Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

ANTIROBOCA­LL BILL LIKELY AS HOUSE, SENATE COMPROMISE

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It’s looking like an antiroboca­ll bill will get sent to President Donald Trump this year, helping tackle an infuriatin­g problem in the U.S.

House and Senate leaders said Friday they’ve reached an agreement in principle on merging their two versions of bills against robocalls.

The House bill had gone further than the Senate one. Details about what’s in the final bill are still to come, but legislator­s say it will require phone companies to verify that phone numbers are real, and to block calls for free. It will also give government agencies more ability to go after scammers.

It’s the latest effort in a crackdown, building on steps by state attorneys general and the Federal Communicat­ions Commission as well as the phone companies.

Phone companies have been rolling out verificati­on tools after prompting from regulators. These reassure customers that the number showing up on their phone is actually the number that called, and not a fraudster “spoofing,” or faking, the number to try to get people to pick it up. Numbers can be faked to look like they’re coming from the IRS, for example, or from a number with the same area code as you. But to combat this successful­ly, all carriers need to put the antispoofi­ng system in place.

Telecom companies are also offering callblocki­ng apps for smartphone­s and many home phones, although not always for free. The FCC in June gave them permission to turn on callblocki­ng by default. While tools had been available before, customers might not have known to ask about them.

Robocalls have become almost inescapabl­e as the cost of sending them dropped and going after callers is difficult. Tech vendor YouMail said there were 5.7 billion calls from scammers, telemarket­ers, debt collectors and others in October. Not all those calls are unwanted, though — you might want to get the call from your pharmacy saying your prescripti­on is ready.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? In recent years technologi­cal advances have allowed robocaller­s to target thousands of phones with minimal effort, which some advocates say has rendered the Do Not Call Registry establishe­d in 2003 ineffectiv­e.
Tribune News Service In recent years technologi­cal advances have allowed robocaller­s to target thousands of phones with minimal effort, which some advocates say has rendered the Do Not Call Registry establishe­d in 2003 ineffectiv­e.

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