• unitedwithme@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    Fucking idiots!! What about all the VoIP phone apps? What about number spoofing apps?

    It’s illegal and happens anyway right now, so how would this actually stop any of them from happening? You know what would probably REALLY actually help?! Stop these fucking companies from buying and selling consumer data like commodities and there amount of phone calls would likely drop. No access to numbers means no way to know what number is active. It’d be a huge waste of time and deter these bad actors probably better than what’s in place now.

    For anyone who wants relief: start by switching to a private messaging so like Signal and get your friends/family to switch. Get a new phone number and ONLY share with those who needed it for emergencies. Get a “burner” app # from Burner, Hushed (or hell, even Google voice with a junk account if you must) etc to use for banks, utilities, job applications, etc. Forward those calls through the app to your main number if preferred for calls it send them straight to voicemail.

    You can also look into getting a private SIM service from Calyx https://calyx.org/membership/internet if you really don’t want carriers tracking and selling your data, too.

    I have a referral link, too, for a free month. https://members.calyx.org/r/iarby

    • Hawke@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      You know what would probably REALLY actually help?!

      Requiring the phone companies to authenticate the incoming calls. They know perfectly well which numbers should be coming in from where.

    • dmtalon@infosec.pub
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      1 day ago

      Getting a “new” phone number might be a way to disconnect you from that number if you keep it on the down low, but there’s a high probability your gonna get someones old number that died or lost it and has LOTS of people/companies that wanna contact this number.

      When my son got a phone (and number), the previous owner didn’t tell anyone, not her pharmacy, not her friends and family. It took a long time to get all that BS behind us.

      Curse you “Darla”!

      • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Yep. Got a new phone number several years ago and inherited multiple automated callers for “Arturo”. I got another call today - still can’t get rid of them.

      • lost_faith@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        2.5 years later my work phone is still getting contacted for the previous owner. Last text was last week and was a tech support call for a blue screen reboot loop, I answered that I saw the issue, windows. so I suggested linux or contacting their actual support

    • alakey@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      Get a new phone number and ONLY share with those who needed it for emergencies.

      Not a bad advice, but depending on where you are that might not do anything. I bought a new SIM recently and it was getting spam calls before I even added a single contact. Slapped SpamBlocker from F-Droid on it immediately.

      • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Yeah. The thing about new phone numbers these days is they are generally reused numbers someone else didn’t want. So you’ll still get the same spam calls, they just won’t necessarily be addressed to you.

      • unitedwithme@lemmy.today
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        1 day ago

        Nice! That so actually works? Most carrier blocks will stop the calls from ringing but I still get a voicemail from them.

        • alakey@piefed.social
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          1 day ago

          You can choose to reject it, which is what my Google Phone app does by default when I block a number, or accept it to instantly hang up. I just chose the reject option, most calls stopped completely after a couple of weeks. I do not use voicemail, so not sure how it interacts with that. The app also has an option for a subscription (as in you just insert a link) to an ever updating list of spam numbers, but I just went with not my contact = no business calling me.