
Thanks Michael, I thought about US Telecom and a traceback, but since the "bad" call isn't on our network (we do not know who's network it is on) I am not sure what they can do. Maybe I will see if I can just have a conversation with them about it. On Fri, Nov 6, 2020 at 11:36 AM mgraves mstvp.com <mgraves at mstvp.com> wrote:
Are you engaged with the US Telecom Industry Traceback Group?
https://www.ustelecom.org/the-ustelecom-industry-traceback-group-itg/
They are the trade group that coordinates traceback of illegal robocallers, providing evidence to enforcement agencies.
Michael Graves
mgraves at mstvp.com
o: (713) 861-4005
c: (713) 201-1262
sip:mgraves at mjg.onsip.com
*From:* VoiceOps <voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org> *On Behalf Of *Christopher Aloi *Sent:* Friday, November 6, 2020 10:29 AM *To:* Voiceops.org <voiceops at voiceops.org> *Subject:* [VoiceOps] Confusing Spoofing Customers
Hey All,
We have observed multiple reports of our business customer telephone numbers being used by a bad actor leaving messages for consumers. The consumers receiving the call do not have a direct relationship with us. The bad actor presents ?unknown? as the caller-id and leaves a harsh message asking for personal information and demanding a call back (illegal sounding collector call). The number the bad actor leaves to be called back (in a verbal message) is owned by one of our business customers. So, the response to the ?bad? call goes back to the legit company. The consumer calls our business customer back and explains the message, the business customer has no record of an outbound call to the consumer and is perplexed by the call.
We have a few customers impacted by this and in every instance we have no record of the outbound (bad actor) call leaving our network. I can?t figure out the scam here, they aren?t pumping traffic and the call goes back to the legit business, leaving no opportunity for the bad actor to engage with the consumer. Anyone have any thoughts?