99%? If a phone number was used than the PSTN was used. The fact that SIP is involved in part or all of the call path is not very relevant except for peer-to-peer stuff like whatsapp, skype, signal, telegram, etc. (and even those don't use SIP, but I think you meant voip more than SIP specifically) Even some of those can use e.164 for part or all of the path. I do believe that if the robo call/scam/fraudulent call issue does not get resolved people may eventually start to give up and just use apps like that. Many probably have already. *Brandon Svec* *15106862204 <15106862204> voice|sms**teamonesolutions.com <https://teamonesolutions.com/>* On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 1:11 PM Michael Thomas <mike@mtcc.com> wrote:
On 9/10/20 9:49 AM, Sean Donelan wrote:
At this month's FCC rulemaking meeting, it will consider
https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-announces-tentative-agenda-september-open-m...
Promoting Caller ID Authentication to Combat Spoofed Robocalls – The Commission will consider a Report and Order that would continue its work to implement the TRACED Act and promote the deployment of caller ID authentication technology to combat spoofed robocalls. (WC Docket No. 17-97)
So I have a question: what percentage of traffic in the US is really coming from the legacy PSTN? My understanding is that it's pretty low these days.
If that's true, it seems to me that this is a SIP problem, not an e.164 problem.
Mike