Keeping your phone number or even your email address secret kind of defeats the object of having a phone or an email service, which is to communicate with people. From this perspective your phone number should be easily available to anybody who might want to call you. Hence phone books.
But the phone book has taken a beating in recent years. Most numbers are not listed because they are cellular numbers and the mobile service providers don’t publish phone books. Plus many consumers keep their land line numbers unlisted. I don’t know why mobile numbers don’t appear in directories – I presume some form of laziness on the part of the providers. But I believe that the reason people request unlisted numbers is for privacy. Paris Hilton or Brad Pitt could legitimately expect tiresome intrusions if their numbers were published. Less famous people may affect similar concerns.
A new service avaliable in England takes the issue one step further. Now to avoid intrusive phone calls you have to keep your name secret, too. An article in the London Times on June 9th described a new service from a company called Connectivity Ltd.
It will function along the lines of an old-fashioned telephone operator: users will call the service and ask to be connected to the mobile phone of a person. The service calls that mobile phone and asks for permission to connect the call.
My point about keeping your name secret was hyperbolic. You don’t need to keep your name secret because you can opt out of the directory. But this solution shows that you don’t really need to keep your number secret either, and could get a similar degree of privacy protection without giving up the benefit of reachability. Your service provider could keep a list of numbers that have called you, and a call from a number not appearing on that list could offer you the options of accept, reject, whitelist, blacklist. Blacklisted numbers would never ring again, whitelisted numbers would ring through without asking. I don’t know who currently offers such a service, but in the teeming world of VoIP services I presume somebody does.
Another manifestation of the idea of privacy through secrecy is Caller ID blocking. It has always been my policy to reject calls with blocked caller ID, because it seems kind of rude to block it. The caller knows who they are calling, so why shouldn’t the answerer know who is calling? The caller blocking his ID seems to be saying “I know your number, but I don’t want you to know mine.”
To defeat such rudeness, the call recipient may turn to a service called Trapcall, which purports to unmask blocked Caller IDs.
Trapcall seems like a nice way to render symmetrical the information of the caller and callee, but it becomes problematical in cases where call anonymity is essential. An example of this is a battered wife shelter, where a resident may need to call her husband, but does not want him to discover where she is.
In the spirit of an arms dealer supplying weapons to both sides in a conflict, the people behind Trapcall offer a service to defeat it.
Both Trapcall and Spoofcard rely on the fact that PRI subscribers have greater access to the signaling information than do regular POTS subscribers. In particular, the number of the calling party can be conveyed to the called party by two different methods: ANI and Caller ID. Even when Caller ID is blocked, calls to an 800 number disclose the ANI. As I understand it the rationale here is that the person paying for the call is entitled to all the information associated with it. This seems like weak reasoning to me, especially if the caller is paying for Caller ID blocking, and consequently has a reasonable expectation that their number will not be disclosed. Caller ID contains whatever the originating switch happens to put in it. For POTS lines the service provider puts the originating subscriber’s number unless he subscribes to Caller ID blocking. PRI subscribers like Spoofcard can program their PBX to put whatever they want in this field.
I think your article is the one that is weak here. First of all TrapCall and SpoofCard don’t use PRIs, they use VoIP. Secondly, your concept of the telephone system is quite antiquated. For one, CALLER ID BLOCKING IS *FREE* PER THE FCC, so the caller is not PAYING to block their number. Third, the “ANI” coming through to TrapCall would be that of your cellphone number, since that’s the billing number, so it’s not ANI that is revealing the blocked number, it’s a field in SS7 called Calling Party Number(CPN), this same field is what makes Caller ID Spoofing and is why Spoofed calls can’t be unmasked by TrapCall because that’s all TrapCall gets, CPN. If someone wants to block their number and really needs to they can use the local operator, a calling card, a payphone, a prepaid phone or any other number of resources, including asking to borrow the neighbors phone. This whole Caller ID thing is nonsense anyways, we didn’t have it pre 1990s, it was defeated in less then a decade, lets get on with our lives.
Thanks for raising these points. To get the straight scoop, I talked it over with Mike Oeth, CEO of Junction Networks, which is a “pure” VOIP player, Junction has no PRI; 100% of its traffic in and out is SIP. According to Mike,
Here’s an example of a typical SIP INVITE header received at Junction Networks:
The “To” and “From” fields are defined in IETF RFC 3261. There is no ‘privacy’ bit or differentiation between CID and ANI. In the above example:
“John Doe” is the Caller ID Name, 12485559999 is the Caller ID Number. That’s it. Either that information comes through from the upstream carrier, or it does not.
Here are two examples of ‘blocked’ Caller ID Name:
Here is an example of blocked both Caller ID Name and Number:
anon said: CALLER ID BLOCKING IS *FREE* PER THE FCC, so the caller is not PAYING to block their number.
That is true. I am so used to complaining about those nickel and dime charges from the phone companies that I threw it in out of habit.
anon said: Third, the “ANI” coming through to TrapCall would be that of your cellphone number, since that’s the billing number, so it’s not ANI that is revealing the blocked number, it’s a field in SS7 called Calling Party Number(CPN), this same field is what makes Caller ID Spoofing and is why Spoofed calls can’t be unmasked by TrapCall because that’s all TrapCall gets, CPN.
We have established that SIP implementations are inconsistent in the way that they treat the calling number fields of SS7, and as you pointed out, Trapcall doesn’t use SS7, it uses SIP, so it is at the mercy of its upstream carriers as to what SS7 fields are exposed. But out of curiosity I did an experiment. I programmed my cell phone for conditional forwarding the way the Trapcall website says to, and I called it from a landline. When the call landed on my cell phone, I rejected it, following the instructions on the Trapcall website. The call landed on the destination number with the Caller ID of the originating phone, not the Caller ID of my cell phone. When I blocked (*67) the Caller ID from the originating phone, the cell phone Caller ID said “Blocked,” and when I rejected the call and it went to a SIP number, the Caller ID appeared as “Restricted,” which presumably means that when the call left the circuit switched network the signaling gateway obeyed the SS7 “Address presentation restricted indicator” bits and didn’t pass the number into the SIP header. This is all as expected, since the number I forwarded to was not an 800 number.
So I got an account at Halloo with an 800 number, and repeated the experiment. I called my cell phone from a land line prefixing the phone number with *67. Sure enough, everything happened the same way, except when the call rolled over to the 800 number, the Caller ID came through unblocked, again the Caller ID of the originating phone, not the cell phone.
I then programmed Halloo to forward the 800 number to my cell phone rather than my SIP phone. This made it work exactly like Trapcall. I dialed my cellphone from a landline, prefixing the call with *67 to block the Caller ID. When my cell phone rang the Caller ID showed as “Blocked.” I rejected the call, which caused it to roll to the Halloo 800 number, which forwarded it back to my cell phone where it rang with the Caller ID no longer blocked.
anon said: If someone wants to block their number and really needs to they can use the local operator, a calling card, a payphone, a prepaid phone or any other number of resources, including asking to borrow the neighbors phone.
All true, but a non-technical person would reasonably expect that *67 would block their Caller ID under all circumstances. But this has never been the case when calling 800 numbers, and now Trapcall further defeats this expectation.
anon said: This whole Caller ID thing is nonsense anyways, we didn’t have it pre 1990s, it was defeated in less then a decade, lets get on with our lives.
I like Caller ID – I like to see who is calling and I like people to know it’s me before they pick up the phone. For me it would be a shame if this feature became useless. Customers like me are the ones who might pay for Trapcall. I used the term “weak” to describe the argument that calls to 800 numbers should expose the numbers of people who request (and expect) anonymity because the person paying for the call has a right to see who is calling. If this was a legitimate argument, all calls to cell phones in the US should also expose blocked Caller IDs, since the callee is paying for his minutes.
I made this point to Mike Oeth, who responded that the argument for exposing the calling number is not just a matter of who is paying for the call. Here’s his comment in full: