FCC threatens to block service providers aiding illegal robocalls

October 4, 2022

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is threatening to block calls from voice service providers that have not yet taken meaningful action against illegal robocalls and are allowing them to proliferate, as well as exclude them from the American telephone network.

The seven companies involved are Akabis, Cloud4, Global UC, Horizon Technology Group, Morse Communications, Sharon Telephone Company and SW Arkansas Telecommunications and Technology, and they have two weeks to address the concerns of the authority. Otherwise, compliant carriers will be forced to block incoming traffic or be thrown off the American telephone network, as the FCC continues to complain that fines are insufficient.

The announcement comes as the agency works to combat illegal robocalls and address the growing threat of spam texts since the introduction of the STIR/SHAKEN requirements.

In addition, the FCC has adopted rules requiring all voice service providers to verify the authenticity of incoming calls by 2020, after three major US wireless carriers, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon, fully implemented the technology by June 2021.

The agency also authorized the start of work on a new rule requiring operators to block texts from numbers previously used illegally, such as to deceive consumers.

The sources for this piece include an article in TheVerge.

Top Stories

Related Articles

January 15, 2026 Chinese customs authorities have effectively barred Nvidia’s H200 artificial intelligence chips from entering the country, according to more...

January 15, 2026 A new survey suggests much of the promised productivity is being quietly clawed back. While 92 per more...

January 15, 2026 For months, the U.S. Supreme Court poured extraordinary effort into finding the source of the leaked draft more...

January 14, 2026 Anthropic says that more than 90 per cent of the software powering new versions of Claude is more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn