Category: Apple|Sep 18, 2016 | Author: Admin

New call-blocking apps in IOS 10 can stop spammers and scammers before they reach you

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iOS 10 allows apps to provider Caller ID labels for incoming voice calls, and automatically block callers, too.

iOS 10 allows apps to provider Caller ID labels for incoming voice calls, and automatically block callers, too.

Constantly hassled by incoming calls on your iPhone that promise riches for filling out a survey, claim the IRS will arrest you if you don’t wire a payment (to Costa Rica), or say they’re calling from your “credit-card company” without mentioning which one? iOS 10 packs a solution: apps can now identify callers as scammy or spammy, and optionally automatically block them.

This may be useful for you, or to help a loved one install on their phone if they can’t always differentiate between legitimate callers and those aiming to defraud them.

And don’t worry: Apple isn’t giving developers all your incoming call information. Just like iOS 9’s content-blocking Safari extensions, all the rules used to identify and optionally block fraudulent and unwanted calls have to be loaded in the app, so that iOS 10 can check against them locally, rather than letting the app send your data off who knows where. The phone numbers of incoming calls never leave your device.

[The Week in iPhone Cases: Check out the first crop of iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus cases you can buy.]
HiyaIncoming calls are identified as they happen.
These apps can also provide Caller ID lookup, offering the name of a business or person associated with a phone number, instead of a rough location, as Apple shows by default. Apps will have a variety of options and prices: Some will be entirely free, some have a one-time payment, and others require a recurring subscription. Many already appear in a more limited form in the App Store and are available on Android, where deeper call integration was already available.
With one or more apps with call-blocking or Caller ID lookup features installed, you can selectively turn them on and off via Settings > Phone > Call Blocking & Identification. Entries in your Contacts list and some other methods Apple uses to identify callers override third-party rules. But, for the most part, you should see either a warning label or a directory lookup for numbers not in your Contacts.

Settings

The free Hiya app appears first out of the gate, an update to its maker’s previous iOS app and now analogous to its Android version. The company, also named Hiya, collects reports from a variety of data sources, public and private, and categorizes unwanted calls into a few types. Its technology is used by Samsung and T-Mobile, as well as available in app form.

Hiya displays a red “do not enter” style shield next to calls it identifies definitively as a “scam or fraud.” It even offers the granularity of noting “IRS Scam,” a fraud it sees as a rising trend, to provide a user with even more vigilance. Calls that are simply unwanted (spam) appear with a yellow yield sign and a label like “telemarketer” or “survey.”

If you copy a phone number from the Phone app or another source in iOS and switch to Hiya, it recognizes the format and offers to look it up. The lookup shows any information, including reports from other users, a ranking, and the number’s location and cellular network. You can then tap to report, selecting a category and entering a report, or block. Hiya says that it discovered a flaw in call blocking that prevents it from blocking numbers at the moment (both automatically and at a user’s request), but Apple is aware of the flaw and plans to fix it.
Hiya and other apps will be able to automatically block calls by criteria instead of just labelling them.
Once that’s fixed, Hiya will be able to automatically block scam and/or spam calls, which will prevent you from even seeing the call appear. These options might be good for a relative or friend who either wants to or needs to not receive such calls.

Other apps well known in the Android world have announced upcoming release. TrueCaller, popular in India, claims to block about 400 million calls a month, and Nomorobo, popular with VoIP calling services, have versions coming. Nomorobo plans to charge $2 a month after a 30-day free trial.

Many apps that offer limited blocking and ID already appeared in the App Store prior to iOS 10, so you’ll need to look carefully to find ones that have been updated. Some older apps manipulate your Contacts to add huge quantities of numbers, which was an ugly kludge, but it worked. Fully compliant iOS 10 apps don’t have to mess with your Contacts at all, so look for a release date of September 13 or later.

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