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Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Fed up with nuisance calls? Spain is taking more action to help spot the good from the bad calls...
https://spanishnewstoday.com/spain_t...0267348-a.html |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Good. I signed up to Lista Robinson years ago but it didn't seem to do any good, especially in stopping calls from energy providers. Just these last few weeks they seem to have almost stopped, though. Yesterday I got an SMS message purporting to be about a transaction for €2996 on my Cajamar account - except I don't have a Cajamar account, so at least that one was easy to spot!
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Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
I had a (genuine) email from Sabadell yesterday:-
'From now on you will start receiving this type of messagingSMS fraud has become a very common technique cybercriminals use to try to usurp the identity of trusted entities.​ For stronger security, we are adding RCS (Rich Communication Services). This format, which you will receive in the same Message area, will replace traditional SMS (with some exceptions) and will show to you the verified sender so you can easily identify their authenticity.' |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Originally Posted by spainrico
(Post 13344896)
I had a (genuine) email from Sabadell yesterday:-
'From now on you will start receiving this type of messagingSMS fraud has become a very common technique cybercriminals use to try to usurp the identity of trusted entities.​ For stronger security, we are adding RCS (Rich Communication Services). This format, which you will receive in the same Message area, will replace traditional SMS (with some exceptions) and will show to you the verified sender so you can easily identify their authenticity.' |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
This will be great, I can just block all incoming calls from coming from numbers beginning with 400 on the router, and I guess it will be possible to find an app for Android which can do the same thing.
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Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 13344895)
Good. I signed up to Lista Robinson years ago but it didn't seem to do any good, especially in stopping calls from energy providers. Just these last few weeks they seem to have almost stopped, though. Yesterday I got an SMS message purporting to be about a transaction for €2996 on my Cajamar account - except I don't have a Cajamar account, so at least that one was easy to spot!
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Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Thanks for flagging that up Lynn (I have PM-ed you) I will start another thread for this issue.
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Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Something is rotten somewhere.
The signal I get from my current provide at home (Lobster on Movistar) is marginal so I'd been thinking of switching to Orange and bought their cheapest PAYG SIM to try it out, I made ZERO calls and gave the number to NO ONE yet within a couple of hours of putting the SIM in a spare phone live I received 4 spam calls! How/where did they get my number form? |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
I am not an expert but I would say:-
a) I doubt you are the first to have that number b) Don't they use some sort of automatic system that just calls all numbers in rotation? I am with O2 and I now receive very few of these calls and when I do I never answer them and always block them |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
When you activate a new SIM and given a number, you're given a number in a new block of numbers, and this is public info so you and everyone else in your block of numbers is moved to the top of the spam lists.
First thing you can do is log into your Orange account and turn everything in marketing preferences to off. Next is to not to answer a call from a landline number (beginning with 9) that you don't know and you're not expecting e.g. any parcel delivery or call from the doctor or town hall, etc... don't answer it, just silence it. Eventually the number of calls goes down. When spam calls move to 400 then it'll be very easy to block them all. Most spam calls have already been successfully stopped from mobile numbers and international numbers over the past couple of years. |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Originally Posted by DLC
(Post 13345528)
Next is to not to answer a call from a landline number (beginning with 9) that you don't know and you're not expecting e.g. any parcel delivery or call from the doctor or town hall, etc... don't answer it, just silence it.
Recent legal changes have forced "corporate communication" to use landline numbers and not mobile numbers (apparently illegal now for such purposes), but I still get quite a few calls from mobile numbers that turn out to be nothing but spam. Though at the same time I must say I rarely get spammed from landline calls. What's worse is that a lot of it is just "bots" calling and even trying to interact with you, so it's not even a real person you're dealing with. Scary times and it won't get any better with technology moving forward... |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Originally Posted by astera
(Post 13345536)
I'm always confused as to what to do in these cases.
Recent legal changes have forced "corporate communication" to use landline numbers and not mobile numbers (apparently illegal now for such purposes), but I still get quite a few calls from mobile numbers that turn out to be nothing but spam. Though at the same time I must say I rarely get spammed from landline calls. What's worse is that a lot of it is just "bots" calling and even trying to interact with you, so it's not even a real person you're dealing with. Scary times and it won't get any better with technology moving forward... |
Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
I got another text this week supposedly about a suspicious transaction on my (non-existent) Santander account. This time they'd upped the ante though, and the transaction amount was €8,456! I wonder if they'll keep trying with all the different bank names until they hit on the right one?
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Re: Spain doing more to stop spam calls
Originally Posted by bobd22
(Post 13345553)
You can usually tell if a call is from a spam automated set up as there is usually a delay before anyone speaks, so what I do is never answer before anyone speaks and if delay is more than a couple of seconds hang up, if it's a genuine call they will ring back. Secondly with these calls if unrecognised number and it's a Spanish number and I do answer I do so in English which is usually enough to put spammers off and they usually hang up.
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 13345558)
I got another text this week supposedly about a suspicious transaction on my (non-existent) Santander account. This time they'd upped the ante though, and the transaction amount was €8,456! I wonder if they'll keep trying with all the different bank names until they hit on the right one?
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