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Forum S.N.A.F.U. Project - Spoofers Need A Final Undoing
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Forum Thread Details
  • State Verified Answer
  • Replies 8 replies
  • Answers 6 answers
  • Subscribers 11 subscribers
  • Views 1320 views
  • Users 0 members are here
  • telemarketers
  • robocalls
  • caller id spoofing
Related

S.N.A.F.U. Project - Spoofers Need A Final Undoing

rmcoutu33mcintoshent
rmcoutu33mcintoshent over 7 years ago

Victim less Crimes? Robocalls, Caller ID Spoofing, IRS Scams, These are all things associated with having a telecommunications contract which pretty much affects anyone these days. there are unscrupulous persons all over the face of the earth using VOIP and spoofing services to conduct robocalling campaigns with the intent of defrauding our loved ones and it goes on 24-7 all year long. I am asking the Element 14 community to engage into combat with these insensitive individuals. Technology has been created to allow us to avoid the unwanted annoyances of greedy Telemarketers using Caller ID, Caller ID spoofing has been the criminal response. What some individuals have done is create electronics to weed out robocallers(Tele-zapper,CPR5000, and a number of devices that function so poorly they are no longer available)

 

 

Cutting to the chase, it would be wonderful/and profitable if a member of the community could develop a device that can use the spoofed caller ID information by calling from a celular phone connected via USB dongle to confirm if the ID'd # is indeed busy, and not spoofed to allow the caller to dial 1 to be routed to the base station and either be answered by user or leave a message. In the event the cell call gets a cant't connect , or this number is out of service message, the caller gets disconnected. If the device could access a database of suspected robocall numbers to preempt the previously described process and then follow through on Spoofed call detection that would streamline the call screening process and put a serious SNAFU in the scoundrels process.                                                                                  

 

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Top Replies

  • DAB
    DAB over 7 years ago +9 suggested
    I have a simpler approach. I no longer answer my phone unless I know the number on the caller id. I have told everyone I know that I will pick up their call if they just identify themselves and so far…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 7 years ago +7 suggested
    It's the automated call systems that are annoying. They will ring until one actively mutes the phone, and they can repeat daily, and they are smart enough to hang up the call quickly if they hear silence…
  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz +4 verified
    Many of our annoying calls from "Microsoft" are skype type calls and targetting landlines. The game here is to string them along for as long as you can, so it delays them ringing someone else. For NZ based…
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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 7 years ago

    It's the automated call systems that are annoying. They will ring until one actively mutes the phone, and they can repeat daily, and they are smart enough to hang up the call quickly if they hear silence. But basically there is a lack of intervention by government and service providers. Often the systems will originate calls from another country, to make it harder to initiate legal proceedings, and also because then it's easy to modify the caller ID presentation number to make it harder to block a specific number.

     

    Although there are some suboptimal workarounds (like apps on mobile phones) I think its at the point where a technical solution is not needed for the end user, but for governments to enforce service providers to do something about it, because they can easily see that the calling number is different to the presentation number (they are two separate fields in the out-of-band data when a call is set up from one network to another). We don't have access to that difference by the time the call arrives on our phones, it has been filtered out by the service provider.

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Many of our annoying calls from "Microsoft" are skype type calls and targetting landlines.

    The game here is to string them along for as long as you can, so it delays them ringing someone else.

     

    For NZ based phones if you prefix with 192 it stops the caller ID from being sent, so there is no system (apart from DAB ) that can be used.

     

    However lately the game is to call mobiles in the hope the missed call will prompt you to call back, and they charge like a wounded bull.

     

     

    I'm also aware of a payback for an automated dialling system ....

    The business was using an automated calling system to annoy everyone, so someone decided to turn the tables and set up an automated caller to ring them all day and played music.

    They decided to stop auto dialling if the calls stopped.

    It was on the news which gave anyone else the warning as well, and so far we've mostly avoided a repeat.

     

    They make the mistake here of calling between 6 pm and 7 pm when most people are home watchign the news.

    Our first comment is "wonder what they are selling", and sure enough ...

    I like the ones that say we'll be in your area, and when asked what area that is, the response is 20km away ... I usually respond with  "good luck then, I'm not there and hang up".

     

    But yes telemarketing is annoying and not going away.

     

    mark

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Many of our annoying calls from "Microsoft" are skype type calls and targetting landlines.

    The game here is to string them along for as long as you can, so it delays them ringing someone else.

     

    For NZ based phones if you prefix with 192 it stops the caller ID from being sent, so there is no system (apart from DAB ) that can be used.

     

    However lately the game is to call mobiles in the hope the missed call will prompt you to call back, and they charge like a wounded bull.

     

     

    I'm also aware of a payback for an automated dialling system ....

    The business was using an automated calling system to annoy everyone, so someone decided to turn the tables and set up an automated caller to ring them all day and played music.

    They decided to stop auto dialling if the calls stopped.

    It was on the news which gave anyone else the warning as well, and so far we've mostly avoided a repeat.

     

    They make the mistake here of calling between 6 pm and 7 pm when most people are home watchign the news.

    Our first comment is "wonder what they are selling", and sure enough ...

    I like the ones that say we'll be in your area, and when asked what area that is, the response is 20km away ... I usually respond with  "good luck then, I'm not there and hang up".

     

    But yes telemarketing is annoying and not going away.

     

    mark

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  • rmcoutu33mcintoshent
    0 rmcoutu33mcintoshent over 7 years ago in reply to mcb1

    Being in a position where my significant other is undergoing treatment for renal cancer we can't afford to ignore a tele # from out area code spoofed or not. This makes a painful situation So much more difficult. Telemarketers suck the marrow from our elderly bones!

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to rmcoutu33mcintoshent

    This makes a painful situation So much more difficult.

    Sadly something you can't avoid, and good luck on the treatment.

     

    Here in NZ there is supposed to be a black list that all members of the Telemarketers are meant to abide by.

    Not sure if there is one in your location, and whether they will honour it.

     

    The telecom companies here have banded together to help isolate and hopefully eliminate many of the overseas calls that are 'spam/false/just a nuisance' as they realise it is impacting on their network and customers.

     

     

     

    You realise that once you've found a solution, they'll find a way around it.

    It's very similar to making something idiot proof ... there's always a better idiot around the corner image

     

    Mark

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  • neilk
    0 neilk over 7 years ago in reply to mcb1

    A long career in front line software development and implementation with non-technical users has taught me that there is no such thing as "idiot proof" !!!

     

    Neil

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