A Different "Spoofing" Victim

  • +3
    Resident47 replies to AnnieM
    Please cite which "laws have changed recently". To my reckoning, nothing has changed all summer to the common carrier obligations set forth in the Communications Act, which is the only law relevant to your oblique claim. Your phone carrier must deliver call traffic to you without interference, it says. That condition changes only with your consent.

    47 U.S. Code § 202 - Discriminations and preferences
    https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/47/202

    Dialing my Misinformed Consumer Secret Decoder Wheel, it registers a high probability that yet again FCC declaratory rulings from three months ago have been confused with new federal laws, which must be passed by two divisions of Congress and signed by the President. We've had this discussion before ...

    https://800notes.com/forum/ta-c7f332226206a68 ... 753183657519067

    } I was informed [the carrier] can set your number to reject these calls.

    This option is hardly news to seasoned readers here. Many grew frustrated with the limited blocking offered by their carriers and have moved on to VOIP call management and/or software and hardware call blockers under user control.
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