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John Oliver Fights Robocalls By Robocalling Ajit Pai and the FCC (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Comedian John Oliver is taking aim at the Federal Communications Commission again, this time demanding action on robocalls while unleashing his own wave of robocalls against FCC commissioners. In a 17-minute segment yesterday on HBO's Last Week Tonight, Oliver described the scourge of robocalls and blamed Pai for not doing more to stop them. Oliver ended the segment by announcing that he and his staff are sending robocalls every 90 minutes to all five FCC commissioners. "Hi FCC, this is John from customer service," Oliver's recorded voice says on the call. "Congratulations, you've just won a chance to lower robocalls in America today... robocalls are incredibly annoying, and the person who can stop them is you! Talk to you again in 90 minutes -- here's some bagpipe music."

When it came to robocalling the FCC, Oliver didn't need viewers' help. "This time, unlike our past encounters [with the FCC], I don't need to ask hordes of real people to bombard [the FCC] with messages, because with the miracle of robocalling, I can now do it all by myself," Oliver said. "It turns out robocalling is so easy, it only took our tech guy literally 15 minutes to work out how to do it," Oliver also said. He noted that "phone calls are now so cheap and the technology so widely available that just about everyone has the ability to place a massive number of calls." Under U.S. law, political robocalls to landline telephones are allowed without prior consent from the recipient. Such calls to cell phones require the called party's prior express consent, but Oliver presumably directed his robocalls to the commissioners' office phones.
Oliver told the FCC commissioners: "if you want to tell us that you don't consent to be robocalled, that's absolutely no problem. Just write a certified letter to the address we buried somewhere within the first chapter of Moby Dick that's currently scrolling up the screen... find the address, write us a letter, and we'll stop the calls immediately."

3 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Actually, John, this is a crime by sjames · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They DO have a legitimate purpose. The people being called are public officials. They are the natural recipients of petitions for the redress of grievances WRT communications in the United States. No law may abridge that right.

  2. Re: Embrace the healing power of AND by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Interesting

    On my iPhone, 90% of scam calls say "Scam Likely". The false positive rate seems to be 0% (No legitimate call has been falsely flag as a scam).

    If Apple can detect these calls, why can't the FCC require the telcos to block them? They have at least as much info about the calls as Apple does.

  3. Re: Embrace the healing power of AND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if this will help (Secure Telephone Identity Credentials: Certificates):

    https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8226

    (I just learned of it this morning; I know next to nothing about it, but it sounds potentially relevant.)