The FCC Aims to Stem Robocalls But ATT, Verizon and T-Mobile Say Wait

Billions of Robocalls

Consumers get billions of robocalls and many if not most of them come from overseas locations including India and the Philippines.

On September 28, the FCC seeks to implement foreign provider regulation that would block most of these incoming calls.  

Under the proposal, foreign carriers have to be approved by the FCC and those spamming calls would be blocked.  

Rule Challenge

Several big phone companies say they are On Board With Robocall Blocking, Just Not Now. 

“We strongly support the direction the FCC is going to address the foreign robocall problem, to police the edge of the U.S. telephone network,” Verizon associate general counsel Christopher Oatway said in an interview. “We would like to pause the process, reexamine what needs to be done and continue to work on ways to create effective barriers to these incessant calls.”

“A slight pause could be helpful” to address unintended consequences, he said. “If the foreign providers aren’t making every effort to complete and certify compliance, there needs to be consequences for that.”

ATT said that legitimate calls might get blocked. The Example ATT gave was a US citizen in India tries to call home but the call initiates from a carrier who is not an approved and thus the call is blocked.

David Frankel, the CEO of a Utah based conference call provider was the only person against the delay citing WiFi, texting, and initiating a call from a hotel as a work around.

“How many Americans are overseas in circumstances where they are trying to call home this way, versus how many people are being bombarded with these illegal calls?” he asked.

There is also a loophole in the regulation in that it only pertains to direct calls not calls that go through a middleman.

The obvious remedy is of course to close the loophole. 

Mish

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13 Comments
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holliweb12
holliweb12
4 years ago
If you are a customer of Publix then you must take part in the Publix survey cause Publix organized.  http://surveysguide.onl/
njbr
njbr
4 years ago
I get calls from my friend “Scam Likely” multiple time a week.  We don’t talk for long, but my favorite opening line from her is “Wait!! Don’t hang up….”
Steve_R
Steve_R
4 years ago
This was  a problem 3 to 4 years ago, not a problem anymore, very few calls of this nature ring anymore. AT&T telemarketer option takes them out. Not sure of Verizon or Tmobile.
thimk
thimk
4 years ago
well , how did the “robocaller” get your phone number ??????? I seem to get many unsolicited phone calls after I  initiate a new online service or sign up for  some sort of vendor discount program . hmmm
 
QTPie
QTPie
4 years ago
Reply to  thimk
It’s very simple… the scammers just dial numbers at random. They don’t “get” your number specifically from anyone.
Casual_Observer
Casual_Observer
4 years ago
At the point where everyone has a cell phone, the wireless carriers can only poach customers from one another using ..wait for it…robocalls.
Casual_Observer
Casual_Observer
4 years ago
As evidence of this I got a phishing attempt by T mobile which resulted in routing a call to their call center that said I had changed my service from Verizon to T Mobile. It goes to show how desperate T Mobile is to acquire new subscribers. A few years ago AT&T did the same for wireless digital TV service to steal subscribers from Dish Network. It is a zero sum game for some businesses.
bubblelife
bubblelife
4 years ago
If I don’t recognize a caller I block the number. See ya later. 
BoneIdle
BoneIdle
4 years ago
Reply to  bubblelife
I just set my cell phone to only accept calls from numbers in the contact list.
All others get routed to voice mail. Legitimate calls leave a message.
bubblelife
bubblelife
4 years ago
Reply to  BoneIdle
aka Silence Unknown Callers 
QTPie
QTPie
4 years ago
Reply to  bubblelife
It’s not that simple. Occasionally someone bone fide that you don’t recognize their number might call you.
Jojo
Jojo
4 years ago
So why do the telco companies want a delay?  Is it because of the money they stand to lose from robocalls?
davebarnes2
davebarnes2
4 years ago
I suppose that CIA-initiated kidnappings of robo-call firms’ owners are not allowed.

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