• Re: originator whitelist?

    From Richmond@21:1/5 to bad sector on Sat May 4 12:40:43 2024
    bad sector <forgetski@_INVALID.net> writes:

    is there a way to build a white-list of phone numbers and have calls
    from any other number silently dropped?

    Yes, Do Not Disturb allows this, because you can make exceptions to
    it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bad sector@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 4 07:24:13 2024
    is there a way to build a white-list of phone numbers and have calls
    from any other number silently dropped?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From VanguardLH@21:1/5 to bad sector on Sat May 4 13:09:24 2024
    bad sector <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    is there a way to build a white-list of phone numbers and have calls
    from any other number silently dropped?

    Set a global ringtone (the default one). Could be a silent ringtone, or
    one that is much more quiet to eliminate jarring you from whatever
    you're current doing. Then, in each contact, assign the ringtone you
    want for that contact.

    I have a global and quiet ringtone for all calls. For contacts, I have
    all of them assigned to a much louder ringtone, except for a couple for emergency use that play the very loud siren ringtone. You could have
    different ringtones for different contacts, but I generally just use a
    louder ringtone for all my contacts. Tis a bitch, though, having to
    edit every contact to change the ringtone. Luckily, I only have about
    20 contacts. I don't put everyone that has called me into my contacts
    list.

    Does "dropped" mean you want the call rejected, or just not interrupt
    you with a ringtone (which then has the caller hangup or go to
    voicemail)? My bank and pharmacy, for example, are not in my contacts
    list, but I do want their calls should they leave voicemail. My doctor
    calls are from an everchanging list of numbers at the hospital or
    clinic, and I'm not listing everyone of them (which I wouldn't know,
    anyway, until after getting a call from all of their numbers).

    Richmond mentioned using exceptions in the DND feature. My old Android
    8 phone doesn't let me list specific exclusions. Its choices for call
    DND priorities are:

    Calls from:
    - No one.
    - Everyone.
    - Contacts.
    - Favorites.

    Mine is set to Contacts. However, I don't use DND to filter out calls
    by the caller. I only use it to schedule when DND is active, like when
    I'm sleeping. So, the DND Mode is "Priority only" which means only my
    contacts can wake me with a call. Luckily my contacts rarely (maybe
    never) call me while I'm sleeping since they're probably sleeping, too.

    As I recall, DND does not reject incoming calls. It simply doesn't have
    your phone make noise: no ringtone, no vibrate. The caller hears the
    rings until the voicemail service picks up the call whereupon the call
    can decide to hang up or leave a message. If they leave a message, you
    should get a notification about a new voicemail.

    There are times outside of sleeping hours when I do want to know I got a
    call from a non-contact caller, especially if I'm waiting for the call.
    So, instead of ignoring non-contact callers to push them to voicemail, I
    simply use a soft ringtone with no vibrate (the global defaults) for non-contact callers. For my contacts, I configure their contact records
    to use a louder ringtone. But the DND feature is another possibility.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to VanguardLH on Sat May 4 22:22:42 2024
    On 2024-05-04 20:09, VanguardLH wrote:
    bad sector <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    is there a way to build a white-list of phone numbers and have calls
    from any other number silently dropped?

    Set a global ringtone (the default one). Could be a silent ringtone, or
    one that is much more quiet to eliminate jarring you from whatever
    you're current doing. Then, in each contact, assign the ringtone you
    want for that contact.

    I have a global and quiet ringtone for all calls. For contacts, I have
    all of them assigned to a much louder ringtone, except for a couple for emergency use that play the very loud siren ringtone. You could have different ringtones for different contacts, but I generally just use a
    louder ringtone for all my contacts. Tis a bitch, though, having to
    edit every contact to change the ringtone. Luckily, I only have about
    20 contacts. I don't put everyone that has called me into my contacts
    list.

    You could assign ringtones to groups, then add contacts to one or
    another group. Friends, family, businesses...

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)