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      Home»Tech»AT&T Tests AI ‘Digital Receptionist’ That Screens Calls Using Your Call History
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      AT&T Tests AI ‘Digital Receptionist’ That Screens Calls Using Your Call History

      Updated:December 25, 20254 Mins Read
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      AT&T Tests AI 'Digital Receptionist' That Screens Calls Using Your Call History
      AT&T Tests AI 'Digital Receptionist' That Screens Calls Using Your Call History
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      AT&T is rolling out a network-based AI “digital receptionist” feature in testing that can screen incoming calls for users, using more than just contacts lists—it taps into your calling history and other network data to decide whether a call gets through, gets blocked, or is answered by the AI. The system will ask unknown callers things like “who’s calling” and “what is this in regard to,” try to determine urgency, human vs. spam, possibly even perform tasks like taking messages or letting deliveries in if that matches your preferences. It lives at the network level, meaning it doesn’t need extra apps or devices, and also includes options like a “Do Not Screen” list (trusted numbers get a free pass) and live transcript/summaries so you can jump in if you want. 

      Sources: AT&T Newsroom, The Verge

      Key Takeaways

      – This digital receptionist represents a shift from device-based filtering to carrier-level AI screening, which could allow more accurate filtering of spam or unwanted calls because it can see patterns across the network, not just your phone’s contact list.

      – While it offers convenience (automatically screening, taking messages, letting certain calls through), there are privacy and oversight trade-offs: network-based AI has access to more data, and users will need clarity about how that data is used, stored, and protected.

      – There’s a modular / user-controlled aspect to AT&T’s plan—trusted numbers, “Do Not Screen” lists, ability to see transcripts or pick up mid-screening—so users aren’t completely hands-off; still, the utility and user experience will depend heavily on how well those controls are designed and how accurate the AI is in distinguishing spam vs legitimate calls.

      In-Depth

      AT&T’s new “digital receptionist” is a sign that the battle against robocalls, spam, and unwanted interruptions may soon shift up a level—not just apps or phone settings, but baked into the network itself. What makes this different is that instead of relying on the limited view from your contacts or a database of known spam numbers, AT&T’s AI tries to understand which callers matter to you by studying patterns of calling behavior across the network. If someone you often talk to calls, that pattern helps the system decide that this is a trusted number. If the call comes from an unknown or suspicious source, the receptionist may intervene—asking who’s calling, what they want, and judging urgency before handing the call over, sending it to voicemail, or even disconnecting.

      This setup carries several benefits. First, convenience: the AI handles screening automatically without the user needing to install something new or manually manage every unknown caller. It promises to reduce spam in a more intelligent way, letting through the important calls automatically (friends, family, work) while putting others in the queue or dismissing them. The live transcript/summaries feature adds transparency, letting the user monitor or even take over the interaction if needed, which may help address concerns about false positives or mistakes.

      However, there are trade-offs. Using network-level data means that AT&T will have access to patterns of who you call and when—and that raises questions about privacy, data retention, and potential misuse. There’s also the possibility of errors: misidentifying a legitimate caller as spam or putting through a spam call. The “Do Not Screen” feature helps, but its effectiveness will depend on how well it’s implemented and how much control users have.

      Another factor is competition: carriers like AT&T are increasingly positioning themselves not just as pipeline providers of voice and data, but as AI service platforms. If this pilot is successful, AT&T could gain a differentiator in the market. Users may gravitate toward providers whose AI tools work better, both in accuracy and in respecting privacy.

      Ultimately, this “digital receptionist” pilot could offer real value for users tired of spam calls, but its success will rest on transparency, opt-in choices, reliable AI, and strong privacy guardrails. It’s one more example of how AI is creeping into everyday services—not just futuristic gadgets, but how you handle your phone calls.

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