The FCC voted to give cell providers explicit permission to stop the madness
The FCC voted unanimously today to allow carriers to block robocalls by default, setting the stage for the major carriers to take action against the surge of unwanted automated calls that basically everyone hates. The agency also voted to move forward on a proposed rule that would require carriers to adopt the SHAKEN / STIR caller ID authentication system if they don’t do it themselves by year-end.
Robocalls are one of the few issues the FCC is totally aligned on — the unwanted calls are by far the number one issue consumers file complaints about. Pai, a Republican, has called them the “scourge of civilization,” while Geoffrey Starks, a Democrat, said that the unwanted calls have “changed the fabric of our culture” when he appeared on The Vergecast last month.
The vote comes just two weeks after FCC Chairman Ajit Pai proposed the blocking rule, which he said was designed to give carriers “certainty” about whether automatic blocking was allowed or not. Carriers like AT&T and T-Mobile have offered robocall-blocking services for a while, but they were opt-in; the new rule gives them cover to enable those services by default, and restrict calls to numbers that are already in your contact list. Here’s the blockquote from the FCC press release:
Importantly, the new rule does not require carriers to turn on robocall blocking by default, and it doesn’t mandate that any such services have to be free. Chairman Pai’s official statement on the vote does not say anything about the services being free, but Commissioner Starks issued a statement today saying he does expect these services to be free. “Providers who implement these services will save billions of dollars as network capacity is freed up,” he said. “I would have serious concerns with a carrier that includes a line item on consumers’ bills or otherwise charges them for these services.”
We’ll see — carriers can’t resist a fee.
- Nilay Patel
- Nilay Patel
My take: I don't agree with Agit Pai on any number of FCC policies particularly net neutrality of which this right-wing appointed chairman has opposed and ruled against but on this issue at hand I'am mostly in agreement as are probably 99.9 of all Americans.
Pai and the right-wing love to give businesses the volunteer option rather that regulations of which we have seen so often exploited by business in the face of common sense and then with no voluntary correction from the right. So with regard to the lack of requirement this service be free and as the article ends above, we'll see.
Pai and the right-wing love to give businesses the volunteer option rather that regulations of which we have seen so often exploited by business in the face of common sense and then with no voluntary correction from the right. So with regard to the lack of requirement this service be free and as the article ends above, we'll see.
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