> The FCC also subpoenaed Telnyx for information that might identify the callers and "determined that the very limited identifying information Telnyx collected from its customers was false." They used physical addresses in Canada, including one that turned out to be a Sheraton hotel, and IP addresses from Scotland and England.<p>Not surprising. These phone call and text messaging platforms almost always look the other way when they have customers doing illegal things, on purpose. It’s how they make money. In my personal experience, Sinch (aka Inteliquent, Mailgun, Mailjet), Bandwidth.com, and Fractel are the biggest offenders. Twilio used to be bad but has become a lot better, and I rarely see robocalls or spam text from them these days.<p>The only solution is huge fines and jail time. By not coming down hard on these companies, the FCC is basically letting other people be victimized by these scams.