Suing the Phone Company 19
TTop writes: "A Washington insurance agent has sued Verizon for harassment after receiving repeated annoying telemarketing calls from Verizon. These particular telemarketers would leave misleading messages on his voice mail like "It is very important that you contact our business office about your account", and continued to call despite his request to be put on a "do not call" list. He even had an temporary anti-harrasment order served on Verizon's regional president. While he ended up losing the case, other state's laws might be more permissive of this approach to protecting privacy."
Louis Regal (Score:1)
The number: 1-877-774-7998.
The other machine call I often get is from a guy who legally changed his name to "John World Peace" and is running for Governor or something, and wants you to "cast your vote for World Peace !" He usually rants and raves a bit about the Railroad Commissioner or something, I usually have a good laugh at his name and the chances of Texas electing him and hang up.
Me, too. (Score:3, Informative)
Thanks for letting me vent.
Talk to your state reps (Score:1)
The attorney general's list (Score:1)
Re:The attorney general's list (Score:1)
bullshit (Score:2)
says the judge. Well, let *me* go around calling people constantly, leaving repeated messages, and refusing to stop when requested, and see if *I* don't get sued. I bet you it's unlawful as hell. And the phone company's response?
"Should you continue to pursue any judicial action against the company, please be advised that Verizon will pursue all legal remedies available to it against you."
Of course...
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Abuse is their specialty! (Score:1)
Interesting (Score:4, Interesting)
The big question though is why you can't sue these companies the same way you can any other company? What makes them so special beyond amounts of money? It's like another poster mentioned, if I was calling someone all the time and leaving messages and wouldn't stop I'd be in jail. But all of a sudden a major company does it and it's alright. I feel the same way about the federal budget. If I ran my personal finances that way I'd be in jail. These institions should be held to the same accountability standards as the rest of us.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
I have always hated Bellsouth due to my experiences with them at work with isdn and frame relay services. It REALLY pisses me off that with DSL, I have to be sending cash to Bellsouth every month one way or the other. And don't say "get a cable modem"...guess who runs that in my neighborhood. Here's a hint...the company can be abbreviated the same as Bull Shit.
Isn't it a $500 fine? (Score:3, Interesting)
Isn't there a a fine if you call someone after being asked to be put on the do-not-call list? I thought there was, and it takes effect immeadiatly, not in 6 weeks while you circulate lists, right now.
In this computer age changing your do-not-call list can be done in real time with any half way decient comptuer and database. They should use one.
I use a cell phone exclusivly. Call me to make an unsolicitiade sales call and I will sue you, and I know the law is stronger becuse I pay for calls.
Re:Isn't it a $500 fine? (Score:1)
Re:Isn't it a $500 fine? (Score:1)
No-Call Lists (Score:1)
Spam on my cell (Score:1)
Here in Japan we have cell phone services that are light years ahead of what's offered in other countries: almost-passable web browsing, Java applets, and e-mail.
There's a problem, though: spam. It's bad enough to get a dozen messages that take forever to delete with the bad UI, but the last straw is having to pay to recieve them - around 2 cents for a 500-byte message. Luckily, I can set my phone to recieve from only certain people, but that can be inconvenient. I guess what we really need is good spam-filtering.
Back to regular telephones: again, here in Japan some phones are equipped to display the phone numbers of callers, and you can even set up filters: does this kind of thing exist elsewhere?