Last updated: April 29, 2026 · Operator: Ops Armada LLC · Contact: support@callrescuer.com
This page describes the SMS (text-message) program operated by CallRescuer (the "Service"), a product of Ops Armada LLC. It explains who sends the messages, how consumers opt in, what messages are sent, frequency, cost, and how to stop. Using the Service means you accept this disclosure together with our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
Messages are sent by small service businesses (the "contractor") that use CallRescuer as an automated assistant for their incoming phone calls. The contractor's business name appears in every message. CallRescuer is the platform that delivers the SMS on the contractor's behalf via a US 10DLC long-code phone number registered with The Campaign Registry under Ops Armada LLC (Standard Brand). The phone number that texts the consumer is the same number the consumer originally called.
Opt-in is consumer-initiated: the consumer calls the contractor's published business phone number. When the call cannot be answered (after-hours, line busy, or no answer), the platform automatically texts the consumer back as the contractor's automated assistant to capture the inquiry so the business can follow up. This is the modern equivalent of a voicemail callback — the consumer's inbound call is the consent.
SMS responses to a missed call are optional: the consumer can reply STOP at any time, or simply not reply, and the conversation ends. STOP at any point in the conversation halts all future messages from any contractor on the platform.
Contractors using CallRescuer must publish their business phone number through normal business channels (website, Google Business Profile, business cards, paid advertising, etc.). The published number is the only number that triggers a CallRescuer SMS response.
Contractors may, but are not required to, additionally disclose to consumers via their website or other channels that calls to the published number may be answered by an automated SMS assistant if the call is missed. Recommended language for contractors who publish a website:
"If we miss your call, you'll get a text back from this number to capture your details so we can follow up. Reply STOP to opt out. Standard message and data rates may apply."
The CallRescuer platform's own outbound messages identify the contractor's business by name and include STOP/HELP keyword support per CTIA guidance.
Examples of what consumers receive after a missed call:
Hi, this is the automated assistant for Acme HVAC. We missed your call — what's going on? Reply STOP to opt out.
This is the automated assistant for Acme HVAC. Reply STOP to stop messages. For immediate help, call the business directly.
Reply STOP (or any of UNSUBSCRIBE, CANCEL, END, QUIT, OPTOUT, REVOKE, STOPALL) to any message at any time. The consumer's phone number is added to a global do-not-text list across all contractors and all Ops Armada products (VoiceInvoicing, VoiceQuoting, CallRescuer, ReviewRescuer). The opt-out is enforced server-side by phone number, not by contractor — once the consumer stops, no contractor on the platform can text the same number again unless the consumer explicitly re-subscribes by replying START or YES.
Reply HELP (or INFO) and the consumer receives a message identifying the contractor's business name, reminding them of the STOP keyword, and pointing them to call the business directly for immediate help. For questions about the platform itself, email support@callrescuer.com.
The Service does not charge consumers for SMS. Standard message and data rates from your mobile carrier may apply. Contact your carrier for plan details.
Frequency is low and tied to the consumer's inbound calls. A typical missed call generates between three and five messages over the course of a single short conversation, then ends. There are no recurring or promotional messages.
The Service supports US-based mobile numbers across all major carriers (T-Mobile, Verizon, AT&T, and supported MVNOs). Delivery to non-US numbers is not supported and we do not knowingly text non-US recipients.
We never sell or share consumers' phone numbers with third parties for marketing purposes. SMS conversation content and metadata (timestamps, delivery status, opt-out events) are stored solely to operate the Service, deliver the consumer's inquiry to the contractor, and meet carrier and TCPA recordkeeping obligations. Full details in our Privacy Policy.
We may update this page from time to time. The "Last updated" date at the top reflects the most recent change.