Baltimore Sun

AT&T to put together ‘strike force’ to deal with annoying robocalls

- By Brian Fung

AT&T said this week it’s forming a “strike force” to beat back robocalls that interrupt your dinner and trick you into talking to prerecorde­d messages, in response to mounting complaints by consumers and public officials.

Robocalls are illegal under federal law if you haven’t opted in to receive them. Yet thousands of Americans a year are being hit with automated calls and texts against their will, officials say, sometimes because t hey’ve switched to a phone number that’s already on a marketer’s list.

The strike force on robocalls won’t just involve AT&T, but also potentiall­y other wireless carriers, cellphone manufactur­ers and software developers. Its objective? To come up with ways to make sure marketers and Wheeler other robocaller­s can’t get around regulation­s and blacklists aimed at blocking those calls.

The big trick is developing technology that can better i dentify when a call is coming from a suspect source before a consumer answers the phone.

As part of the effort, AT&T said in a blog post the strike force plans to craft a “Do Not Originate” list — which sounds a lot like a “Do Not Call” list that contains a list of numbers known to generate robocalls. AT&T also vowed to embrace newer caller ID standards that could also help cut down on phone spam.

Although federal regulators last year cleared the way for carriers like AT&T to offer call-blocking services, in some cases those services charge a fee to consumers.

That’s not good enough, Tom Wheeler, chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, said in a blog post last week.

“I have sent letters to the CEOs of major wireless and wireline phone companies calling on them to offer call-blocking services to their customers now — at no cost to you,” Wheeler wrote. “Consumers want and deserve more control over the calls they receive.”

The FCC receives thousands of consumer complaints about robocalls every year. The issue accounts for the largest cate- gory of FCC complaints, and the agency now publishes data on every public complaint it receives about robocalls to name and shame the callers.

But even a quick look at the data shows it’s not easy to track down the true origins of a particular robocall.

Earlier this month, Sens. John Thune, R-S.D., and Ed Markey, D-Mass., urged carriers to do more to fight automated calls and texts by setting up a database that tracks reassigned numbers.

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