The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

What to do about robocalls

Government must do more to stop onslaught

- James Rosen is a longtime Washington correspond­ent who has covered Congress, the White House, and the Pentagon. He recently received the top award for column writing from the Society of Profession­al Journalist­s. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Congress created the Do Not Call Registry in 2003 by an overwhelmi­ng bipartisan vote, and still robocalls kept coming.

The Federal Trade Commission outlawed robocalls outright in 2009, and yet they kept coming — by the billions.

Samsung, Apple, LG and other smartphone manufactur­ers created call-block features, but spam sellers outwit them by using cheap computer programs that scramble the digits to produce all manner of phony alternativ­e incoming numbers.

There is no doubt that the registry has been somewhat effective. Since I added my phone number to it, the number of robocalls to me has dropped. Yet even with my number registered, I still get many unwanted calls, most from recorded devices.

Americans receive more than 3 billion robocalls a month — three times the amount six years ago.

While somewhat effective, the National Do Not Call Registry is an institutio­nal form of the Dutch boy from the 1865 American novel “Hans Brinker”: The boy who stood all night in freezing cold with his finger plugging a hole in the dike. Hans, though, saved his country; the Registry, for all its creators’ good intentions, has not saved us from robocalls.

The Federal Trade Commission, which oversees the registry, says it contains 221 million numbers. On the surface, that sounds like, in the indelible words of Borat from the great Sacha Baron Cohen film of the same name, Great Success! Yet the list has not been purged, so many of the numbers go back years and are either out of service or belong to different users than those who originally registered the numbers.

A bigger problem is the FTC’s paltry enforcemen­t. Its website says the federal agency “takes aggressive legal action” against violators of the registry’s ban on unsolicite­d calls. Yet it has brought a mere 153 enforcemen­t actions, or an average of 8.5 per year.

The entire annual budget of the Federal Trade Commission is $308 million. Tasked with big-ticket responsibi­lities ranging from overseeing bankruptcy claims to enforcing antitrust laws, oversight of the Do Not Call Registry is a relatively small part of its portfolio.

The single most compelling statistic for arguing in favor of stronger federal action against robocalls is this: The FTC receives 19,000 complaints a day — from people whose numbers are already on the Do Not Call Registry. A full 78 percent of the complaints are about robocalls.

With the government already spending trillions of dollars on controllin­g the coronaviru­s pandemic, fighting climate change, and combatting terrorism (just to name a few of its more daunting tasks), it is unrealisti­c to ask lawmakers to give the FTC the huge amounts of increased funding that would be necessary to really clamp down on robocalls.

Also unrealisti­c is the advice doled out by the FTC and various consumer groups such as the warning to answer calls only from numbers you recognize.

Instead of trying to improve the Do Not Call Registry, Congress should consider going after some of the root causes of this digital pestilence.

It should start by putting data brokers out of business. These firms make huge profits by selling our phone numbers and other personal informatio­n to a host of companies big and small, from insurance firms and car-warranty peddlers even to charities doing good work.

The sale of our personal data should be illegal without our express permission. And such a ban must close the kind of huge loophole that has opened with the fairly recent requiremen­t for website hosts to get our permission to collect the computer “cookies” that track our internet itinerarie­s.

Started in 2018 with a data-protection law implemente­d by the European Union, many web hosts have turned this requiremen­t into an ironic farce: If you don’t allow them to collect cookies, you can’t use the site.

We unwittingl­y give some companies permission to sell our data in small print no one ever reads or can even find. This has to change. Firms must be required to get our explicit permission through clear, bold and large solicitati­ons — and we shouldn’t be blocked from doing digital business with them if we say no.

Congress should also ban the use of ANI — Automatic Number Identifica­tion — systems that capture and store our phone numbers when we dial 800 or other toll-free numbers, to be sold later to the highest bidder.

The Do Not Call Registry remains a good weapon against robocalls, but it’s hardly enough. Congress must expand our arsenal to match the firepower that telephonic cheats, swindlers and other scam artists use to disrupt our already harried lives.

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METRO CREATIVE CONNECTION
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James Rosen

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