Posted 15 February 2024

Virgin Media O2 to roll out free AI-powered spam-fighting tools to help protect customers from fraud

New initiative using AI, we all hate these calls, now Virgin seem to be trying to fight it by teaming up with Hiya.

Full Info below:

  • New partnership with spam and fraud call leaders, Hiya, will see AI powered spam-fighting tools and enhanced caller identification services rolled out for free to all customers.
  • Adaptive AI will block known fraudulent calls and provide customers with more information about callers before they answer the phone.
  • The service will run alongside Virgin Media O2’s existing fraud protection services, including firewall technology which has blocked more than 89 million fraudulent texts from reaching customers in 2023.

Virgin Media O2 will roll out AI-powered spam fighting tools and new caller identification services to all mobile customers for free to help protect them from fraud, thanks to a new partnership with voice security leader, Hiya.

The Hiya Protect service, which will be rolled out in the background to all consumer customers in the coming months, uses Adaptive AI to analyse call number behaviour to determine whether to flag a call to the customer as suspected spam or block it as fraud, preventing it from reaching customers’ phones before it even rings.

In addition, Virgin Media O2 will also roll out Hiya’s advanced caller identification service, Hiya Connect, which will allow companies to add identity information to their calls with their company name, logo, call purpose and location, so recipients immediately know who is calling and why. This is projected to benefit businesses by providing their customers with greater peace of mind when receiving their calls and making it more likely someone will answer.

The news follows extensive investment from Virgin Media O2 in recent years to keep its customers safe from fraud, with the new tools and services due to run alongside existing fraud protection measures. This includes spam text AI-powered technology which has prevented more than 89 million fraudulent texts from reaching customers in 2023 alone.

Murray Mackenzie, Director of Fraud at Virgin Media O2, said: “In the fight against fraud, we’re committed to rolling out the latest technology to help keep our customers safe.

“From AI tools to help us block fraudulent calls, to services that help identify callers before a customer has even picked up the phone, our extensive partnership with Hiya will see us continue to improve on our existing measures and give customers’ additional protection from spam and fraudsters.”

Kush Parikh, President of Hiya, said “We are proud to provide our spam and fraud solution and branded calling service to Virgin Media O2, a company known for its exceptional service throughout the UK.

“Carriers around the world are wrestling with how to prevent phone spam and scams, and protect the reputation of business customers. Hiya is doing its part to restore confidence in voice calling by aligning with leaders like Virgin Media O2.”

Phone spam and fraud are persistent challenges for telco carriers worldwide. In the UK alone, 28% of unknown calls were spam according to the latest Hiya study – and nearly 10% of those were fraud calls. With scammers constantly evolving their methods and looking for new ways to gain personal information from customers, Virgin Media O2 is urging all mobile customers to report suspicious texts for free by forwarding them on to 7726.

By forwarding on scam texts, customers can protect themselves and others from fraud. The telecoms company is not only able to investigate and block the mobile numbers used by fraudsters, but also use the scam texts to help refine its blocking services, making it easier to identify new trends and block messages faster.



Notes to Eds

About Virgin Media O2

Formed in 2021 as a joint venture between Liberty Global and Telefonica, Virgin Media O2 has more than 46 million UK connections across its award-winning broadband, mobile, TV and home phone services. Its own fixed network currently has 16.4 million premises serviceable alongside a mobile network that covers 99% of the nation’s population with 4G, and more than 3,200 towns and cities with 5G services.

About Hiya
Hiya is trusted by global businesses, carriers, and consumers to provide secure, engaging connections and stop unwanted calls. Built on the world’s leading Voice Security Platform, Hiya connects businesses with their customers, helps carriers secure their networks, and protects people from spam and fraud calls. Hiya’s SaaS applications, Hiya Connect and Hiya Protect, serve more than 250 million users on the Hiya Network, powering call protection and identity for AT&T, Samsung, Ericsson and more. Learn more at hiya.com.
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  1. Assured_Brother's avatar
    Ai spam blocker - interesting that's what I wrote my dissertation on in 2004-5. Are you telling me I was sitting on a multimillion pound idea that I could have used? I didn't because I presumed Google already would be doing it in even..

    Basically it used a neural net and the more spam messages were sent out the more the nn would learn. Once it got over a certain threshold that would then block. So the more messages sent, the more it's learnt and blocked. You could whitelist authorized people too! That design is basically this by the looks of things
    EndlessWaves's avatar
    I'd be very surprised if they'd been doing any manual filtering for years. The mention of 'AI' is just because it's come back into fashion as a marketing term.

    There's no detail in the press release to be able to tell whether this is just a switch to a new subcontractor providing similar services or a genuinely new approach.
  2. Laura.Palmer's avatar
    This is BS. The networks could monitor the messages that originate in their network for spam but no. They leave it till it goes to the recipient and rely on 3rd party monitoring tools like this to report it back to them.
    They make ££ when the texts are sent. That is all you need to know.
    Bout time Ifcom got off their lazy backsides and stepped in.
    greenant's avatar
    Ofcom don't do much about anything. 1500 complaints about a certain tv presenter, no action. An analogue to digital phone transition affecting most people in the UK, no targets, no rules for the transition apart from basics already in place pre-transition. So as with most stripped back government watchdogs these days, they will sit on their hands.
  3. m4rmite's avatar
    Virgin would be better off using AI to improve its customer services
    Ferris's avatar
    Using AI would involve the novel introduction of at least some I
  4. JuD_'s avatar
    This is amazing.
    Someone in my family was fraudulently messaged being me and took over £1600 from their account and other outgoing payments.
    Thankfully the bank paid them all back but it was a situation where that money had to be paid for other outgoings like home care and it could have been much worse.
    Now I'm trying to prevent that by making keywords or other things to stop that happening again.
    Especially older people are so vulnerable to these scams and it's sad.

    Thanks for the post.
    MrSwitch's avatar
    Author
    Aww man, sorry to hear that, happy to see you have the money back though (edited)
  5. innocent's avatar
    On a tangent, whether true or not, interesting read at least to me (I say this to preempt one of my avid followers, "here we go again" Discussions) : businesstoday.in/tec…-05 (edited)
  6. TeaTimeTales's avatar
    I will believe it when I see it. They have been promising to block these nuissance calls for years.
  7. sidesey's avatar
    Shame it’s not for land lines as they were the ones spamming incessantly for us to get a mobile from them. Ironic really. Had to threaten to leave them, then they stopped. Funny that!
  8. bored_senseless's avatar
    How do I contact the fantastic Mr switch?
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