• Susaga
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    1 month ago

    Granted. Your phone breaks, preventing you from receiving text messages, or doing anything else with your phone. And there’s no real option for you to obtain a new phone, even by borrowing someone else’s.

    You will still receive leaflets about Ohio politics, though. If you want the leaflets to stop, just send a quick text to the number on the back saying “STOP”.

  • zero_spelled_with_an_ecks@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    Granted. Gen alpha has heard your prayers and wants to help you experience JOMO on Ohio politics no cap. Only skibidi political texts from now on:

    Hewwo registered voter. Sherrod Brown has been mewling to lookmax ahead of this election. For less than a glizzy, you can help spawn points unalive their pre-jits and keep serving. Will you be a giga-chad and give $2 to help him mog sweaty Bernie Moreno? We’re not glazing when we say donations increase your rizz. Dead ass no jelqing required. With a 900% match, you can’t afford to hurkle durkle.

  • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    I stupidly signed my name in at a single campaign event almost a decade ago. Of course, that information made it’s way to a large local political organization, and they’ve refused to remove me from their contact list, no matter how many times I asked.

    What has sort of worked is replying, every time they contact me, that their nonconsensual text messages have swayed me to vote against their candidate or issue, and I that will continue to vote, out of spite, against any candidate that sends me unsolicited texts messages.

    It’s not perfect, but I have gotten significantly less election related text spam since I started this approach.

    Just to be clear, I spent years asking them politely to take me off their lists, but nothing reduced the volume of election spam until I switch my approach to this.

  • markstos@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    As soon the message arrives, reply STOP.

    This sends a signal to the sender and the carrier that you didn’t want it.

    Next, look for the messaging app feature to “Block and Report”. This sends a signal to Apple/Google and possibly others that the message was spam.

    Now, I do these things and I continue to get political fundraising pleas over text from groups I don’t recognize.

    BUT, I also work with bulk emailing and know it takes a very small number of reports, less than 1%, of messages reported as spam before the bulk-mailer/carrier blocks and penalizes the group originating the message.

    I think some collective action here by a small group can make a difference.

    • nexas_XIII@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      In regards to iOS, if you reply you cannot then select “block and report spam” (or if you can it’s not a swipe action like it was previously). So I just block and report spam for every one that comes in.