I really have no idea. I tried to hit "send" on it and got a Verizon recording advising me that the call couldn't be completed as dialed, etc.
If it had been an international call I'd expect it to start with 011. I know caller ID can be spoofed, but also that it's not easy for an end user to do, so my next guess is that the engineer at Joe's Pizza And VOIP Service had a few too many beers last night and screwed up their CLID.
FWIW, my work desk phones at my last two jobs both omitted the leading 011 on inbound international calls' CID, so it may be a "real" international call from Ecuador. Why someone with an Ecuadorian number would be calling your cell phone is left as an exercise for the reader.
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Date: 2007-11-08 02:27 pm (UTC)... how did that work exactly?
badly-hyphenated international call?
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Date: 2007-11-08 02:33 pm (UTC)If it had been an international call I'd expect it to start with 011. I know caller ID can be spoofed, but also that it's not easy for an end user to do, so my next guess is that the engineer at Joe's Pizza And VOIP Service had a few too many beers last night and screwed up their CLID.
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Date: 2007-11-08 02:56 pm (UTC)(Hm. Steve Kropla's dialing codes site doesn't show an area code 8 for Ecuador, just 2-7.)
It can't be a US/Canada area code, since N9X is "reserved for expansion" for when we have to go to longer numbers.
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Date: 2007-11-08 03:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-08 07:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-08 03:24 pm (UTC)You might want to blur out that other number (which looks familiar, but it isn't in my address book).
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Date: 2007-11-08 07:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-08 06:50 pm (UTC)