Call blocking
Call blocking, also known as call block, call screening, or call rejection, allows a telephone subscriber to block incoming calls from specific telephone numbers. This feature may require an additional payment to the subscriber's telephone company or a third-party.
Call blocking is desired by individuals who wish to block unwanted phone calls. These generally include types of unsolicited calls from telemarketers and robocalls.
Landlines
[edit]Unwanted calls to landlines may be blocked through a number of methods. Some landline phones have built-in call blocking facilities. External call blockers are sold as telephone accessories which plug into existing phones.
Call blockers and related services recently received attention in 2016 from publications including Which? and Consumer Reports in the United Kingdom and United States respectively.[1][2] Such devices and services enable the user to block a call as it is in progress or alternatively block the number after the call is made. These devices rely on caller ID information and thus a phone blocker requires a caller ID service active on the line for blocking to function.
Treatment of blocked calls may include:
- Sending the caller to voicemail
- Sending the caller to busy signal
- Sending the caller to "Number No Longer in Service"
- Sending the caller to "Keep Ringing"
Smartphones
[edit]There are a multitude of third-party call blocking applications available for smartphones, in addition to the built-in call blocking functions furnished on most models.[3][4]
Effectiveness
[edit]Many phones permit users to automatically block all unfamiliar phone numbers,[4] but this strategy runs the obvious risk of rejecting a legitimate call. Users often choose instead to vet numbers individually, manually blocking subsequent calls from numbers judged to be spam. This tends to be especially true given spammers' increasing use of so-called "neighbor spoofing", which chooses numbers similar to the user's and is thus designed to increase the probability of answering a call.[5] Mathematical analysis has analyzed the effectiveness of such manual call blocking.[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Leedham, Robert. "Call Blocking Devices – Everything You Need to Know". which.co.uk. Which?. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
- ^ "Rage against robocalls". consumerreports.org. Consumer Reports. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
- ^ "How to Block Phone Calls on Your Android Phone". digitaltrends.com. Digital Trends. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
- ^ a b Lance Whitney (2023) Stop the Madness: How to Block Spam Calls and Robocalls, PCMag.
- ^ Carmen Maye, Roy L Moore, and Erik L Collins (2019) Advertising and Public Relations Law, Taylor & Francis.
- ^ Michael Christopher Wendl (2022) Spam calls and number blocking, Chalkdust Magazine 16, 57-62.