I always try this but they almost always hang up instantly. I can never figure out the right answer to “We heard you were in an accident that wasn’t your fault”
I thought the play was to keep them on for as long as possible before they catch on. I had one 5 minute call talking about Air Ducks, perhaps a toy like Air Hogs, but I couldn't really understand why they needed to know how many rooms I had in my house.
I found the best response is "Have a nice day" and hang up. While we hate them, they probably hate their job too. Being "nice" and not wasting my or their time means that they practically stopped calling me.
I have searched for a project for blocking robocallers using a Raspberry Pi. Recently, I have received a lot of annoying calls on my landline phone. Surprisingly, there is a lack for solutions based on Raspberry Pi. This project [0] seems to be the best for the task. However, you still need to invest on a USB modem. The author recommends a U.S. Robotics 5637 Modem, but it is expensive, at least in Mexico. Compared to blocking ads with a Pi Hole, blocking robocallers is harder.
I don't get why we are still using Integers to do phone calls. We could solve this with either a little bit of cooperation with Google + Apple or government stepping in
flarg|4 years ago
jonplackett|4 years ago
karmakaze|4 years ago
riggsdk|4 years ago
auraham|4 years ago
[0] https://emxsys.github.io/callattendant/
flarg|4 years ago
donkarma|4 years ago
greenyoda|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
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unknown|4 years ago
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afinlayson|4 years ago
Gunax|4 years ago
jazzyjackson|4 years ago
(I kid, I am also puzzled that there is apparently no way for a network to verify a caller is a subscriber and not someone leasing VoIP numbers)