That's exactly what they're doing now.@Ted DuPuis
Almost all of the calls I get on my cell follow a very predictable pattern.
@ Noontime almost every day I'll get a call from some unknown number from some far flung place. Today was New York but it's sometimes California, many from Texas (they really like the 214 area code), New Jersey, Florida, where ever. I don't answer it, of course.
Then, shortly thereafter, always within 30 minutes, I get a call from my own area code and prefix. And, again, it goes unanswered.
This literally happens almost every day.
I get a few others at random but they're far less common.
BTDT. Evidence was slightly different in my case, but equally convincing.And now my number has been spoofed, as I just got an auto-text response from a number sharing my exchange saying "sorry, I can't talk right now."
I called VZW and from the person I talked to it sounds like they might be pushing forward with the FCC and doing something to combat the number spoofing.
I don't answer any call from any number that doesn't register as someone I know. Maybe I'm weird, but I avoid phone calls at all costs.......any excuse to not answer my phone I will take. Unless it is my wife, or my boss (maybe that is a redundant statement), or I really want to talk to you, I'm not answering, much less some unidentified number. Try my method for a month, I promise you will have much less hate and discontent.
Doesn’t work for those of us perennially on-call. The proper fix is a root-cause fix. Block the garbage at the source as a policy of the network.
I don't answer any call from any number that doesn't register as someone I know.
What do they need the FCC for? They’re allowing the spoofed numbers in at their edges from their own customers, let alone the ones allowed by their competitors.
All the domestic carriers have to do is block any CID sent that doesn’t match a registered DID for the circuit and demand customers who need spoofing (to display an 800 number for a legitimate call center for example) prove they own the number prior to allowing the customer premises gear to send it.
Otherwise send, “Unavailable” or no CID at all. That’ll motivate any businesses who miss the deadline to fix it.
I think they fed you a line of BS if they think FCC has to be involved.
Prove the business that has the trunk owns the number or no CID ingress at the edge. Done. The carriers can implement it any time they like. Accepting CID on a trunk is not a regulated service required item. They can put whatever limitations on it that they like.
Drop inbound calls from other carriers who refuse to do it, straight into voice mail. That’ll get the others to fix it real quick.
I’ve got a phone system bug right now that under a very specific condition it’ll spoof out a trunk ID number that’s meaningless. Called party gets a five digit caller ID number.
My carrier lets the call go out, which I’m thankful for while I get Avaya to fix their crap, but they could just drop it.
That’d actually get me the opportunity to yell at Avaya for an actual Sev-1 outage and make them drop me a patch NOW instead of waiting months for their stupid idiot software group who keeps closing the ticket after reading the logs showing it happening, to actually fix it.
I don't think the carriers will ever fix it voluntarily.
As far as scammers getting clever, local news station other night had story on this and one of the anchors said he recently received a call from his OWN number?
For some of us, the problem isn't answering the call - it's that it comes through at all. I don't answer the spams either, but I still have to pull the phone out to check if it's a call I want to take. And if it happens while I'm teaching... well, that's just unacceptable. If I could be sure that DND would keep the phone from ringing I'd rely on it, but I already know it doesn't. Not even airplane mode blocks all calls, at least as of last year.*I don't answer any call from any number that doesn't register as someone I know. Maybe I'm weird, but I avoid phone calls at all costs.......any excuse to not answer my phone I will take. Unless it is my wife, or my boss (maybe that is a redundant statement), or I really want to talk to you, I'm not answering, much less some unidentified number. Try my method for a month, I promise you will have much less hate and discontent.
I'm talking about the controls in Settings, I've never used the Control Panel controls for that. The only time I manually turned off wifi while in airplane mode was a couple of times when I was getting spam texts coming through while lecturing, back when I carried my phone with me. At that time I needed to manually turn it back on after turning off airplane mode to re-enable it. It's been a while though, so I'm not sure whether that was under iOS 10 or 11.@azure WiFi and Bluetooth have had “persistence” since iOS 11 was released.
They’ll stay on if you turned them on this time you activate airplane mode, if either one was turned back on individually while airplane mode was active the last time.
Or put another way, whichever one you activated during airplane mode the last time you were in airplane mode will stay active.
https://www.macobserver.com/tips/quick-tip/airplane-mode-ios-11/
Also Control Panel Bluetooth and WiFi “off” buttons don’t really turn either one off anymore. They just force a disconnect from whatever devices you’re connected to. You have to go into Settings now to truly turn them off while not in airplane mode.
@azure WiFi and Bluetooth have had “persistence” since iOS 11 was released.
They’ll stay on if you turned them on this time you activate airplane mode, if either one was turned back on individually while airplane mode was active the last time.
Or put another way, whichever one you activated during airplane mode the last time you were in airplane mode will stay active.
https://www.macobserver.com/tips/quick-tip/airplane-mode-ios-11/
Also Control Panel Bluetooth and WiFi “off” buttons don’t really turn either one off anymore. They just force a disconnect from whatever devices you’re connected to. You have to go into Settings now to truly turn them off while not in airplane mode.
I don't think I've ever turned it on while in airplane mode - except just now, to verify that what you're saying is the way it behaves now. I'm quite sure, though, that until fairly recently (i.e. sometime in the past year) wifi stayed on regardless of whether airplane mode was active.
You could try setting the phone to "Do Not Disturb" and only allow calls from selected numbers. The iPhone allows you to select Everyone, No One, Favorites, or Groups you have set up.For some of us, the problem isn't answering the call - it's that it comes through at all. I don't answer the spams either, but I still have to pull the phone out to check if it's a call I want to take. And if it happens while I'm teaching... well, that's just unacceptable.
You could try setting the phone to "Do Not Disturb" and only allow calls from selected numbers. The iPhone allows you to select Everyone, No One, Favorites, or Groups you have set up.
Absolutely no way will I allow any device to update itself automatically. For one thing, I won't update my iPhone until ForeFlight finishes their compatibility testing and sounds the all-clear. For another, I always wait a few days and then google for gotchas with the most recent update. Even so, I always approach updates with trepidation. Automatic updates, no freaking way.Good Lord. Yet another reason I won't let my i-thingies update themselves. Why does every update have to bring some new hell to deal with? I swear they just think up stuff to change just to keep their employees on the payroll.
Maybe that works better now, but as of the last time I tried that sometime last fall, it did not work reliably. That was the first thing I tried, carrying the phone to class with DND enabled (allowing "Favorites", which on my phone is an empty list). The first time a spam call came through, that was that, and I tried airplane mode instead. Once I had a spam come through in airplane mode too (no I'm not sure how), fortunately while I was in my office but had forgotten to turn off airplane mode. And of course text spams came through unless wifi was turned off, which as far as I could tell at the time required another manual step. So from then on I used both DND and airplane mode at the same time, but eventually decided there was no way to be 100% certain that nothing would come through short of a hard shutdown, so I began leaving it in my office while in class. The main reason I was carrying it with me was for the time, but since I was also carrying my computer to all classes as of last year, the phone was redundant anyway.You could try setting the phone to "Do Not Disturb" and only allow calls from selected numbers. The iPhone allows you to select Everyone, No One, Favorites, or Groups you have set up.
Same here.Got a couple the other day from area code 685. Samoa. What could possibly be wrong with that?
I am still on IOS 10.3.3. I just decline all updates. They pack in more crap into each update that drains your phone resources and slows it down so you look to buy a new one. I'm going to be using this Iphone 6s until it literally drops dead (or I do).Absolutely no way will I allow any device to update itself automatically. For one thing, I won't update my iPhone until ForeFlight finishes their compatibility testing and sounds the all-clear. For another, I always wait a few days and then google for gotchas with the most recent update. Even so, I always approach updates with trepidation. Automatic updates, no freaking way.
I've decided to go back to working on the "blackboard" more in physics lectures - though they've removed the chalkboard in the room I'll be teaching in this fall, and replaced it with a document camera, a computer interface, and large flat screen displays - but my computer doesn't have a stylus anyway, so I won't generally have a reason to bring it. I might go with an iPad though, in which case I can still leave the phone in my office.
My work Mac has no knowledge of my AppleID or cell number, and I don't have iMessage set up on it. Heck, I don't even use iMessage on my personal Mac. So no, unless Apple finds some devious way to auto-configure iMessage on it with my personal identity/cell number and turn it on, I don't see that ever happening... hopefully.That’ll bring new “fun”. If you have a Mac you can get those texts on iMessage on the screen while
presenting. Hahaha.
Technology, ain’t it grand?
My work Mac has no knowledge of my AppleID or cell number, and I don't have iMessage set up on it. Heck, I don't even use iMessage on my personal Mac. So no, unless Apple finds some devious way to auto-configure iMessage on it with my personal identity/cell number and turn it on, I don't see that ever happening... hopefully.
Then why don't you turn the ringtone off using the side switch, and vibration off in "settings" during class? Is there any call or text important enough to answer that you might receive during that period?Maybe that works better now, but as of the last time I tried that sometime last fall, it did not work reliably. That was the first thing I tried, carrying the phone to class with DND enabled (allowing "Favorites", which on my phone is an empty list). The first time a spam call came through, that was that, and I tried airplane mode instead. Once I had a spam come through in airplane mode too (no I'm not sure how), fortunately while I was in my office but had forgotten to turn off airplane mode. And of course text spams came through unless wifi was turned off, which as far as I could tell at the time required another manual step. So from then on I used both DND and airplane mode at the same time, but eventually decided there was no way to be 100% certain that nothing would come through short of a hard shutdown, so I began leaving it in my office while in class. The main reason I was carrying it with me was for the time, but since I was also carrying my computer to all classes as of last year, the phone was redundant anyway.
It appears that the way things are working now, all the radios are turned off in airplane mode, so no other steps should be needed. I've decided to go back to working on the "blackboard" more in physics lectures - though they've removed the chalkboard in the room I'll be teaching in this fall, and replaced it with a document camera, a computer interface, and large flat screen displays - but my computer doesn't have a stylus anyway, so I won't generally have a reason to bring it. I might go with an iPad though, in which case I can still leave the phone in my office.
Because it is too easy to accidentally toggle the switch when it's in my pocket. Happens all the time, I'd say about 50% of the time when I have it toggled on, the next time it rings I only feel the vibration and sure enough, the switch has moved itself to the off position.Then why don't you turn the ringtone off using the side switch, and vibration off in "settings" during class? Is there any call or text important enough to answer that you might receive during that period?
Because it is too easy to accidentally toggle the switch when it's in my pocket. Happens all the time, I'd say about 50% of the time when I have it toggled on, the next time it rings I only feel the vibration and sure enough, the switch has moved itself to the off position.
I'm not sure how it happens. My iPhone 7 is ALWAYS in its case - I think it's a 3rd party case, bought from Verizon with the phone so I'm not sure of the make. But it definitely has a small cutout and you would think it would be hard to hit it. But it happens all the time - just yesterday in fact.Usually a case, even a simple one, will stop that. Makes it such that something has to be physically pushed down inside the cutout in the case to hit the switch.
That's pretty low. Personally, I get so many spams that even if I'm expecting a call, I always check the caller ID first before answering. No caller ID, I don't answer. A rare exception is if I'm expecting a call from someone who I know has caller ID suppressed, but that is only certain doctors, as a rule.They also are getting ruder. I had one get through (I was expecting another call) and immediately ask to be put on their do not call list. His response “ f#$& you”
That's pretty low. Personally, I get so many spams that even if I'm expecting a call, I always check the caller ID first before answering. No caller ID, I don't answer. A rare exception is if I'm expecting a call from someone who I know has caller ID suppressed, but that is only certain doctors, as a rule.
I dont ever answer the phone*, even if it is someone I know which makes this fairly easy. I wonder if that will become more popular over time.
What's the point of having a phone then? Things are expensive.