Baby Boomer Confusion Blues

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A massive migraine attack a few days ago put the brakes on my plans to resume regular posting. Let me tell you a tale of how a thoroughly confusing encounter with a Baby Boomer exacerbated the problem!

The library is the place to go when you need to find answers, but the librarian needs to be able to understand the question first in order to help. In this case, a woman was picking up the pieces after she apparently got scammed, but her twisting story and tangents only served to confuse me instead of helping me find out what was wrong.

After going all around Robin Hood's barn, it sounds like she and/or her husband broke all the basic rules of account security, losing access to Gmail and Facebook accounts by giving out their passwords, and then following a scammer "help desk" who asked them to install weird phone apps and surrender financial information.

I was able to get her the proper addresses for Google and Facebook account recovery, and made sure her new e-mail account used a unique password. She assured me it did, but I don't have a lot of confidence in that. She still seemed as confused as when she started trying to explain herself, and my growing headache wasn't helping me sort anything out for her.

These past few years have forced a lot of people into the realm of smartphones and online services, and a lot of the folks who need it most are least inclined toward technology. I hear a lot of resentment at computer use and smartphones from folks who hale lots of time to complain, but apparently no time to try to learn the basics. No one wants an "intro to the internet" class, but everybody wants to piss and moan when I don't have time to hold their hands.

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Image credit

Some lessons:

  1. Don't use the same passwords on all your accounts. Especially don't use the same password on your recovery account that you use on your main account! No one should ever ask for your password.

  2. No legitimate recovery service will ask you to download apps or install software. If you need to scan for malware, use your inbuilt security suite or maybe Malwarebytes. If you favor open-source projects, perhaps ClamAV is worth a look.

  3. Never trust e-mails or browser popups. Never click strange or unexpected hyperlinks. Never answer strange text messages about shipping and finance. When in doubt, open a new private browsing window and go straight to the website in question, or call the company's helpdesk phone number.

  4. If anything leaves you feeling uncertain, or raises red flags, STOP! If it's legit, in the worst-case scenario, you can still always start over. If it's a scam, you might save yourself a heap of trouble.

  5. If you need someone else to help solve a problem, don't start way back at Genesis 1:1. Define the problem and what specific steps need to be taken. If you don't know the second part, don't be vague about the first part!

Anyway, I survived the shift... barely. The next day, the headache was gone, but nausea and confusion plagued me still. And smoke from wildfires has begun to tinge the air enough to disturb my sleep as well. It's been a fun week, with a capital F U from Nature.

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16 comments
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<<< Am a Baby Boomer, but only just..., wish I was a GenX. We are not all dumbasses when it comes to technology.

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A lot of baby boomers built the technology of today. A lot of baby boomers kept up with technological advances at least from a basic user's perspective. But a lot of them could never program a VCR in the 1980s, and haven't bothered with tech since then. I swear they still expect a DOS prompt and an 8086 so they have justification for their feelings of intimidation.

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DOS, 8086 and VCR programming.., all stuff I did! The Baby Boomers generation span is far too long IMO.., being right at the end of it stuffs me in with lots of old people about to die.., I'm far from that!

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If I asked my Librarian for this type of help they would tell me to beat it. You do a very good support job for that community!

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I'm surprised that this kind of assistance was expected from a librarian. Being scammed is never pleasant and can cause panic, but I thought this would be a police matter, or anyone but not the librarian.
I trust that your migraine will migrate... I know just how painful that is because I have one now and did not get much sleep last night.

Wishing you better days ahead:)

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We're a small town, and for many people without home internet or computers of their own, we are the only source for web access in many a mile. We are not supposed to handle personal information, provide unscheduled one-on-one assistance, or actively perform computer tasks for folks, but we sometimes bend the rules a bit because our pattons sometimes have no other option.

The migraine faded entirely after about 48 hours of misery and recovery.

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Oh, wow! That sounds like a rural area in places like the Philippines or Jamaica, and I understand too well the need to break rules and extend some courtesy in such cases.

I'm happy that your headache subsided, and I hope that you're feeling better overall:)))

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I am better now, and alas it doesn't sound like the police or sheriff can help her much at this point, although as mentioned before, I had a heck of a time trying to follow her story and figure out what exactly I was supposed to help her do.

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Yeah, it's sad with cases of scamming, as there's very little the police can do to help... and I also can imagine that she herself cannot even comprehend what has happened much more to explain it to you 😏

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Que triste lo de los usuarios que fueron estafados 🥺.

Me alegra conocer a un bibliotecario acá en mi ciudad hay bibliotecas pero poco se usan y las veces que he ido no hay esa figura o ese puesto.

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My little town is growing, and so is library use. Homeschoolers, senior citizens, readers of bestselling fiction, people trying to learn new skills, and kids learning to love books all visit every day. A lot of people think libraries are dying, but my experience suggests otherwise.

Mi pequeña ciudad está creciendo, y el uso de las bibliotecas también. Cada día nos visitan educadores en casa, personas mayores, lectores de best-sellers de ficción, personas que intentan adquirir nuevas habilidades y niños que aprenden a amar los libros. Mucha gente cree que las bibliotecas están muriendo, pero mi experiencia me dice lo contrario.

(Translation by deepl.com)

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Sorry to hear about your migraine, my daughter gets them so I know how bad they can be. And even with being in pain, you find the time to help, this shows your character.

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Apparently, I was born in the middle of the Baby Boomer era. I have tried to keep up with technology, but sometimes I haven't succeeded. It doesn't help that I don't have that kind of a brain to begin with; it has always been difficult for me to remember lots of picky details long-term, and that's what one apparently needs to do to keep up with the times.

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If you can survive on HIVE, you're way ahead of the technological curve compared to the cantankerous Luddites I sometimes encounter.

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