Telemarketer Blows Whistle on Tape-Altering Scam 371
Recently, Florida-based telemarketing firm Epixtar is frequently accused of cramming an extra $30 onto phone charges of small businesses, yet has proof of legality by recording their calls. Until they laid off some people, one of whom has blown the whistle. The companies' cramming tactics become "legal" by altering those taped recordings to include a quick statement about the $30 charge. MSNBC has the article, including a short audio clip of a sample call.
Screwed-over employees (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I guess they really screwed their employees over, too.
Re:Screwed-over employees (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Screwed-over employees (Score:2, Funny)
The telemarketing biz doesn't sound so bad after all.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Not just laying (Score:2)
Sex - The basis of all humour
rus
Re:Screwed-over employees (Score:3, Informative)
really, of if i had to choose between telemarketing and mcdonalds crap job, big macs here i come(that way i at least get the
They WHA?! (Score:3, Funny)
Damn, say what you want about telemarketers, but I think I want to work for this company.
The whistleblower obviously was a person that was not laid.
Re:They WHA?! (Score:2, Funny)
Until they laid some people... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Until they laid some people... (Score:2)
Well, if in fact the business was laying them, they were getting screwed, and therefore it seems logical that they would report the person screwing them.
Re:Until they laid some people... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Until they laid some people... (Score:2)
"Come 'ere sonny! I'm gonna have to fire you!" "Again grandma?? It's been three times this week!"
Morality? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's often better to voice your concerns internally, and work to improve the system from within.
I find it very moral to give a company a chance to improve itself. (How long a chance? About as long as it takes for the would-be-whistleblower to find a better job.)
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Interesting)
It makes you wonder what the laid-off employees (especially the whistle-blower) did to try and restore morality internally before going to MSNBC. Would you complain to management if you knew they would never/weren't intereseted in resolving the issue? Or would you just take the final paycheck and go tell the world?
The media is a powerful tool for an employee with little or no power inside their company.
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to mention that in a case like this people have been wronged by the company, and deserve redress, which will never occur due to internal reform.
Maybe if you believe the company is doing things that are unethical but legal, then you can try to reform from within. But when it's illegal (or deeply unethical) you have a moral duty to blow the whistle, even if it's going to suck for you. You aren't allowed to put ethics aside because they aren't convenient.
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally, I think that's easier said than done in today's economy. I think a lot more people may find feeding one's family and paying the bills a little more important.
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Insightful)
Simply put, blood is thicker than water and moral pomposity won't feed the kids.
While it would be nice if we could all live perfect lives. The sad truth is that most of us are little more than worker ants doing whatever necessary merely to survive. Unless you were born with a silver spoon so far down your throat it was coming back out your *ss, "moral superiority" is simply something else you can't afford.
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Informative)
What are you talking about? This applies to priests, lawyers, and psychiatrists. It does not apply to employees. Being an employee does not absolve you of the responsibility to report crimes. By that standard no one in Enron broke the law -- they were all in eaah other's confidence. Your conclusion is absurd.
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Insightful)
Jesus of Nazareth did not voice his concerns internally and work to improve the system from within. True change requires true sacrifice, which few are willing to make.
Reality (Score:4, Insightful)
what are the stipulations? (Score:5, Interesting)
In my mind, telemarketing is about as self-damaging as prostitution. I'd probably put it up there on the moral scale, too. Its time we see religoius groups going into telemarketing offices and trying to save their souls.
Actually, I think that a prostiute is lest morally detestable than a telemarketer - at least prostitutes can feasably enjoy their job, and it pays better.
Re:what are the stipulations? (Score:4, Insightful)
Uh, your post made little sense in general (I hope English is not your first language) but this last sentence really takes the proverbial cake. The fact that you enjoy your job and get paid well does not make you moral. A CEO of an overly large software and operating systems company utilizing unfair marketing practices to crush hopes and dreams, and a contract killer could both have those things in common.
The moral defense of prostitution is that it is a victimless crime, which makes you wonder why it is a crime at all. As George Carlin says, "Selling is legal; fucking is legal. Why isn't selling fucking legal?" As far as I can tell, it is religious in nature, based on the prohibition of extramarital sex. Sex, even for money, is still a fairly beautiful and awe-inspiring thing. People not getting laid is probably a significant cause of misbehavior in this world, and so I favor anything outside of rape or coercion that lets more people have it.
Re:Reality (Score:3, Insightful)
Morality is a luxury many people can not afford.
Fortunately, anonymity is a luxury everyone can afford.
There's no reason that the media couldn't have been tipped off earlier with an email from disgruntled_employees@hotmail.com.
Don't use morality as an exuse for their timidity.
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
It may be the right thing to do, but being in the right doesn't keep you off the streets, unfortunately.
Re:Morality? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
> thing?
I worked at a newspaper [fwst.com] once. In my state, it is legal to carry a concealed firearm if you are licensed to do so. An employer or business may prohibit even licenced holders from carrying their weapons on the premises, and this newspaper does.
My supervisor didn't have such a license, because she found it too restrictive to bother with, in part because she couldn't take her weapon into bars. Instead, she worked a couple of nights a month as a volunteer patrol officer and was certified and licensed as a peace officer in Texas (having had a previous career as a full-time police officer). As a peace officer, she could carry her weapon anywhere, anytime she wanted to. That included bars, restaurants, and her place of regular employment, despite the no-guns policy.
The employer's representative had a meeting with her and they let her know in no uncertain terms that, under the law, while they couldn't prevent her from bringing her weapon to work, there were lots of reasons to fire people.
As a consequence, she left her weapon in the car when she came to work.
People who work for telemarketers typically aren't well paid, aren't in it because they love it, and do have families to support and bills that way outstrip their meager incomes, especially in bust economies where unemployment is rising.
It is illegal to fire people for whistle-blowing under state and federal whistle-blowing statues. A person so terminated can recover in a number of ways. Regrettably, most people aren't aware of their rights and even if they are aware of them, do not know how or do not have the money to invoke and protect them.
Besides, there are lots of reasons to fire people.
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:Morality? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
It's like the ADA, they can't fire you, but if you can't do the job, they can find something else for you.
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Interesting)
Daniel
Re:Morality? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, that makes your company a lot safer. Instead of having the gun in the hands of a female -- trained at its use, at that -- it's out in the parking lot. The first person to break into that car and find it will present a million (actually far more) times the threat that woman did. And the gun won't be there -- again, in the hands of a woman trained in its use -- in case it is ever needed.
I don't know how you feel about the whole situation -- you probably aren't responsible for the decision -- but I think it stinks.
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
If the company knew that she had a gun and did nothing before she shot people then the company is liable!
I think this is bs but lawyers make a living doing scummy shit as this.
I would of fired her too. I would have to protect my shareholders and my other employees if a lawsuit took away profits. Also its illegal in most if not all states to bring a weapon to work unless its th
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Insightful)
Uhmmm, not in most states, and especially n
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
Hell, maybe she wears the gun around the house, too. Just in case, you know...
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
Yes, I'm sure everyone here (that drives regularly) would feel MUCH safer with women, not-only being behind the wheel of a car, but being heavily armed to boot...
Re:Morality? (Score:2, Insightful)
The employers primary concern would be their employees. If she is so well trained in its use you would expect her to know better than to leave it in a relatively unsafe car.
Re:Morality? (Score:4, Insightful)
Besides, there are lots of reasons to fire people."
Problem 1 is that it costs money for justice or to prove your innocense in America. Since your fired you no longer have income to pay the legal fee's.
Problem 2 is you have to prove why you were terminated. The burden of proof is usually on the guy who has the least resources. A corporation can make shit up or can find a reason to can you.
I heard stories from other slashdotters of getting fired for leaving the lights on after work, coming in 5 minutes late, spending more then 30 minutes for lunch, being assigned something impossible to finish on purpose so you look bad during a performance review, etc. All of these cases had to do with things like threatening to join unions, complain about there bosses to hr, to threatening to quit, to just about anything.
After all this shit HR will force you to sign a self incriminating document as part of your pink slip to receive severance pay. If you refuse they will then terminate you for sub-ordination and disciplinary issues.
Either way in court they have documents to prove that your performance was the reason you were let go.
Last lets say by a miracle you won and your employer was forced to rehire you. Would you really want to continue to work there? Don't you think they will make you quit one way or another? Kind of like the weird guy in the movie office space. (they cut off his paychecks and moved him into the basement, and forced him to setup bug traps)
I was a merchandiser once and this lady came in late 3 out of 5 days a week and always complained. She filed a sexual harrasment complaint when my boss made her sign a document stating that she was about to be canned and she had 60 days to straighten her act or else. He fired her after she refused to sign it and cursed him off. HR forced him to rehire her after the complaint was filed. Anyway he gave her 3 times as much work to do as anyone else until she quit. Same is true here.
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
You people are fsking obsessed - get therapy.
Re:Morality? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Name one. Would the evil gun jump out of her holster and start shooting people? Gun accidents are almost invariably a case of gun negligence. Following the four basic rules of gun handling (1. Guns are always loaded, 2. Never point a gun at anything you are unwilling to destroy. 3. Keep you finger off the trigger (and out of the
Re:Morality? (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunatly we live under capitalism and we need to bendover when necessary to support ourselves and our families. If you are already canned then why not. But it will kill your career if you can not get a reference from a former employer if you do it while on the job.
I had a friend who was pissed off at a verbally abusive boss and he almost quit. His wife threatened to divorce him if he left and forced him to bend over. He eventually found another job and then quit to satisfy his wife and daughter. They recently just bought a house and had trouble selling the old one and they both had college loans to pay off. This was why his wife was frantic.
Its not fair and I believe it sucks but this is the way the system works. If I had kids they would be more important to me then a few pissed off people at my employer.
Also you need a good credit report for further employment and a future house or college loan. Even if your single and have no family. Which was the case with my friend since he was close to the edge. Otherwise his wife would of been more lenient.
Infact I was turned down from a job about a month ago because I forgot to mail a check to Linuxmagazine back in 1999 after subscribing. It came 2 months late. With a poor economy, HR can do whatever it is they want to filter you out. It sucks but if you have no job you still need to pay the bills or yourself and others in your family will be screwed.
Re:Morality? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is not "vinyl siding salesmen piss me off." This is a company employing fast-talkers to act like phone company fact-checkers to rip businesses off. If you are willing to work for them, You Are A Thief. It really is that simple, folks. No amount of off-the-job fast-talking will change that.
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Insightful)
Stealing from people is never right. [...] Doing it because your kid needs fed doesn't make it right.
I am not commenting on this particular case, but I can't agree with the above. It is only true if rights to property are more sacrosanct than human life.
In most civlised countries, people consider life more important, and would not convict for theft someone who had no other reasonable choice to feed themselves.
I don't know man (Score:2)
The only scenario I can think about is if you were harassed (for example, by mandatory millitary service) in your own country, came to US and couldn't get refugee status. Then, yes, people have right to fight for their own survival and basic physical comfort, even by breaking laws. But not for their colledge degree.
Why don't you tell your full story s
Re:Morality? (Score:2)
I have a better solution. You keep me on the payroll as an outside consultant. And in exchange for my salary, my job will be never to tell people these things that I know. I don't even have to come into the office. I can do this job from home. --Fight Club
Re:Morality? (Score:3, Interesting)
This was the guy who handled refunds. Everyone knows how much shit telemarketers get and how high the turnover rate is for them... imagine being the person who has to stall people who have figured out they got scammed. Then imagine when it dawns on you that they're not just idiots who don't pay attention, but that your company really *did* scam them.
Is it really possible he could be in this position *without* holding a grudge?
And I don't think you can assume mixed mot
Telemarketing's Penalty.. (Score:2)
Telemarketing should be against the law as an invasion of privacy, or at the very least, a public annoyance. With fair penalties of course. Nothing insane; although sometimes I think death would be appropriate, such as at 6pm when I'm eating dinner and they bother me to try and sell me some new windows..
To Hell with fair penalties. (Score:5, Funny)
Or I want button installed on my phone that will kill whoever is on the other line.
Re:To Hell with fair penalties. (Score:3, Funny)
Hopefully this button isn't close to the call waiting button. Take the following scenario:
"Mom? I'm getting a call on the other line, can you hold a sec?"
BZZZZZZT
"Er, Mom, you still there? Mom?"
"You just put your lips together and blow." (Score:2, Funny)
Fun things to say to Telemarketers (Score:3, Funny)
More of the Classics (Score:5, Funny)
A Nice List [funmansion.com]
Another Good List [aaronscollection.com]
50 Stupid things to Say [lifeisajoke.com]
These bastards are a pet hate of mine. I've tried most of these at one stage or another. If you can keep from laughing, it's fun to string them along
Another good one . . . (Score:2)
Of course, this only works if you have a child of an appropriate age handy.
Re:Fun things to say to Telemarketers (Score:3, Insightful)
I find it much better to know the laws, and ask them a million and one questions that they legally have to answer.
"What's the name of your boss??? And how do you spell 'Bob'? Slower! Again! Didn't quite catch that... Okay, and his last name?
Re:Fun things to say to Telemarketers (Score:2)
"Put me on your don't call list" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"Put me on your don't call list" (Score:2)
Hmm... ``User Is A Cyborg"
Re:Fun things to say to Telemarketers (Score:5, Insightful)
"Please add this number to your Do Not Call list."
(Note the important difference between "add" and "remove" - many people ask for their number to be removed, which does nothing - the company has plenty of lists of people to call, so if you get removed from one list, you're bound to show up on several more.)
Re:Fun things to say to Telemarketers (Score:4, Informative)
Many telemarketing companies maintain different DNCs for each customer - ask them to put you on ALL their lists at once.
Not Surprising (Score:3, Funny)
Man let me tell you his beer fund was funded
Different ethic standards? (Score:3, Insightful)
"The company feels it operates ethically and has not done anything wrong," Nasca said.
If you're getting anrgy phonecalls from the people who are giving you money (more or less by voluntarely), you're probaly doing something wrong and / or unethically. Wether you give a damn is another matter entirely... many a sucxessfull business (spammers etc) depends on pissing people off.
on a similar note via snail mail (Score:5, Interesting)
The solicitation most definitely looked like a bill (front page [krwtech.com] and back page [krwtech.com]). The bottom half of the page is a tear away bill stub and the solicitation notice on the top right hand corner is in a lighter font than the rest of the text (though it's harder to notice on the scan).
Fortunately, I'm in the habit of reading all of my bills when they come in, but some people aren't. They obviously got the information from the internet WHOIS database even though that database is explicitly protected by a clause saying you can't datamine from it.
The next morning, I filed a complaint with the United States Postal Inspectors because of the deceptiveness and the likelihood that others will be fooled by it. Here is the complaint I sent:
I received a solicitation from ICLS which deceptively looks like a bill. Located on it, is a tear-away payment stub with a customer number, due date and amount with no reference to the fact that it's actually a solicitation on the stub. On the upper right hand corner, it does state "THIS NOTICE IS A SOLICITATION AND RECEIPT OF PAYMENT WILL CONFIRM YOUR ANNUAL LISTING", however, it is a lighter font than the rest of the solicitation.
While I, fortunately, did not fall for the solicitation, I'm concerned that other people whom aren't as careful could easily be deceived as without close examination, it will appear as a bill.
I'm still waiting to hear back from the postal inspectors to see what they have to say.
Re:on a similar note via snail mail (Score:2)
Hell, NSI did/does that (Score:3, Informative)
I told the FTC about it and they told me that I was not the only one to complain and t
I own a small business, (Score:3, Funny)
All I ever get are wrong numbers.
How fast can you speak? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How fast can you speak? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yep, saying it extremely quickly is still a deceptive business practice, and thus a dispute would be covered by normal legal methods. Still a hassle, as the telcos have rather stupidly decided that you can't set it up so you have to have written authorization before people can add items to your bill; though it's fraudulent to tack things onto your phone bill, might as well make it difficult to do so.
Don't waste your breath with telemarketers. (Score:5, Informative)
Check out this answering machine for your PC [voicecallcentral.com] that deals with telemarketers who withhold their caller ID. The software can be configured to hang up on these cases and you will never hear the phone ring. It also implements white lists and black lists. Usual disclaimer applies.
Yes there is a risk of IDing legitimate calls as false positives. However, I've been monitoring my caller ID for over two years and can confirm that this is becoming less of a problem as more bell systems make their caller ID protocols compatible. So the risk is diminishing with time.
Yes this is a drastic move but until the law catches up this is how you have to deal with aggressive deceptive practices.
Caller ID is a godsend people - use it. Yes the telcos should be hung by their balls for extorting extra services out of the customers by selling personal information to scum telemarketers. In my next residence I will register my phone under an alias. If anyone calls asking for the alias, then they are immediately identified as a telemarketer and I will tell them there is no one here by that name. This crap has gone far enough.
"Anonymous Call Blocking" (Score:3, Interesting)
This will eliminate a small number of telemarketers - the rest will get through because they're calling from overseas and would have simply shown up as "out of area" or blank on your caller ID unit.
Re:"Anonymous Call Blocking" (Score:5, Informative)
Turns out that with all the long-distance calling I do the cell was actually cheaper than the regular phone line. Furthermore, it's illegal to make an unsolicited sales call to a cell - because the cell owner has to pay if *you* call.
Ever since I disconnected my land line and went to a cell (more than two years now) I've been completely telemarketer free. Not one bloody sales call, not even from those hell-fiends at AT&T.
You can't imagine just how much nicer life is when you know that *every* call you get is from someone you want to hear from, or at least need to hear from.
Max
Re:"Anonymous Call Blocking" (Score:2)
Re:Don't waste your breath with telemarketers. (Score:2, Funny)
Hey, that's an awesome idea! Register yourself under the name Mr. Mudder Fokker, so that they avoid calling you in fear of getting in trouble for obscene phone calls
Re:Don't waste your breath with telemarketers. (Score:2)
Get an answering machine. If it's someone you care about, let them know to leave a message, and you'll pick up if you're there. This cuts the false positives nearly out, and if it's someone who doesn't know you well enough to know you are screening calls that way, and if it's at all important, they'll leave a message.
Re:Don't waste your breath with telemarketers. (Score:2)
In my next residence I will register my phone under an alias.
Get an unlisted number. Get checks that do not have your address and phone # on them. Get a free voicemail account to fill out on forms.
Re:Don't waste your breath with telemarketers. (Score:3, Funny)
as soon as you realize that someone is trying to sell you something:
State loudly and clearly "I am not interested"
Put the phone down (don't hang up)
see how much longer they stay on the line.
Sometimes for a bit of variety, I put the phone next to the TV.
Shame (Score:3, Funny)
Try cramming Epixtar (Score:4, Funny)
Better yet, try it on the next telemarketer that calls you. Should be fun and legal, since they called your "business" to "inquire about your services" themselves.
Who is this? (Score:2)
Can anybody verify if these companies are one and the same?
Another low trick (Score:5, Interesting)
Telemarketer: "Hi, my name is [somebody] and... excuse me, can you hear me?"
My dad (still groggy): "Yes."
Telemarketer: "I'm calling to offer you suchandsuch a service... [blah blah blah garbage]"
Dad: "I'm not interested. Goodbye. *click*"
Next month, he notices his long distance service has been changed to (I think) AT&T.
They used his "Yes" answer to an irrelevant question, and turned it into a "sale".
People like that should be thrown in jail.
Re:Another low trick (Score:4, Informative)
laid? (Score:2, Redundant)
This reminds me of a joke:
Jack & Mary's boss had to lay one of them off.
So he walks up to Mary and tells her: It's like this - I have to lay you or Jack off.
She replies: I'm affraid you'll have to jack off, because I'm late for my bus...
Man... (Score:2, Offtopic)
'Opting in' (Score:2)
So did anybody else notice... (Score:2, Funny)
What he meant
"If you blow the whistle you'll be laid off"
What he actually typed
"If you blow my whistle you'll be laid."
eh, easy mistake, anybody could have made it.
validation (Score:2)
If the recordings of phone conversations were stored as mp3 files, the customers could sign their conversations with their private crypto keys, validating the recording as authentic. I know some call centers record calls digitally. It shoudn't be too hard to send me an email with the file so i can gener
Best way to handle telemarketers... (Score:5, Insightful)
The worst was a local newspaper calling around for new subscriptions. He starts out saying what paper he's calling about and asks whether I receive their paper. I say no. Then he starts off on a sales pitch, which I interrupt to say that the reason I don't receive the paper already is that I don't WANT it, since I get my news from the net. The guy actually tries to continue on reading the script or whatever he's got in front of him... took a couple tries to be polite about not wanting what he's selling before I just flat out said "Listen to the words coming out of my mouth. Not interested." and hung up on the guy. In retrospect that should have been my first response.
I'm amazed people still sit on the phone with these bottom-feeders and answer their questions, unwillingly signing themselves up for a ton of crap. It's not hard to tell them to piss off instead of falling for their tactics.
Re:Best way to handle telemarketers... (Score:3, Interesting)
My response... (Score:2)
Telemarketer: "At this time we will begin your no obligation 30-day free trial. Should you decide to continue after 30 days your company's Web and Internet service is only $29.95 monthly and will be included in your local phone bill appearing under the heading online services
Me: "No means yes and yes means no, does your company personally wish to pay for my entire phone bill, including the $30 a month charges, and additionally all long dist
Poster didn't read the article... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not what the article says. It hints that the tape was cut off immediately after the person responded "Yes" to a group of questions asked quickly all at once, removing the rest of their response. Which is still bad but not nearly as bad as inserting bits into the conversation that never took place. I'm sure that's not far off, if it's not already happening in some cases, but it didn't happen here according to the MSNBC article.
My telemarketing rule #1 (Score:5, Informative)
Never confirm more than your name, and ask for theirs first.
A person/company calling you has you at a great advantage. It could be an inmate of a prison just trying to get your credit card, and all he/she started with was probably a phone book or Internet connection... I mean come on, they almost always BLOCK their source phone number. How can you even remotely trust someone who is hiding behind an unidentified phone number, wanting to sell you something???
It is like social engineering, surely we here on
Now what I have always wanted to do, but never have, is when the call starts and they say it may be recorded, I would say "Good, for my records and quality assurances I AM RECORDING THE CALL TOO." How do you think the would respond to that? most likely "Click."
I Recommend a Seinfeld (Score:5, Funny)
TEL: Hi, would you be interested in switching over to TMI long distance service.
JERRY: Oh, gee, I can't talk right now. Why don't you give me your home number and I'll call you later.
TEL: Uh, I'm sorry we're not allowed to do that.
JERRY: Oh, I guess you don't want people calling you at home.
TEL: No.
JERRY: Well now you know how I feel. [Hangs up]
Seinfeld Episode Transcript [prohosting.com]
Make No Mistake -- This Is Organized Crime (Score:2, Interesting)
Back in the 1990s I began to realize that a phone bill became viewed as a charge account that organized crime could tack charges onto. This accusation includes organizations like AOL. Charges for goods and services
What is the charge for? (Score:2)
Scary Paradigm (Score:4, Insightful)
What scares me is businesses are arranging with banks on direct account withdrawals, and checking account numbers are pretty easy to come by. I mean, if you have ever paid something by check, they have it. And now, they do not even need a signed check to get withdrawal. So you could see charges showing up on your checking account that you have no idea what is.
And dealing with a business is kinda scary, because they have links to Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian. They can mess up your credit and then you have to straighten that out too. You might as well pay them their money just not to have to argue about it. I mean, like me - if I get my credit all screwed up over some business that slipped a charge on me for some "professional services listing" and I refused to pay, I might be denied a job because of that stain. And they know this.
So, I try to keep any monthly billing I have to as few of entities as possible. Once a company has legitimate billing access, they have a foot in the door that a telemarketer can use to fool me into thinking I am doing business with somebody I am already doing business with... like the way they bamboozled the guy with the trick 4-in-one question that if he said "yes" ( which was the obvious answer to three of the questions - if the name, address, and number was correct ), he implies acceptance of the quickly stated fourth question - that he is authorized to modify his billing.
With a business model out now that depends on signing up monthly billing, I see the opportunity for scamming artists soaring, as the number of open accounts, ripe for modification, soars.
I continue all attempts to make purchases on a per-instance basis, meaning I pay full price for the product and close the sale, leaving no loose ends. None of this "support", "warranty", "revolving charge account", etc. I walk out the door with the product, and the vendor has been paid in full. That way things don't change after the agreement has been made.
I have done way too much business already with businesses ( especially insurance companies, and any company having anything to do with investments ) that love to send me tons of paper describing changes after I have agreed to something.
Damm, I just don't have time to read it all. I really *hate* to do business under that business model.
This is the thing that had me so worked up over the Lexmark Printer thing ( where Static Control Concepts tried to make an aftermarket replacement toner cartridge but ran afoul of DMCA because Lexmark put a chip in the toner cartridge, and SCC could not legally duplicate the chip. ). Once this paradigm catches on in the business community, I fear we will see the end of going to WalMart to get replacement aftermarket goods for our day-to-day expendables. Companies could demand and get agreements for monthly billings, and once that's in place, the door is wide open for rampant trickery to modify those agreements.
Alert ! (Score:2)
Now liberty online - that must be another name these guys do business under
Re:what's the obsession with spam? (Score:3, Interesting)
Somehow I see E-mail dying (replaced by online feedback forms) and Landlines dying (replaced by VoIP and wireless).
Any good technology can be turned into trash with the right tools.