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AT&T CEO Interrupted By a Robocall During a Live Interview (theverge.com)

At an Economic Club event in Washington, DC today, AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson was interrupted on stage by a robocall, pausing an interview in front of dozens of people and driving home that absolutely no one is safe from the spam epidemic. From a report: Over the past few months, regulators at the Federal Communications Commission have been feeling the pressure from lawmakers and consumers who are urging them to put an end to the relentless onslaught of robocalls people receive every day. Last year, consumers received over 26.3 billion of these scammy calls and the problem only appears to be getting worse. "I'm getting a robocall, too," Stephenson said during the Economic Club event, ultimately declining the call on his Apple Watch. "It's literally a robocall."

12 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. Caller ID is a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is almost NO security whatsoever, and even a total moron can install an app on his phone to spoof somebody's #, potentally ruining the victim's life.

    To not even have the most basic security in place when it was rolled out decades ago is criminal.

    1. Re: Caller ID is a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When people pull those "swat" pranks, they are spoofing their number so it appears they are at the house they are swatting.

      Guess what, some people have died from this.

    2. Re:Caller ID is a joke by helpfulcorn · · Score: 3, Informative

      I always thought 911 was a joke, now it's caller ID too? Public Enemy will have to update their song.

      In reality, I don't answer the phone at all anymore unless it's someone on my contact list or they call repeatedly from the same number, then I know it's probably a person worth talking to.... probably.

      The question is, how long until robocallers start getting that people will do that?

  2. Shenanigans!!! by Major_Disorder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm calling it. Who wouldn't shut off their phone ringer while doing an interview? BS, pure unadulterated BS.

    --
    First law of people: People are generally stupid.
  3. Why would the telcos want to stop this? by viperidaenz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They make far too much money from people answering spam calls.

    1. Re:Why would the telcos want to stop this? by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fine the phone company for any robocall that they cannot trace. That will motivate them to make the necessary changes to track the originator of the calls, or cut-off those intermediate telcos who refuse.

  4. Load of Bullshit ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    All that is required is:

    (1) Reverse Path Verification (That is, do not accept terminations from a network that could not be the originator)
    (2) Do not permit originators to set "Caller ID" to a number they have not rented (from the provider).

    Problem solved.

    However, this will never happen because in case (1) the terminating network makes money from terminating incoming calls. They will not make this money if they refuse to terminate the call. Therefore, they have an interest in not verifying anything at all as that will adversely affect their revenue stream.

    In case (2) the provider (call originator) makes money from originating calls. They do not care that the "caller id" is fraudulent (and they know it is fraudulent because they do know which customer to charge for the call origination). They have an interest in not preventing fraudulent "caller id" since that will adversely affect their revenue stream.

    There is absolutely no need for this Stirred and Shaken crappola that will do nought whatsoever.

    Furthermore, there is no evidence that dingy-doofus was interrupted on stage by a robocall SINCE HE DID NOT ANSWER THE CALL AND NO WITNESSES HEARD THE ROBOCALL. It was more likely his boyfriend calling to remind him to bring home some more lube.

  5. Re:Anyone else had FEWER calls last 2 weeks? by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have had none this year and one last year. Unsolicited commercial call, that is. Robo-calls I never had a single one in my life. Of course, here the robo-caller pays a $50'000 fine per incident and repeat offenders may go to prison. Europe is a bit ahead of the US in these matters.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  6. The irony is ... by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... the call was to ask if he was happy with his long-distance phone carrier.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  7. Robocalls are impossible to stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... says only country where this regularly happens.

    You just gotta get over the idea that everyone has a god given right to advertise to anyone anywhere. But getting that particular meme out of the US consciousness is going to be difficult.

  8. The advice on robocalls is wrong by Vermonter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We're always told - don't pick up, don't engage. But the truth is, if we want to stop these robocalls, then if you can you *should* answer, you *should* engage, and you should try to keep a live person on the line with you for as long as possible. This will cost the scammers money... after all, talking to a human isn't free; that human is getting paid. Or if they aren't paid by the hour, then if they are busy with you who (presumably) knows its a scam, then they are unavailable to be scamming others.

    If we as a culture decided to waste a few minutes of the scammers' time with every phone call, then they would quickly lose their value, and many scammers would go out of business.

  9. Re: No issue where I am by Frederic54 · · Score: 5, Funny

    > > The US is a target because everyone knows our language and we have money.

    > That doesn't explain why this problem doesn't exist in the UK and Ireland.

    Because you don't have money?

    --
    "Science will win because it works." - Stephen Hawking