L Vanice
Diamond
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2006
- Location
- Fort Wayne, IN
My wife and I keep the ringers on our cell phones turned off and very few people know our numbers. Most of those know that the ringers are off, so they call the house phone. We do turn on the ringers when away from home on a trip and the relatives know that we are travelling. If our call history shows a missed call, we can count on it being one we wanted to miss. If they leave a message it will be someone wanting to lower the cost of our AT&T cell service (not the brand we use), so checking voice mail once a month or so to delete the messages is a waste of time.
Unfortunately, the house phone rings often with crooks spouting the various scam spiels, or maybe just hanging up without a word. Our VOIP service lets us block each of those scam/hang-up numbers. The trouble is that they mostly use fake caller ID numbers, once even calling using our own number. So I have blocked our own home phone number. Fake numbers prevent any meaningful means of blocking spam callers unless the Feds get the phone companies to prevent fake caller ID. Domestic phone numbers have ten digits, so there are almost a billion possible phone numbers that can be faked. The scammers will never run out of fake numbers.
Larry
Unfortunately, the house phone rings often with crooks spouting the various scam spiels, or maybe just hanging up without a word. Our VOIP service lets us block each of those scam/hang-up numbers. The trouble is that they mostly use fake caller ID numbers, once even calling using our own number. So I have blocked our own home phone number. Fake numbers prevent any meaningful means of blocking spam callers unless the Feds get the phone companies to prevent fake caller ID. Domestic phone numbers have ten digits, so there are almost a billion possible phone numbers that can be faked. The scammers will never run out of fake numbers.
Larry