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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday April 10 2019, @06:28AM   Printer-friendly
from the follow-the-money dept.

Submitted via IRC for Runaway1956

The robocall crisis will never totally be fixed

Years into the robocalling frenzy, your phone probably still rings off the hook with "important information about your account," updates from the "Chinese embassy," and every bogus sweepstakes offer imaginable. That's despite promises from the telecom industry and the US government that solutions would be coming. Much like the firehose of spam that made email almost unusable in the late 1990s, robocalls have made people in the US wary of picking up their cell phones and landlines. In fact, email spam offers a useful analogy: a scourge that probably can't be eliminated but can be effectively managed.

Finding the right tools for that job remains a challenge. The Federal Trade Commission has had a strong track record in its 140 robocall-related suits, including a recent victory at the end of March that targeted four massive operations. Bipartisan anti-robocalling legislation is gaining traction in Congress. Apps that flag or block unwanted calls have matured and are solidly effective. And wireless carriers—in part facing pressure from the Federal Communications Commission—have increasingly offered their own anti-robocalling apps and tools for free.

Yet the number of robocalls continues to hit new highs. The anti-robocalling company YouMail estimates that March 2019 saw 5.23 billion robocalls, the highest volume ever. And other firms recorded similar highs. But those numbers don't take into account calls that were successfully blocked. A more useful measure might be the number of complaints filed per month to the FCC and FTC, which remained mostly static in 2018 and the beginning of 2019.

"Even though we're at an all-time high, there's some good news," says YouMail CEO Alex Quilici. "The numbers may be creeping up a little bit, but the situation seems to be mostly stable at this point. We have not turned the corner, but maybe the corner is in sight."

In fact, some consensus has emerged about where that corner is. Industry groups led by the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions have been working since 2016 on a pair of standards, dubbed "STIR" and "SHAKEN," that will be used across landline, mobile, and VoIP carriers to cryptographically authenticate the source of calls. Basically, this means that the "spoofed" phone numbers robocallers rely on to ramp up their call volume—also the reason so many robocalls appear to come from your area code—will be easily flagged as untrustworthy.


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by NotSanguine on Wednesday April 10 2019, @11:41AM (1 child)

    You can find ineffective credit card numbers by Googling for their images. It will waste the scammers' time but won't stop the calls, because by now your phone number is on a list being circulated around India.

    What's more, as soon as you give them the cc details, they immediately attempt to charge the card. When it's declined, they say "are you sure that's the right number?"

    So no. That doesn't really waste their time. Keeping them on the phone wastes their time. Wasting their time to the point where they get your fake card details is more important than fake card details. You'd do better to go with something like "Uhh..just a minute. Where's that damn card?!? Hold on. Shit! It was right there in the drawer! Madge! Where'd you put the Visa card? Madge! I don't care if you're taking a shit. I need that card! Okay. I'm really sorry, sir/ma'am. Please just give me one more minute and I'll be right with you."

    Then put the phone down and make a bunch of noise like you're looking for something, then just go and do something else while you wait for them to hang up. Or you can do what I do. [soylentnews.org]

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  • (Score: 2) by lars on Sunday April 14 2019, @11:56AM

    by lars (4376) on Sunday April 14 2019, @11:56AM (#829332)

    I was actually thinking numbers that are still "fresh," that could be used.