<p>New Delhi: The CBI has booked 10 call centre operators for allegedly cheating the customers of US-based technology behemoths Amazon and Microsoft in the name of offering technical support and luring them with attractive offers for plan upgrades, officials on Friday said.</p>.<p>The central probe agency had registered the FIR against 10 call centres on a complaint from the Microsoft of which five also appear as suspects in the case registered on the basis of Amazon's complaint, they said.</p>.<p>The two cases were registered on October 4 last year but have been made public on the orders of the special court, the officials said.</p>.Sexual assault-accused auto driver from Delhi nabbed from Mumbai.<p>These call centres allegedly charged the foreigners from their accounts by offering them technical solutions when they tried to activate their fire stick or other Amazon devices, they said.</p>.<p>In case of Microsoft, it is alleged that the perpetrators sent 'pop-up' messages to the victims, asking them to call the number to sort out the purported threat that their computers are facing.</p>.<p>Once the customers called the number, they were duped by the call centre operators, the agency alleged. </p>
<p>New Delhi: The CBI has booked 10 call centre operators for allegedly cheating the customers of US-based technology behemoths Amazon and Microsoft in the name of offering technical support and luring them with attractive offers for plan upgrades, officials on Friday said.</p>.<p>The central probe agency had registered the FIR against 10 call centres on a complaint from the Microsoft of which five also appear as suspects in the case registered on the basis of Amazon's complaint, they said.</p>.<p>The two cases were registered on October 4 last year but have been made public on the orders of the special court, the officials said.</p>.Sexual assault-accused auto driver from Delhi nabbed from Mumbai.<p>These call centres allegedly charged the foreigners from their accounts by offering them technical solutions when they tried to activate their fire stick or other Amazon devices, they said.</p>.<p>In case of Microsoft, it is alleged that the perpetrators sent 'pop-up' messages to the victims, asking them to call the number to sort out the purported threat that their computers are facing.</p>.<p>Once the customers called the number, they were duped by the call centre operators, the agency alleged. </p>