FCC Puts Another Carrier On Notice with Cease and Desist Letter

If you haven’t already figured it out, the FCC is serious about carriers and providers not carrying robocalls.

The FCC sent a cease and desist letter to DigitalIPvoice informing them of the need to investigate suspected traffic. The FCC reminded them that failure to comply with the letter “may result in downstream voice service providers permanently blocking all of DigitalIPvoice’s traffic”.

For background, DigitalIPvoice is a gateway provider meaning they accept calls directly from foreign originating or intermediate providers. The Industry Traceback Group (ITG) investigated some questionable traffic back in December and identified DigitalIPvoice as the gateway provider for some of the calls. ITG informed DigitalIPvoice and “DigitialIPVoice did not dispute that the calls were illegal.”

This is problematic because as the FCC states “gateway providers that transmit illegal robocall traffic face serious consequences, including blocking by downstream providers of all of the provider’s traffic.”

Emphasis in original. Yes. The FCC sent that in BOLD to DigitalIPvoice. I love aggressive formatting choices.

The FCC then gave DigitalIPvoice steps to take to mitigate the calls in response to this notice. They have to investigate the traffic and then block identified traffic and report back to the FCC and the ITG on the outcome of the investigation.

The whole letter is worth reading but a few points for voice service providers and gateway providers:

  1. You have to know who your customers are and what they are doing on your network. The FCC is requiring voice service providers and gateway providers to include KYC in their robocall mitigation plans.
  2. You have to work with the ITG. You have to have a traceback policy and procedures. All traceback requests have to be treated as a P0 priority.
  3. You have to be able to trace the traffic you are handling. From beginning to end.

The FCC is going after robocalls hard. Protect yourself by understanding what is going to be required of your network.

Keeping you in the loop.

For more news on FCC Regulations, visit the NLR Communications, Media & Internet section.

FTC to Send Nearly $100 Million in Refunds in Vonage Settlement

On October 30, 2023, the Federal Trade Commission announced that it is sending nearly $100 million in refunds to consumers who were harmed as a result of internet phone service provider Vonage’s alleged use of dark patterns and other obstacles that made it difficult for users to cancel their service.

In its November 2022 complaint against Vonage, the FTC alleged that Vonage made its cancellation process more difficult to navigate than its enrollment process. In particular, Vonage allegedly restricted users to a single method of cancellation, charged unexpected early termination fees, continued to charge users after they canceled, and issued only partial refunds for overbilled amounts. Vonage and the FTC subsequently reached a settlement where Vonage agreed to pay $100 million in refunds to consumers harmed by the company’s actions, implement a simple and transparent cancellation process, and stop charging consumers without their consent.

The FTC is now in the process of sending payments to 389,106 consumers. Eligible consumers will receive refunds by check or PayPal.

 

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For more news on Federal Trade Commission Refunds, visit the NLR Antitrust & Trade Regulation section.