The Palm Beach Post

Report: Nearly half of cell calls will be scams by 2019

- By Hamza Shaban Washington Post

Nearly half of all cellphone calls next year will come from scammers, according to First Orion, a company that provides phone carriers and their customers caller ID and call-blocking technology.

The Arkansas-based firm projects an explosion of incoming spam calls, marking a massive leap from 3.7 percent of total calls in 2017 to more than 29 percent this year, to a projected 45 percent by early 2019.

“Year after year, the scam call epidemic bombards consumers at record-breaking levels, surpassing the previous year and scammers increasing­ly invade our privacy at new extremes,” Charles Morgan, the chief executive and head data scientist of First Orion, said in a blog post last week.

The barrage of fraudulent calls received by cellphone owners

has taken an even more dire turn in recent months, as scammers target immigrant communitie­s with urgent calls regarding ambiguous legal trouble.

Another popular technique spam callers use to trick people into answering their calls is known as neighborho­od spoofing.

When scammers call, a caller ID displays a local number with a familiar area code, as if the call is coming from a relative or a neighbor.

More than half of all complaints received by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission are about unwanted calls, totaling more than 200,000.

The FCC says that according to 2016 estimates, Americans received about 2.4 billion unwanted, automated calls every month.

Call-blocking apps can prevent known scammers from getting their calls in, but First Orion noted that these tools can be ineffectiv­e if fraudulent callers use numbers that aren’t already blackliste­d.

To combat robocalls and malicious caller ID spoofing, the FCC has has allowed phone carriers to block calls that may be illegal, and has pursued enforcemen­t action against scammers, issuing hundreds of millions of dollars in fines.

This year, the FCC issued a $120 million fine against a man from Florida who allegedly made nearly 100 million robocalls offering people exclusive vacation deals.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? The FCC says that according to 2016 estimates, Americans received about 2.4 billion unwanted, automated calls every month.
JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES The FCC says that according to 2016 estimates, Americans received about 2.4 billion unwanted, automated calls every month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States