Yes, You are blocked.
On a caller ID feature on a phone, "incoming private number" means you are receiving a phone call from a number that has been listed as private, meaning the name of the person owning that number has been blocked from your caller ID list.
It means that somebody has put in *67 before your number ex: *67303-555-5555
Leave a message. It will be picked up when the 'phone becomes reachable.
This can be done from a cell phone exactly the same as you can from a landline. Simply dial *67 then dial the number. This will show up on their caller ID as a blocked call.
Well, I don't think we can find out the caller but you can track the location. I don't really know how but it is possible. Hope this is very useful.
On a call display, "67" typically indicates that the caller has chosen to block their number from being displayed. This is often done by dialing a specific code before the number they are calling, which prevents the recipient from seeing the caller's phone number. In some regions, it may also appear as "Private Caller" or "Blocked." The exact display can vary depending on the phone service provider.
Yes, in some cases, law enforcement may be able to trace a call even if the caller has blocked their number. Methods such as obtaining a court order or working with phone companies can potentially reveal the caller's information.
no it will reject any incoming number that has been blocked from your caller id they will have to dial *67 to unblock their number so you can see who is calling
When you meen network locked, my answer is: -you can try it with a SIM card from another provider. When it works, it's not locked. -you may read on its package network locked on ... If the phone wasn't unlocked by somebody, your phone must me locked.
In North America, *69 will redial the number of the last person who called you. However, it does not work if the person blocked their caller ID, or if it's a telemarketer who sent a fake caller ID, or if for any other reason you didn't receive valid caller ID information.
Well, you could *try* to call forward your phone (w/*72) to an 800 number that you have access to. If you have access to an 800 number, you know that the caller ID cannot be blocked when calling an 800 number. This might just end up revealing your phone number though, since the number was technically forwarded from your number to the 800 number. Not really sure about that one, but if the above mentioned doesn't work then I don't think it would be possible. One thing you could do instead is to call up your phone company and turn on "Anonymous Call Blocking." This would force whomever calls your number to reveal their caller ID, which you could then use to identify the caller.
Calls that show as private number on Caller ID withholds their name and number from the service. On landline phones you usually can call back the last person who called your number by using star 69. This will often not work on private numbers, unknown caller, or blocked numbers leaving you with no way to call them back.