Number Masking Using Java

Overview

Phone number masking hides the phone numbers of parties in a call from each other. Many businesses find it advantageous to anonymize communication between two parties — for example, between a customer and a delivery agent on a food delivery service platform or a driver and a rider using a ride-hailing application. Businesses can implement phone number masking by sending calls through an intermediate phone number that acts as a proxy between the two parties. A Plivo number can serve as the intermediate number to connect the two parties while keeping their contact information private.

How it works

As an example, we’ll build a number-masking application for a food delivery service that lets the company connect customers with delivery agents and vice versa without revealing any actual phone numbers. To do this, you

  1. Create a customer-to-agent phone number mapping in your application’s back end.
  2. Create the number masking application using Plivo.
  3. Assign the number masking application to a Plivo number.

Prerequisites

To get started, you need a Plivo account — sign up with your work email address if you don’t have one already. You must have a voice-enabled Plivo phone number to receive incoming calls; you can rent numbers from the Numbers page of the Plivo console, or by using the Numbers API. If this is your first time using Plivo APIs, follow our instructions to set up a Java development environment and a web server and safely expose that server to the internet.

Create a 1:1 map with actual numbers

Create customer-to-agent phone number mapping for the application. Whenever a customer places an order, their phone number should be stored in a database for your application to access. A delivery agent will be assigned for the order, and the agent’s number will also be stored in your database, and will be mapped to the customer’s number:

Customer's Number		<->		Agent's Number
  1-415-666-7777					1-415-666-7778

We created sample mapping data in the src/main/resources/application.properties file:

spring.main.banner-mode=off
spring.output.ansi.enabled=ALWAYS
logging.pattern.console=%clr(%d{yy-MM-dd E HH:mm:ss.SSS}){blue} %clr(%-5p) %clr(%logger{0}){blue} %clr(%m){faint}%n

number.map={"14156667777":"14156667778", "14156667779":"14156667780", "14156667781":"14156667782"}

Create a Spring application for number masking

Open the NumberMaskingApplication.java file in the src/main/java/com.example.NumberMasking/ folder and paste into it this code.

Note: Here, the demo application name is NumberMaskingApplication.java because the friendly name we provided in Spring Initializr was NumberMasking.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
package com.example.NumberMasking;

import com.plivo.api.exceptions.PlivoXmlException;
import com.plivo.api.xml.Dial;
import com.plivo.api.xml.Response;
import com.plivo.api.xml.Number;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Value;
import org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication;
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.*;
import com.google.common.collect.HashBiMap;
import java.util.Map;

@SpringBootApplication
@RestController
public class NumberMaskingApplication {

	@Value("#{${number.map}}")
	Map<String, String> CustomerAgentMap;
	
	public static void main(String[] args) {
		SpringApplication.run(NumberMaskingApplication.class, args);
	}
	
	// Handle incoming calls to a Plivo number, connect agent with customer and vice versa without revealing their actual phone numbers.
	@RequestMapping(value = "/number_masking/", produces = { "application/xml" }, method = { RequestMethod.GET, RequestMethod.POST })
	public Response HandleIncoming(@RequestParam("From") String FromNumber, @RequestParam("To") String ToNumber)
			throws PlivoXmlException {
		Map<String, String> AgentCustomerMap = HashBiMap.create(CustomerAgentMap).inverse();
		Response response = new Response();
		if(CustomerAgentMap.containsKey(FromNumber)) { // Check whether the customer's number is in the customer-agent mapping
			var DestNumber =  CustomerAgentMap.get(FromNumber); // Assign the value from the customer-agent map to DestNumber variable
			response.children(new Dial()
					.callerId(ToNumber) // Plivo number is used as the caller ID for the call toward the agent
					.children(new Number(DestNumber)));
		}
		else if (AgentCustomerMap.containsKey(FromNumber)) { // Check whether the agent's number is in the customer-agent mapping
			var DestNumber =  AgentCustomerMap.get(FromNumber); // Assign the Kky from the customer-agent map to DestNumber variable
			response.children(new Dial()
					.callerId(ToNumber) // Plivo number is used as the caller ID for the call toward the customer
					.children(new Number(DestNumber)));
		}
		System.out.println(response.toXmlString());
		return response;
	}
}

Save the file and run it.

Number Masking

You should see your basic server application in action at http://localhost:8080/number_masking/.

Set up ngrok to expose your local server to the internet.

Now people can call your Plivo number. If an incoming call to your Plivo number is from one of the customer phone numbers in the customer-agent map — for example, if the caller number is 14156667777 — then Plivo will send the XML response to process the incoming call as below, and you can check the XML document in your browser.

XML Document - Customer Calls Agent

If the incoming call to your Plivo number is from one of the agent phone numbers in the customer-agent map — for example, if the caller number is 14156667778 — then Plivo will send the XML response to process the incoming call as below, and you can check the XML document in your browser.

XML Document - Agent Calls Customer

Create a Plivo application

Associate the Spring application you created with Plivo by creating a Plivo application. Visit Voice > Applications in the Plivo console and click on Add New Application, or use Plivo’s Application API.

Give your application a name — we called ours Number Masking. Enter the server URL you want to use (for example, https://<ngrok_identifier>.ngrok.io/handleincoming/) in the Answer URL field and set the method as GET. Click Create Application to save your application.

Create Application — Number Masking

Assign a Plivo number to your application

Navigate to the Numbers page and select the phone number you want to use for this application.

From the Application Type drop-down, select XML Application.

From the Plivo Application drop-down, select Number Masking (the name we gave the application).

Click Update Number to save.

Assign Application - Number Masking

Test

To test the application, you need two Plivo numbers. Set up one of your numbers as a customer and another as an agent in the customer-to-agent mapping data in the config file. Make a call from each of your mobile numbers to the Plivo number you mapped to the application. You should see that the call is forwarded to the other number, and that the incoming call has the Plivo number as the caller ID.