Sri Lanka Badu Numbers - 144-------- Skip to Main Content

Sri Lanka Badu Numbers - 144--------

The numeric prefix "144" does not exist within the official Sri Lanka Numbering Plan, and such listings in "Badu" lists are likely fraudulent scams or a misuse of the ISO 3166-1 numeric code for Sri Lanka. These lists, found in illicit online communities, often serve as mechanisms for phishing, malware distribution, and privacy violations, and should be avoided. For information on official numbering, consult the Sri Lanka Telecommunications Regulatory Commission. Sri Lanka Numbering Plan

Legal & Safety Warnings: Accessing or promoting such services may violate local laws regarding online conduct and harassment. The Sri Lanka Computer Emergency Readiness Team (CERT) advises reporting phishing or social media scams encountered during such searches. 2. Handmade Crafting: "Badu Numbers 144" Sri Lanka Badu Numbers - 144--------

—does not correspond to a standard Sri Lankan mobile operator code (which typically begin with 071 for Mobitel or 077 for Dialog The numeric prefix "144" does not exist within

A few evocative examples (hypothetical but plausible) Sri Lanka Numbering Plan Legal & Safety Warnings:

Common Scripts Used from 144 Numbers:

| Scam Type | What the Caller Says | |-----------|----------------------| | Bank Fraud | “Your Sri Lanka bank account will be blocked. Press 1 to speak to an officer.” | | Parcel Scam | “A customs parcel in your name contains illegal goods. Pay a fine via eZ Cash.” | | SIM Deactivation | “Your Dialog/Mobitel SIM will be deactivated in 2 hours due to Aadhaar (Indian scam misapplied to SL).” | | Lottery Win | “You won LKR 500,000. Send LKR 5,000 as processing fee.” |

Q2: Are all 144 numbers scams?

Virtually yes. Legitimate businesses do not use 144. The only exception could be a misconfigured corporate PBX (e.g., a company’s internal extension 144). But that would not appear on your phone with a full 10-digit number.

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