for this project. |
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That distinction mattered because poor number control could harm unrelated people, waste users' time, or create legal and reputational problems for the service. |
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Then there is the final insult: certain members of the scambaiting community. Let's take one that went by the name of "BluePhoneBuster" as an example. This type of scambaiter loves to insert themselves into other people's projects, do no work, but then also cannot tolerate other scambaiting communities other than the one(s) that he alone runs. Ergo, he starts attacking the same communities he was a participant in. There's several scambaiters out there like this, who only take enjoyment from making other scambaiters experience a miserable one and driving them out of the community. |
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== Shutdown == |
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BobRTC announced that it would close on 4 July 2022. A Scammer.info thread preserved the shutdown notice, which blamed financial pressure, increased datacentre costs, and carrier demands connected with inbound call handling. |
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We launched BobRTC as a service in early 2019 in hopes to make scambaiting easier and more fun to do. We never had the desire to be mean, ugly, pimple-faced gatekeepers. We thought by doing this project we could have an impact. In many ways BobRTC did achieve many things in scambaiting, particularly against SSA scammers (which we had a direct hand in getting many of them arrested in India). We also, with the help of AT&T, took down Premium Techie Support and the Glendale, CA based man who was behind that scam (AKA Saburi Pvt Ltd, India) was forced into a consent decree by federal prosecutors. |
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The shutdown notice also said that scammers had added BobRTC numbers to scrub lists, which the authors presented as evidence that wasting scammer time could affect their call behaviour. |
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As a team we have other projects we are working on, anti-scammerism still runs through our blood. |
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== Legacy == |
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BobRTC occupies a specific place in scambaiting history. It was not just a forum and not just a phone app. It was a purpose-built tool that combined scam-number sharing, browser calling, and community controls. |
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It was nice knowing all of you. |
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After its closure, scambaiters continued using other VoIP services, text-based baiting, forums, Discord communities, virtual machines, and reporting sites. BobRTC remains a reference point for people discussing older scambaiting infrastructure. |
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Please disable your SubscribeStar subscription to BobRTC.</blockquote> |
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== Caution == |
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Calling suspected scam numbers can create legal, safety, and privacy risks. It can also interfere with investigations or expose the caller to harassment. Any article about BobRTC should describe the platform historically and avoid presenting unsafe call tactics as instructions. |
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== Safety and Legal Considerations == |
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BobRTC was designed to ensure user safety: |
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== See Also == |
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* [[Scammer.info]] |
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* [[Scambait.org]] |
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* [[SpamLogger.com]] |
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* [[Scambaiting]] |
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* Calls were made using random caller IDs, so scammers could not trace them back to users. |
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* It was advised to use a VPN for additional security. |
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== References == |
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* [https://scammer.info/t/is-https-bobrtc-tel-offically-dead/101654 Scammer.info: BobRTC shutdown discussion] |
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* [https://forums.malwarebytes.com/topic/272363-bobrtc-is-not-a-trojan-site/ Malwarebytes Forums: BobRTC is not a Trojan site] |
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBPmlPJnNGc YouTube: BobRTC free scambaiting phone service tutorial] |
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* [https://scammer.info/t/bobrtc-and-numbers-lets-talk/48652 Scammer.info: BobRTC and numbers discussion] |
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* [https://www.techsupportscam.com/faq/scambaiting TechSupportScam.com: scambaiting FAQ] |
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Legally, BobRTC operated within the boundaries of the law by only allowing calls to known scam numbers, avoiding random or sequential dialing prohibited by telemarketing regulations. |
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[[Category:Scambaiting]] |
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[[Category:Websites]] |
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[[Category:Internet Culture]] |