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Communications The Internet United States

FCC Gives Carriers the Option To Block Text Messages (cnet.com) 107

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNET: The Federal Communications Commission said it's getting tough on text message spam by clarifying that phone companies can block unwanted texts. At its monthly meeting Wednesday, the Republican-led agency voted 3-1 to classify SMS text messages as a so-called Title I information service under the Telecom Act. The three Republicans on the FCC, which voted to adopt the classification, said this would allow phone companies to block spam text messages.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said the new classification would empower wireless providers to stop unwanted text messages. "The FCC shouldn't make it easier for spammers and scammers to bombard consumers with unwanted texts," he said during the meeting. "And we shouldn't allow unwanted messages to plague wireless messaging services in the same way that unwanted robocalls flood voice services." But he said that's what would happen if the FCC were to classify text messages as a Title II telecommunications service under the law.
Jessica Rosenworcel, the lone Democrat on the FCC, disagrees with the classification. "Today's decision offers consumers no new ability to prevent robotexts," she said."It simply provides that carriers can block our text messages and censor the very content of those messages themselves."

She says the FCC did the same thing to the internet last year when it repealed Obama-era net neutrality rules. "That means on the one-year anniversary of the FCC's misguided net neutrality decision -- which gave your broadband provider the power to block websites and censor online content -- this agency is celebrating by expanding those powers to also include your text messages," she added.
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FCC Gives Carriers the Option To Block Text Messages

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  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @04:54PM (#57794060)
    if political candidates can still spam text me.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Pai man bad, Net Googtrality good.

  • by WankerWeasel ( 875277 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @04:57PM (#57794086)
    Who is defining "unwanted"? Could your phone provider block all messages or certain messages as "unwanted" unless you agree to pay for a tiered or premium service?
    • I suspect that the provider would behave similar to how email systems do with spam filters to cut off those who blast messages off to tons of recipients all at ones. I suspect there will have to be a way for notification systems (such as the ones that schools use to notify parents of closures) to get white listed.

    • by atrex ( 4811433 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @05:07PM (#57794136)
      I think it's more likely that they want to charge the originating companies extra fees for the ability to send text messages to their customers rather than charge the customers more themselves.
      • I can certainly see that happening. Unwanted until you pay to be wanted.
      • by bob4u2c ( 73467 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @05:20PM (#57794220)

        they want to charge the originating companies extra fees for the ability to send text messages to their customers rather than charge the customers

        Not so fast there! In California they want to start taxing the user for text messages.

        Text Message Tax [fortune.com]

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @05:51PM (#57794374) Journal

      Exactly.

      I have Spectrum, but don't use their DNS. Just an hour ago, the DNS I use was blocked again for about 30 minutes. This has been happening pretty regularly lately. If I switch to another DNS or go to a VPN, I'm back up on my desktop instantly but all of the other devices in my home stay down unless I change the DNS setting on my router. Setting up a combination of two different DNS providers also seems to help.

      This is a recent phenomenon that didn't exist prior to net neutrality. I am also seeing 10-fold increases in streaming bandwidth when I use my VPN.

    • When some completely new idea comes along, it makes sense to ask all kinds of "what if?" questions.

      Spam is not new. Well over 90% of emails sent are spam. The reason you receive only a small fraction of the spam os because the provider blocks it. Nothing new about this, we know how this works, how this turns out.

      Does Comcast, or any ISP on the entire planet, block all of your email as "unwanted" unless you pay more for a premium service?

      Would YOU sign up with a wireless carrier that charged extra for rec

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      It's more likely that text messages of the wrong political persuasion, regardless of what the user things (even if they went out of their way to sign up for it) will be determined spam.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Wait up, who the hell wants bloody blocking, it is my phone device, I should get to decide who can contact it and who cannot. I want allowing and not blocking. I want a phone that is 100% blocked, zero incoming calls allowed, not a one, unless I specifically allow it. All calls blocked except ones allowed in. The provider can logged skipped attempts at contact I can review latter to allow it remain as is, blocked. My device, my choice who can connect in to it.

      I have no intention of wasting my life attempti

      • That was my point. It's unlikely YOU will get to define who gets blocked and who doesn't. It's far more likely that the phone providers will get to pick and choose who gets blocked and who doesn't. As others have pointed out, it wouldn't be surprising if we see spammers be allowed to flood your phone as they do now as long as they pay for the ability to do so without being blocked.
  • That sounds kind of silly. Who would continue to use a carrier that did that? The whole point of having a phone is to be able to communicate; if the carrier starts working against you on that you had better be looking for a new company.
    • That sounds kind of silly. Who would continue to use a carrier that did that?

      Indeed. This isn't comparable to NN for ISPs. Many people have only a single broadband provider. But switching cellular providers is easy.

    • That sounds kind of silly. Who would continue to use a social media platform that did that? The whole point of being on social media is to be able to communicate; if the platform starts working against you on that you had better be looking for a new one.

      Except.. there are limited options, really. Your speech in the new town square (primary social media platforms) is already limited; why wouldn't your private speech be limited now as well?

      Society as a whole seems to have already tacitly agreed that the town square can be privately owned and controlled. Why would this trend stop there?

      The slippery slope is only a fallacy when one is not actually sliding down an ice covered incline towards a precipice.

      • by meglon ( 1001833 )

        Society as a whole seems to have already tacitly agreed that the town square can be privately owned and controlled. Why would this trend stop there?

        It was privately owned BEFORE people started using it as a "town square." People migrated their prior town square to the new one because they chose to, and (some) understood that there were conditions to that. As well, BECAUSE it is privately owned, it doesn't owe anyone a damn thing. That's how businesses work, and that's why people point out that a "free market" without some form of regulation designed to protect individuals is a very bad and dangerous thing.

  • by found404 ( 5415512 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @05:03PM (#57794118)
    There's a war going on re: The Control and Flow of Information. This is a small part of it.
  • I am getting sick of all the stupid advertising text messages I get all the time. Now if they can stop the spam robo calls I get all day long. One in particular that keeps wanting me to change my power supplier is particularity annoying.
  • Nice service you have there. Be a shame if something happened to it. We think everyone should have it. [cbsnews.com]
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Does the classification really have to be changed for this?
    What would be wrong with the carrier making such a filter available as an opt-in option without the classification change? (free or payed, regardless)
    That seems a common sense solution.

  • by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @06:16PM (#57794482)

    What they should have done is require telecoms to verify number ownership. Most of these calls and texts are coming from unknown sources using fake CIDs. If an incoming connection comes from source that is different from the one that 'owns' the number, then you know it's fake.

    ie: If 555-1234-5678 is owned by Bell, but you get a connection from a voip provider in India, it's a pretty safe bet that it's not a legit call.

    But this would need to be legislated because there's no way any telecom will bother to co-operate with this unless they are forced to.

    • by meglon ( 1001833 )
      They need to do individual black lists for phone numbers (both for texts and calls). Get a text (or call) that's a robo, scammer, spam.... do a *somenumber (i'm liking 86) and that phone number is permanently blocked from your phone number. they could give you an option maybe of classifying it as potential fraud, or a robo... and then they should be required to investigate on a large scale any that receive a large number of people blocking/reporting any given sender/caller.

      That wouldn't be all that hard
      • Permanent block may not work well - if they are faking the number, you've now blocked a third party (or an unused number) that had nothing to do with the spam.

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Wednesday December 12, 2018 @06:23PM (#57794512) Journal
    Of users generated content.
    Thats your words a big brand and big gov wants to look at and then remove.
    What next? Voice? Say the "unwanted" words in real time and get "talking" on the phone blocked?
  • ... The Trump seems to be strangely silent on this topic. Come to think of it, I haven't seen any of his tweets lately.

  • Congress says different laws for information services vs telecommunications services. So the FCC can just take a telecommunication service and relabel it as an information service (or vice versa) to get whatever they want, without bothering to get Congress' permission, or Congress having to change the telecom act.

    If this shit is legal, then I know how Trump can get his wall after all, without Congress authorizing a cent. Just redefine the wall as Medicare or preschool services or something like that, and then he can spend any money Congress allocates to those things, on the wall instead. And he can even "make Mexico pay for it" by simply redefining USA as Mexico.

  • So who chooses what SMS/MMS messages go through? If the customer has an option to subject themselves or not subject themselves to the carrier's filtering, I'm okay with that.

    If the customer doesn't have a choice to enable/disable filtering, it is just a grab for censorship.

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