Telemarketers Held Accountable ... In Theory 22
str83dge writes "The House of Representatives just passed H.R. 90 which amends the Telecommunications Act to prohibit telemarketers from circumventing caller ID. People can file suit against the telemarketers for minimum damages of $500. Privacy.org has a story here. Question: if they circumvent caller ID, won't it be difficult for the average person to determine who actually is calling them? Let's just hope they take this a step further and apply it to spammers. :)"
That's too bad (Score:2, Insightful)
If they started displaying real phone numbers, they'd be tricking me into thinking that someone I want to talk to is calling and I'd answer.
Re:That's too bad (Score:1, Funny)
Re:That's too bad (Score:2, Interesting)
A lot of times when a telemarketer calls my home, the caller ID box reads "No Data Sent". Maybe that will stop if this law passes.
What I wish is that there would be a law that requires them to reveal where they got your phone number. I have an unlisted phone number, yet I still get telemarketers calling.
Re:That's too bad (Score:2)
Re:That's too bad (Score:1)
Sequential dialers, like the old-time "war dialers" from a few years back.
555-1111 - no answer
555-1112 - no answer
555-1113 - pass call to salesman
555-1114
And so on. Sooner or later they get to you.
Re:That's too bad (Score:2)
They'll probably do what I've already seen at least one of them do. I'm not sure how they manage it, but for I while I had one telemarketing company sending a bogus phone# to my caller ID box. (I.e. I tried calling the number back and got the 'there is no such number' sort of message...)
I typically have been forced to resort to not bothering to pick up the phone if I don't recognize the phone#, let alone if it says 'unavailable'...
Re:That's too bad (Score:1)
I worked in a building with, I dunno, a few hundred other people, some of which were CSR folks. All the phones went through our switch (Lucent? Don't remember), and from there out to the world. And the switch was configured so it anyone called you from inside that building your caller ID would display the receptionist's number.
Which made for a big PITA for the receptionist - she'd constantly get calls saying "You called me twenty minutes ago. What do you want?" - when it could have been anyone in the building that placed the call, and she had no way of knowing who. When she tried to explain this, many people would get abusive and swear that the caller ID said this was the number so stop lying, etc (it's from the phone company, so it has to be true, right?).
It got to be so bad that they reconfigured the switch to not send caller ID info.
Re:Anyone filed? (Score:4, Informative)
At least, as a good thing, I would figure this would easily pass a Democrate Senate, and already has the blessing of the Republican House (which I would think would be more friendly to telemarkers than the Senate).
No problem if they circumvent Caller ID (Score:1)
BUt essentially, they circumvent Caller ID to get you wonder who it is calling, but after that they have to tell who they are to get you to buy, so it's all okay to go after them.
Re:No problem if they circumvent Caller ID (Score:2)
Re:No problem if they circumvent Caller ID (Score:4, Informative)
I used to have a FirstUSA credit card and they sold our name to a list. Funny thing was, they had my wife's name on the card INORRECTLY, and as she was the primary, the telemarketing weasels would call asking for her by the wrong name - dead giveaway.
To make things more fun, they'd swear they WERE FirstUSA and all they needed was our address. Su-u-u-ure you're at FirstUSA Corporate...where do you think the bills get sent? Anyhoo, I cancelled FirstUSA and told a supervisor I didn't appreciate the telemarketers, the lies, and the fraudulent charges for "services" we never agreed to.
God Bless America!
GTRacer
- "If I could have just a few moments of your time..."
Any way of finding out who is calling? (Score:1)
Re:Any way of finding out who is calling? (Score:2)
Sure thing. I've sued and won before. Last time was when AT&T called me three times in four days. Best way to do it is to play along until they give you enough to identify them. Even if it's a contracted company doing the company, it's the company they're calling on behalf of that is responsible.
Residential ANI (Score:3, Interesting)
And I'd give my left nut to be able to get that on regular residential service:
"Hi, I'm from the Fernwood Chicken Shack and Long-Distance Telephone Service, and I'd like to..."
"You'd like me to immediately place me on your do-not-call list and.." *CLICK*
But with ANI, I have the callback number. I can finish the do-not-call demand, and if they disregard it, then I know where to send the process server.
I think that's why Qwest isn't offering it. They make too much money from their telescammers.
Email too? (Score:1)
Time to start a blacklist (Score:1)
Since so many of my friends show up as "unavailable" on my caller ID, I welcome this measure with open arms as a way to sort the wheat from the chaff.
df
We're better off the old way (Score:2)
I rigged up my CID-friendly modem to ATA immediately on "Number Unavailable", and ignore everything else. Whenever I hear a second ring, I know the modem is letting the call go through. It's great fun to hear one ring and then -- nothing!
Best of all is a statewide DNC list. Here in Connecticut, it has hit the Teleban like a "bunker buster". So much so that my CID trick is now shelfware. A mandatory national DNC list with whopper fines would solve the problem instantly.