In 2019, scam calls will make up 44.6% of all US mobile phone calls, one study predicts, and that number has grown jaw-droppingly fast. It’s up from a mere 29.2% in 2018 and just 3.7% in 2017. The ballooning of scam call volumes is likely thanks to innovations in robocalling technologies, as well as a few poor legislative choices. So, what options are still left to someone who doesn’t want to answer a dozen spam phone calls a day? Presently, not a lot. Here’s a look at the dismal state of affairs today, and what you can do to combat robocaller spam in a practical manner.

Billions of Robocalls a Year

Last year saw 85 billion spam calls across the globe. The types of scams vary. Some are phishing for bank or credit information by impersonating your bank, your phone company, or the IRS. Others simply want you scare you into calling back so that they can hit you with a bill for their pay-per-minute number. But, the billions of calls wouldn’t be possible without robocalling technology, which lets scammers call hundreds of potential victims simultaneously, and saves their vocal chords by letting them record a one-size-fits-all message. Interestingly, the bank holding company Capital One bank was the worst offender by far last month, with over 23 million estimated national calls, more than double the calls attributed to the runner-up, Comcast. The US government hasn’t been of much help. You can sign up for the national Do Not Call Registry, which makes it illegal for telemarketers to call your number. But, plenty of telemarketers won’t obey, and the government can only investigate a fraction of them.

Our Current Response to Robocalls? Giving Up

What’s the impact of a quarter of a trillion robocalls per year? For starters, it appears the official answer to robocall spam now boils down to “just give up.” Robocalls are the Federal Communications Commission’s top consumer complaint, with over 200,000 complaints lodged annually. Here’s the best advice they can muster, the very first bullet point under their Consumer Tips to Stop Unwanted Robocalls and Avoid Phone Scams page: “Don’t answer calls from unknown numbers. If you answer such a call, hang up immediately.” Of course, if you’re the typical online millennial, you don’t need this advice. You’re already following it. As the 2018 Atlantic article “Why No One Answers Their Phone Anymore” puts it, telephone culture is disappearing. The younger crowd understands texting or messaging to be a far less invasive and far more practical way to stay in touch with everyone they know. Everyone they don’t know? Voicemail.

The Best Tech Solution Is Whitelisting

When it comes to blocking calls, we have two options – blacklisting and whitelisting. With a blacklist, every phone number found to be a spammer, scammer, or otherwise unwanted will be blocked from reaching you. This would have worked fine if it weren’t for spoofing, a trick that lets scammers “call” your phone from a number that isn’t really theirs. If you’ve ever picked up a call because the number had your local area code only to find a spammer, you’ve fallen victim to spoofers. Whitelisting is more drastic than blacklisting: It blocks everyone as the default, only allowing in any pre-appoved numbers from your phone’s contact list. It’s a drastic measure. Friends and family will get through, but anyone else, from spammers to legitimate callers like your dentist office or a school closing notification, will be sent to voicemail. Firewall, which lets its users only receive calls from their whitelisted contact list, represents an evolution in anti-robocall apps that’s designed to meet the rising tide of phone call spam. Sure, whitelisting essentially means you’ll never meet anyone new over the phone. But, for millennials, that’s already the case, since phone calls have become inessential next to Slack, email, and texting.   “We ran a beta with Firewall and only about 15% of the calls were on a blacklist whereas 40% of the calls were unwanted by our users. In our view (and this was supported by these beta numbers) the blacklist model is not enough to stop unwanted calls. Most unwanted calls are either not actually illegal robocalls or not yet blacklisted.” But, even whitelisting can’t solve the greater problem – robocalls are overwhelming our infrastructure with sheer force of numbers. Hospitals can’t whitelist unknown numbers, after all. When it comes to robocalls, the US needs a systemic change.

US Law Might Be Catching Up

In May 2018, the FCC issued its largest fine ever: $120 million against Miami man Adrian Abramovich, who was found to have placed 96.8 million fraudulent robocalls for vacation deals. It’s an indicator that the FCC is beginning a (slow) move towards addressing the $350-million-a-year phone-scam crisis. At least, that’s what Scott Goldsmith, who, as a partner at law firm Dorsey & Whitney, deals with alleged violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, thinks. Another signal that the government is taking robocalls seriously – the US House of Representatives just passed a bipartisan bill titled the “Stopping Bad Robocalls Act”. Among other regulations, the bill requires any robocallers to obtain the consent of those they contact.   “Bad actors who engage in deceptive calling practices by masking their true identity can harm both individuals and the companies they falsely purport to represent. Law abiding businesses spend significant resources responding to complaints by individuals who receive calls from ‘spoofers’ pretending to call on their behalf. The FCC’s forceful response in this case will hopefully dissuade some of these bad actors.” If it’s passed and enforced, the bill would be true to its name. But those are big “ifs”. Previous rulings from the FCC haven’t quite materialized. The FCC also recently issued a rule allowing carriers to auto-block robocallers, but carriers have yet to update their systems. And, according to Carter, changes in government regulations are largely behind the robocall scourge in the first place:

The Future of Robocalls

The billions of robocalls we’ve weathered over the past few years certainly seem unsustainable, and new government regulations could potentially stem the tide. At the same time, it’s unlikely that we’ll see this particular brand of audio spam fully disappear. I’ll let Carter have the last word in the near future of our battle with 85 billion annual tinny robo-voiced scammers:

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