As pioneers in the field and with the collaboration of healthcare experts, we developed a range of highly advanced yet accessible solutions and functionalities.
In 1994, we bought the LIS and performed a complete reengineering of the software to integrate Windows technology. First known as Cortex, and created by Barrett Labs/3 Net Systems (California, USA) in 1983, the LIS has been distributed in Quebec since 1987. Historyįor the last 35 years, OMNI-Lab has been one of the most powerful Laboratory Information Systems (LIS) on the market.
Team member commitment, as well as product and service quality, enable us to meet our objectives and provide full customer satisfaction. Our quality assurance includes the implementation of a strict management system, continuous improvement of processes and conducting comprehensive internal audits. Our goal is to help our clients improve productivity by offering products and services that meet the highest standards, that incorporate the best solutions on the market and that offer 99.995% availability. Our OMNI-Lab LIS particularly suits medical, veterinary and clinical research laboratories. designs, develops, produces and implements fully integrated Laboratory Information Systems (LIS). If you, or someone you know has been a victim of a tech support scam, you can report the event to Microsoft online at this site: /reportascam - and tell us about your experience in the discussion thread below.Omnitech Labs Inc.
So, why would you do that with your PC? Instead of falling for the pressure tactics and assuming that the person on the phone must know more about PCs than you do, you should question how he got your number and why he's calling you out of the blue to solicit tech support services when your PC has no symptoms and appears to be running fine. If someone called you out of the blue, claiming to be a doctor, and started asking you medical questions, would you answer him? If he then told you that you had some illness you didn't know you have - even though you have no symptoms and feel fine - would you pay him money to "cure" you?
The scammers are generally intimidating and use scare tactics like telling victims that if they do not pay for support and deal with these non-existent issues immediately, they will lose data, attackers will get their personal and financial information, or their PC will crash completely. Instead of a strange pop-up message alerting you about a malware infection you don't really have, a "support technician" calls you on the phone. How does a tech support scam work? It's sort of an old-school version of a fake antivirus scam.
After granting Omnitech access to their PCs for the fraudulent tech support, some victims had malicious software installed, such as password stealing utilities that can compromise the user's personal and financial information. As if that's not bad enough, Omnitech actually introduced security issues that weren't previously there in some instances.