Malaysia airlines plane may have crashed 239 people on board #5

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I don't understand this, what happened?

I looked up diverted call and apparently this is how some call centers spoof their number on caller ID. So it's probably a passenger received a call from someone that spoofed the loved one's cell number as their own and it showed up as "diverted call" along with the passenger's number.

That's what I get from it anyway.

I mean, what else could it be?
 
I looked up diverted call and apparently this is how some call centers spoof their number on caller ID. So it's probably a passenger received a call from someone that spoofed the loved one's cell number as their own and it showed up as "diverted call" along with the passenger's number.

That's what I get from it anyway.

I mean, what else could it be?

Thank you, but wow, maybe it's late here but I don't get a word of that either...
I know you can divert calls to your office number, or to a friend's number but still don't get this
 
I looked up diverted call and apparently this is how some call centers spoof their number on caller ID. So it's probably a passenger received a call from someone that spoofed the loved one's cell number as their own and it showed up as "diverted call" along with the passenger's number.



That's what I get from it anyway.



I mean, what else could it be?


Glad I wasn't alone in not understanding lol.


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Does anyone else wonder why this plane was not followed by fighter jets or why fighter jets were not sent to look for it when it did not respond to air traffic control?

I am positive that most developed countries would follow a plane with fighter jets to assess the situation and potentially shoot the plane down if they were not responding to air traffic control after 9/11. If the plane was hijacked I wonder how they could be sure the plane would not be followed by military planes.

It is baffling what has happened to this plane. I cannot understand how someone a pilot or someone else is able to turn off the transponders this should not be possible. Every civilian plane should be visible at all times in the air for security purposes. I hope that lessons are learned and that organisations like the FAA, governments and plane manufacturers like Boeing and Airbus agree to modify planes so the transponders cannot be turned off.

I don't.

It is not in U.S. Air or Water.

We are talking an entirely different area.

Governed by many, and a bit of space of none.

No U.S. (or even C.A.) rules and regulations or any we would be familiar with.
 
Thank you, but wow, maybe it's late here but I don't get a word of that either...
I know you can divert calls to your office number, or to a friend's number but still don't get this

Yes, I found that too. I don't use my cell phone much so I have no idea about diverting calls. I honestly don't understand what this article is saying...or implying.

Jmo
 
oh I get it, they're calling their loved ones on the plane and think it's ringing but the calls were set up to be diverted to another number which is why it rang, makes sense
 
I looked up diverted call and apparently this is how some call centers spoof their number on caller ID. So it's probably a passenger received a call from someone that spoofed the loved one's cell number as their own and it showed up as "diverted call" along with the passenger's number.



That's what I get from it anyway.



I mean, what else could it be?


Here's another article about this. Makes better sense to me.

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/...ceived-not-from-mh370-but-us-says-mas-bernama

A family received a call from the number of their missing loved one. The call turned out to be from the US. What a cruel joke.


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oh I get it, they're calling their loved ones on the plane and think it's ringing but the calls were set up to be diverted to another number which is why it rang, makes sense


No. Well yes they are calling those cell phones and they are ringing but not because of that.

This is about a family member receiving a call from a loved ones number that is missing on the flight.


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http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/257057
Malaysia Airlines has clarified that a cell phone number which allegedly belonged to a family member of a passenger on Flight MH370 is an American number, not from China.

MAS subsidiary Firefly’s chief executive officer Ignatious Ong Ming Choy said in Beijing today the number was identified to be an American mobile phone number by a telecommunication company authorised by MAS.

Earlier, a family member of the affected passenger claimed that he had received a diverted call from a number after the flight went missing, and urged MAS to investigate the source of the number in order to track down the whereabouts of the missing Boeing 777-200.
 
Cell phones will ring like any other, even if they no longer function.

There are many National News Paper articles, for this incident alone, but for others.

Let's say you die in your home. No one knows for months. I call you daily. It still rings for me, I can leave messages until it is full, I can still text to you, phones do not stop ringing. Just like email does not stop when you die. It still goes through, but no one is there to get it. Even if the phone was smashed, burned, tossed in the sea, or you were not there for email. Same concept. Messages still go, into digital space they go in when you are alive and can retrieve.

The cell phone will ring on the caller end always. When the number is finally reassigned, you will finally get a new voice-mail message.
 
this is such a small thing but the pilot's (or was it the co-pilot's) last words to Malaysian ATC were "all, right---good night"... seems so normal but when I worked all night long at my old job "graveyard" shift---we were all working, it was our work day. No One ever said "good night" to anyone. we said the same things you'd say to each other as we came and went through the large complex I worked at, that you'd say in the daytime. If you talked to someone in person or on the phone, if you knew you wouldn't be talking to them again, you'd say "have a great shift" or "see you later" or "thanks, 'bye", like you would in the day time. but never "good night"...I don't remember ever even hearing "Have a good night" (just, as mentioned, "hope you have a nice shift")..... "Good Night" sounds sort of final. maybe it's cultural and that's just what's said in that part of the world...
 
It is all starting to piece together for me.

1. The plane lost contact when entering VN's airspace. Communications were manually turned off.

2. Early reports said that Malaysian Military showed an unidentified plane headed west.

2. Malaysian officials denied that report. Which I believe has to due with national security.

3. There is a possibility that a huge cell tower picked up activity from cell phones from the plane over Kota Bharu. Officials have to have this info by now. It would confirm a western path. If the plane was at a lower altitude this is entirely possible.

4. A day or so later the United States reported they were headed to the Indian Ocean, based on their information.

5. Yesterday they recanted and said they weren't headed there.

6. Today, they said after working with the Malaysians, they are in the Indian Ocean.

It is starting to make sense that this plane went down in the Indian Ocean. We have subs there as well. I'm convinced they all know more than they are saying. I also think this was definitely a hijack. :twocents:
 
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