Telemarketers to Target Cell Phones 452
sik puppy writes "According to this article on msnbc, telemarketers may soon be targeting cell phones." The article discusses how some of these will be accidental, but others will be in response to things like the do-not-call registry.
Who pays me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who pays me... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2)
two words: SUE THEM (Score:2)
they catch on quickly.
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2)
Business Opportunity (Score:3, Interesting)
It seems to me that somebody could make a heck of a lot of coin by setting up a business specifically for the purposes of suing telemarketers.
You'd charge, say $20/offence, and require a form granting access to the customer's phone records and listing as much information about the call as possible (though time & date should be enough)... then go ahead and sue (maybe on behalf of hundreds of other people complaining about the same firm as well). Keep 90% of the judgement and send the remaining 10% to y
Re:Business Opportunity (Score:2)
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2, Interesting)
I am so sick of being a "demographic" and of being marketed to. Don't they realize that by doing this it only inflames me with regard to whatever bullshit they are selling? I go *OUT OF MY WAY* to avoid products that are sold in this manner. Fuck marketers and their respective companies.
And no, this is not meant as a troll.
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2)
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2)
The caller-ID was shown as Private Number, and when I answered, It was a pre-recorded message which went something like this.....
Hi this call will not cost you anything and is brought to you by XYZ the makers of ABCD. If you would like to proceed, press 1 on your dial pad
At which point I hung up. If this starts happening frequently then will be very annoying.
For non-US readers... (Score:2)
Of course, the originator of the call pays for his end of the call, but in the case of a telemarketer that would be a very low "corporate bulk-rate" pricing for a normal land-line.
What??? (Score:2)
Re:What??? (Score:2)
Re:What??? (Score:2)
But when cell phones came out they were very expensive and used only by rich folks who wanted to be able to make and recieve calls on the go. But it would have been unwieldy to have someone using their regular phone (perhaps even a local call, which are one price fits all/not metered in the U.S.) pay the outrageous fees to contact the owner of the mobile phone. (And *someone* has to pay the costs of that conversation)
Re:Who pays me... (Score:2)
Appears slightly broken... but (Score:2)
Re:Appears slightly broken... but (Score:2)
Re:Appears slightly broken... but (Score:2)
Absolutely, some will. It's a lot like a "remove" link on spam, which sometimes is used to confirm addresses. Once the number is exposed on a list, some will use a list for something other than its intended purpose.
I listed my home phone number, since it was already getting bombarded with phonespam. In eight years of owning a cellphone (not the same one for all eight years, thankfully), I've never (knocking on wood) gotten a telemarketing call on my cellphon
Re:Appears slightly broken... but (Score:2)
Been getting SMS spam for years already (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, the cost of sending these messages means that you don't get many, and they won't come with a 150KB attachment for no good reason.
Re:Been getting SMS spam for years already (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Been getting SMS spam for years already (Score:2)
ok i understand that even we pay for receiving sms's sometimes but that's only when you're roaming on a sucky operators network(and then you can very well turn the phone off and receive the messages when you get back home).
Re:Been getting SMS spam for years already (Score:3, Insightful)
I've seen this with a lot of providers here in the US -- most of them have a way to send messages via a web interface. I think you can even send them through an email gateway in most cases (2025551234@mobile.provider.com or something). Not the same as getting your normal email through your phone, this is a seperate email gateway. At least, that's what I've been told.
I say "Lawsuit." (Score:2)
Re:I say "Lawsuit." (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I say "Lawsuit." (Score:2)
Not only do I get free long distance...
Not only do I get to carry my phone with me, ready for anything weird that might happen to me...
Not only do I get really great service and zillions of minutes for less than fifty bucks a month (in contrast, my old landline was 45/month not counting long distance and semi-local)...
But, it's illeg
New feature set (Score:2, Interesting)
Nokia? Motorola? Anyone listening?
Re:New feature set (Score:2)
Nothing regarding text messages, though.
Re:New feature set (Score:2)
Re:New feature set (Score:2)
You can already do this.
Nokia 3360: Restrict Incoming Calls [nokiahowto.com]
Re:New feature set (Score:2)
Nobody but my family has this number.
Why should I have to inconvenience my family so some fuckwit telemarker can call me (and spend MY money -- I pay for incoming minutes)?
Ha! (Score:5, Informative)
Title 47, Chapter 5, Subchapter II, Part I, Section 227, Article b, Item 1, Subitem B, Instance iii
It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States to make any call (other than a call made for emergency purposes or made with the prior express consent of the called party) using any automatic telephone dialing system or an artificial or prerecorded voice to any telephone number assigned to a paging service, cellular telephone service, specialized mobile radio service, or other radio common carrier service, or any service for which the called party is charged for the call;
Thus anyone using an auto-dialer (i.e. 99% of telemarketers) are inviolation of the law and subject to a $500 fine in small claims court.
See these for more info:
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/47/227.html [cornell.edu]
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/05/05/11623
http://www.panix.com/~eck/telemarket.html [panix.com]
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Not to mention the hordes of pitchfork- and torch-wielding cellphone users that would seek such telemarketers out and have them drawn and quartered...
Loophole you could drive a truck through (Score:2)
It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States to make any call (other than a call made for emergency purposes or made with the prior express consent of the called party) using any automatic telephone dialing system or an artificial or prerecorded voice to any telephone number assigned to a paging service, cellular telephone service, specialized mobile radio service, or other radio common carrier service, or any service for which the called party is charged for the cal
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
But I wonder - what about ad supported phones? You are given the phone, and it has gps support with a color display. You agree to receive a number of marketting ads a week, whether by display, voice call, etc, which don't
there's something like this: (Score:2)
This works much better, since if ppl called me, then our conversation was interrupted by an ad, I'd just hang up and stop talking to that person via phone.
Not quite HA (Score:2)
If a human is making the call, even if all they are doing is pushing a "Next Call" button, then this law doesn't count.
Predictive dialer systems are in a grey area.
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
I would expect the industry to move away from auto-dialers and just have the operators prompted as to what number to manually dial.
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Yes, that's true for now. But look closely at this part:
made with the prior express consent of the called party
You can bet your ass that they will turn any contract riders to receive marketing as an "express consent" to accept incoming cell calls. These riders are frickin everywhere.
Hold on a second... (Score:2)
What are the telemarketers going to do, send SMS messages?
Re:Hold on a second... (Score:2)
National DNC list... (Score:2)
I already scared the hell out of some local company that was making calls (low-scale, probably just a couple secretaries doing it). When I mentioned the fines, they apologized profusely and got off the phone as quickly as possible.
Re:National DNC list... (Score:2)
Re:National DNC list... (Score:2)
He has everyone he knows send him their illegal faxes. They send a certified letter to the sender with, in proper legal-ese, a demand for $1500, next day by courier, or else a suit will be filed for the $500 plus all legal fees (which is always significantly more). Something like 90% respond with a check. The lawyer pockets $500, and the fax recipient get sthe other $1500.
How's that for some profit? $1500 for the
uh... (Score:2)
Re:uh... (Score:2)
Crazy cellphone charging system (Score:2)
The system in the UK also relies on mobile numbers being
Simple remedy... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Simple remedy... (Score:2)
The problem with that is, the bottle is open and the genie is has stolen the stopper... Telemarketers aren't going to let go that easily. They've got cash and backing to lobby against any legislation that might limit them. Why else do you think the national Do Not Call list is being challenged in court?
Telemarketers believe they have a Constitutionally-granted right to call anybody, anytime, to sell stuff (freedom of speech), and that fact that you'v
This always happens with regulation. (Score:2)
This was not a good time to implement a nationwide do-not-call list. Although maybe I don't care about this so much because I don't have a cell phone and don't intend to get one (they may or may not give you brain cancer, but everybody I know that has one has no attention span anymore.)
So long as they keep away from faxes, and keep the pitches to a minimu
Re:This always happens with regulation. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This always happens with regulation. (Score:2)
Just because it's a way of making money doesn't make it right, regardless of what the Reagan/Thatcherites would have you believe.
Re:This always happens with regulation. (Score:2)
Re:This always happens with regulation. (Score:2)
I know tele-marketing isn't quite the same, but its the same principle. People disagree with it. They don't like it. They want it to stop. This being a country run 'by the people and for the people' when the majority of people stand up for something (like they have by signing up f
New Script (Score:5, Funny)
Telemarketer: Hello! I am running for Mayor in the City of Ritzville, so this is a political call exempt from the Do Not Call list. I am running for mayor on the platform of keeping our wonderful vacation timeshares as cheap as possible for the good bargain hunters. In fact, you can get this beutiful timeshare right on the beach for less than you might think. Would you like to hear more about these wonderful deals that happen to be in the city I'm running for mayor in? If so, press 1 to talk to a representative now!
Anti-Telemarketing Counterscript (Score:2, Interesting)
It sounds to me like you need the Anti-Telemarketing Counterscript [xs4all.nl].
-r
Hmmm (Score:2)
What will happen, though, is that cell phones'll start being registered on the "Do Not Call" list, which'll push the total number of phones registered into the hundreds of millions.
Far from profiting by such a tactic, that might well be enough to convince the courts that telemarketers have gone too far. Especially if the tactic interferes with medical staff's paging systems and phone systems.
One death that can be attri
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
With the portability law coming into effect, it will be impossible to tell for anyone whether your target is landline or mobile. So I went ahead and registered both landlines and the SO's cell phone. If I ever stop being too important to have a ce
Not only annoying, but costly too! (Score:2)
RIAA, you'll have to work harder if you want to take back the "Incredibly Stupid Commercial Entity Trying to Alienate Their Theoretical Audience" prize!
Re:Not only annoying, but costly too! (Score:4, Funny)
Court in session, Glib Telemarketers are appealing a ruling that they can't call cell phones. Aide to judge notifies the judge that there's a call on his ultra-private emergencies only cellphone. Judge retires to his chambers to take the call...
Voice: "Hello. I'm Sodum, and I'm calling on behalf of Glib Telemarketers. Would you be interested in one of our free unlimited-credit credit cards today?"
Judge returns to court and sentances everyone at Glib Telemarketing to a slow and painful death.
Re: jd's .sig (Score:2)
>
>What does it take to make our world come alive? What does it take to make us sing? (SoM
Best juxtaposition of .sig and post ever.
One million points of light, each one a telemarketer from Glib Telemarketing being burnt at the stake. That's my Vision Thing, and the next time there's a recall election, I'm running for Governor on it!
Re:Not only annoying, but costly too! (Score:2)
It's not about commercial speech vs individual speech. Speech is still free, the First Amendment guarantees you the right to speak, it does not guarantee you the right to an audience. If you knock at my door to exercise your free speech rights and tell me you think my house is ugly, by all means, go ahead. I will then exe
The Original Submitter is wrong (Score:2)
What I'd like to know is, what recourse is available to those people who actually switch their landlines to cell. Do the telemarketers *have* to remove your number if you tell them its a cell? Can you sue for reimbursement if they don't?
Re:The Original Submitter is wrong (Score:2)
The solution may be to get a rabbit (Score:5, Funny)
How about a do not "anything" registry? (Score:2)
Re:How about a do not "anything" registry? (Score:2)
Today's Sluggy Freelance (Score:2)
Telemarketing Cell Phones Is Already Illegal (Score:2, Interesting)
(47CFR64.1200)
(a) No person may:
(1) Initiate any telephone call (other than a call made for
emergency purposes or made with the prior express consent of the called
party) using an automatic telephone dialing system or an artificial or
prerecorded voice,
(iii) To any telephone number assigned to a paging service, cellular telephone ser
Phone companies could make a killing (Score:2, Insightful)
2) Give users a special dial code to call immediately after receiving a telemarketing call, like you can use *57 for harassing calls
3) Deliver the telemarketing companies a weekly invoice for their calls to cell phones
4) No, this isn't the stupid joke you thought it was, move along.
Sucks to be them... (Score:2)
Offtopic: my favorite new telemarketer trick, which has seemed to help reduce my call volume. Pick up, and as soon as they go into their pitch, put the phone down on the counter, but don't hang up. Don't pick it up again until they've given up on you. Sorta pointless, but hilarious. I haven't tried t
This won't fly (Score:4, Interesting)
This idea won't fly. The reason is simple: money. On landlines it costs nothing to receive a call, so consumers can complain but that's about it as far as the telephone carriers are concerned. Cel phones and SMS are a different story. When a telemarketer calls a cel phone or sends a text message, the phone's owner can point to a line on his bill and say "This unwanted call/message cost me $X.". Now the phone owner has proof of an actual dollar amount to go with his complaint, and he can demand reimbursement. If the phone carrier reimburses, it's going to turn telemarketing into a cost for the carriers and they're going to do something about it. If phone carriers refuse to reimburse, we'll see something like the junk-fax law passed ASAP. One way or another, when the telemarketers start generating provable costs to the recipients of their calls there's going to be a major backlash against the telemarketers.
Telemarketers, take note: if you won't compromise, if you insist that it's either no limits at all or nothing, you may find that the rest of us consider giving you nothing at all a perfectly acceptable outcome. :)
Re:This won't fly (Score:2)
So when I went over the limit on my minutes that month, I fired off an e-mail to every single address I could find associated with the newspaper complaining, and requesting compensation.
I finally got a response; a manager made sure that my number was removed, and offered compensation for the amount that I went over on my
Re:This won't fly (Score:2)
Is that true? The originating number shows up on your bill? Is it the same on landlines? Kinda kicks caller-id-blocking into touch...
I think we'd be able to litigate this away... (Score:2)
I wonder... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
provider cooperation (Score:2)
Wow! Avoid plans with free incoming calls... (Score:3, Interesting)
Don tinfoil hat: is it possible that the cellular companies instituted these plans precisely in order to be telemarketer-friendly?
You can register cell #s on the do-not-call list (Score:3, Informative)
My cell number was registered on the list as soon as it was started. Telemarketers would have a nice $11k fine if they called me on it.
-bm
Double Trouble (Score:2)
It is illegal to "Initiate any telephone call to any residential line using an artificial or prerecorded voice to deliver a message without the prior express consent of the called party...."
Add to that that the call was made to a cell phone:
"No person or entity may...Initiate any telephone call (other than a call
In Canada.... (Score:2)
However, I've had my phone for nearly a year and have received perhaps 5 calls in total. Obviously people aren't too happy about being called on their cell phones and are probably not going to buy anything. Even the people who would normally buy from a telemarketer aren't going to b
Thank goodness for foresight (Score:2)
On a similar subject, folks might find today (Tuesday)'s Sluggy Freelance [sluggy.com] amusing...
Non Starter (Score:2)
First, they will not be 'targeting' cellphones.
Second, they will not be calling phone numbers that are in the Do-Not-Call registry. They CAN'T.
Third, E-911 does not provide address information to telemarketers, it is a system where CALLING OUT from a cellphone allows the 911 provider to get the location of the phone. The cellphone provider's location-tracking system is not part of E-911, but is a requirement for it. And if the provider is going to use advertising t
DNC List Works for All Numbers, Right? (Score:2)
Do Not Call... (Score:3, Informative)
I dont plan on having any telemarketers calling my cell.
Their restraint is our protection? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, and we know companies never use marketing tools that they fear we won't like. That's why webvertisers never use spam, pop-unders, stupid animated banners that cover the page....
How many millions did X-10 make from pop-unders? As they chuckled all the way to the bank, I somehow doubt they were shedding tears about my "annoyance and antagonism."
The cell carriers are doing this (Score:2)
Based on my reading of the relevant US code, providing the airtime for the call at no charge to me does not mean it's okay for them to telemarket to me. However, the code only seems to apply if they contacted my phone using the phone number -- if they est
Easy remedy. (Score:2)
Track the unsolicited calls that were made to you and bill the agency that is responsible for your now unusable minutes. Better yet, if the wireless providers were to reimburse you for your lost minutes and then bill the responsible agencies to recover, we could possibly see the end of telemarketers.
This would work only if the phone companies didn't already pay the telemarketers for their services in marketing. Then we probably wouldn't see the providers charging the telemarketers.
Why is this an issue? (Score:3, Insightful)
What I wonder is how companies get cell phone numbers in the first place, to 'accidentially' call. Cell phones are all unlisted for a reason. This means they were either sold the numbers by the cell company, or they're randomly calling folks.
Going through numbers in random/sequential order is illigal, IIRC. It's considered right up there with prank phone calls and the like, which (again, IIRC) you can be prosecuted for if found out. The problem is, you can rarely find out precisely who called you. Phone networks don't exactly have whois. That, and the only realistic way to do something like this is a class-action suit. That involves a lot of dirt digging by many people - something that isn't practical in the least.
Re:Are they TRYING to make us mad? (Score:2)
Ugh.
Re:yeah (Score:2)
press 4 if you want a college degree
press 5 to find out where 1000's of hot young girls are waiting for you
press any key to give us all your money, for us providing you with nothing
Re:oh good :-( (Score:2)
be careful if you are married (Score:2)
P.S. it could be good if on the street-phone I could type somehow my ID (nick?) that would be recognized by the Caller ID system.
Re:be careful if you are married (Score:3, Funny)
Turn those cell phones off, "to conserve energy". Say it; it rolls off the tongue, doesn't it? "Honey, I'm 'conserving energy'!" Then you cannot be called, period -- and almost no telemarketers are crazy enough to leave you a message. Check your messages from time to time, to see that your wife has a flat, etc, but leave the phone off when you're not checking messages or dialling out.
That's what I do... And, the side benefit is, no one is capable of bothering you. Conside
SMS too, and calls at work (Score:2)
Oh, and they might want to clue in that while the likelyhood that I will buy something while called at home is low, the likelyhood that I will buy something what called on my cell minutes in in the negetive range (whilst the likelyhood that some pleb calling my cell is very high), and the likelyhood that I will go postal on so