In answer to Guru: Correct, and BT are the loser.
Are you registered with the Telephone Preference Service?
TPS does not stop scammers !!
Scammers and fraudsters don't act within the law.
TPS:
You have been told the only answer to your problem, whitelisting.
Slightly off topic, but they have to actually follow the law now, or the NCA will come down on them hard no matter which country they are in:
Fraud targeted thousands across UK and abroad - National Crime Agency
(Mods I hope this link is allowed here. It's a GOV site, nothing being sold on it.)
I get genuine calls I want from people I have never spoken to before every day so whitelisting would never work for me. the only scam calls I get are on the two landline numbers - in my case they always come from India and always pretend to be from BT, sometime the information commissioner of all people (!), microsoft etc. I just about never use a mobile and have never had a scam call on my mobile.
@Jane2018wrote:I get genuine calls I want from people I have never spoken to before every day so whitelisting would never work for me.
Another thing to add to "the list" that you've spectacularly misunderstood how it works.
We are still waiting, it appears it's possible.
Phone companies agree to block scam calls from abroad - Ofcom
BT do block scammer calls everyday , it’s fatuous to suggest that no effort is made to stop these calls , but it’s an impossible task to block every single one ,and any blanket approach is likely to affect genuine calls as well as scam calls ,obviously BT ( and everyone else ) cannot simply say , any call from India, and that’s if is likely to be a scammer so block all calls from that location, what’s more spoofing the geographical location is as easy as spoofing the number they appear to be calling from .
BT are not the only company that is subject to this , if the OP moves to a different provider, and they keep the phone number they have , the scam calls will follow , if they change number ( to one provided by the new ISP ) due to the random nature of scammers, you may be fine for a while ( especially if the new number has never been previously used ) but there is every chance that new number will eventually also be called by scammers .
Scammers obviously know the way calls are delivered and how to circumvent any attempts to block , use IP telephony , so the calls are effectively ‘free’ and use calling technology so that hundreds if not thousands of calls are made simultaneously and only the ones that are answered are offered to the scammer call centre employee, they don’t sit and dial each number themselves.
Personally I can recall one obvious scam attempt in decades, the AVR was a somewhat ridiculous’ This is a call from your bank ‘ , I hung up before the ‘ press 1 to speak to a bank employee ‘ , that’s the point at which the scammer is connected , but luckily that’s it , one call in many , many years , if someone gets inundated with scam attempts they are either just unlucky or scammers have noted any number that gets answered and enters into the dialogue, by in my example pressing 1 , and that makes that number more valuable to the scammers , so once you have entered into a dialogue, even if you haven’t been duped and realised after speaking to them , increases the likelihood of more calls , as your number is circulated as a potential sucker .