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FTC Targets Group That Made Billions of Robocalls 97

coondoggie writes Given the amount of time the FTC and others have put into curing the robocall problem, it is disheartening to hear that a group of companies for almost a year have been making billions of illegal robocalls. The Federal Trade Commission and 10 state attorneys general today said they have settled charges against a Florida-based cruise line company and seven other companies that averaged 12 million to 15 million illegal sales calls a day between October 2011 through July 2012, according to the joint complaint filed by the FTC and the states.
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FTC Targets Group That Made Billions of Robocalls

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  • Call: Let me ask you a question
    Me: Click

    They had me so excited it was going to be the ones that are calling me twice a day right now. At least it's not the stupid car warranty scam again.

    • On my land line I put the phone down gently without hanging up. I figure if they want to waste my time, I should waste some of theirs.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        The brings to mind a profound application that would likely solve this problem, a turing test for robocalls. How long can a computer keep the telemarketers on line, whilst leaving you out of it all. Roboanswers for robocalls, so 'hmm' apt ;D.

      • Re:Hello? (Score:5, Funny)

        by Oligonicella ( 659917 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @06:05AM (#49187379)
        I'm meaner. I pretend to be a very old individual, making them listen closer. I play along for a few seconds, knock over a chair or table and them shout "No, no!" and scream like I'm being murdered. THEN I drop the phone down, make a few noises and then calmly hang up.

        Very cathartic... and fun.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          The fun part is that the person calling can't hang up the fun. they have rules to follow.

          once, I got a call from some these bozos, I said, "sure, hang on one sec..." I put the phone on speaker and continued with my basement remodel project...... for 2 hours this guy had to listen to me sawing and hammering etc... every now and then I'd throw a "almost done" in to let him know that I have not forgotten about this. I finally pick up the hand set and ask "am I ever going to receive a call from you people in

      • by Yomers ( 863527 )

        You mean you wasted valuable time of their calling program? They probably pay very close to zero calling rates per minute, why bother? Or there is live person that will speak to you if you do not hang up after listening to the message?

        • Re: Hello? (Score:4, Informative)

          by DynamoJoe ( 879038 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @08:11AM (#49187861)
          Yes, if you press 1 you'll eventually get connected to a soulless husk that was formerly human but now is unable to feel warmth. They're also pretty quick to hang up, so I just shout at them.
          • Well, and the thing to remember is you have no idea what actually happens when you press a button.

            Have you been connected to a pay for call service? Have they confirmed your phone number is valid? There are examples of people pressing "1" only to find a line item on their phone bill the next month.

            Honestly, the best solution I've found is to buy phones which can be programmed to block certain calls (like callers with Unknown/Private numbers). After that, I simply don't answer calls from area codes I don'

            • by praxis ( 19962 )

              There are examples of people pressing "1" only to find a line item on their phone bill the next month.

              Can you cite such an example of an incoming call placing a charge on the bill of a recipient that pressed '1'?

          • "soulless husk that was formerly human"

            Good description of someone who works for a dishonest company.
    • Here's how to handle the car warranty:

      Them: Hello, sir, you're vehicle warranty has expired. How many miles are on your [insert car here]?
      Me: A million and a half.
      Them: Oh, okay...
      Me: Give me a warranty, I just totalled that bitch.
      Them: Have a nice day, sir.
      Me: Hey, you fuck, I want a warranty. How am I supposed to afford a new car?

      Usually they just hang up as soon as you give them that kind of mileage, but you get the hang of it. They won't call back for about 6-8 months.

      • Or you could use non-standard units. And no, I don't mean switch to kilometers.

        About 14.6 football fields make up a mile, so...

        Them: Hello, sir, you're vehicle warranty has expired. How many miles are on your [insert car here]?
        Me: 68,000 football fields.

      • Hey I have always given truthful answers to those questions but with you provide an answer of 375,000 or 255,000 miles they no longer want to talk to you especially when the vehicles are 16-19 years old.
      • Re:Hello? (Score:4, Funny)

        by Jarik C-Bol ( 894741 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @11:27AM (#49189371)
        Last telemarketer call I got, I waited until the guy came on the line, then, channeling the announcer at the airport who warns that you might be a terrorist, I say
        "Thank you for calling the FBI self incarceration hotline. To surrender in english, press 1. Para espanol, oprime el numero dos."
        There is a long pause, and the guy goes "Hello?" so I go
        "To hear these options again, press 3."
        "hello?"
        'To hear these options again, press 3."
        there is this anxious pause, and then I hear the button tone.
        'beeep.'
        I nearly die of joy, and promptly start my imaginary menu from the top.
        "Thank you for calling the FBI self incarceration hotline. To surrender in english, press 1. Para espanol, oprime el numero dos."
        another anxious pause, and then:
        'Beeeep.'
        I'm not trying not to pass out from glee, so I scream into the phone:
        "YOUR A FUCKING IDIOT! NEVER CALL ME AGAIN!"

        they called me twice a day for a week after that, but god it was fun.
      • by GTRacer ( 234395 )
        I own a Mazda RX-8 with high mileage. Every so often I get snail-mail spam for an extended warranty, which I just throw out. One day, I was really bored and slightly curious about the protection, so I called them (bad form, I know). After going through a couple of menus, a friendly rep took my basic info, then frowned on his end. He regretfully informed me they don't offer warranties on RX-8s because it has a rotary motor.

        So, genius, why do you keep sending me warranty offers you can't honor?

        Somehow
  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @01:33AM (#49186549)

    Unless they settled to the tune of tens of billions of dollars, I don't see how we're going to make any progress on this.

    • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @01:39AM (#49186559) Journal
      Honestly, if we are stuck with the NSA amassing a database of all the phone calls, ever, anywhere; and a policy of using CIA killer robots on people who annoy us; I'd be a great deal happier if we at least got some visible benefit from the whole mess by using these assets to locate and terminate telemarketers. They have to stick out like a sore thumb in call traffic analysis, and I'm pretty sure that 'the corporate veil' is not rated to withstand most contemporary munitions.
      • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @02:08AM (#49186637)
        Is that a good idea? If you kill the telemarketers with CIA's killer robots, how are you going to poison the NSA database of all the phone calls? The more telemarketers we have, the more shit the NSA has to sift through.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Telemarketing doesn't poison the NSA database anymore than spam email poisons an email account with a good spam filter. Spam, whether tele or email, is highly centralized. It's trivial to ignore for those guys.

          Which reminds me, it's about time that phones get a filtering solution.

          • It's trivial to ignore for those guys.

            That's the point at which you switch to phase 2: you become a telemarketer.

          • by Yomers ( 863527 )

            In Russia somebody made an android app for blocking debt collector agencies calls. Users add offending numbers to global list. Can something like this work to filter out telemarketers or they can freely change caller id?

            • by Bigbutt ( 65939 )

              The problem still is with folks putting in good numbers. Who vets the number to ensure it's a debt collection agency? And really, at least they're legitimate companies. It's the cruise, time share, vacation, auto warranties, home loan folks that need to die in a fire.

              [John]

              • Also, as someone who works with Asterisk/VOIP... it's *really* easy to set your caller ID to any phone number you want - how about a random caller ID rotation through every legitimate phone number in the U.S.? Gonna block them all? And with text-to-speech being able to re-render variations of the message in any of dozens of voices, it could be quite difficult to pick up on patterns from audio streams. Just sayin... this problem is not easily solved. Some layer for verifiability would be needed. Maybe it's t
                • Caller ID is pitifully weak because it was never really intended to be otherwise. At least with all the telemarketer crap I've run into, it is already being spoofed, even without the widespread presence of even basic filtering tech on phones.

                  I'm sure there is some totally-innocent reason why the telcos, who are definitely in no way complicit with the spammers, continue to let end users rely on it, rather than on ANI, which actually has some hope of working because it was designed to insure that somebody
        • If they can filter out telemarketing calls via behaviorial analysis, they can simply ignore the junk data coming from those sources.

          You can't have your cake and eat it too. Simpler to just get rid of the telemarketers.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        using CIA killer robots on ... telemarketers. They have to stick out like a sore thumb in call traffic analysis, and I'm pretty sure that 'the corporate veil' is not rated to withstand most contemporary munitions.

        +1.

        Just like with spammers, the behavior will continue until those who are engaging in it start dying because of it.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        The telemarketers probably are the NSA. Think about it you have the three steps bullshit. We are looking at Jane, who regularly gets calls from this number XXX-XXX-XXXX (so happens to be their own telemarketing front).

        Next, they want to look at John and tap his phone too, but oh damn he isn't three steps away, it won't be covered by their FISA warrant. So they have the telemarketing co place a class to John.

        Great now John is within three steps. Its all nice and legal....

    • by Pinkfud ( 781828 )
      Settled? The cruise line/political survey outfit is still at it. I got their call just a few days ago.
      • These companies are like a hydra. Cut off one head and one or more grow back. That is why the FTC wants to find a better solution that can find and block them.

        I have also still been getting calls from many scam companies. When Rachel from Credit Card Services calls, if I have time I press one and engage the person. Sometimes I ask them for their company's name, then address, which normally results in hangup. Once I had a person who must have been new and who seemed genuine give me a real address that
    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @02:37AM (#49186739)

      I was hoping "settled" meant they agreed to hangings rather than impalings.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Instead of "settling" with the cruise line company behind the robocalls, they should have sunk it, like the Titanic, and let its corpse "settle" to the ocean floor. THAT might have had a chance at deterring other telemarketing ***holes.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by bobf0648 ( 3782611 )

      Unless they settled to the tune of tens of billions of dollars, I don't see how we're going to make any progress on this.

      The solution is hard jail time. I don't mean easy-living jail, I mean the baddest damn federal prison. And not just for the boss, but for everyone involved.

  • by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @01:53AM (#49186591) Homepage Journal

    WTF does "settled charges" mean? Who went to jail? Who was prosecuted? Where and when was the court case?

    • You can't be dumb enough to both not know what settled means in that context and not know how to find out.

      So I guess you're being rhetorical and trying to make a point, but are unable to not be passive-aggressive about it for some strange reason?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 05, 2015 @02:03AM (#49186623)

      However as is typical in these cases, while the settlement imposes a civil penalty of $7.73 million against CCL, it will be partially suspended after CCL pays only $500,000. Other companies involved such as Linked Service Solutions got a $5 million civil penalty but will only be required to pay $25,000.

      Why does government even pretend to work for us?

      • by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Thursday March 05, 2015 @03:23AM (#49186879) Homepage

        I would like to know: the next time that I receive a £60 parking ticket will the authorities be content with me paying £5?

        • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

          Maybe. Are you such that the chances that the government would ever get the £60 minimal? The IRS for instance has settled back taxes, fines, and other penalties for a fraction of what was owed because they realize something is better than nothing. Other civil settlements are similar. Heck, even early release/parole/suspended sentences for criminal convictions can be viewed as paying a fraction of what is actually owed.

        • I can't speak for the court system by you, but I got a ticket once for going through a stop sign. (I did a "rolling stop.") I appeared at the court house and all of the people with tickets were, one by one, being told to speak with the prosecutor at which point they'd come back with a non-moving violation and a small fine. I wound up agreeing to "parking on the sidewalk" which got me a $100 fine and wasn't reported to my insurance company. (My fine was higher than everyone else's and to this day I still

          • I wound up agreeing to "parking on the sidewalk" which got me a $100 fine and wasn't reported to my insurance company. (My fine was higher than everyone else's and to this day I still wonder if it was because I questioned the validity of the ticket since the officer wrote down the wrong street that it happened on.)

            No - its because you were parking on the damned sidewalk, ya bastard! Now straighten up and fly right.

      • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @08:33AM (#49187947) Homepage

        Yeah, not only is the civil settlement (not criminal - nobody's going to jail) ludicrous in size, it's also ludicrous that they act like it takes a multi-year investigation to figure out who's making the calls. It's not difficult, you use their service and then find out who did what. Given normal police detective work it should take up to a week tops to shut one of these operations down.

        I love how they're still talking about taking Rachel from cardholder services down a couple of years ago. How stupid can these people be? I still get calls from Rachel as well as her sister Bridgette. Hell, she even has a brother.

        Their needs to be a way to take these people's assets and throw them in jail. It's sad that we can steal a Mexican guy's cash at the side of the road because he might be a drug dealer (not that we can prove it or that we need to prove it) but get caught running an illegal business - exactly, by the way, exactly what asset forfeiture laws were created for - and you get a civil settlement of $500,000. No investigation into how much money was actually made.

        You know this guy is still doubled over in his mansion laughing at the schmucks at the FTC who were stupid enough to settle for half a million.

      • However as is typical in these cases, while the settlement imposes a civil penalty of $7.73 million against CCL, it will be partially suspended after CCL pays only $500,000. Other companies involved such as Linked Service Solutions got a $5 million civil penalty but will only be required to pay $25,000.

        Which is all to say, mere cost of doing business. I wonder is a 15 minute delay before starting up again was part of that "punishment"?

    • It means that the company gets screwed for millions of dollars all of which magically disappears into the black hole of the federal government general fund. Meanwhile, you, dear victim, will get discount coupons for cellphone accessories for obsolete phones. It's a little bit like the government promising you a tax "credit" in return for actual money paid by some private entity. You can only make use of this "credit" if you meet certain specific criteria e.g. tax bracket and taxes owed combined with astr

  • All they need to do is to pay the scammers with a CC and watch where the money goes. Then go knock some heads.

    As they say, follow the money.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      All they need to do is to pay the scammers with a CC and watch where the money goes. Then go knock some heads.

      As they say, follow the money.

      If it's that easy... Why are there still criminals?

      The sad fact is, it's not that easy. The money is funnelled through shell companies and offshore (most of the time the shell company is offshore to begin with) where it cant be traced by US authorities and then moved around a bit more for good measure (in increasingly legit transactions, but realistically it's just one front paying another until the money becomes clean enough to use).

      • I watched a news magazine show where they were able to meet up with Nigerian "my uncle the king needs you to transfer $200 million" scammers. They had little trouble meeting them in Montreal Canada.

        They went to the authorities and asked them why they didn't pursue these sorts of things and they blah blah'd about getting cooperation in Nigeria. The reality is that many of the contacts are with Nigerians in places like Canada and the UK.

        The reality was that too hard actually translated into "not easy enou
  • by mlkj ( 3794193 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @03:50AM (#49186971)

    Like this fine man did. [bbc.com]
    Then enjoy not hearing whatever they try to sell you over the sound of billing them 10p a minute.

  • Cruises? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Kazoo the Clown ( 644526 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @04:59AM (#49187179)
    I don't get cruise sales calls -- I get calls for carpet cleaning, construction contracting, phony IRS agents, and phony credit agencies. I suspect many are calling from foreign countries. They obviously aren't deterred one whit by US laws or agencies. I just use a box to screen everything unless it's on a whitelist. And blacklisted calls get a disconnected number signal. For the most part, problem solved but I can see from the call logs who's tried and what scam they are pulling by googling the number. What I wonder is, why haven't we seen a massive bust of robocall scammers by the FBI? A couple of reasons-- one, they're not in the US, two, they're paying for the call, so the phone company is making money off them, and three, rich people are mostly unaffected by and/or oblivious of the problem.
  • by sirwired ( 27582 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @06:09AM (#49187389)

    As always, the FTC "settlement" consists of nothing more than the bad guys having to mail a check for the money they haven't yet shipped off-shore and promising to Go Forth and Sin No More. Why does the FTC even bother? How is that supposed to deter anybody?

    Such a settlement might make sense if this was some minor paperwork violation of an obscure regulation, but these guys were simply pretending the law didn't exist, yet they still get off with a slap on the wrist.

  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @06:25AM (#49187435)

    Who's actually spending money on this stuff?

    I get that maybe some elderly people can be victimized by carefully tailored scams that target the elderly, but when some guy from India calls some old white guy in Indiana about his computer, is he really going to buy into it?

    And this other stuff about your credit cards, free trips, auto warranty -- who is buying this kind of thing over the phone anymore?

    • Sales is like magnetism, it's a natural force of the universe. Wrap some wire around a magnet, spin, and you've got electricity. Same thing with sales: take any product no matter how absurd, add professionals and boom, you've got a company with millions in revenue per year.
  • by DynamoJoe ( 879038 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @08:09AM (#49187849)
    We can find robocallers. We just need them to sufficiently piss off a decision maker at the NSA. Then, BRING ME THE HEAD OF "RACHEL" FROM CARDMEMBER SERVICES.
  • by SIGBUS ( 8236 ) on Thursday March 05, 2015 @09:26AM (#49188275) Homepage

    If it hasn't already happened, they'll just pop up under a new name, with a dozen new shell corporations but the same people behind it. Until they actually put some teeth behind the Do Not Call list, it's never going to stop.

  • This is a story about going after telemarketers that made calls from 2012. It's 2015, and my phone is still ringing with robocallers. At this rate, the people calling me now will be fined in 2018...

  • Like that girl back in middle school she looks good but will not deliver the goods. The government will not act in such a way to discourage the practice. The fines and penalties will be designed to insure that the company made good money and gets to keep almost all of it effectively encouraging them to keep on doing the same nonsense. You can see this same problem with companies like Microsoft that may well have been fined two billion dollars over the decades. Yet the two billion is onl
    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      If the government put the company out of business then there would be no future revenue, err, I mean fines.

  • I currently use a program that blocks calls not on a whitelist, but I miss the power of asterisk. Being able to turn my cell phone into a PBX system and treating the incoming cellular network as just another channel I can manage would be pretty awesome!
  • Can they like target them with guns? Maybe some artillery?

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