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Government Communications United States Technology

A Bipartisan Bill That Could End Our Robocall Hell Just Passed the House 429-3 (gizmodo.com) 99

The Stopping Bad Robocalls Act passed the U.S. House of Representatives by a nearly unanimous vote, with only two Republicans and one independent voting against the bill. Gizmodo reports: The bill, sponsored by Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, prescribes strict regulations around the use of automatic telephone dialing systems or other artificial or prerecorded messages. The bill specifically requires any entity making robocalls to first obtain the consent of those being called. The bill also requires the creation of reliable mechanisms whereby consumers can withdraw their consent. Emergency services and certain non-commercial entities would be exempt from the new regulations, which would be enforced by the Federal Communications Commission. If passed, the law would also prohibit phone companies from passing on the cost of robocall enforcement to consumers in the form of line-item charges. The bill now heads to the Senate where it's expected to pass without hardly any resistance.
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A Bipartisan Bill That Could End Our Robocall Hell Just Passed the House 429-3

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  • by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Thursday July 25, 2019 @05:54PM (#58987494)

    But I will take it!

    They should have made is so that people can force Telco Companies to back bill the robo-callers and credit the callee. Would have been far more fun!

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by taustin ( 171655 )

      I'd be happier if it included a mandate that I can block all calls originating in a foreign country, and all calls that come through the internet (and it'd be nice to have a whitelist capability for specific numbers, too).

      Because that's where most of the robo-call criminals are calling from. I do not foresee the FCC doing much enforcement in, say, China or India.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Probably wouldn't be effective though, as they usually use an IP connection to the US which only then hits the POTS network, meaning they get billed only slightly more than a local/national call despite it being international.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      - Give the end user a *50 type code to dial to report the prior call as a robo call
      - Charge the carriers via FCC fine $0.01 per reported robocall
      - Prevent persons dialing your number from using computer programs for interactive voice response unless the very beginning of the call states it is a computer. The "Hi my name is Susan, and I'd like to ask you a question about insurance" with a set of single word yes/no/number questions should be prohibited unless directly stated before the call begins.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Thursday July 25, 2019 @05:55PM (#58987498) Journal
    We might see a brief reprieve of a few months to a year or so, and then the scammers will find a loophole, and we'll be right back to where we were.
    • by marcle ( 1575627 )

      This, although I doubt there will even be much of a pause. The scammers have found a loophole in the international calling system, and all the legislation in the world isn't enough to rewrite that software now that it's the backbone of our telephony. Any technical solution will be expensive (read: unlikely) and very difficult to deploy throughout the system.

      • They already have; at least with all the text messages I was constantly getting offering free loans, Amazon gift cards, and other crap. The SMS have stopped...so now I'm getting MMS messages from various addresses xdqfv@svmwbz.com offering me a "CVS Gift Reward". svmwbz.com was just created today, less than an hour and a half ago, and it's already on one blacklist. But my carrier AT&T could probably care less; but this is NEW behavior.

        As a side note, MMS spam doesn't even seem to have an actual categ
        • by Cederic ( 9623 )

          So report it as unwanted spam messages. The FCC shouldn't expect you to be able to differentiate between SMS and MMS; if they don't recognise the difference then join them by indicating you've had spam SMS.

    • We might see a brief reprieve of a few months to a year or so, and then the scammers will find a loophole, and we'll be right back to where we were.

      The biggest loophole to plug is to technologically prevent spoofing a phone number you do not own. If scam boiler rooms can't spoof my neighbor's phone number, if the Caller-ID has two possibilities: "Really Truly The Actual Caller" or "None", I can continue to block all "None", and only answer the phone if I know the caller.

      Or maybe even get around to setting up a VoIP system where only callers in my phone book ring through, all others go directly to voicemail.

      I don't see how the scammers will get around

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        By spoofing numbers in your contact list, obviously.

        While the chance that they might guess a number in your contact list is remote, it is possible, especially if you have a company's 1-800 number in your contacts or something similar. All they have to do is get lucky at guessing which companies you might have dealings with and they get through.

    • Have you not had a reprieve lately anyway? Six months ago I got multiple spam calls daily from what looked like local numbers. Three months ago I got multiple spam calls daily from "Spam Likely". For the last month, I've had maybe one or two a week get through. T-Mo has really been on the case.

  • Toothless (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25, 2019 @06:00PM (#58987526)

    The bill specifically requires any entity making robocalls to first obtain the consent of those being called.

    That was already the law. The problem is people are ignoring it. And spoofing caller ID. And worse. How about making a law that forces the telephone companies to disallow spoofing caller ID? Especially since they're the ones that make it possible for their spamming customers?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "GOP Representatives Andy Biggs and Thomas Massie, as well as Rep. Justin Amash, who quit the Republican party earlier this month, voted against the bill. The lawmakers could not be immediately reached for comment."

  • ...and certain non-commercial entities would be exempt from the new regulations

    I seem to recall that with previous laws (possibly the national do not call list) there was an exception made for political campaign calling. Maybe some particularly diligent person around here feels like RTFB and reporting back whether they've given themselves an exemption yet again? (H. R. 3375, I think. I tried control-f-ing but came up empty handed.)

    • The bill just patches up the previous law. It looks like it doesn't alter the previous exemptions. Sad. Near elections, the campaign calls are the bulk of nuisance calls.
  • You guessed it: Frank Pallone
  • by Anonymous Coward

    If you expect the FCC to actually enforce this in a meaningful way, you're living in a fool's paradise.

  • by therealkevinkretz ( 1585825 ) on Thursday July 25, 2019 @06:43PM (#58987746)

    Seriously?

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Thursday July 25, 2019 @07:03PM (#58987858) Homepage Journal

    Sorry, the majority of these calls are originating out of IP telephony banks.

    There's pretty much NO way to track these.

    • Yes there is, when they originate a large volume of reported spam/fraud/telemarketing/robo calls

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25, 2019 @07:56PM (#58988114)

      They are quite possible to track.

      At the point it leaves the IP network and enters the PSTN network, a telco
      is routing a call for a customer. That customer is breaking the law. The telco
      (or the authorities anyway) can find out who that customer is from the payments
      they make.. The banking system makes that possible. If the customer is using
      some sort of anonymising payment network then ban the use of those in telecom.
      Problem solved. That customer i.e. which ever bullshit US/Indian/Chinese company
      it is, is charged with the offense. Probably they should also go after the directors of
      the company, that is likely to be more effective.

      It will turn into whack a mole for a while as the telcos are closing crooked accounts
      and the crooks reopen new ones. But that will really slow them down, and also increase
      the chance of them making a mistake and getting caught.

      I run a telco here in Japan, and we have to report end customer names to the Police
      regularly. They try to hide behind circuit aggregators, but we threaten to cut those
      aggregators off if they dont tell us who the crooked end customer is. It does work. Far
      fewer spam calls here.

    • "There's pretty much NO way to track these."

      The telephony provider knows who to bill for each call, so just make them liable for the fines if they cannot pass the fine through.

  • Some robocaller bribes Mitch McConnell.

  • by OYAHHH ( 322809 ) on Thursday July 25, 2019 @07:36PM (#58988024)

    That cannot be spoofed.

  • It will be because our Congress actually did something useful for once.

  • I used to have a political science professor who'd always pontificate about "you can't have international law without international law enforcement." How, praytell, is this bill going to stop robocalling? Anyone who's already ignoring the Do Not Call will ignore these restrictions, too (especially those offshore). Laws are useless; we need technical solutions.

  • "The bill now heads to the Senate where it's expected to pass without hardly any resistance"

    Does that mean "WITH resistance"

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