17-05-2023 07:22 PM
Yesterday while up the mountains in Cumbria I received a text from EE (??) Welcoming me to the Isle of Man and advising I will pay a daily charge for usage !!. Haven't opened it as I presume it is a scam, as EE must know my phone isn't in Isle of Man ? Please clarify !
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17-05-2023 07:36 PM
This sounds like a standard welcome text when your phone first registers on a foreign network, but if you post the exact verbartim wording of the message, that may help confirm.
If you're in Cumbria and out of service of EE-UK, it's quite possible your phone is registering on a Manx network.
17-05-2023 07:36 PM
This sounds like a standard welcome text when your phone first registers on a foreign network, but if you post the exact verbartim wording of the message, that may help confirm.
If you're in Cumbria and out of service of EE-UK, it's quite possible your phone is registering on a Manx network.
17-05-2023 07:51 PM
17-05-2023 07:59 PM
Reading a text message is perfectly safe.
17-05-2023 08:06 PM
17-05-2023 08:09 PM
That's the standard welcome message I referred to above.
A scam text is usually obvious by them wanting you to call an expensive premium-rate number, or volunteer some personal details.
17-05-2023 09:58 PM
I live in Cumbria and recall a couple of occasions where I've got a similar sounding text to yours, when up on the fells.
I think due to the poor coverage in the Lake District, and with the Isle Of Man been within view when on some of the fells, the phone can sometimes connect to an Isle Of Man network.
17-05-2023 10:14 PM
17-05-2023 10:16 PM
I'm pretty certain I did not. But this was a few years ago.
17-05-2023 10:58 PM
Roaming charges for the Isle of Man are set out at https://ee.co.uk/help/help-new/roaming-costs/countries/isleofman
The notifiation text is working as designed, to advise you that you're using a foreign network - this behaviour can sometimes happen in border areas when your home network has no coverage. Northern Ireland, Dover & Cumbria are examples.