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General Support => Day-to-Day Use => Topic started by: CoalMinerRetired on October 18, 2012, 08:53:28 PM

Title: FTC offering $50k to best technical solution to stop robo-calls
Post by: CoalMinerRetired on October 18, 2012, 08:53:28 PM
This was announced today. Evidently the federal government is getting into crowd sourcing.

http://robocall.challenge.gov/

http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2012/10/robocalls3.shtm
Title: Re: FTC offering $50k to best technical solution to stop robo-calls
Post by: Mango on October 20, 2012, 07:46:52 AM
I am not American so am not eligible to enter.

I think this is a very simple problem to solve.  Just create a star code that causes the service provider to log information about the call such as the Caller ID, Caller ID Name, ANI, terminating carrier, and probably other things I haven't thought of.  Advertise to users that when they receive a telemarketing call, they should hang up and dial this star code.  With that volume of data it should be trivial to analyze it and block at least the worst offenders, using a scoring system similar to the system used in email spam filters.

I do this on a small scale with my OBi110.  It's very effective, but would be even more effective with crowdsourced data.  (I can only block Caller ID after I receive and identify the first call.)

For this to produce the best data, it needs to be a free service that everyone can use.  The POTS industry isn't known for innovation, and it isn't known for providing free services.
Title: Re: FTC offering $50k to best technical solution to stop robo-calls
Post by: Rick on October 22, 2012, 09:05:57 AM
Quote from: Mango on October 20, 2012, 07:46:52 AM
I am not American so am not eligible to enter.

I think this is a very simple problem to solve.  Just create a star code that causes the service provider to log information about the call such as the Caller ID, Caller ID Name, ANI, terminating carrier, and probably other things I haven't thought of.  Advertise to users that when they receive a telemarketing call, they should hang up and dial this star code.  With that volume of data it should be trivial to analyze it and block at least the worst offenders, using a scoring system similar to the system used in email spam filters.

I do this on a small scale with my OBi110.  It's very effective, but would be even more effective with crowdsourced data.  (I can only block Caller ID after I receive and identify the first call.)

For this to produce the best data, it needs to be a free service that everyone can use.  The POTS industry isn't known for innovation, and it isn't known for providing free services.

I guess I'm not understanding how you capture information from callers that a) block caller id or b) spoof caller id.  I go in and block calls that either have callerid or spoof it, figuring whoever they spoof I probably don't want to talk to.  But I also get calls with blocked id that unless I want to block all of them I have to take.

What specifically do you do with the OBi to capture info?