When Did My Cell Number Get Published?

As I’ve mentioned before, I hate the telephone.  However, I actually have a cell phone anyway, for emergencies and the like.  As my stated goal is to never actually use the thing, I believe I have the cheapest plan in the galaxy – $10 per month.  That only gets me about 20 minutes of talk time, but I use it so rarely that in the 15 months I’ve owned it, I’ve banked over 7 months worth of minutes.

Anyway, only a very few people know the number to this little phone: my wife, our babysitter, and a few neighbourhood friends who in the past we have had to co-ordinate arriving somewhere with.  And it’s not listed anywhere that I know of.  I’ve never entered it as contact info anywhere.  It rings (or at least used to ring) so infrequently that I have at times not recognized my own ring tone.  It’s only when everyone’s looking at me with a “Why aren’t you answering your phone?” expression that I realize it’s mine.

But suddenly all that has changed.  In the last couple of weeks, I’ve received about 20 calls on my cell phone.  One, I answered even though I didn’t recognize the number, because it came from my area code — it was a wrong number.  But all the others are from area codes I don’t even recognize like 310, 510 and 909 (all California).  I’ve answered 3 or 4 of them out of curiosity, and as you’ve already guessed, they are all phone spam.  Recorded messages that I don’t listen to long enough to even learn what they want from me.

So I am intrigued as to why it took the spammers so long to find my number.  If there is some computer somewhere trying every possible phone number and flagging the ones that don’t answer with “this line is not in service,” or a fax or modem signal, and it was  just a matter of churning though all the possibilities?  Let’s do some math: there are about 375 area codes in North America, and let’s say that that the average one uses about half of its available exchanges.  So there are 500 × 375 = 187,500 possible 4-digit extensions.  So we have 187,500 × 10,000 = 1,875,000,000 possible phone numbers on the continent. 

If I set up 10 PCs calling one of these possible numbers each every 10 seconds, it would take me 59½ years to try every one.  If I used 100 computers, 6 years.  1000 computers = 7 months.  Is that what happened?  Is there a phone-spam funded server farm somewhere testing possible phone numbers all the time?

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4 Responses to “When Did My Cell Number Get Published?”

  1. Clayton Says:

    I’m betting your cel carrier publishes a directory of their users online somewhere or they sold your number as part of the list to marketers.

    Think of it as Karma for all the voicemail marketing campaigns you’ve run in the past. 😉

  2. 1739 Says:

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  3. Scott Says:

    I’ve heard of two companies that claim to offer a list of all cell phone numbers that are in use. One doesn’t really say how they get the data, but the other claims to be in contact with a group of telecom insiders. Neither says or implies that they do any automated dialing (even with the 1000 computers / 7 months possibility, the data would be outdated by the time it was sold).

  4. Michel Chiasson Says:

    if you type the calling phone number on google….you will be directed to a list of complains regarding that cell number along with comments from others, like you and I, that have seen these phone numbers appear on the display…and they are calling about extending guarantees to a vehicle they don’t know you own, or to increase the credit card limit of a card for which they know nothing about…phone spam from california…

    oh well, far from the “opt out” campaigns you managed so well….

    i don’t have your cell, but could you contact me? I need to talk about one of your past assignments….

    Before we talk, can you check the TSX.ca and type that ticker ….thanks!

    As always, I speak – write in code 🙂

    Have a good weekend!


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