Hi HN, I’m Josh. I built Speechbolt, an AI receptionist that answers unknown callers, asks what they want, and then (based on your rules) connects you, takes a message, or wastes scammers’ time.
It started after someone close to my family circle nearly fell for a deepfake voice scam. While testing, I also ran into a real-world mess: 700+ unwanted calls from one source. That pushed me to learn about the TCPA (a U.S. law regulating certain robocalls/texts; people often cite $500 - $1,500 per illegal call/text/voicemail, depending on the facts). Speechbolt can log call summaries and highlight possible TCPA red flags, not legal advice, just indicators, so users can keep better records if they choose to file complaints or talk to an attorney.
I’d love feedback on:
• What would you need to trust an AI to answer unknown calls?
• Is the TCPA indicator feature useful, or distracting?
• What privacy controls are non-negotiable?
Note: Speechbolt isn’t a law firm and doesn’t provide legal advice.
It started after someone close to my family circle nearly fell for a deepfake voice scam. While testing, I also ran into a real-world mess: 700+ unwanted calls from one source. That pushed me to learn about the TCPA (a U.S. law regulating certain robocalls/texts; people often cite $500 - $1,500 per illegal call/text/voicemail, depending on the facts). Speechbolt can log call summaries and highlight possible TCPA red flags, not legal advice, just indicators, so users can keep better records if they choose to file complaints or talk to an attorney.
Try it (no signup): a WebRTC demo bot at https://speechbolt.ai
I’d love feedback on: • What would you need to trust an AI to answer unknown calls? • Is the TCPA indicator feature useful, or distracting? • What privacy controls are non-negotiable?
Note: Speechbolt isn’t a law firm and doesn’t provide legal advice.