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Tag: Caller ID

  • FCC Moving to Require Carriers to Fight Robocalls

    FCC Moving to Require Carriers to Fight Robocalls

    FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has unveiled a proposal to require carriers and telephone providers to fight robocalls, after being disappointed some did not voluntarily do so.

    “All of us are fed up with robocalls—including me,” said Chairman Pai. “We’ve taken many steps to stem the tide of spoofed robocalls. I’m excited about the proposal I’m advancing today: requiring phone companies to adopt a caller ID authentication framework called STIR/SHAKEN. Widespread implementation will give American consumers a lot more peace of mind when they pick up the phone. Last year, I demanded that major phone companies voluntarily deploy STIR/SHAKEN, and a number of them did. But it’s clear that FCC action is needed to spur across-the-board deployment of this important technology. There is no silver bullet when it comes to eradicating robocalls, but this is a critical shot at the target.”

    Spoofing is a favorite of robocallers who will make their number appear as if it is from the same area code or exchange as the person they’re calling, making it more likely the receiver will pick up. STIR/SHAKEN is a protocol that helps carriers verify the identify of a caller to ensure the number is not being spoofed. If the call spans carriers, the originating carrier passes on the verification to the receiving carrier, and a “Call Verified” badge will show up on the receiver’s caller ID.

    The FCC had previously recommended that carriers begin implementing STIR/SHAKEN but, based on Chairman Pai’s proposal, some of them did not comply. Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint and AT&T have all committed to supporting the protocol.

  • Facebook Messenger Will Now Give Context to That Random Person Messaging You

    Facebook has long allowed people to message you even if you’re not friends with them. Oftentimes, those messages wind up in that “Other” inbox inside Messenger. You don’t know what I’m talking about? That’s ok, plenty of Facebook users probably have no idea that they have a whole other inbox full of messages from random stranger, spammers, and more.

    Anyway, it appears that Facebook is looking to be more of an all-encompassing messaging service – not just one for you and your buddies. With an update that’s rolling out on iOS and Android today, Facebook will provide some context for those random people messaging you inside Messenger.

    According to TechCrunch, Facebook will unearth publicly available information about the person messaging you and place it at the top of the message. It’ll display the person’s name, photo, location, and job – as long as they’ve made that information public.

    The new feature isn’t going to trample on privacy controls and show info users have set to private.

    The new feature won’t just pull up this type of info on strangers – it’ll do so with anyone you’ve yet to communicate with on the platform. Even if they’re your friend. Because, let’s face it, you sometimes forgot who the hell you’re friend with on Facebook.

    This isn’t the first time Facebook has given users a sort of Caller ID, or in this case Messenger ID. Last month, Facebook unveiled its Hello app for Android, a caller ID app that also displays a caller’s publicly available Facebook info. The app also makes it easy to block people, based on said info or lack thereof.

    I guess it never hurts to know a little bit about the person who’s spamming you on Facebook.

    Image via Marco Paköeningrat, Flickr Creative Commons

  • Facebook Is Still Trying to Take Over Your Phone, New ‘Hello’ App Shows You Info on Callers

    Back in March, it slipped that Facebook was testing a new phone app that would serve as an Android dialer and caller ID app. Internal testing called it “Phone”.

    Now that app has materialized as Hello, which Facebook is launching today.

    “Billions of calls are made everyday on mobile phones and people often have very little information about who’s calling them. Today we are starting to test Hello, a new app built by the Messenger team. Hello connects with Facebook so you can see who’s calling, block unwanted calls and search for people and places,” says Facebook Product Manager Andrea Vaccari.

    As a caller ID app, Hello has a lot going for it. If there’s one thing Facebook has a lot of, other than confidence that you’ll want to download dozens of standalone Facebook apps, it’s phone numbers. As long as a person’s phone number is public, Hello will show you their profile picture and any other public information about them – which a nice way to avoid that creeper that keeps calling you.

    Of course, all the info makes blocking numbers much easier. Plus, if a number is manually blocked all the time, Facebook’s Hello will block it automatically for you.

    “From your settings, you can block specific numbers and adjust whether you want to automatically blocks calls from commonly blocked numbers. Blocked calls go straight to voicemail and can be reviewed in your recent calls,” says Vaccari.

    Apart from its function as a dialer and advanced caller ID app, Hello also leverages Facebook’s data troves to form a pretty massive business directory. Let’s say you look up a restaurant down the street – Hello will show you an image, business hours, its Facebook rating, and quick links to call (via cellular or free via Messenger).

    If you’re interested, you can download Hello today for Android. Sorry, iOS users – no dice. iOS doesn’t play nice with apps trying to access the phone function.

    Sure, there is plenty of useful stuff inside Hello. It’s also another app from Facebook that’s not the main Facebook app. You should get used to Facebook pumping out standalone apps. It’s not going to slow down. We’ll see if, in the end, this is a good or bad thing. It all depends on the apps’ usefulness. What I can say about Hello is that it’s a hell of a lot more useful than Slingshot.

    Image via Facebook, Vimeo

  • Google Misses The Mark On Business Listings

    Google Misses The Mark On Business Listings

    Google unveiled Android 4.4 (KitKat) last week, and has since talked about some changes to the Phone app. These are some pretty big changes, and they have a direct impact on how users can and will engage with businesses by the phone.

    The app connects directly to Google+, and will provide profile info in caller ID. It also provides a search box, where users can search for nearby businesses when they’re looking to make a phone call, effectively bringing the phonebook right to the phone. Well, perhaps effectively is not the right word.

    Do like the direction in which Google is taking the Phone app? Let us know in the comments.

    Very few people have KitKat so far, but that will change over time. The new Nexus 5 launched with it, and it’s coming to Google Play versions of the Galaxy S4 and HTC One. Eventually, it will make its way to more phones. Google indicated that it will run fine on low-end smartphones, so we expect it to have a pretty broad reach when all is said and done.

    Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land is one of the few that do have KitKat, and he wrote a post slamming Google’s business results in the Phone app.

    You would think they would be in line with the results you would get from the Search and/or Maps apps but apparently you’d be wrong.

    “There’s so much wrong here. The phone app does manage to locate one restaurant that’s near my location in the city of Newport Beach, California. One,” he writes. “After that, it suggests another restaurant in Irvine, about 10 miles away. Then it suggests one in ‘nearby’ San Francisco, which is about 300 miles away. After that, it suggests some phone number I didn’t recognize — in fact, one that I couldn’t even call, as it was too many digits.”

    He then talks about trying different examples, like “pizza,” “movies,” etc., and the results don’t get much better.

    “It’s not just that the results are so bad,” he writes later in the piece. “The experience sucks, too. Assuming you do find a business you want, there’s an excellent chance that if you’ve turned to the Phone app as a search tool, you’ll want to know more about that business before calling. And yet, the Phone app listings pretty much tell you nothing. There’s not even a picture of the business.”

    It’s entirely possible that the experience and results will improve as time goes on. I’d expect them to, but it’s pretty odd to see Google launch something like this – something that is actually a search feature – and execute it so poorly. Remember when search was just what Google did?

    In fact, in some ways, it seems like results are suffering more and more as Google “improves” its technology and progresses as a search engine. Look at the Knowledge Graph. Google has made tremendous strides in search with that, but it’s also caused some significant quality issues, even beyond the errors we point out from time to time.

    Earlier this week, Search Engine Roundtable pointed to an interesting finding in a Google Webmaster Help forum thread, where spammers are getting fake Google+ Local listings to appear in Knowledge Graph results.

    There have been quite a few complaints with the local results appearing in the carousel since they rolled that out as well.

    But back to the Android Phone app.

    Even if the results are poor for now, Google deserves some credit for taking search to such an obvious (but so far untapped) place. If the results and experience improve, this puts businesses even closer to prospective customers.

    Google said in a recent Google+ post, “The new Phone app helps you find just the right number, even if it’s not in your contact list, by letting you search among nearby places or even Google Apps accounts (including your company’s directory, if employees numbers are shared), directly from within the app–just start typing, and results will show up!”

    The Caller ID element of the new Phone app has been getting most of the attention this week (compared to the search function, which is possibly more significant).

    New Phone App

    With the feature, Google matches numbers against the names of companies and services with Google Places listings. It also looks at your Google Apps domain, and lets you know if someone from work is calling. Starting in 2014, anyone who has verified their number, and has discovery turned will ahve their names and Google Profile photos display when they call.

    “It’s great if a new friend who hasn’t been saved in your contacts yet calls you,” Google says.

    You can opt out of this, but it’s also another instance of Google pushing Google+ on users of its other products – in this case Android.

    This comes just as the company is facing a backlash from YouTube users unhappy with a new change to the comments system, which also utilizes Google+.

    Google’s message seems pretty loud and clear: If you’re using something we make, you’re going to use Google+.

    Do you think the changes to Android are going to be good for business? The user experience? Let us know what you think in the comments.