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The phone industry has a clever plan to stop spam robocalls
Spam robocalls are becoming more and more of an annoyance. (AP Photo)
Spam robocalls are becoming more and more of an annoyance. (AP Photo)

The deluge of spam robocalls has reached incredible heights this year, with up to 2.6 billion occurring in the month of May alone, according to the Federal Communications Commission. And it’s showing no signs of slowing down as calls are cheaper than ever to make on a massive scale.

On the other side of the table, a suite of companies, government agencies, and trade groups are all working to solve the horrible scam. And the good news is that these groups have a plan.

Despite bureaucratic challenges and an incredibly slow-moving and complex telecommunications industry, solutions are being fast tracked. The fight against robocalls is a top priority of FCC Chair Ajit Pai, and if everything goes well, the tide may turn in the robocall war in 2018.

The key to solving the robocall spam issue is putting an end to spoofing, which is when a fake caller ID shows up. According to the FCC, caller ID spoofing is the most treacherous aspect of robocalls, since people generally take caller ID at face value, which enables scams.

A license to block

In the telecommunications system, there are a series of numbers that are never assigned to anyone, and spammers sometimes use them. If a call originates with one of these numbers as its caller ID, phone companies know those numbers aren’t valid, but they rarely block the calls.

“Up until now this has been difficult due to call completion rules,” said Chris Drake, chief technology officer at iconectiv, a former Bell company that is developing anti-spoofing solutions in the robocall war. “Any blocking needs to be reported to the FCC in case there’s gamesmanship for competition.”

In March, the FCC proposed rules that would give carriers express permission to finally block these unassigned numbers without worrying about falling afoul of anticompetitive laws. With that in its pocket, carriers could also block numbers that aren’t currently in use and numbers that are likely spoofed, such as numbers for the Internal Revenue Service, which is frequently impersonated. For example, the IRS has many incoming-only numbers, so calls from those numbers are always fake and could be reasonably blocked by carriers.

Unfortunately, however, many scammers are ruthless professionals that are not sloppy. According to Drake, studies show that many scammers don’t just use the “impossible” numbers but instead are able to fake real caller IDs, perhaps to a number that looks similar to yours so you have a higher probability of picking up the call.

“No good scammer is dumb enough to use an area code that’s not real,” said Drake. “The FCC opening up call blocking is an important precedent, and as the carriers start to look for other patterns other than what the caller ID says it is a good start.” In the future, they may have to look for bizarre outgoing call patterns, crazy high call volume, and other things beyond caller ID.