Forum Discussion
There are 3 ways to "verify" the numbers. One is to fully verify from where the call came and another to partially verify from where the call came. There's a third but I forget its adjective.
I'm getting calls from fully verified...
- Bruce3 years agoHonored Contributor III
There is no adjective for the third verification, so I made up "regional" for Area Code.
Full: Cox verified the 10-digit number is registered with the originating provider.
Partial: Cox verified all but the last 4 digits with the originating provider. For example, a company has a private PBX so the last 4 digits wouldn't be registered with the originating provider.
Regional: Cox verified the first 3 digits came from a known gateway of another provider.
- hammer3 years agoNew Contributor
Do Not Call Registry flop.
Actually it's a Cox failure to FULLY implement spoof calls.
At least get Cox users to complain to their license holder (the FCC).
- Bruce3 years agoHonored Contributor III
Cox is implementing it. I'm getting Fully Verified calls....prefixed with
...but also calls from numbers without a prefix. Perhaps Cox doesn't prefix Partial and "Regional" calls but it doesn't mean Cox hasn't verified a portion of the numbers as per the FCC. In my opinion, a prefix is useless. What's the difference between looking at Caller ID to check for a "V" or just recognizing a telephone number on the Caller ID? I don't care if it has a "V" or not...I don't recognize the number.
I thought the point was to stop ringing my phone.
- hammer3 years agoNew Contributor
Bruce: "I thought the point was to stop ringing my phone..."
I did too.
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