FCC Calls on Gateway Service Providers to Help Track Robocalls' Origins
Phone companies that allow international robocalls into U.S. networks need to take part in efforts to trace those calls' origins, the FCC said Tuesday. It said Enforcement Bureau Chief Rosemary Harold wrote gateway service providers All Access, Globex, Piratel, Talkie,…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Communications Daily is required reading for senior executives at top telecom corporations, law firms, lobbying organizations, associations and government agencies (including the FCC). Join them today!
Telcast, ThinQ and Third Base, requesting they take part in tracking down the originators of illegal spoofed foreign robocalls. It said the seven "are uniquely situated to assist government and industry efforts to combat scam robocalls." The letters come atop proposed rules Chairman Ajit Pai circulated on Jan. 28 that would establish a registration process for naming a consortium to conduct private-led efforts to trace back the origin of suspected unlawful robocalls. Sprint, T-Mobile and Comcast on Tuesday said they had all implemented anti-spoofing technology in parts of their voice networks (see 2002040020).