How the FCC plans to stop robocalls where many start: Overseas

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A growing number of annoying robocalls are coming from overseas. The FCC wants to do something to stop that. 

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Ending robocalls is almost like a game of whack-a-mole: Stop one and more pop up. But Jessica Rosenworcel, acting chair of the Federal Communications Commission, thinks she’s found a new hammer to stop the illegal automated spam calls originating from overseas. 

She’s proposing to close a loophole in FCC regulations to require “gateway providers” to stop robocalls before they get to your phone. The agency adopted the proposal, called the during its monthly meeting on Tuesday. 

The proposed regulation would put additional requirements on US-based gateway providers that pass through voice traffic to other networks in the US. These gateway providers, which are smaller, low-profile companies that hand off calls from network to network, are often used by foreign scammers to disguise phone calls entering the US. The new FCC requirements would ensure that the gateway providers are verifying calls before they pass them on to other operators in the US. 

“What we’re doing is saying that the first gateway provider into the United States has some responsibilities,” Rosenworcel said in an “By imposing these requirements to identify where the traffic is coming from, we’re going to stop illegal robocalls before they reach you in your home.”

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commission. US consumers have received just under 22 billion robocalls in the first five months of the year and are on pace to hit over 52 billion robocalls for the year, according to YouMail, a company specializing in blocking robocalls.   

These calls aren’t just annoying. Nearly 60 million Americans say they’ve fallen victim to a phone scam in the past year, like the calls purporting to be from the IRS or from a company inquiring about an expiring warranty on a nonexistent car, according to a , detik a company that makes a spam-blocking and caller ID app. In total, Americans have been swindled out of nearly $30 billion by phone scams over the past 12 months, according to the survey conducted by Truecaller and The Harris Poll. 

Beyond US borders

The , for every major voice provider in the US to implement a technology called Stir/Shaken. It’s designed to verify the number that pops up on caller ID is legitimate. As of Tuesday, any provider that hasn’t complied with these mitigation efforts would be blocked. 

While Stir/Shaken and other FCC efforts are expected to at least slow the tide for these annoying calls, experts note there’s still a big problem in stopping the calls coming in from outside the US, because US regulators and law enforcement are unable to enforce US laws overseas. 

“We’re hearing from a lot of the domestic carriers that an increasing number of calls are coming from abroad — the ones that look like they’re scams,” Rosenworcel said. She added that it has been especially challenging for US regulators and law enforcement to trace criminals back into “jurisdictions where there might be some actors who can scurry away before we can find them.” 

She also noted that “difficult diplomatic relationships between the US and other countries can make it difficult to bring those bad actors to justice in the US. But she emphasized that the agency needs to “find ways to stop them.” 

It’s an issue experts agree needs to be addressed. Efforts like Stir/Shaken have pushed more illegal robocallers outside the US, said Clayton LiaBraaten, senior strategic advisor to Truecaller. 

Combating the problem will require more cooperation among international carriers and regulators, which LiaBraaten admits is no easy task. But he thinks world leaders, international regulators and carriers throughout the world will be motivated to work together.

“That’s a tall order trying to get a bunch of multilateral agreements in place,” LiaBraaten said. “But this isn’t just an American problem. It’s a global problem. People are being defrauded all over the world.” 

Ending the scourge of robocalls will also require coordinated effort within the US, Rosenworcel said. The FCC needs to work with other federal agencies like the Federal Trade Commission as well as state agencies like attorneys general offices around the country to bring enforcement actions against those who break the law in perpetuating these calls, she said.

Rosenworcel pointed to the — the largest in the agency’s history — against Texas-base telemarketers in March. The companies were accused of transmitting about 1 billion robocalls to sell fake health insurance policies. She said the FCC worked with the Ohio attorney general’s office on this case.

“With coordinated activity — with many more mallets smacking this problem — we’re going to be more capable of bringing it to a stop,” Rosenworcel said. “More of that federal-to-federal and federal-to-state coordination is going to be necessary in order for us to be successful.”

“We’re just getting started,” she added. “We have more work to do, and we have a new vigor to make it happen.”

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Britons were today warned that a ‘nightmare’

Britons were today warned that a ‘nightmare’ is looming as the growing list of items set to be in short-supply come December 25 stretched to include pigs in blankets, hams and party foods.

A shortage of butchers means that farmers believe have to ‘throw pigs in a skip’ because they can’t be slaughtered and carved – with 150,000 animals under threat of being culled in the next ten days, according to the National Farmers’ Union.

The meat crisis is compounding woes caused by a lack of HGV drivers and fuel as well as labour shortages that will lead to a ‘distinct lack of choice’ this year with many essential gifts and foods scarce or missing completely. 

Retail analyst Clive Black of Shore Capital said: ‘A lot of people eating on Christmas Day will be asking: ‘What the hell is this?’.’ 

Shoppers were told this week that a raft of items from turkey to beer as well as fizzy drinks and electronic goods are under threat this Christmas amid the supply chain crisis.

British families may also struggle to find toys and detik sofas or get them delivered in time.

Ministers have already they cannot guarantee that there won’t be shortages this Christmas with serious problems emerging in the meat sector.

The cabinet is now said to be considering easing visa restrictions for up to 1,000 foreign butchers to avert the crisis – but The Times claims that Priti Patel is against it and concerned they are being pushed by British industry to move back towards pre-Brexit freedom of movement 

But the British Meat Processors Association says that the 1,000 EU butchers is still 14,000 short of the 15,000 the country needs.

This means that businesses are focussing on keeping supermarkets stocked with simple cuts of meat such as bacon, steaks and chops, meaning Christmas favourites such as pigs in blankets and hams could be in short supply  

A BMPA spokesperson said: ‘We really should have been producing Christmas food from about June or July onwards this year and so far we haven’t, so there’ll be shortages of party foods and things like pigs in blankets.

Anything that is labour-intensive work could see shortages.’  

Britons were today warned that a ‘nightmare’ Christmas is looming as the growing list of items set to be in short-supply come December 25 stretched to include pigs in blankets, hams and party foods.

Turkeys, drinks, toys and furniture will also be hard to get

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<div class="art-ins mol-factbox news halfRHS" data-version="2" id="mol-6e31abf0-21e1-11ec-91aa-61198103d9fa" website pigs in blankets could be off the Christmas menu too!

Cards' Dakota Hudson faces Cubs, aiming for postseason role

Dakota Hudson will continue his comeback from Tommy John surgery when the St.

Louis Cardinals host the Chicago Cubs on Friday.

Hudson (1-0, 4.91 ERA) will draw the start in the opener of the three-game series against the injury- and illness-depleted Cubs. He will be making his second appearance for the Cardinals since completing his rehabilitation from the September 2020 operation.

“He’s just back in the big leagues. Let’s be reasonable about it, what it is,” Cardinals manager Mike Shildt said.

“You want to be smart about it. He’s back on the mound, getting another opportunity. He’s going to get about 70 or 75 pitches, around that area, depending on how hard he’s working, and we’ll go from there.”

Hudson went 16-7 with a 3.35 ERA in 2019 and 3-2 with a 2.77 ERA in eight starts last season before sustaining the elbow injury.

His first game back came against the Cubs on Sept.

24. He earned the victory while working 3 2/3 innings in relief, allowing two runs on four hits and no walks with two strikeouts.

“It was just great being able to get back out there,” Hudson said. “I was able to prepare well and (catcher Yadier Molina) was running the show for me. Just trusting the defense, being me and seeing what I can do, it was a blast to get back.”

St.

Louis, which has won 18 of its past 19 games, will visit the National League West runner-up in the wild-card game on Wednesday.

The Cardinals (89-70) are still determining what role, if any, Hudson and fellow right-hander Jack Flaherty will have in postseason play.

Flaherty is working his way back from shoulder soreness.

“Let’s temper about Jack and some degree Dak as well,” Shildt said. “I know the names dictate, ‘Hey, we want them to be this and this.’ Let’s make sure they’re healthy and getting work off the mound. That’s the priority, the responsibility to those two.”

The Cubs (69-90) have used the final weeks of the season to assess players who could be part of their ongoing rebuild.

They come into the series after 3-2 and 9-0 victories over the Pittsburgh Pirates the past two days.

Prior detik to that, the Cubs had lost 14 of 16 games.

The Cubs will close out the season without several players who played down the stretch. Shortstop Nico Hoerner (general soreness), infielder/outfielder Patrick Wisdom (undisclosed), catcher Austin Romine (undisclosed), pitcher Keegan Thompson (shoulder soreness) and outfielder Jason Heyward (concussion) are all sidelined.

Second baseman David Bote left the game Thursday with right shoulder discomfort and is questionable for Friday.

The Cubs remained undecided on a starting pitcher for the series opener.

The mounting injury/illness list prompted the Cubs to summon another half-dozen minor league players to help them get through the end of the season. A COVID-19 outbreak would make it difficult to play the final weekend.

“They’re here as an abundance of caution,” Chicago manager David Ross said.

“You’ve got to have some backups in case something is more serious. But still running through all the testing and think we’ve got it, for now, contained.”

The Cardinals have been playing without shortstop Edmundo Sosa (bruised wrist) and Molina (shoulder soreness).

Both are questionable for Friday.

–Field Level Media