Billions of robocalls blamed on one company, company gets targeted by FTC

This article is good. Really good.

A voice over internet protocol (VoIP) service provider charged with sending billions of illegal robocalls was issued a $10 million penalty and is banned from supporting certain telemarketing practices as part of a settlement, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Tuesday.

This is just the first paragraph of a very well article I came across. This is definitely a good thing, although the company “cann’t pay the fine.”

Tuesday’s court order, issued through the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, also imposed the $10 million fine, which has been put on hold because XCast Labs can’t pay it. The company is also required to take steps to comply with telemarketing laws, including setting up additional screening of customers and transmissions to better police illegal robocalls.

Don’t put the fine on hold. It should be their responsibility to pay said fine. They apparently kept all of the phone records, and assed calls through. This means that if they couldn’t pay it, they’d pay wha they could and be forced out of business. Sorry, but if my company were doing this, I bet i would need to pay it, unless they expect to have the company either raise that money or pay it off over time. That is not known, and I bet I couldn’t do that if I were in that situation. I guess I’m glad I’m not in the courts, as I’d tell them to pay something, and it could be paid over time.

This may be somewhat familiar to those who are on TSB or TBSN, as this paragraph says:

Some of the robocalls that XCast Labs was accused of facilitating involved scams from companies pretending to be government agencies, according to the May complaint. For example, some of the calls claimed to be from the Social Security Administration and warned that utility services like heat and water would be cut off unless payments were made, the complaint said. Other calls told consumers to act quickly to reverse made up credit card charges.

The robocalls featured prerecorded marketing messages, many of which were sent to DNC-registered phone numbers, the complaint said.

The illegal calls began in at least January 2018, according to the complaint, which said some of the calls marketed goods and services with a “history of deceptive sales practices,” including extended warranties for cars.

Even calls that did not fraudulently purport to be from the government did not “truthfully identify” the seller, the DOJ press release said. Instead, those calls included “false or misleading statements to induce purchases or were transmitted with ‘spoofed’ caller ID information.”

XCast kept extensive records of its transmissions, including the exact date and time of a call, the phone numbers involved and exact durations of the calls. The FTC said records produced for just three of XCast Labs’ customers showed almost two billion of the robocalls were sent to numbers included on the DNC Registry.

Finally,

“XCast was warned several times that illegal robocallers were using its services and did nothing,” Director Samuel Levine of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection said in a prepared statement. “Companies that turn a blind eye to illegal robocalling should expect to hear from the FTC.”

Next company should be forced to pay something, even if they can’t pay in full. Withholding the fine is telling the company tht it’s OK and that they can pay whenever they can.

I bet you that they’ll continue with their practices just like usual.

FTC settles with company that facilitated billions of illegal robocalls is the article. Good luck with this one!


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