Verizon is charging for anti-spam features T-Mobile and AT&T give away for free
Verizon today announced a new subscription service
designed to cut down on robocalls and other spammy automated messages
that plague mobile users each and every day. The service, called Verizon Caller Name ID,
comes in the form of an app and it will notify users when an incoming
call is likely to be a robocall, spam, or fraudulent. The big catch:
unlike competing carriers’ similar features, Verizon wants to charge
customers $2.99 per month for Caller Name ID.
This is perplexing for a couple of reasons. For one, you
might expect a cell carrier would want to offer this service for free,
as a benefit of being a paying subscriber. (One can dream.) The Federal
Communications Commission even passed a new rule proposal back in March
that is expected to give more call blocking power to carriers to cut
down on massive robocall complaints, far and away the number one
complaint lodged with the FCC every year. So it’s clear Verizon
understands this is a problem, and yet it’s still withholding a remedy
behind a $3-per-month paywall.
More important, however, is the fact that competing
carriers offer robocall and spam warnings to their subscribers for free.
T-Mobile, for instance, even does so on a network level, so you don’t
have to download an extraneous app. T-Mobile announced its scam warnings feature back in March
for all subscribers of its T-Mobile One plan, with the plan to expand
the service to other T-Mobile customers down the line. AT&T also
offers something similar, which it launched back in December,
for those with postpaid iOS and Android devices. That leaves Verizon as
the odd one out, charing for a service it knows rival telecoms happily
hand out free of charge.
The article was published on : theverge
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