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Phone Carrier Apps Can Help Fight Robocalls -- Sometimes, Even For Free (cnn.com)

Friday CNN reported on "what you can do right now to stop robocalls."

"Short of throwing your phone in the garbage, there's no way to avoid them altogether. But wireless providers and smartphone developers offer tools to filter out at least some unwanted calls." - Verizon's Call Filter app is free to download on iPhones and Android devices. The company announced Thursday the app will offer some free features -- including auto-blocking calls from known fraudsters, showing warning banners for suspicious calls, and a spam reporting tool. For $2.99 a month per line, the Call Filter app can use a phonebook feature to look up the names of unknown callers, and it can show a "risk meter" for spam calls.

- AT&T's Call Protect has similar free features and add-ons with a $3.99 per month subscription. (iOS and Android)

- T-Mobile phones come loaded with Scam ID, which warns customers about suspicious phone numbers. It's also free to activate Scam Block, which automatically rejects calls from those numbers. An additional app called Name ID offers premium caller identification for $4 per line monthly. (iOS and Android)

- Sprint's Premium Caller ID , which comes pre-installed, looks up unknown numbers and filters and blocks robocalls for $2.99 per line.

- Google's Pixel phones also give you the option to have your voice assistant answer suspicious calls for you. The phone can transcribe the conversation and lets you decide whether to answer.

7 of 69 comments (clear)

  1. You are being CONNED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, they charge your for caller ID which is a known defective product. Now they want to charge you again for an application that tries to make up for that known defective product.

    Isn't it time TO SUE THE TELLY COMPANIES????

    1. Re:You are being CONNED by Mister+Transistor · · Score: 3, Informative

      Agreed. Those assholes are charging for "Caller name ID", then charge a monthly blocker fee, and that is limited in the number of calls it blocks.

      Assholes.

      I use an Android app called "Call Control" and it seems to be the best of the blocker apps. It does white and blacklists, and it has no limit on the number of numbers it blocks. The main feature I use it for is local NXX spoofing - you can enter a block of (Area)+NXX, which takes care of all the random fake "local" spam calls! Works great and it's free!

      --
      -- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
  2. try Hiya by FudRucker · · Score: 3, Informative

    my Samsung Galaxy S9 has it built in from the factory , plus there is an app at Google playstore for phones that dont come with it from the factory https://play.google.com/store/...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  3. $3/mo to filter spam? Nope. Try again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dear carriers, charging your customers even more money for a service that tries to solve this problem from their side isn't how this works.

    You should know the traffic that crosses your network. You already know your paying customers, and you should know your network peers. The problem you are having is that you don't know the traffic that is coming from your peers. You should be able to trust your network peer and their traffic, and your network peer should be able to do the same for you. If that's not true, drop that peer link. Over a few iterations, the shitty untrustable peers will be readily identifiable by name, and no one will work with them. Spam calls solved. You're welcome.

  4. Silent ringtone by eford49 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A silent ringtone as the default also works, if you don't mind having to maintain your own "white-list" by assigning a differnt ringtone for those you want to hear from. Best of all, this approach is free.

  5. Good reason not to pay for it by Solandri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because once everyone has paid for it, the carriers will approach the telemarketers and say "We'll let you bypass the spam blocking tool we sold to our customers if you pay us $x/mo." What's that saying about the only winner in a war being the guy who sells weapons to both sides?

  6. Re: I have had good results with Jolly Roger by c6gunner · · Score: 2

    Um. Jolly Roger doesn't do any checking/verification. You're basically filtering out any numbers you don't reckognize and sending them into the abyss.

    I use Jolly Roger too, but I would never do it that indiscriminately. Insteas I've switched to using a VoIP service, and set it up so that it presents all callers with an IVR by default. Phone numbers which I reckognize get filtered to bypass the IVR, while everyone else gets a "press 1 to be connected" message. Human callers press 1 and pass through, while robocalls get stuck there so I never hear them. Every once in a while I check the call log and look for any numbers which keep calling repeatedly without actually getting through; those get added to a filter that forwards them to Jolly Roger on future attempts, for my amusement.