Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AT&T Advertising Cellphones Communications

AT&T, Comcast Announce Verification Milestone To Help Fight Robocalls (usatoday.com) 90

"The fight against robocalls can even bring telecom rivals together," reports USA Today: AT&T and Comcast said Wednesday that they can authenticate calls made between the two different phone providers' networks, a potential industry first and the latest in the long-running battle against spam calls... The system, which uses a method developed in recent years, verifies that a legitimate call is being made instead of one that has been spoofed by spammers, scammers or robocallers with a "digital signature." The recipient network then confirms the signature on its side. The companies said consumers will get a notification that a call is verified, but exactly what that will look like is not yet known.

Both AT&T and Comcast will roll out the system to home phone users later this year at no extra charge. AT&T also said it will introduce the feature to its mobile users this year... Other major wireless and traditional home voice providers have pledged support for the verification method, including Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, Charter, Cox and Vonage, with several announcing plans to roll out or test the feature in 2019.

The day Comcast and AT&T made their announcement, AT&T's CEO was giving a live interview that was interrupted by a robocall.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

AT&T, Comcast Announce Verification Milestone To Help Fight Robocalls

Comments Filter:
  • by Vermonter ( 2683811 ) on Saturday March 23, 2019 @01:00PM (#58320874)

    I don't want my phone to ring with a little alert that something is a scam. My phone already tells me when something is a potential scam. In fact if its a number I don't recognize, I know that 99 times out of 100 it's a scam. I want my phone not to ring at all. I want the call to get stopped before my phone is even involved. It's not answering a robocall that annoys me, it's having my phone ring in the first place.

    • There are a number of apps that do indeed block pam calls from ringing through, two I use are Hiya and NoMoRobo.

      I have for a while been mulling over building a regex based one though as it would be lots simpler and probably more effective.

    • This is why I love the Do Not Disturb mode in Android Pie (9.0) You can tell it things in great detail like "Don't ring or show a text unless the call is from someone on my contacts (or even a subset)"

      It makes all the call block apps that were necessary the past couple years completely unnecessary. I'm sure if I was in Sales or had some other reason to have to answer calls from numbers I don't know it would suck, but I identified early on in my career all the reasons I was NOT EVER going into sales.

  • Maybe 30 years ago, it would be prudent to roll it out to home first, but today? I know people my parents age, might still have a home phone (85 years old) although they don't, but it should go to mobile first. Why not? Because the mobile carriers make a ton of money off of calls, regardless where they come from.
    • I don't understand this at all - I am not 85, but I still have a phone, and it's the only thing that works reliably. I have had several cell phones, and even in Silicon Valley, they don't connect at my house reliably, they don't connect at my work (parking lot) reliably, they can't be used in the building at all (prohibited and shielded anyway), they don't work at any hotel I go to. I don't talk while driving, but when I check, they aren't connected when you are on the highway aside from poulated areas. Bas

      • Same here...I have a wired home phone for several reasons, including long-duration work- and tech-related calls.

        I can't recall the last time I got an actual legit call coming in on it, it's probably been years. The phone (2 lines, actually) are only about ~$10/month so it's not much of a cost.

        And I admit that I enjoy driving the phone scammers insane and wasting their time in all sorts of ways. It's fun and I always come away feeling refreshed at having ruined a scammer's morning or whatever.

      • I no longer have a landline because for 5 straight years, the only calls that came to it were from scammers, telemarketers and similar filth. I asked myself "Why the fuck am I paying for this?" and I couldn't find an answer, so I got rid of the thing.

        Now I do live in a major metro area, and have great signal on my cell.

        Your other points about mobile not being reliable in places away from home don't exactly do much to sell the idea that landlines are still relevant. Unless you have one really fucking long co

    • by satsuke ( 263225 )

      I work in telecommunications and can say without hesitation that there's very little new money in actual phone conversations.

      Have you noticed that even the bare bones $15 per month cellular plans are either unlimited calls, or have a large bucket of minutes assigned to them?

      The cost and profit is so low that it realistically costs more to generate an itemized bill than it does to nickle and dime people for service.

  • If a call seems to be coming from Telco A to Telco B, A must authenticate and owe a small fee to B. And vice versa. If it does not cost any money or revenue, there is no incentive for Telco A to be vigilant or sincere in the authentication issue.
    • If it does not cost any money or revenue, there is no incentive for Telco A to be vigilant or sincere in the authentication issue.

      They've made a reciprocal agreement. They both get the same thing out of it.

  • by hAckz0r ( 989977 ) on Saturday March 23, 2019 @05:18PM (#58322032)

    Wow. Its about time. It's been more than 3 years since I started writing online, everywhere I could, and telling every single service provider's support manager I talked to, that they should standardize this exact technology between all carriers. If all device connections into each telecom network were verified in a standard way, and exchanged during handover, this problem would have been solved years ago.

    The biggest problem is with the addition of VOIP, the spammers are able to put whatever they want into a database and thus spoof the number at the other end where it goes back into a telcom network. Enforcement of a digital signatures for each device would fix the problem and with that the exchanged caller id, though much larger in size, would finally be useable for something. So, If you think blocking numbers is useful or effective, you are just wasting time. A blocklist is just blocking random phone numbers of honest people who are not actually calling you anyway.

  • It's embarrassing that we're in 2019 and we can't authenticate callers. I think it's amazing that we haven't seen some massive DoS type attack because phone providers just trust each other like "Well, you're in the club, you must be legit". So now they're going to solve the problem which is caused by their inadequate system, and do it free of charge? WTF?

    Maybe instead there should be a tax on every call which is NOT end-to-end authenticated, and then let the free market take care of things.

  • [quote]...an exchange of authenticated calls between two separate providers ...[/quote] What about scam calls made _WITHIN_ AT&T or Comcast? Are they going to be screened or not? Scammers have so much power (as in admin rights), they can switch their calls thru any switch. Easy fix. Given that AT&T and Comcast, _ALLOW_ callerID spoofing. Scammers have total control over their victim's caller ID display. The fix is to _DISALLOW_ spoofing. Switch it off.

Beware of Programmers who carry screwdrivers. -- Leonard Brandwein

Working...