Out call is placed.
Caller ID blocking is the common term for a service by which a caller can prevent the display of the calling number on the recipient's telephone. Blocking the number is formally referred to as
calling line identification restriction (CLIR). This customer option was part of the legal authorization for New York State's 1992 authorization of Caller ID. Telecommunications regulators vary in their requirements for the use and effectiveness of assorted technologies to prevent numbers from being displayed. Generally,
unlisted numbers are always blocked. Non-published and regular listed numbers are not usually blocked. But there is varying treatment for the determination of call display blocking because of many factors. If desired, customers should inquire carefully to make sure their number will not be displayed. The telephone service provider may also have vertical service codes which can be dialed to configure blocking as active for all calls or on a call-by-call basis. In some locations in the United States, regulations allow (or require) blocking to be automatic and transparent to the caller. Where blocking is applied on a call-by-call basis (that is, at the time a call is made), subscribers can block their caller ID by
dialing a special code (a vertical service code, or VSC) before making a call. In
North America and some other regions, the code is *67 (1167 on
rotary phones), while in the
United Kingdom and
Ireland, it is 141. This special code does not block the information from companies using call capture technology. This means that equipment with caller ID will simply display the word "PRIVATE" or "WITHHELD". When CNID is blocked at the caller's request, the number is actually transmitted through the entire telephone network, with the "presentation withheld" flag set; the destination CO is expected to honor this flag, but sometimes does notespecially when the destination phone number is served by an ISDN
PRI. Alternatively, in cases where caller ID is being blocked automatically, it can only be released on a call-by-call basis by dialing a special code (*82 in North America; 1470 in the UK). See "Enabling", below. Similarly, some countries offer
anonymous caller rejection, which rejects all calls when the subscriber's name, number (or both) is blocked. Some
telephone companies protect their clients from receiving calls with blocked information by routing anonymous calls to a service (such as AT&T Privacy Manager), where the caller is required to announce themself. The service then asks the called party if they want to accept or reject the call. Other telephone companies play a recording to the caller advising them of the called party's rejection configuration, and often offer advice (such as prefixing their dialing with *82) on how to get their call to the intended called party.
Emergency services will most likely be able to show the restricted number using a service called
calling line identification restriction override (CLIRO), or by using general ANI services. These features create a
cat-and-mouse game situation, whereby subscribers must purchase additional services in order to cancel out other services.
Disabling caller ID delivery Depending on the operator and country, there are a number of prefix codes that can block or disable Caller ID transmission by the caller. Prefixing a telephone number with the following codes disables Caller ID on a per-call basis: Other countries and networks vary; however, on
GSM mobile networks, callers may dial #31# before the number they wish to call to disable it. Some countries and network providers do not allow Caller ID blocking based on the domestic telecommunications regulations, or CLIR is only available as an external app or value-added service.
Enabling caller ID delivery Depending on the operator and country, there are a number of prefix codes that can unblock or enable Caller ID transmission by the caller. On GSM mobile networks, callers may dial *31# to enable caller ID on all subsequent calls. ==Caller ID spoofing==