Notice

Forum sign-up and posting have been fixed as of 4/17/25 524am MST. Please give the community a try!
Anyone with an account beforehand can reset their password to login.

Share

FCC robocall enforcement does little to stop illegal calls, Senate hears

Over the shoulder view of young Asian woman receiving a suspected spam call on her smartphone

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | d3sign)

The Federal Communications Commission’s attempts to stop robocalls have failed to make a big dent in the problem, according to testimony at a Senate subcommittee hearing today.

The FCC “has been trying to address the problems, but, to date, its methods have not succeeded in achieving a meaningful reduction in these unwanted and illegal calls. Either the FCC does not have sufficient legal tools to stop these unwanted and illegal calls, or it has not yet determined how to deploy those tools effectively,” said Margot Freeman Saunders, senior counsel for the National Consumer Law Center.

The hearing on robocalls was held by the Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Communications, Media, and Broadband. Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), the subcommittee chair, said that FCC enforcement is ineffective and that Congress should give the agency more power. He mentioned the long-standing problem that the FCC is unable to collect on most of the robocall fines it issues.

Read 19 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Author: Jon Brodkin. [Source Link (*), Ars Technica – All content]

Shop with us!

You may also like...

Leave a Reply