not all these numbers are bad.<br><br>We all have legit clients calling to israel , egypt, etc.<br><br>the problem is some specific ones.<br><br><br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 6/6/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">
Paul</b> <<a href="mailto:ast2005@9ux.com">ast2005@9ux.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">Florian Overkamp wrote:
<br><br>> Hi Mike,<br>><br>> Mike Lynchfield wrote:<br>><br>>> We create an API , or Web portal , that would accept input<br>>> (DID,Reason,Flag)<br>>> and serve a list.<br>>><br>>> This list would be a SOF (Suspicion of fraud) list in either txt,xml
<br>>> or both<br>>> for you to download.<br>><br>><br>>> How does it sound ? ..<br>><br>><br>> The basic idea makes a lot of sense, although I think there should<br>> also be some meta-data like:
<br>> - what is the nature of the SOF, in text, for customer support purposes<br>> - when was the number registered as SOF<br>> - optionally, how many complaints were made about the number ?<br>> - if there was an identifiable source, of the complaint or notice, who
<br>> was it ?<br>><br>> Our national regulator also publishes a list of numbers that have been<br>> seen in auto-diallers. Maybe other countries do the same ?<br>><br>><br>I would like to get some of those numbers and do rate checks with
<br>voicepulse and plainvoip using the macros they provided. It seems to me<br>that the upstream provider should be the one to prevent these calls from<br>going through.<br><br>_______________________________________________
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