AT&T is testing an AI-powered digital receptionist that will automatically screen incoming calls to determine if they’re legitimate or spam. The feature will roll out to select customers throughout 2025, using voice-to-voice and agentic AI to ask callers questions before deciding whether to put the call through or handle it independently.
How it works: The AI receptionist answers calls on your behalf and conducts a brief screening conversation to assess the caller’s legitimacy.
User control features: You maintain oversight and can customize how the system operates for different types of calls.
The technology behind it: AT&T uses multiple large language models to process speech, generate responses, and convert them back to speech.
In plain English: Large language models are AI systems trained on vast amounts of text to understand and generate human-like responses—think of them as sophisticated pattern-matching engines that can hold conversations by predicting what words should come next based on what they’ve learned.
Future possibilities: AT&T envisions expanding the AI’s capabilities beyond call screening to handle more complex tasks.
Why this matters: While spam call filters already exist from carriers and app developers, they typically still require users to decide whether to answer unknown calls, leaving the burden of identification on individuals rather than providing truly automated protection.