top | item 20836018

(no title)

ozmbie | 6 years ago

Is this a uniquely American problem?

My Australian mobile phone receives maybe one spam call per year. It’s my single phone and I give out the number to various businesses and people.

discuss

order

giancarlostoro|6 years ago

It is an increasing problem. I've defaulted to never answering numbers I don't have saved unless I expect a call. If it's important they should leave a voicemail. I wanna say a few years ago it wasn't this bad, then I realized I had missed a lot of spam calls cause I had my number behind Google Voice (free with Sprint) and now it is just ridiculous.

Also idk about other states, but in FL everything is public record, so after I bought my house I've gotten spam letters and calls like crazy.

voltagex_|6 years ago

This year I've been getting three types of spam calls (in Australia):

1. Spam call from new 03 8xxx xxxx range, I was sure these were VoIP numbers handed out by MyNetFone but haven't been able to prove anything. I can't remember what the content of the call was

2. International spam call from Mozambique (?). The call never connects if I pick up.

3. Private number, recorded voice in Mandarin. I think this is a tax scam.

I'm sure I'd seen some changes in the laws regarding caller ID this year, but I can't find it.

Yes, it's much, much worse in America.

Erwin|6 years ago

In Denmark, phone sales to consumers are generally illegal though strangely insurance and newspapers are excluded.

There's a national "do not call" list you can sign up to as well. This is amusing called the "Robinson List", presumably after Robinson Crusoe. The same concept is used in a dozen other countries.

I guess the penalties are severe enough that it generally only very shady people call, such as those pretending to be from Microsoft and calling to fix your computer.

squeaky-clean|6 years ago

It's also illegal in the USA, and we have our own national do not call list. The problem is the spammers are mostly using spoofed numbers (I get calls from my own phone number quite often) and are not actually physically located in the USA. It's difficult to prosecute some call-center warehouse located in Asia.

StavrosK|6 years ago

Rather off-topic, I was surprised by how readable this was to someone who doesn't speak a lick of Danish (me):

> Robinsonlisten er opkaldt efter Robinson Crusoe, som er en fiktiv person, der optræder i romanen Robinson Crusoe af Daniel Defoe. Han strander på en øde ø og lever isoleret.

paranoidrobot|6 years ago

It's primarily an American problem, but I've seen in the last year or two an uptick in certain kinds of Spammy activity to my Australian mobile number.

The most prominent type, and have appeared in the last two years are the one-ring-only calls from some foreign country. They're trying to get you to call back to some premium-rate number.

The second are SMS based random spam. Just an hour ago I got spam from "JbHiFi" (even though it's not them, I've never given JB my number) with phishing/spam "you won a contest". I also get random SMS spam from other sources.

Then again, if you have any kind of landline in a regional area you're going to get a ton of fake NBN/Telstra/ATO/etc scammers.

jlizzle30|6 years ago

I think so. I never had this problem in Canada but it's been terrible since moving to the US.

_Codemonkeyism|6 years ago

Basically get no spam calls in Germany, sometimes from companies where I'm a customer.

0xdeadb00f|6 years ago

I'm in Australia. I'd say I get between 5-10 spam calls a year.

ben509|6 years ago

The downside of inventing it is the US has a massive amount of legacy in telephony that few other nations have to deal with. That opens up tremendous opportunities to break the system. But, hey, we get +1 as our international code, so there's that.