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FTC Offers $50,000 For Best Way To Stop Robocalls

coondoggie writes "It's not clear if the Federal Trade Commission is throwing up its hands at the problem or just wants some new ideas about how to combat it, but the agency is now offering $50,000 to anyone who can create what it calls an innovative way to block illegal commercial robocalls on landlines and mobile phones."

7 of 614 comments (clear)

  1. Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Large fines to the telephone company that passed on the robocall. That will be more than enough incentive for them to figure a solution that avoids the fines by stopping the robocalls.

  2. Stupid question from across the Atlantic: What? by captainpanic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What is a robocall? We just don't have them where I live (Western Europe).
    Also, since we don't have robocalls, and have never had them, how difficult can it be?

  3. Same way you do spam... by The1stImmortal · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just run the phone number equivalent of a blacklist directory. Exempt such directories from any legal liability, and just make it compulsory for telcos to provide (as an opt-in service) call filtering based on the blacklisting.

    The carriers always know the calling number even if the caller id is blocked, so it should work if done at the exchange.

    Alternatively, someone could throw together a little telephony device (or app in the case of smartphones) that sits in between the phone and the wall socket and queries public blacklists based on caller ID, and screens out anonymous calls.

    Not that hard surely?

  4. Re:Ok, how about this by Xest · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is the often cited excuse for not dealing with it in the UK that BT uses.

    So in my mind the best solution is to penalise BT financially for each call someone registers as being an illegal automated call. BT can then pass the cost on to whoever routed the call to them such that effectively as the cost gets passed back down the chain the cost of illegal calls eventually gets passed on to the source making it not cost effective.

  5. *FO by anyaristow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    *FO to report a call as abusive or illegal. Too high a percentage of *FO responses gets your service terminated.

  6. Re:A modest proposal by causality · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Effective deterrent? That'll be why there are no more murders in US states with death penalty then. Wake up, deterrents don't work, people don't believe they will be caught.

    Someone who would murder another human being (not talking about legitimate self-defense here) is either a cold-blooded killer or psychotic. There is something wrong with them that prevents them from considering things like the probability of getting caught, how wrong such an act would be, or that with modern forensics most murderers do in fact get caught. These are not people who think rationally and perform risk assessments prior to acting.

    Compare to the sociopaths who tend to run corporations. They are all about their own self-interests. They do consider risk, in fact it's about the only thing that can alter their decision-making. A real law with teeth that poses a real threat to their income actually would make them think twice. Combine that with how unlikely it is that they would make a perfectly untracable phone call, plus the even lower likelihood of making a perfectly untracable financial transaction for whatever business they are doing, plus the number of complaints that would result from an automated system making tons of calls, and the likelihood of getting caught is very high.

    Back on topic, I find not answering the phone works personally...

    It's the same problem you find with spam. You and I may not talk to them and buy from them, but some moron out there will. Their costs are so low that they only need a very small rate of response to make money. Passing a law with teeth that targets a few centralized assholes is much easier than convincing every moron to put a little thought into how their actions affect others.

    --
    It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  7. Re:Why the hell do phones not have a firewall?? by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My favorite is a telemarketer tormenter on Asterisk....

    http://leifmadsen.wordpress.com/2009/07/17/telemarketer-torture/

    I based it off of their ideas... I transfer the call to an extension that is nothing but random clips of someone agreeing, saying "yeah", etc... but waits for a pause in audio to trigger the next random clip. Some telemarketers wasted an HOUR talking to my torture device.

    I just wish I could do this with my cellphone.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.