Those automated phone calls during the dinner hour, late at night or to your wireless phone can be so frustrating – and the government is taking note.
The head of the Federal Communications Commission circulated a proposal Wednesday designed to close loopholes, reaffirm current anti-robocall rules, and encourage wireless and wireline carriers to do more to fight against unwanted telemarketing calls and spam text messages to consumers.
A key part of the plan: clearing up any confusion over whether the phone carriers can offer blocking services – so-called robo-blocking technology that could help people stop the unwanted calls.
“We are giving the green light for robocall-blocking technology,” FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler wrote in a blog-post on the commission website.
Phone companies have said that they worry that automatic call-blocking might run afoul of laws requiring them to connect phone calls.
In his blog, Wheeler said the technology can be offered without violating the rules. “The FCC wants to make it clear: telephone companies can – and in fact should – offer consumers robocall-blocking tools,” he said.
Another part of the plan aims to make it easier for consumers to say “no” to robocalls and texts. People would simply be able to say “stop” and cannot be told that they need to fill out a form and mail it in to get the calls to cease. And for people who switch phones and inherit a new phone number, the Wheeler proposal says they should not be subjected to unwanted calls that the previous owner consented to.
Unwanted robocalls, robotexts, and telemarketing calls are the biggest source of consumer complaints at the FCC, with the agency receiving more than 215,000 complaints last year alone.
Consumer groups praised the Wheeler plan, which the commission will vote on at its June 18 meeting.
“This should clear the way for companies to offer the call-blocking tools that people want to stop robocalls from invading their homes morning, noon and night,” said Delara Derakhshani, policy counsel for Consumers Union.
An industry group, US Telecom, said it was studying Wheeler’s proposal. “USTelecom supports the FCC’s efforts to provide consumers with options to mitigate unwanted phone calls, and to take strong enforcement actions against illegal robocallers,” spokeswoman Anne Veigle said.
She declined to say specifically whether the group supports Wheeler’s plan to allow or encourage the phone companies to offer the blocking technologies to consumers.
Another group, CTIA-The Wireless Association, said there are a number of apps and features available to consumers to help stop robocalls and other intrusions. “While we are still reviewing the details of the chairman’s proposals, we remain committed to working with all interested parties to help protect consumers while preserving choice and promoting innovation,” the association’s statement said.
A spokeswoman for AT&T referred a reporter to US Telecom for comment. Representatives of Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile didn’t immediately have a comment.
Some lawmakers questioned parts of the proposal.
Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., a member of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, expressed concern about an exception in the proposal that would allow free calls or texts in some circumstances, such as to alert a consumer to possible fraud on a bank account or to remind a person about an important prescription refill.
The proposed exemptions, he said in a statement, “will result in an increase in unwanted calls and texts to consumers without their consent.”
The commission had received more than 20 petitions from companies – including bankers, debt collectors, app developers, retail stores, and others – seeking clarity on rules pertaining to robocalls. Dozens of state attorneys general also had asked the FCC to weigh in on whether blocking robocalls might violate any telecommunications statutes.
Millions of people have placed their phone numbers on the federal Do Not Call Registry, which bars telemarketers from calling the numbers on the list. But scammers pay no attention to the registry, contributing to the many complaints about telemarketing calls to the FCC and the Federal Trade Commission. Often, it’s hard to track down the scammer making the automated calls since current technology allows them to fake or “spoof” caller ID information, so the number you see on your caller ID isn’t the real number and usually leads to a disconnected number or something other than the source of the original call.
(AP)
5 Responses
Always excluded from these laws and regs are politicians and non-profits. I can’t say that I have been deluged by politicians calling, but the non-profits have ruined my office life. I am flooded daily with tzedokoh solicitations by live operators. My standard response is that I have sworn to never, ever pledge over the phone, that I will never, ever divulge my credit card numbers, and that they are free to send me anything they wish in the mail. I have often yelled at some of these callers for beginning with the usual lie, “You were so generous to give us $36 dollars last year – can you repeat the chesed?” I never even heard of the organization, and will tell them so. Trouble is, there is no way to stop this abuse.
Yes, please, so “Rachel” from “Cardholder Services” can stop bugging me.
What is that red thing in the picture?
Mazal, you’d want to miss your “last chance to lower credit card rates”? It’s amazing how many numbers those pains have called from. My landline phone has call block, but that only works if they call from the same number twice.
BTW, would this block the guy a lot of tzedakahs hire to scream that it’s my last chance to donate this or that and win the raffle/auction/whatever? I wouldn’t miss him at all. In fact, he’s probably caused me more than once not to give to this or that tzedakah since he’s so annoying to listen to.
This is long overdue!