As unwanted call traffic levels reach new highs, the need for effective call protection services is greater than ever. Hiya is proud to power a solution for AT&T.
These unwanted calls can be primarily spam/telemarketing and scam/fraud.
When it comes to protecting their customers, AT&T’s free app, AT&T Call Protect, is saving customers from unwanted calls.
In general, call protection services have two key attributes: identification and accuracy. It is important that each attribute balance the other.
The challenge for analytics services like ours is that identification and accuracy can be at direct odds with each other. While the easiest way to achieve strong spam/scam identification is by liberally declaring numbers spam or scam, this leads to poor accuracy, false labeling of innocent numbers and potentially important calls going unanswered. For example, since the majority of robocalling activity happens via spoofed phone calls, flagging a spam call or blocking a scam call isn’t the end of the matter. In a spoofed call, the number shown on caller ID isn’t the actual number creating the call. Instead, it is provided by the spammer or scammer directly. Scammers will often spoof a random number for only a few days – or even a few hours – before abandoning it.
Hiya is able to balance identification and accuracy on AT&T Call Protect thanks in part to the AT&T network itself. Hiya’s service operates on a per-call basis, not a per-phone number basis. Each individual phone call is assessed for spam/scam potential, regardless of the number. The service is quick to observe the rise in spam or scam traffic during spoofing, and equally quick to absolve the number when the scammer departs.
AT&T Call Protect powered by Hiya gives customers peace of mind that they are receiving the best in the industry when it comes to both identification and accuracy. Consumers win and scammers lose. Hiya is proud to have among the highest customer reviews (over 4.7-star rating in the App Store). We’re proud to stand by our customers so they can maintain trust in the fundamental aspect of their mobile device: making and receiving calls.