Thanks.
In your opinion, do you think the report I linked is too harsh against Sinch when they accuse them of being lax, perhaps even intentionally, against scam center customers? Do you think they more or less do what is realistically possible to detect and block such users?
EDITED:
Personally, I feel Sinch is slow-rolling their processing of complaints and shutdown of scam center customers.
Why? Because there's a conflict of interest.
A. Sinch's interest is in keeping customers, including scam centers, for as long as possible, because customers are their revenue source. Sinch would be happy to keep all customers including scam centers, and for scam center outbound calls to be blocked at the network level or at the user level by smarter Phone apps on users' smartphones.
B. The general public interest is in blocking scam centers by any and all means, in whichever ways are most reliable and effective. Deleting scam center customers from Sinch quickly is one of the best ways of derailing these scammers quickly.
One solution to this conflict of interest would be to separate the banning mechanism away from Sinch and bring it into the network level, similar to 10DLC operates for A2P (app to person) mass texting. Instead of the "Stop" command, the SIP calling network should track how many users flag a call as Scam, plus an optional AI score, and after a certain threshold, the SIP network itself (no Sinch or other VSPs) will block calls from that Sinch account on the basis of a substantial number of scam reports. The scamer calling account will be blocked from ringing user devices by the SIP network, effectively taken down in minutes or hours insteaf of days or weeks as is now the case, saving hundreds of potential victims from losing hundreds of thousands of dollars/pounds/euros.
Two things that would cut down on these scam calls at the level of the user smart phone/desk device/soft phone:
1. Require more KYC. Nobody, not even in 2nd and 3rd world nations, should be allowed to obtain VOIP service capable of calling into the US or Europe or any targeted country, without showing the VSP their ID, in case of future legal issues due to criminal activity.
2. The suspicious VOIP call headers must be exposed to users thru the Phone app and any calling app, when calls are live, and in call history records. When a call has a C-Level (Unverified) STIR/SHAKEN Attestation, it should byb default not ring and go straight to voicemail, and call history should show "C: Unverified" next to the name and number. Second, when spoofing, they put forged fake info in the SIP INVITE "From:" header, "Chase Bank <+1800....>", when it doesn't match the SIP "Contact:" header "<+1213....>" , the real name and number of the VOIP account from the "Contact:" header should be also shown, when calls are ringing/live, and in the Phone app's call history, so the user is warned of the scam caller and should not tap to call back.