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Do you get the feeling that Robocalls are getting worse? I still get them on my landline, but now they seem to be creeping onto my smartphone as well. Mine have gotten a little better, but I have plenty of friends who aren’t so lucky—and are getting sick of call after call of random insurance scams, special award notices, or whatever the latest spam of the day is.
While there are plenty of downloadable apps you can use to minimize robocalls, if you’re getting close to your breaking point, it’s time to take more drastic measures. This trick is for iPhone users only, but we’ll be back soon with techniques Android users can try as well.
The secret weapon
What I will describe sounds a bit extreme at first, but follow the steps and you see how you’ll first block all calls, then open back doors to the calls you want to receive such as those numbers in your contacts list or special categories you can choose. It’s a bit tricky getting there, but it works and is worth trying if you just don’t want to deal with those pesky calls anymore.
You’re going to employ iOS’ Do Not Disturb mode, which you probably only use when you don’t want to be bothered while you’re sleeping, or in a movie. In this fun little twist, you’ll want to set your phone in Do Not Disturb mode in perpetuity. You will now, and forever more, enjoy sweet silence.
To do this, hit up the iOS Settings app and tap on Do Not Disturb. Turn off any scheduling you might have previously set and tap the little switch to turn the feature on. Never turn it off.
You’re not done on this screen, however. Scroll down to the “Phone” section and make sure the “Allow Calls From” setting is either “All contacts” or, if you want to limit yourself a bit more, “Favorites.” This means that your device won’t ring unless someone is already your contact—but you can always call back unknown, important calls, assuming they leave a voicemail.
I’d also enable “Repeated Calls,” so a call from an unknown caller punches through your wall of silence in case the person is really trying to reach you.
The one caution with this whole “leave Do Not Disturb on all the time” philosophy is that it means what it says. You also won’t receive notifications when you get text messages, your screen won’t pop up with the message, your device won’t vibrate, and you won’t hear any sounds.
There’s a fun way to bypass this, however.
Pull up iOS’ Contacts app and tap on a contact—one you’d like to know is texting you even if your device is on “Do Not Disturb” mode. Tap on “Edit” in the upper-right corner of their contact card, and then tap on “Text Tone.” Switch the Emergency Bypass switch to on, which will ensure that every text they send will go to your device.
This little trick comes with a caveat, too. Any contacts that use “Emergency Bypass” will no longer obey your device’s Do Not Disturb setting, which means any stupid texts they send while you’re sleeping will pass through to your device. Sometimes the person’s messages will trigger your vibrate and text tone unless your device’s physical switch is set to vibrate/silent mode.
This might get annoying if you’re, say, watching a movie, so you’ll want to make sure you’ve turned your device’s volume down as low as it’ll go. Or you can give your person a customized text tone that’s at least lower in volume, generally, than whatever you use as your default tone. (You could also just turn your phone off when you’re at the movie theater, or a fancy restaurant, etc.)
You’ll also want to go through your contacts and set this feature for as many people as you want to hear from, since Do Not Disturb will otherwise dump anything they send you into your Messages app sans notification. It’s a tedious process if you have a ton of friends, but how many of your friends call you in the middle of the night, anyway?
Still, if you’re tired of being harassed by robocallers, blocking everyone you can with Do Not Disturb is an option—a nuclear option, but an option nevertheless.
The process for Android phones is very similar. It’s just that the locations of the switches are different. But we’ll cover that in a future article.
And as a tip, if you use this process, make sure you print this page and keep it handy so you can back-out of the changes if you ever want to reverse the process.
Be Safe – Backup Your Data Regularly!
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