**Disclaimer:** This is a free and open source project, but it relies on third-party web-services for some functions to work. This project is not affiliated with any third-party entities in any other sense.
The goal of this project is to provide a free and open source application that can block unwanted calls or warn about probable intentions of the callers using a third-party crowdsourced phone number database (from some other proprietary app).
* Toggle the "Auto-update enabled" switch (recommended) to automatically receive daily DB updates (these are delta updates, so they consume very little traffic).
* Toggle the "Block unwanted calls" switch if you want to enable automatic blocking.
* After these steps everything should just work. Enjoy!
* Showing a notification with some caller info (positive/negative rating, category, number of negative reviews and such) when the phone's ringing. *Works offline.*
* Loading and displaying a list of reviews for a number (accessed by pressing the notification). *Requires internet.*
* Automatic blocking of unwanted calls (may not work on some devices; tested to work on modern Android versions (including Android 10)). *Works offline.*
The "featured" database provides "names" (company names or short descriptions) for some (presumably) subset of numbers in the main database.
The third-party servers can be queried for a list of detailed user reviews for a specific phone number.
A detailed review contains:
* A rating: positive, negative or neutral.
* A category: each review may have a different one.
* A title and a comment: the actual description the user left for the number.
## Privacy
Protecting the user's privacy is the first concern during development. No personal data is sent to or otherwise shared with anyone.
The only known possible data leaks are the following:
* Database update procedure leaks user's IP address to the update servers.
The request also includes current database version (base or updated).
* User review requests leak user's IP address coupled with the phone number in question.
Shouldn't be a big deal unless you call it for a bunch of numbers in your phone book.
No other identifiable information is sent with the requests.
## Rationale
Some may find the original application (whose DB and servers are used) hard to trust because of its proprietary nature (and also the use of firebase analytics and the like).
But since the database behind that application is crowdsourced, some may find it acceptable (in a moral sense) to use that database in a separate open source application.
Also, this project is meant to be non-commercial. So, there's that.