How to deal with and block phone spam and unwanted calls on a iPhone

At least three times a week my phone will ring between 11pm and 4am, repeatedly. When I answer it, there is someone there, who (with a very strong Asian accent) asks for what sounds to me like “Allan”. I have responded pleasantly saying “wrong number’, “not Allan’s phone”, “sorry, you have the wrong number” etc etc etc, to no avail. I hang up and 5 minutes later, the phone rings again…..”Allan…Allan…”……

Your probably saying “Just Turn The Ringer Off”, which is what I do when my wife is at home, but her job requires her to spend on average 1 or 2 weeks a month away from home. When she is away, I really like to leave the phone on so if there is a problem, and she needs me, she can reach me. Not unreasonable.

I set about finding a “Blocking App” in the Apple App Store, and I must say, I was really disappointed not only at the amount of fake apps that are available for purchase, but the fact that Apple has allowed them to be made available for purchase in their store.

After further investigation it seems that Apple doesn’t allow access to the particular part of the iPhones software that would need to be accessed in order to intercept and block an unwanted call…

If you choose to Jailbreak your phone, you have options, but for the 95% of people who use their iPhone as it came, anything you purchase from the App store to block an unwanted number is going to disappoint you!

In short, at this point in time, I can only offer a “Workaround” – A way to deal with the situation. And as my mystery caller shows me no respect, I will now return the favor and publish their number on this site – please call them at 3am!

My mystery caller phones me from two different numbers. They will try two or three times from one number, and then switch lines and try a few more times from another number. To begin handling this problem I created a contact for my unwanted caller with both of the numbers, and called it “Spammer”,

Now that I have created a contact for my phone spammer, I needed a way to silence them! The best I could come up with was a “Non Ring Tone”. A ring tone that doesn’t make any sound. After a bit of searching (and finding fake files, popups, porn links etc) I did find a silent ring tone. To make your life easier, here it is:

SilentRingTone

Once you have downloaded the zip file, extract it so you have the “SilentRing.m4r” in front of you, then open iTunes and connect your phone. On the top left side of the iTunes window, select “Tones”. Once you have Tones open, drag and drop the SilentRing.m4r file into the open field window.

Once the silent ring tone has copied into iTunes, you can now drag it from the iTunes window to your connected iPhone. When you drag the “SilentRing” file over your iPhone in the device menu, I have noticed that all categories seem to highlight/illuminate (in my case a blue color). It doesn’t seem to matter where you drop the ring tone file, it is automatically copied to the right place on your phone.

After dropping the ring tone file, you will need to click the “Sync” button in the bottom right corner of the window to make your changes stick. You may also have to click “Apply” if a pop up window appears.

Once you have successfully copied your new ringtone to your iPhone you can then choose to apply it to your unwanted caller only, that way when they ring at 2am, you don’t hear it, but if your loved one calls with an emergency, your phone will ring normally. To do this, select your unwanted caller/spammer from your contacts, open their information window, and in the top left corner select edit.

A new window will open with more details. As you will see, the ringtone will be set to your phone’s default ringtone.

This is where you can assign different ringtones to different callers. Now that you have a “Silent” ring tone on your phone, it is just a matter of changing this from “Default” to “SilentRing”.

Once you have made your changes (I changed the text message tone to silent as well), click “Done” in the top right hand corner, and your all set. Next time they call, you wont hear a thing! Your phone may still vibrate though, so it might pay you to disable that feature as well if your a light sleeper.

MX Guarddog let’s one through!

MX Guard Dog LogoI guess the Guarddog was sleeping, or chewing on a bone, because a few emails from domains and addresses I have blacklisted are still coming through. I blacklisted On-One Softwares domain name (Good software, but they send a LOT of emails once you download a trial), and after receiving another email from them a few days later, I black listed the actual address the email come from. But alas, they are still coming through. I got two more from them today. There have been another few domains that sneak past the Guarddog, but On-One is the main offender. I will start tracking them no as well.

I have forwarded the messages to MXGuarddog, so we’ll wait and see if they respond.

WordPress Plug In SPAM alert – Post Page Associator 1.3.21

This is so disappointing. Dennis Hoppe has written a really really good plugin. Post Page Associator allows you to create a “page” in WordPress, and place content from one, or multiple categories on it, and by modifying the associated CSS file (or creating your own template) you can make it look just the way you want. It truly is a great plug in. There is a paid version, and a free version. The free version is where my issue with this plugin begins. Now, WordPress is created and made available for free, not to be sold. Even though some plugins on third party sites are commercial, plugins that appear in the Official WordPress Plugin Repository are also meant to be free. This plugin appears in the repository HERE. On the authors own site, he bills the program as free from the repository:

Dennis Hoppe Site GrabSo imagine my surprise when I activated the plugin and saw this in my Dashboard:

Dashboard Spam Screen Capture from WordPress DashboardNot only did it appear in the Admin dashboard, it also appeared under the “Editor” permissions group as well. Thankfully, I don’t have “subscribers” activated on this particular site, as I expect (but can not confirm) it would appear in the subscriber dashboard panel as well. If this isn’t bad enough, should you choose not to donate to the author, and click the button in the bottom right labelled “No thanks, Remove this box now!”, as expected the box goes away……..and so does the plug in!  It de-activates itself!

RANSOM and ULTIMATUM! Pay up, don’t use it, or live with a very large obtrusive and ugly nag screen in everybody’s dashboard,  that’s your choices.

I believe this is a violation of the spirit and terms of WordPress, and I call this “Dashboard SPAM”. I have no problems with plugin authors including a “Donate” button on their plugins “settings” page, or an advertisement for their plugins paid version, and its benefits over the free version, but I feel what the author has done in this case oversteps the mark. At no point during my selection and installation of this plugin was I asked to accept this term/condition.

I have just been looking to see if the author has made a note anywhere about how to remove the spam part, and I stumbled upon THIS thread. The first thing that caught my attention is that the author does indeed provide a way for you to remove the spam when asked – his answer:

How To Remove Spam GraphicAnother suggestion in the thread states that removal of the “donate.php” file is all that is required to make it go away. This may have been true of previous versions, but in the current 1.3.21 version, no such file exists. In the current version, the author has renamed this file to “contribute.php”, and now, simply deleting this file will crash your entire WordPress install. The author has written it in such a way that there is code in this file that code elsewhere in other files looks for, and if it doesn’t find it, it WordPress crashes.

Post Page Associator is not, and will not be used on this site.

 

MX Guard Dog (vs Postini)

MX Guard Dog

MX Guard Dog is a free virus and spam filter, that I learned about when looking for an alternative to the Postini service I have been using for many years. It’s free, in exchange for a link on your site, meaning that if you display links to the service in prominent locations on your site, you earn credits towards the licensing fee. You can top up with paypal if you fall short after your free initial 30 Day trial. I haven’t been using it for long, but I am pretty impressed so far!

One thing I really like about MX Guard Dog is the different user access levels. There is a “postmaster” mode, which is basically god mode, where you set everything up and get all your accounts in place, and then there is user mode, which strips all of the admin stuff away, and leaves you with what you need to sort the good mail from the bad. Below is a screen capture of Postmaster mode, where you can preside over all spam, in all of the email accounts you have in your domain.

MX Guard Dog Main Panel

And this is what you are left with at the user level.

MX Guard Dog User Interface

Each user see’s only their email, and it’s really great for those who just want to check their spam, and not have to worry about the nuts and bolts. For comparisons sake, below is a screen capture of Postini’s dreary standard Google “sparse” interface.

Postini Interface

And the Postini settings panel (With copyright 2009 still down the bottom, making me feel like they are really paying attention to this service).

Postini Settings Window

For the most part, the functionality is similar. MX Guard Dog is a lot less annoying in my opinion, and apart from being free in exchange for links (I was paying $12 per year per email account for Postini through Bluehost), it has a few other features Postini doesn’t have, which make it the better service. A feature I really like in MX Guard Dog is you are able to set the intervals at which you get your spam summary sent to you. Postini sends it daily, but MX Guard Dog allows you to select multiple  summaries, which is great for those who receive a lot of email.

And speaking of email summaries, here’s the Postini summary on an iPhone (captured using Plutinosoft’s iDemo).

Postini Spam Summary on iPhone

And the spam summary from MX Guard Dog, also using iDemo.

MX Watch Dog Spam Summary on iPhoneAnd now, my favorite advantage to MX Guard Dog over Postini. When you click the senders name to have a message delivered, it actually DOES IT! My biggest gripe with Postini was that when trying to get a message delivered, you were taken to a screen where you have to log in, and fumble about, and on more than a few occasions the message never arrived for me. MX Guard Dog releases the message with just one touch! Nice Work!

In summary, even though Postini initiates a secure connection, it doesn’t tell you about it. You get that nice safe feeling with MX Guard Dog because you see nice re-assuring graphics letting you know they are thinking about your security.

MX Guard Dog Security SealMX Guard Dog does exactly what the makers say it does – “He lets the good mail in, and keeps the bad mail out.” It just so happens that he does it for free, and gives you some nicer options along the way.

I will post a follow up article after my 30 day trial is complete.