New Rules Proposed by FCC Chair Rosenworcel to Cut Down on Text Message Scams
February 23, 2023 By Monica Green
(Image Credit Google)
A new set of regulations has been put up by the Federal Communications Commission to curtail the rising number of text message scams.
Network providers will be required to ban robotexts that are probably illegal after the commissioners approve them in March.
This includes numbers that seem to be invalid, unallocated, or unused, as well as those that are asserted by governmental organizations and other well-known organizations, according to the reports.
According to the chair, this would be the agency's opening salvo in its campaign against scam SMS. She said that no customer would wish to receive these texts because they are illegal. The chair stated, "We are going to stick at it and come up with other strategies to address this growing consumer hazard."
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The agency's commissions will vote on the new rules at their upcoming monthly meeting on March 16. The regulations would go into effect after being published in the Federal Register if this were to be approved. Providers would be required to ban texts from individuals or organizations that the FCC flags for texting prohibited messages.
All text message users are the target of these scam robotexts, according to Rosenworcel. ranging from warnings about incorrect numbers and missing goods to payment confirmation and links to websites This might deceive any of us because it occurs frequently in our daily lives.
After the FCC's actions to eradicate robocalls, new laws for text message fraud are being proposed. According to Engadget, both topics, along with the other components of the suggested frameworks, would be discussed at the monthly meetings.
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In order to improve phone services in underserved areas, this includes increasing cooperation between terrestrial mobile network operators and satellite service providers. When faced with life-or-death scenarios without access to network coverage, this could be helpful.
This problem has been known to the Federal Communications Commission since last year. They issued a serious warning for fraudulent robotexts in July 2022 as a result of the worrying rise in incidents.
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The agency advised consumers to avoid communicating through these messages because this kind of scam does not depend on weaknesses in smartphones themselves.