In article <alpine.bsf.2.20.1912171724140.8...@nog2.angryox.com> you write: > Sure, but have you ever tried to contact a carrier for which you do not > have a business relationship and get them to do something, and you are > smaller and less consequential than they are? > > We can block Hooli, but now OUR customers are livid, and Hooli doesn't > really care.
It's more subtle than that. The signature from Hooli is a signal you can stir into your spam filters. If the call comes from them and the calling number isn't one you'd expect them to host, that's a pretty strong signal your customer won't be happy to get the call. R's, John _______________________________________________ VoiceOps mailing list VoiceOps@voiceops.org https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops