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Despite tougher laws, automated spam calls are on the rise again

FCC Shuts Down 1,400 Phone Companies for Failing to Protect Against Robocalls

The Federal Communications Commission this year has shut down 1,400 phone companies it alleges failed to protect consumers against unauthorized robocalls, but that hasn’t been enough to stop the number of unwanted calls from rising to a six-year high, according to a report from the CoPIRG Foundation.

Coloradans received an estimated 291.5 million scam or spam robocalls from January through September of this year, according to data from YouMail, a leading robocall-blocking company. And about a third of adults are receiving an unwanted robocall daily, while two-thirds receive them at least once a week. The deluge is even worse when it comes to unwanted texts.

“It is important that when you get a spam text message or phone call that you don’t interact with it. That tells them there is a human on the other end,” advised Danny Katz, executive director for the CoPIRG Foundation, which is focused on consumer protection.

A big reason spam calls and texts are rising despite tougher laws and heftier penalties is that phone companies are still allowing them to go through, sometimes motivated by profit. Artificial intelligence and other technological advances have made sending mass waves of calls cheaper and more effective at breaking through people’s defenses.

Of the 9,242 phone companies that are on file with the FCC as of Sept. 28, only 4,084 have installed mandated robocall-fighting software throughout their network, which is down from 4,365. Another 1,696 have installed the technology on part of their network, while 2,909 have not installed it, up from 2,567 last year, according to the study.

That increase in non-compliance likely reflects more providers getting real about their actual progress, as well as non-compliant firms acquiring smaller firms that had been complying.

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