Pradeep Pandey Profile picture
X about AI and Web development • Co-founder @AIInsights__ • DM for collaboration • 📥 Pandeybiz13@gmail.com

May 9, 17 tweets

Spam callers have a 23-second rule.

If you don't answer in 23 seconds, their AI marks you as "inactive" and moves on.

But if you decline?

You just told every scammer in the network your number is live.

I tested this for 30 days.

Here's what actually stops them:

First, understand why you're targeted.

When you sign up for anything online, your number gets sold to "data brokers."

They package it with your location, age, income, and sell it to call centers.

Each call confirms you're real.

The cycle intensifies.

Step 1: Register with the National Do Not Call Registry.

Go to DoNotCall dot gov (yes, it's real).

Enter your number. It's free. Government-backed.

Within 31 days, legitimate telemarketers must stop calling you.

But scammers ignore this.

That's where it gets interesting...

Step 2: Enable your phone's built-in spam blocker.

iPhone: Settings → Phone → Silence Unknown Callers (ON).

Android: Phone app → Menu → Settings → Caller ID & Spam → Filter
Spame Calls (ON)

This stops 80% of spam calls immediately.

Step 3: Download a spam-blocking app.

The top 3 (all free):

• RoboKiller (blocks 99% of spam)
• Nomorobo (crowd-sourced spam database)
• Truecaller (identifies unknown numbers before you answer)
Pick one. Install it.

Watch the spam vanish.

Spam Calls (ON).

Step 4: Remove your number from data broker sites.

This is the nuclear option most people skip.

Sites like Spokeo, WhitePages, BeenVerified sell your info.

Visit each one. Submit "opt-out" requests.

Takes 2 hours. Cuts spam calls by 60-70%.

Step 5: Stop confirming your number is active.

Never answer unknown calls.

Never press any buttons (even to "opt out").

Never call back.

Each interaction teaches their AI you're a live target.

Let it ring into the void.

Step 6: Use a disposable number for signups.

Get a Google Voice number (free).

Use it for online shopping, forms, sketchy websites.

Keep your real number private.

If Google Voice gets spammed, delete it and get a new one.

• Step 7: Block international calls if you don't need them
• Step 8: Report every spam call to FTC via ReportFraud dot ftc dot gov

These 2 final moves lock the door.

Carriers track reported numbers. Scammers get flagged. Networks adapt.

Here's what happens after you do all 8 steps:

Week 1: Spam drops by 40-50%.

Week 2: Unknown calls nearly disappear.

Week 4: Maybe 1-2 slip through.

Month 3: Total silence. Your phone becomes peaceful again

The psychology behind why this works:

Spam calls are AI-driven.

They target "responsive" numbers.

By removing your data from brokers and never engaging, you become invisible.

You literally train the algorithm to ignore you.

Common mistakes that undo everything:

❌ Answering to "yell at them"
❌ Pressing buttons to "unsubscribe"
❌ Calling back "just to see"
❌ Sharing your real number on sketchy sites

Each mistake adds 6 months to your spam problem.

"But what if it's important?"

Real people leave voicemails.

Emergency services text you first.

Your doctor's office leaves a message.

Legitimate calls always identify themselves.

Spam calls?

They hang up after 2 rings.

Pro tip: Set custom ringtones for your contacts.

Everyone in your phone = recognizable ringtone.

Unknown number = silence.

You'll never miss an important call, but spam becomes invisible white noise.

You just built an impenetrable spam fortress.

8 steps.

2 hours of setup.

Lifetime of peace.

Your phone will feel like a tool again, not a slot machine of interruptions.

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