Craigslist hates VoIP, Prepaid Cellular, Spammers….

June 2, 2008 by Garrett Smith

Craigslist hates VoIP

Not sure how I missed this, I like to think of myself as being on top of the industry but I just came across this over the weekend.

Craigslist.org, the popular free classified ad site, has been at war with spammers for some time. According to some reports, 90+% of ads in some categories are generated by spambots. Craigslist has deployed countermeasures including CAPTCHA and other techniques, but spammers have quickly evolved their techniques to sidestep them.

A few months back, Craiglist instituted a telephone verification process that places an automated outbound call to a user placing a classified ad in certain categories. The call delivers a unique code using text to speech, which is then used by the poster to authenticate the ad they are placing.

This is an effective measure for dealing with spam, and a great thing for legitimizing the Craigslist user experience….but not so great if you are a Craigslist user and you also happen to be a VoIP or prepaid cellular user.

The problem is that Craigslist is categorically blocking legitimate VoIP and Pre-paid cellular users from authenticating themselves.

The phone verification process is fairly straight forward. When you place an ad in many categories on Craigslist, you are presented with the form below.

Craigslist blocks most VoIP phone numbers, including those from services like Grand Central and Tossable Digits. This is an apparent broad stroke to counter the use of such services by spammers to game Craigslist’s voice verification.

Craig’s uses a 3rd party service, ReduceFraud.com to screen out VoIP and Pre-paid cellular numbers, and will not deliver an automated verification call to a number that is determined to be such. (Since only SPAMMERS use VoIP and Pre-Paid Cellular!!!) What sophisticated algorithm does ReduceFraud.com use to identify VoIP numbers, you ask? They check the DID number to see who owns the NPA NXX X number block, and if the DID number is owned by Level 3 Communications, they classify it as VoIP of course. Whizbang!

Coincidentally, ReduceFraud.com is owned and operated by a CA firm called Telecentrex, who offers their own hosted VoIP service.

Amazingly, this has created a business opportunity for resourceful entrepreneurs. Literally dozens of services have popped up offering everything from VoIP DID Numbers that Craigslist classifies as Fixed Lines, to pre-authenticated Craigslist user accounts, to full-blown Craigslist Super Spammer Software Packages.

I even found programming requsts on e-Lance, Rentacoder and GetaFreeLanceer.com
offering to pay for workarounds.

I would love to find out which service provider Craigslist is using to delivery their automated outbound verification calls. It would be cost-prohibitive to incure circuit-switched LD charges to deliver all those millions of calls…..VoIPMonitor estimated nearly 24 million VoIP users by 2008 (i.e 24 Million frustrated, would-be Craigslist users)…..I would not be surprised to learn that the provider was leveraging VoIP to send these very same outbound verification calls. Now wouldn’t that be ironic?


21 Comments

  • And how about the irony that ReduceFraud.com has NO PHONE NUMBER AT ALL on their website and the number for Telecentrex (714) 408-4400 comes back as “Non-Fixed VoIP”, iow a FRAUDSTER!

  • Garrett Smith

    @David:

    We touched on that briefly on the Squawk box call yesterday. Honestly, it is tough to give them the benefit of the doubt on this.

  • It is really screwed up. I just sold to a legit advertiser a whole bunch of DIDs for one time use, it seems that my DIDs although they are VoIP are listed by them as “fixed line”. go figure!

  • Garrett Smith

    @Moshe

    I find it funny that a large organization (revenue and influence wise) would utilize a service that is so arbitrary.

  • I’m going to be a bit contrarian on this. Craigslist is in serious trouble about the spam and illegal posting stuff – they face lawsuits and even being shut down in some places because of the spammers. It is hard to argue that denying some percentage of users access to post ads is worse than denying all advertisers and potential buyers access.

    Which is of course not the same thing as not dealing with fixing their issues with voip-using potential advertisers. They clearly are going to need to do that – but maybe you should cast this as an opportunity for a smart voip entrepreneur to come up with a verification service that works and doesn’t discriminate? The upside has to be good – craigslist is big business

  • Cory Andrews

    Owen – I agree 100%….the title of my post was perhaps a bit provocative….but this is the ADD generation and it takes a little oomph to grab the attention of prospective readers these days.

    I see their efforts to date as band aids. I am not an expert in broad fundamental solutions like OpenID, I just saw their current methodology of voice verification to be inherently flawed.

    I sympathize wholeheartedly with the folks at Craigslist. Spam is a blight, but “throwing the baby out with the bathwater” is not a long term solution.

  • If they are doing something as detailed as checking the carrier, why not (instead of alienating 14 million subscribers), offer SMS validation, take a recorded voice sample, or offer the subscriber a faxable form? There are so many easy alternatives than a black-out approach. Cory Andrews “throwing the baby out” comment is dead on. Great article by the way.

  • I have a very good system working now that I can generate working verified phone accounts. If interested please visit:
    http://www.craigslistextractor.com/phone-verified-accounts.php

    We work 24/7 so email us anytime!

  • George Bush

    Anyone notice that we just let San Fran have Legal Hookers??? Ummmm oh wait Craigslists crack team of 25 hippies are located in San Fran too…. and let me see they got the biggest US based online ad site with Escorts and Hookers all over the place Can you say Kick backs?

    Craigslist… shut down your Escort Pages You say you are non-profit you go on TV and the news saying you want to bring peace and love to the nation and world lets see it

    We all know what areas on craigslist are the “problems” LE and FBI know it, Craigslist knows it Take Escorts Off of Craigslist and you make the internet and world a better place. fricken hippies takin their corp kick backs in san fran makes me sick you guys are suppost to stand for something

  • Funny, I wanted to sign up for their service (reducefraud.com), but their demo wouldn’t work and their contact form wouldn’t work either because… I have Vonage!? So I called their domain registration contact number and left a message. Are there other services besides them?

  • What a joke…their “anti-spam” policy isn’t working…the site is filled with spam and fake ads. Probably the majority of their help-wanted ads are fake (e.g., pay a fee to get on a list to take surveys). It’s difficult to take the site seriously at this point.

  • Perhaps they would be wiser to employ the services of an entity that is empowered with a lot more information to conduct skip tracing and personal background information. It can be done, but there is only so much they can do to research the background history of their users.

  • hii

    My method:

    1. Go to a pay phone with a cellular.

    2. Use the pay phone to call the cellular (fifty cents).

    3. When the cell rings, note the incoming number. This is the number for the pay phone. Hang up the cell without answering and then hang up the pay phone. The pay phone will give your fifty cents back.

    4. Either whip out your laptop or, if not feasible or no wireless, call a friend on the cell, and have them enter the pay phone number in the Craigslist phone verification.

    5. Some pay phones don’t make a regular ring when called, so listen for a more subtle sound like a click and then answer. The payphone will tell you your verification.

    6. Enter verification on Craigslist.

  • Lezzie Buckermist

    Google has an interest in Craigslist. This is a DATA Harvesting method on Google & Craiglists partnership. Essentially for personal data. By giving CL your cell/phone number you automatically link your email data and your browser environmental variables, Internet Protocol (IP) address to googlesyndication, google maps and so forth. In other words Google would know every website, phone call you make via super cookies and LSO’s. Giving your phone number to make a post is tremendous invasion of privacy. I wouldn’t post to Craigslist by giving out your phone number. That’s like walking into a store and having them ask for your “phone number” to shop.

  • mark

    what a joke. these people come out of nowhere with the means to put all local advertisers out of bizz . i truly think this is a cia front to get every one fighting with each other

  • steve

    Just go to your account, dredge up an old listing, and edit to your heart’s content.

    It will go to the top of the list.

  • jon

    Craigslist new spam policy is a joke.

  • Former Craigslist user

    Here’s an idea use Backpage.

  • Jim smyth

    Just posted a Job, stupid Craiglist will not verify my Google Voice number or VoIP number.

    Idiots

    Using VoIP does not make you a spammer, it just makes you cost conscious.

  • TROY St. JOHN McNEILL

    “Lezzie Buckermist”, has it ALL figured out, People. Its a Google/CRAIG scheme to get access to all active landlines (the wealthiest citizens). As a form of discrimination, it may not be legal. I want to hear what the AG says.

  • Mario John

    Blocking pre-paid cellular users is a discriminatory practice. I’ve sold many items, without any complaints from the buyers before getting the “verification” notice. Because I am a prepaid user I was blocked from further activity on CL. If they were truly interested in dealing with spammers and scammers they could certainly find a more equitable form of verification. Having some half *** outfit block reputable individuals from using the site, is a testament to CL’s total lack of professionalism. The lack of planning their business model and anticipating the potholes, is probably why they’ve had so many problems in the first place. Alienating tens of millions of users leaves an opening for a structured and responsible alternative to CL.

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