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mr__ed's avatar
mr__ed
Explorer
Jan 14, 2019

Verizon and Robocall Annoyances

For quite a while I've been deluged with scam callers accessing my cell phone. It's become so pervasive that I often don't even answer, and sure enough, when I check missed calls they're not from any of my contacts. So that means that virtually all calls received by my phone are illegitimate and unwanted. I contacted Verizon tech service to see if they could help. The tech recommended changing my number, but I refused that because I knew the scammers would eventually find me. He agreed and then mentioned an app that could be installed that could minimize these calls.


The main problem is I would need to dump my flip phone and get a smart phone in order to use the app. I really prefer my flip phone and have no other reason to own a smart phone. Unfortunately, these scammer criminals may force the issue. But I'm going to hold out as long as I can! ;)

46 Replies

  • enblethen wrote:
    Have you put your cell on the "donotcall.gov"?
    Now there's a joke. Intentional or not. That is a huge waste of resources, it does nothing. We put our phone number into the data base, a land line not a cell phone, and noticed absolutely no difference in the number of calls.

    OTOH we use NoMoRobo on our landline and the calls have dropped probably 90%.

    My opinion is that if the calls don't annoy you then keep your flip phone. When you consider the marketing for smart phones is who has the best, newest, fastest camera in their phone, that may give you an idea how much you need a smart phone. They are handy once in a great while, but mostly not so much.
  • The carrier, no matter who it is, isn't going block calls without the user telling them which ones to block, or actively opting into a service (app) that gives them permission to block calls that they deem as spam or risky. Think of the quagmire that would ensue if they proactively blocked calls to consumers that they unilaterally decide the consumer doesn't want to get. Users would be upset because that call that the carrier thought was spam was someone that they actually wanted to talk to. Businesses can sue for blocking access to their customers.

    So, the way for the consumer to tell the carrier which calls to block is through any variety of apps that are unfortunately only available on Smartphones. In 2019, it is projected that half of all calls that traverse mobile carriers' networks will be robo/spam calls. The popular smartphone operating systems come with the ability to select a call and add it to a block list manually. In addition to that, AT&T (as an example) has an app called "AT&T Call Protect." They actively classify spam, telemarketers, etc. When a call comes through it will say "Suspected Spam" or "Telemarketer" or "Potential Fraud" You can also block these types of calls through the app.

    Someone calls me dozens of times a day from a 908 number but I never see them - they're actively blocked by the AT&T app. The robocaller is so fast that it redials within milliseconds as soon as the call is rejected. Most calls come up 10 or more times in a row and all appear to be at the same exact time because it dials back so fast.



    Might be time to get a smartphone...
  • It's hard to imagine anyone responding to a robo call for anything, but someone must be or they wouldn't be doing it.
  • a smart phone is pretty much your only option. i installed the NoMoRoBo app on my iPhone 7 and spam calls dropped to near zero. that app runs a couple of $ per month but there are others.
  • Smartphones allow you to block calls. Verizon won't do anything about it. If you got a sp I doubt you'd still be saying you prefer the flip.

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