FCC Names and Shames First Robocall Threat Actor
In a first, the FCC has designated “Royal Tiger” as a malicious robocall threat group
Robocalling can enable phishing, caller ID spoofing, and social engineering that expose personal data or redirect victims to malicious services.
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Background for this topic.
Robocalling is the automated placement of large volumes of telephone calls, using prerecorded messages or text-to-speech. It has legitimate uses, such as alerts and appointment reminders, but unwanted calls can also support fraud. Caller-ID spoofing can make a call appear to come from a bank, government agency, employer, or a known contact, while voice cloning can make impersonation more convincing.
In information security, robocalls are commonly a vishing (voice-phishing) channel: recipients may be pressured to disclose passwords, payment details, one-time codes, or personal data, visit a malicious site, install software, or call another number. Organizations should treat caller identity and unsolicited instructions as untrusted, verify requests through independently obtained contact details, and train staff on these scenarios. Call filtering and authentication controls can reduce volume but do not replace verification; security teams should preserve relevant call, message, and account records when investigating targeted campaigns.
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In a first, the FCC has designated “Royal Tiger” as a malicious robocall threat group
California-based XCast Labs says it will settle FTC charges of facilitating illegal robocalls
Auto-warranty campaign made billions of calls