The scam calls your parents get. Handled, before they pick up.
One in four over-65s was targeted by a phone scam last year — and most never tell their children. Call G puts a patient, polite AI between your parents and every unknown caller. You set it up once, from anywhere, and get alerted the moment something is wrong.
Their phone, their number, no app for them to learn.
Mum's phone
Protected since April · 14 scams blocked
Panic-phrase alert · Tuesday 18:42
BlockedCaller asked Mum for bank security codes — the call was ended and the number blocked. Mum was notified instantly. You can read the full transcript.
Trigger: “confirm the security codes from her Smart-ID app”
Built for the person who worries
You pay, you configure, you monitor. Your parents just keep answering the phone the way they always have.
You set it up — from anywhere
Buy the Family plan, add Mum's number from your own dashboard, and walk her through dialling one short code (or do it on her phone in two minutes at Sunday lunch). No app on her phone, nothing for her to learn.
Her phone behaves exactly as before
Friends, family, the surgery, her hairdresser — saved contacts ring through like always. Only unknown numbers are answered by the assistant first, politely, in plain English.
You see what she'd never tell you
Every screened call lands in your guardian dashboard with a verdict and transcript. Most parents don't mention the 'bank security' calls. Now you don't have to ask.
Panic-phrase alerts: the part that matters at 6pm on a Tuesday
Every phone scam ends with the same ask: a code, a PIN, a transfer, a gift card. The assistant is trained to recognise those requests the instant they're spoken — in the scammer's words, not just from a blocklist.
The call ends immediately
The assistant refuses, hangs up, and blocks the number — before your parent hears any of it.
Your parent is told, gently
A notification explains what happened in plain language, with no blame and no jargon.
You know within seconds
SMS and push to every guardian on the plan, with the transcript attached. Check in with one call.
Phrases that trigger an alert — examples
- “read me the code from your card reader”
- “confirm it with your Smart-ID app”
- “buy gift cards and tell me the numbers”
- “move your money to a safe account”
- “don't tell your family about this”
Detection is semantic — rephrasing doesn't help the caller. The full list evolves with every scam the network sees.
€119 a year. The gift of never getting that phone call.
Less than €10 a month protects three lines — both parents and you. Families give it for Christmas and Mother's Day; what they actually give is the end of a specific worry. Annual billing is two months free, and the first 14 days cost nothing.
Questions families ask
Isn't this a bit… surveilling?
We designed it the opposite way. Your parent's normal calls — saved contacts, friends, family — never touch Call G and never appear in any dashboard. You only see calls from unknown numbers that the AI screened, the same calls a caring son or daughter would want to know about. Your parent sees everything you see, and they're notified on every blocked call.
What exactly is a panic-phrase alert?
The assistant listens for the requests scammers always make eventually: bank security codes, Smart-ID confirmations, card reader numbers, gift cards, 'don't tell your family'. The moment one appears, the call is ended, the number blocked, your parent notified — and you get an SMS and push alert with the transcript, usually within seconds.
My mum would hate talking to a robot. Will her friends?
Her friends are in her contacts, so they never meet the assistant — they ring straight through. The only people who talk to the AI are strangers, and it's polite to genuine ones: the courier, the clinic, the plumber all get connected or leave a message. Honest disclosure: it says it's an AI in the first sentence. Scammers tend to hang up right there.
What if she's expecting an important call from a new number?
Genuine callers with a clear purpose are connected within seconds — the assistant whisper-announces them ('Riverside Surgery about Thursday's appointment') and bridges the call. And you or she can whitelist any number in one tap so it always rings through.
What if the AI gets it wrong?
The rule the whole product is built on: when unsure, never block — take a message instead. A claimed emergency is always put through with a caution. If a real person ever lands in voicemail, one tap on 'Always allow' fixes it forever, and you can report any verdict so the system learns.
Do I need her consent?
Yes — and not just legally. This works best as something you give her, not something you do to her. Most families set it up together; the assistant introduces itself on every call, so nothing is hidden from anyone. We provide a one-page explainer written for parents.
