House passes robocall bill with near unanimous support

Cal Jeffrey

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What just happened? A robocalling bill is one step closer to becoming law. The United States House of Representatives considered the legislation on Wednesday and overwhelmingly passed it 429-3. The proposed measure still needs Senate and executive approval.

The Stopping Bad Robocalls Act will allow law enforcement to pursue robocall scammers more aggressively. It increases the penalties that can be imposed on fraudulent calls and requires service providers to implement call authentication platforms, specifically SHAKEN/STIR, by 2020. It will also call for the Federal Communications Commission to redefine what it considers robocalls.

“The rising tide of illegal robocalls was once a nuisance, but it has grown to threaten the way consumers view and use their telephones,” said Democratic Representative Frank Pallone, sponsor of the bill in a statement last month. “If we don’t get a handle on them, I am fearful robocalls will undermine our entire phone system.”

Despite the bombastic rhetoric, nearly the entire House was in favor of the bill passing it 429-3, notes The Hill. However, lawmakers were not the only ones supporting the legislation. Charter Communications, AARP, Consumer Reports, and others also praised the measure. Even Verizon’s Senior Vice President of Federal Legislative Affairs Robert Fisher issued a statement of support.

“Enough is enough - it’s time for Americans to hang up on abusive robocallers once and for all,” Fisher said. “Verizon has already begun deploying the STIR-SHAKEN call authentication protocol for IP Voice services, and we welcome the continued momentum toward a bipartisan, comprehensive solution that empowers service providers, law enforcement, and most of all consumers.”

The Stopping Bad Robocalls Act still has two more stops before becoming law. First, the bill will be sent to the Senate where it is expected to pass since legislators there approved a similar proposal called the TRACED Act earlier this year. If supported, it will be sent to the White House for President Trump to sign.

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I get around 5 a day. If I don't have the number saved in my phone I don't even answer it. Apparently the IRS is filing a lawsuit against me and I have an arrest warrant out associated with my social security number, lol. Meanwhile, I don't even have so much as a parking ticket
 
So who are the three congressmen that voted against the bill? I would love to hear their lame excuse for doing so. I am sure it has nothing to do with bribes (sorry campaign contributions I get the two confused).
Andy Biggs (Republican, Arizona-5th district)
Thomas Massie (Republican, Kentucky-4th district)
Justin Amash (Republican, Michigan-3rd district)

Oh sorry [fakequotes]Amash left the Republican Party on July 4th, 2019[endsarcasticfakequotes]
 
Imagine being one of the 3 who voted against it. 429 people disagree with you. Maybe reconsider how good you are with informed decision making...
 
I get robocalls on verizon; probably have to pay extra knowing those greedy bastards.

Using MY VERIZON >> sign in >> then go to >> Phone - Manage my Phone >> Call History - View Call History - >> Filter for "Incoming Calls, then select any call that is spam, and by clicking on the ">" on the end of the detail line title = "Options", go to the bottom of the popup window, and select, "Call Block" that number won't get through again. Repeat for more numbers.

You're welcome. I don't work for verizon.
 
I get robocalls on verizon; probably have to pay extra knowing those greedy bastards.

Using MY VERIZON >> sign in >> then go to >> Phone - Manage my Phone >> Call History - View Call History - >> Filter for "Incoming Calls, then select any call that is spam, and by clicking on the ">" on the end of the detail line title = "Options", go to the bottom of the popup window, and select, "Call Block" that number won't get through again. Repeat for more numbers.

You're welcome. I don't work for verizon.

You might think this works for you but it doesn't. 99.99% of these jerks use phantom numbers, so you never really know the true number that's calling you. Sorry to pop your balloon!
 
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