Tauzin To Delay National "Do Not Call" List 58
akb writes "The Washington Post is reporting that Billy Tauzin (R, LA), powerful chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, has told the FTC that he will block their request for funding for the national do-not-call list in order to review the plan. A spokesman said Tauzin does not oppose the creation of the do-not-call list but is concerned with giving the FTC carte-blanche and would like to clarify what the role of the FCC is in the matter. The FTC had hoped the do-not-call list would be implemented by the middle of this year, they said delay in the funding proposal would push implementation back at least 6 months."
Re:SP (Score:3, Interesting)
If they get delayed by two weeks, they'll miss the interim funding bill at the end of this month. If that happens, they have to wait until the next funding bill at the beginning of the fiscal year, in six months.
Re:SP (Score:1)
Re:Maybe his number wasn't on it... (Score:1)
I suck
Gee, a republican goes against privacy (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure... don't believe everything a politician says.
It's much more politically feasable to say "I just need to check on the FTC powers" then to say
"My funders oppose the do-not-call list".
conspiracy fodder (Score:5, Informative)
It's just a coincidence, people.
Re:conspiracy fodder (Score:3, Insightful)
Billy boy has nothing but good intentions [newnetworks.com]
for the telco user. Really. He's as pure as dial-tone.
Re:conspiracy fodder (Score:1)
I believe politicians are already excepted from having to use the do-not-call list, aren't they?
The age-old question... (Score:3, Insightful)
> It's much more politically feasable to say "I just need to check on the FTC powers" then to say "My funders oppose the do-not-call list".
Voters' votes, donors' funds?
Politics is one hell of an optimization problem.
Gee, a democrat feels the same way (Score:2, Insightful)
SSSCA/CBDTPA brought to you by Fritz Hollings
Face it, when money talks in our dictatorship-I-mean-democratic republic, legislators tend to listen. There are only two things that can be done, let the states hold their Congresscritters accountable criminally and civilly so that even if the feds don't take action, the states are free to do so. Then reduce the size of the government so that the average corporation won't get anything from lobbying. The **AA would stop lobbying overnight if the courts took a hardline, strict constructionist interpretation of Article I, Section 8, Clause 8.
You get the kind of government you vote for. Are you whiners really voting for the right party (LP)? Thought not.
Intro blurb kind of misleading (Score:4, Informative)
Tauzin is also concerned about the overlapping jurisdiction of the FTC and FCC. If the jurisdictional issues aren't dealt with before hand we might end up with 2 do-not-call lists or a prohibitive amount of regulation for companies to deal with.
If this do-not-call list is going to work, we must stop and make sure that this is being implemented in the most effective manner.
-Brent
Re:Intro blurb kind of misleading (Score:2)
misleading? (Score:2)
What is misleading?
Re:Intro blurb kind of misleading (Score:1)
Re:Intro blurb kind of misleading (Score:1)
Okay, take a hint here from English lawmakers, and generalise it -- there are way too many US laws which address a specific instance of x and ignore x itself. Don't ban advertisement unsolicited emails, ban commercial unsolicited electronic messages, for example.
And don't throw it to the lawyers to enforce, either. A good law doesn't need sue and countersue and countercountersue to balance things, it should be an elegant solution. Burden of proof on the caller and such like.
And as this guy's campaign contributions, they look like the regular suspects who bribe-euh-*assist* the whole house; disney giving their standard salary for example. Need more than that to criticize.
May be good (Score:3, Informative)
To say it plainly: In the current form, a credit card company could call you even if you're on the do-not-call list. Once the FCC is in the picture, that credit card company is also blocked from calling.
Speaking of stopping credit cards... (Score:2)
More information from FTC. [ftc.gov]
Note this is a junk mail problem, lasts just 2 years, and won't suppress offers from companies that do not use the credit-rating agencies -- but the call is automated and really fast. The FTC also lists the addresses for DMA junk mail and telemarketing opt-outs.
Call blocking must be in place already. (Score:3, Funny)
Might the right answer be.... (Score:2)
Billy has an intellectual interest in this bill? (Score:3, Informative)
This story would sound reasonable, except that there is another story in which the facts are easier to check: Telephone Price Wars Called Off [washingtonpost.com]. The story says that the long distance companies are losing money and need to raise their rates. I think the truth is that providing long-distance services has become cheaper, and they are only trying to squeeze the customers. Why do I think that? Look at BigZoo [bigzoo.com]. That company is able to make a profit at 2.9 cents per minute and 75 cents per month.
If you begin to doubt the "telephone companies are poor" story, then it is likely that you will doubt the "Billy Tauzin is only thinking of how to manage this best" story.
Here is a southern Repbulican man who, even though he is an adult, is still called by the diminutive name "Billy". Is is possible that he would take $16,250 [opensecrets.org] to slow the passage of extremely popular legislation while he tries to stop it? Has such a thing ever happened before? Or, is it true that Billy is taking an intellectual interest in the bill?
Did this whole idea of having a do-not-call list jump into reality last week? No, it has been around for a long time. Billy Tauzin could have "studied" it before.
A lot of newspaper stories are really paid advertisements for a point of view the payers want you to believe.
Saw a congressional discussion... (Score:2)
Re:Saw a congressional discussion... (Score:2)
Wow. I knew the Perl community [google.com] was big, but I didn't realize they had international TV broadcasts. Interviews with Congress too -- I wonder if I can write my representatives [house.gov] to ask for help with contexts?
Chuckle (Score:2)
*laughs*
That is all.
Re:Chuckle (Score:3, Funny)
Obviously, you haven't heard of the national "Do Not Laugh" list that I'm on. I have already reported you, and Ashcroft's people are on their way to pick you up.
Re:Chuckle (Score:2)
Re:Chuckle (Score:1)
Indiana collectively laughs back. (Score:1)
It works like a charm too. Haven't been called since!
Re:Chuckle (Score:1)
Seems reasonable (Score:2)
What struck me was their budget for this program -- $16 Million. I dunno - is it just me, or does $16M sound like a lot of money for a relatively simple database? (Or am I mistaken about the database being simple?)
I bid $500,000 on that job. (Score:2)
"... is it just me, or does $16M sound like a lot of money for a relatively simple database?"
Especially since I would be willing to do it for $250,000, no, make that $500,000.
Place your bids now. We can send them to Billy's office, and show the price for the fraud it really is.
40,000,000 users, 1 entry/2 years = 1 entry/8 secs (Score:2)
Consider the specifications of the system that will hold do-not-call information. Everyone who doesn't want their telephone system abused will make one entry into the database every time they change their telephone number. I figure, on average, one entry every two years.
I've got a 386SX-16 computer around somewhere. That's probably overkill. Looks like I'll be making a profit on my $500,000 bid.
Re:40,000,000 users, 1 entry/2 years = 1 entry/8 s (Score:2)
And that wouldn't even cover the enquiries from telemarketers wanting to check a phone number. Suppose you made an internet form to do so, you'd still need a fair few Oracle licenses, and a Solaris server or two.
You wouldn't be able to publish the list; it's necessary for privacy that the telemarketer needs to ask "is 01291 272 272 okay to call", rather than just "tell me who I can't call"
Re:40,000,000 users, 1 entry/2 years = 1 entry/8 s (Score:2)
Sorry, I meant to say "one call per two years", which is what the calculations are based upon
$16 million == development and setup (Score:2)
Re:I bid $500,000 on that job. (Score:1)
Probably most of the expense is running the call center and web site that helps people sign up for the list. It has to be available when people want to use it, etc. I don't know if that costs $16 million, but it's more than just the cost of the hardware and initial DB setup time. There has to be some kind of permanent administrator for the thing, etc.
Automated? (Score:2)
I'm guessing that the call center would be entirely automated. There are no decisions to be made. Touch-tone entries would be enough.
Re:Automated? (Score:1)
There are always people who get confused and can't deal with the automated system; thus you need at least a few real people to answer the phones. For a nationwide list, probably a number of people.
Recorded message. (Score:2)
Have Doubts... (Score:2, Interesting)
Put Up or Shut Up - Email Your Congressperson (Score:1)
Tell Reps. Tauzin and Dingell how you feel about this by sending them email from the U.S. House's "Write Your Representative" website at http://www.house.gov/writerep/. Just enter the state of Lousiana and zipcode 70360-1111, and your email will go to Tauzin. Dingell is in Michigan at 48124-1111. Make sure you also send one to your own rep. Maybe a few thousand (dare I hope, 100,000?) protests will help them reconsider.
Here's what I just sent them:
"I am very disappointed that you have blocked the initial $16M funding for the FTC's proposed national do-not-call list, as reported by the Washington Port. The money requested is very small, and the benefit to consumers is very large. Most consumers strongly favor, AND WOULD USE, the list if offered it. That the telemarketers association opposes it is only to be expected, and should not affect the FTC being allowed to pursue its development.
Please reconsider your action, and permit immediate funding for the FTC's nationwide do-not-call list.
Thank you."
Re:Put Up or Shut Up - Email Your Congressperson (Score:2)
I'd write to the various Congresscritters and ask them to delay the do-not-call list while studying ways to mutate it into a please-call-me-list
Before you flame me, think about it for a minute. If you're walking down the street, do I have the right to stop you while I try to sell you something? I don't think so. What I can do is put up a booth (local laws permitting) and hope you stop because you find it interesting. Telesales is exactly like that. You're at home, eating dinner or whatever, and the phone rings. The telesales company is betting that you'll stop whatever you're doing and pick it up.
And before anyone says it, TV ads are not the same. The TV equivalent of telesales would be where the TV suddenly turns itself on, or switches the channel, in order to show an ad.
Opting-out is complete bat puckey and whoever invented it needs a serious whack with a cluestick. It should be opt-in, and none of that "you indicated to one of our affiliates that you wanted to receive ads" crap either... That's just salesdroid-speak for "we copied their list in return for giving them ours"...
Better start reading those EULAs (Phone co, ISP, M$, whatever) carefully - before long there'll be a paragraph that reads:
"By using this product I hereby drop my name from all national and state do-not-call lists and will expect to get annoying phone calls and email at all times of day or night."
here's his number, why don't we sign him up? (Score:1)
426 Lafayette St
Houma, LA 70360
985-876-3033
Perhaps if he took the time to ask each and every telemarketer to put him on their 'do not call' list, he may have a change of heart.
Though maybe he'd take the easy road and call his friends at BellSouth that donated $16,250 to him [opensecrets.org]. I bet they have a 'do not call' list that doesn't take a year to get up and running...
Of course signing someone else up for telemarketing is presumably some sort of electronic or mail fraud, so of course I'm not suggesting that anyone actually do this. This post is purely for entertainment purposes.
Why do telemarketers oppose this? (Score:2)
Won't this result in more hits for less effort, or am I missing something blindingly obvious?
BTW, here in the UK we have national do-not-call, do-not-mail and do-not-fax opt-out lists, and I'm on all three. So far, the DNC list seems to be working, but I still seem to get lots of junk mail for some reason. Oh, and I don't actually have a fax, but those telemarketers are so terribly cunning I though it best to cover all the bases...
Re:Why do telemarketers oppose this? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Why do telemarketers oppose this? (Score:2)
That's the legit reason telemarkers are opposed to this.
The other reason is that most of them are scum who don't care that they make their living off of annoying people. They live for that small fraction that will answer the sales pitch and to hell with anyone who doesn't want to be a customer.
We have a don't call list in Indiana (Score:1)
Not once.
This was a few years ago too.
Can you FUCK UP my life, Billy Boy, Billy Boy? (Score:2)