Report: Almost Half of US Cell Phone Calls Will Be Scams By Next Year

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Illustration depicting a phone with a scam call concept.

Many of us are already conditioned to ignore phone calls from unknown numbers. A new study seems to validate that M.O.

By next year, nearly half of the mobile phone calls we get will be scams, according to a new report from First Orion, a company that provides calls management and protection for T-MobileMetroPCsVirgin Mobile and others.

The percentage of scam calls in US mobile traffic increased from 3.7 percent last year to 29.2 percent this year, and it’s predicted to rise to 44.6 percent in 2019, First Orion said in a press release Wednesday.

The most popular method scammers use to try to get people to pick up the phone is called “neighborhood spoofing,” where they disguise their numbers with a local prefix so people presume the calls are safe to pick up, First Onion said. Third-party call blocking apps may help protect consumers from known scam numbers, but they can’t tell if a scammer hijacks someone’s number and uses it for scam calls.

“Year after year, the scam call epidemic bombards consumers at record-breaking levels, surpassing the previous year and scammers increasingly invade our privacy at new extremes,” First Orion CEO Charles Morgan said in the press release.

First Orion in April testified before the US House Committee on Digital Commerce and Consumer Protection about combating robocalls, scam calls and caller ID spoofing with technologies. The company works with carrier giants like T-Mobile to alert consumers of scam calls by displaying “Scam Likely” as caller ID on their phones.

“Scammers relentlessly inundate mobile phones with increasingly convincing and scary calls,” said Gavin Macomber, senior vice president of marketing at First Orion, in an email statement. “Solving a problem of this magnitude requires a comprehensive, in-network carrier solution that dives deeper than third-party applications ever could by detecting and eliminating unwanted and malicious calls before they reach your phone.”

Originally published at CNET.

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Glenn R. Geist
5 years ago

Not two minutes after I posted the above, I picked up the phone without looking at the caller ID and got “DON’T HANG UP! Are you bothered by neck and back pain? If you heard a loud bang, that was me hanging up. It was a robot (illegal here) otherwise I would have told them about the huge pain in my ass.

Another lesson about how making laws is meaningless if you don’t enforce them.

Bill Formby
5 years ago

My ratio of solicitation calls is running about 8 sales calls out of ten. The only thing getting close to keeping up with then now is the number of calls I get from the various doctors these days.

Glenn R. Geist
5 years ago

Well more that half my land line calls are fraudulent. Well more.
It runs from solicitation from local businesses and merchants to Rachel from the Credit card company, to Microsoft wanting access to my computer to the IRS saying there’s a warrant out for me. I’ve been able to successfully counter it by buying a device that blocks calls and it’s down to perhaps one a day from about 15. Still the idea that I’m on a list of people too stupid to take care of themselves is infuriating.

I don’t understand that this is supposed to be the fault of scammers and the phone company can’t do anything about it. True, on rare occasions a call is listed on the ID as an “Invalid number” but over 99% are not. I’m sure it’s just too lucrative for them to be motivated.

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