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Australia Blocks 5.3mn Scam SMS Messages Per Week; Will Pilot a SenderID Registry

The ACMA wants Australia to join a growing list of countries that tackle impersonation fraud via better control of SMS identities.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) reports that the country’s telcos have blocked over 336 million scam texts since new rules were introduced in July 2022. Their figures equate to 5.3 million SMS messages during an average week, or one message for each Australian adult every month. These figures help to explain why complaints about scam SMS messages have fallen by 86 percent in just one year.

Australia is doing a tremendous job of curbing scam calls and texts but the national comms regulator is not satisfied yet. The ACMA used the news blitz surrounding the country’s Scam Awareness Week to highlight another major development on the horizon: they will trial the use of a SenderID registry for SMS messages. ACMA Chair Nerida O’Loughlin said:

The ACMA is currently developing the pilot of a Sender ID Registry, which will help protect the message headers… of brands and government agencies from impersonation by scammers. It will not eliminate impersonation scams but will increase trust in SMS by preventing scam messages entering legitimate pre-existing text message threads on smart phones. Close engagement with overseas registry providers has shown such registries are a valuable tool to protect consumers and brands.

There is huge international momentum behind the adoption of national registries to inhibit the sending of SMS messages that impersonate government functions and reputable organizations. That is obvious both from the string of announcements being made by different national regulators and the influx of traffic to Commsrisk whenever I report news of another country adopting the same approach.

Registries are not a panacea but they do not cost much either; there is no good reason not to adopt them in practice. Even if fraudsters change their tactics, at least they are being forced to work harder. If Australia intends to create an SMS registry after already enjoying massive reductions in scam SMS messages then it begs the question of why some countries have been so slow, so reluctant, and so ineffective when it comes to implementing similar consumer protection controls.

Eric Priezkalns
Eric Priezkalnshttp://revenueprotect.com

During his career, Eric has been a Director of Risk Management for a national telco, the Chief Executive of the Risk & Assurance Group, a Chief Marketing Officer for a software business, a consultant, a public speaker and the publisher of Commsrisk since its launch in 2006. Look here for more about the history of Commsrisk and the role played by Eric.

The comms providers that Eric has worked for include Qatar Telecom, Cable & Wireless, T‑Mobile, Sky and Worldcom. In addition to his proficiency at speaking about the current scamdemic, Eric is also a qualified chartered accountant and a subject matter expert in consumer protection, enterprise risk management, fraud prevention, data integrity and billing accuracy. Eric was the lead author of Revenue Assurance: Expert Opinions for Communications Providers, published by CRC Press. He can be reached through the contact form on this website.

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