TLD Robocall Mitigation Policy & FCC Compliance
TLD’s Commitment to Robocall Mitigation: Fully Aligned with FCC Standards
In a sweeping move in August 2025, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) took action against—or “hung up on”—more than 1,200 voice service providers. These providers were removed from the FCC’s Robocall Mitigation Database (RMD), effectively cutting them off from routing calls through the U.S. network. The reason? They failed to demonstrate compliance with robocall mitigation standards, including proper implementation of STIR/SHAKEN caller ID authentication protocols and submission of mitigation plans. CyberScoop
This enforcement action underscores the urgency of compliance—and shines a spotlight on providers like TLD, which proactively align their practices with—or even exceed—regulatory expectations.
What TLD Does to Meet and Surpass Regulatory Standards
1. Full STIR/SHAKEN Implementation Across IP Network
TLD has deployed STIR/SHAKEN across all parts of its IP-based infrastructure. This ensures caller identities are authenticated (“identity assured”) before calls are routed, satisfying the technical standard required by the FCC’s robocall mitigation framework. CyberScoop, Malwarebytes Forums
2. RMD Certification and Proactive Enforcement Readiness
TLD maintains up-to-date filings in the Robocall Mitigation Database. The RMD is a critical registry that voice operators must stay compliant with—or risk disconnection, as seen in the FCC’s action impacting nearly half of companies warned in late 2024. CyberScoop TLD not only certifies but also routinely reviews and improves its mitigation posture.
3. Internal Robocall Mitigation Policy
Beyond compliance, TLD follows a robust Robocall Mitigation Policy designed to align with FCC standards and industry best practices. This includes general safeguards to help ensure calls remain compliant, trusted, and secure.
By maintaining a strong mitigation posture, TLD reinforces its commitment to protecting customers and partners—building trust and reliability into every interaction.
4. Preemptive Measures for Emerging Threats
Recognizing that threats continue to evolve, TLD monitors regulatory developments around AI-generated robocalls, caller ID spoofing, and global routing abuses. While standards like STIR/SHAKEN and RMD were historically U.S.-focused, TLD also applies mitigation techniques to those calls entering through international gateways—anticipating tighter international collaboration. Malwarebytes, CyberScoop
Final Word
As the FCC ramps up enforcement with bold actions—cutting off non-compliant providers and supporting multi-state “Operation Robocall Roundup” efforts Malwarebytes Forums, CyberScoop—TLD stands ahead of the curve. Through full STIR/SHAKEN implementation, consistent RMD certification, a robust internal mitigation framework, and preparedness for evolving threat vectors, TLD embodies best practices in robocall defense.
In short: where others falter—or are removed from the networks—TLD remains compliant, proactive, and resilient.