FCC Announces First Do-Not-Call Citation 31
An anonymous reader writes "The FCC will announce on Thursday December 18, its first enforcement action for violations of the new national Do-Not-Call list. The perp is a mortgage broker (big users of telemarketing, junk faxes, and spam) in California -- CPM Funding, Inc. No fines (yet) since the FCC can only impose fines on telemarketers after they have had one citation letter (which this is). If, perhaps, a common carrier was to violate however (can you say MCI, AT&T, etc) they can be fined up to $11,000 right off the bat.... no warnings. (The action against AT&T a couple of months ago was for other violations, not violating the new National DNC list.)"
Suing the local police? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Suing the local police? (Score:5, Informative)
Will All Telemarketing Calls Stop If I Register?
Q: If I register my number on the National Do Not Call Registry, will it stop all telemarketing calls?
A: No. Placing your number on the National Do Not Call Registry will stop most telemarketing calls, but not all. Because of limitations in the jurisdiction of the FTC and FCC, calls from or on behalf of political organizations, charities, and telephone surveyors would still be permitted, as would calls from companies with which you have an existing business relationship, or those to whom you've provided express agreement in writing to receive their calls.
sitting ducks, lying marketdroids (Score:3, Insightful)
The "Do Not Call" law should be a simpler law that covers the actual problem. It should outlaw "unsoli
Re:sitting ducks, lying marketdroids (Score:2)
You can also avoid the wardialer-type calls quite a bit of the time by not answering your telephone with "Hello" - the software is programmed to recognize that word, but if you answer the phone with something like "This is Doc Ruby", the software thinks you are an answering machine and hangs up.
You probably also have the option of not answering calls from numbers you don't recognize (provided Caller ID i
Re:Suing the local police? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Suing the local police? (Score:4, Insightful)
The politicians write the rules. When you write the rules, they don't have to apply to you.
Re:Suing the local police? (Score:1)
Re:Suing the local police? (Score:2)
Admittedly, Dean wants to "raise" taxes. He wants to repeal Bush's tax cuts to pay for Bush's huge budget deficit. Tax cuts without spending cuts (ala Bush) are actually tax increases.. you just have to pay later with interest.
Merry Chrismas! (Score:5, Interesting)
Thank you Santa!
Re:Merry Chrismas! (Score:2)
ya, I don't how you can break the DNC, it's a pretty simple thing. Download the list of numbers, insert it into $DBI, search $DBI _BEFORE_ calling the number.
As for SCO, too bad they were given the right to "put up" quietly.
Re:Merry Chrismas! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Merry Chrismas! (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
Does that mean that telemarketers can harass people for two weeks, receive a citation letter, change names, and repeat the process ad infinitum?
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
SMS/Premium rate spam squished (Score:5, Interesting)
I went to their website, read up on what they'd take action on, and filed a complaint.
A month later, they got back to me to say that they had...
1) stopped the service immediately as it looked like they were operating in breach of the code
2) held an inquiry, decided that they were in breach of the code in lots of ways and passed judgment....
3)
4)
5)
w00t! Heck I know 15k isn't a lot but the scum were shut down. Nice to see the system work.
-Baz
Hey!! (Score:2)
Some idiot was stupid enough to leave her name, company and phone number on my answering machine. I was tempted to call her back and tell her that she had just had $11,000 taken out of her salary, but that might have caused a "business relationship" to exist...
Re:Hey!! (Score:1)
but now I'm not so sure.
Awesome (Score:1)
I've already caught two telemarketers calling me, after I told them I was on the do not call list (but only after I had gotten their information), they freaked out and didn't know what to do.
It's quite amusing.
How does one get their info? (Score:1)
Re:How does one get their info? (Score:2)
junkbusters.com has a phone script you can follow. In the days before the DNC, answering incorrectly or FAILING to answer was a violation. I imagine its the same here; if you ask their name, business address, etc. they are required to give it.
If they don't give it, there's a code you can type in after they hang up (again