America’s CUs Joins With Other Groups in Urging FTC to Make Change

WASHINGTON—America’s Credit Unions has joined with other trade organizations in urging the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to have non-IP providers transition to IP within one year, saying the move will help combat criminals’ exploitation of non-Internet Protocol (IP) networks and bolster the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN.

“Over the past two years, we have sounded the alarm regarding the increasing incidence of impersonation of legitimate companies, often accompanied by illegal ‘spoofing’ of the number used in the caller ID – i.e., to cause a call recipient’s caller ID to display the name, or solely the number, of a legitimate company instead of the name and number of the actual caller, who typically seeks to defraud the recipient,” the letter reads. “Illegally spoofed calls continue to harm consumers and undermine businesses’ ability to communicate with their customers.”

TRACED Act Has Helped

The co-signing organizations acknowledged that passage and implementation of the TRACED Act has helped limit criminal access to the calling network by requiring voice service providers to implement the “STIR/SHAKEN” call authentication framework.  

“However, this only works over IP networks,” the organizations said. 

The letter further calls on the FCC to require voice service providers to implement caller ID authentication solutions on non-IP networks as well during the interim period before all non-IP providers transition to IP.

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