Forum Discussion
Hi Trstalgait,
Thank you for reaching out to us through Cox Forums. Current technology makes it easy for scammers to fake or "spoof" caller ID information. Scammers purchase lists of telephone numbers and use spoofing technology to trick potential victims into picking up the telephone. Under the current rules, telemarketers are required to display accurate caller ID information, but when a call is spoofed, the caller ID shows digits that are often someone else's information and in your case, your phone number. Customers that report this issue should keep a log of the date, time, name, and number displayed of the spoofed calls received. Availability for research is limited to the past 30 days.
Please email our team at cox.help@cox.com. Be sure to include this post, your full name, and complete address. We can check on the status of your ticket.
Maria L.
Cox Support Forum Moderator
Cox is responsible to provide us the name of the caller...not the telemarketer.
When we receive a call, we pay Cox to query a CNAM database (Calling NAMe) to determine the name registered to the calling phone number. Unfortunately, to save factional pennies per call, Cox only provides the City/State of the exchange, "Unavailable" or, if it's a Cox-assigned number, our name.
I understand CNAM is not centralized or even standardized, but Cox could apply some simple logic to fake numbers, war-dialing connections and me-calling-me calls.
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