On Tuesday morning, Formella stepped up to a podium and announced the calls came from Life Corporation and Walter Monk of Texas.
On Tuesday morning, Formella stepped up to a podium and announced the calls came from Life Corporation and Walter Monk of Texas.
Not sure how hard it would be, but if it’s possible the FCC really needs to get telecom companies to secure their systems to prevent number spoofing.
The telecom system is so shitty.
Isn’t that what STIR/SHAKEN was supposed to do?
They really wanted that acronym to sound cool. To be fair SBHAIUT doesn’t sound as good.
Maria Hill: Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement, and Logistics Division. And what does that mean to you?
Ward: It means someone really wanted our initials to spell S.H.I.E.L.D.
I’m sorry, are you rich or a politician? No? They don’t care enough to do anything.
Sadly it became annoyingly complicated and manual with number porting. Previously you could have just implemented “we own these blocks, this isn’t in our block, drop the call” but with number porting there are a lot of one offs to track. Not saying they shouldn’t do it, but number portability screwed with things.
If only there were some sort of way to automate handling a whole lot of numbers…
It’s not even that many numbers when the entire list could fit in memory on a modest computer.
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Sure you can. Stop watching TV, use adblockers, and for the actual snail mail, yeah, that’s a harder one, but doable.
This may be luck and based on your location, but I tried placing a “No fliers please” post it on my mailbox, and it seems to have stopped all fliers.
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Lol that’s called TV addiction! I was like you and now I am free.
I’m assuming you’re talking about actual TV viewing, right? Like broadcast TV and cable TV?
For snail mail, there are organizations that can help you with that. I can’t remember their names off the top of my head, but a quick search should help you.
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Ok, what “TV” are you watching that has ads, then? Like, Hulu free or something?
The FTC has some tips. Some of them require paying a processing fee like $4, and it “stops it for 10 years,” which is totall bullshit, but eh. I guess it’s better than nothing:
https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-stop-junk-mail
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