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Appeals Court OKs FTC's Do-Not-Call List 216

GTRacer writes "The USA Today website just posted a report that the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals (Denver) has upheld the FTC's national Do Not Call registry. In their decision, the Court found the list to be 'a valid commercial speech regulation...without burdening an excessive amount of speech.' The telemarketers had challenged the constitutionality of blocking commercial free speech while allowing charities and select others to continue phone solicitation. Interestingly enough, 'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.' Isn't it now obvious these people have a double-standard when it comes to reaching out and touching someone?" The court's decision is available to read.
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Appeals Court OKs FTC's Do-Not-Call List

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  • by erick99 ( 743982 ) * <homerun@gmail.com> on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:33PM (#8310139)
    I don't think anyone was terribly surprised that the registry was upheld. There was a lot of public support and this is, after all, a big election year. What will be interesting to see is how fast the telemarketing firms find work-arounds. For example:

    "Companies can telemarket to anyone who has bought, leased or rented something from them within the last 18 months, or to anyone who has inquired about or applied for something with them within the last three months.

    It also exempts long-distance phone companies and airlines; banks and credit unions; and insurance companies operating under state regulation.

    You could drive a truck full of mailing lists through that loophole. I am sure they will come up with something....

    Happy Trails!

    Erick

    • by Anonymous Coward
      It also exempts long-distance phone companies

      I don't see any reference to this exemption at www.donotcall.gov [donotcall.gov]. Where does it say that phone companies and airlines are exempt?
    • by Maestro4k ( 707634 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:43PM (#8310275) Journal
      • I don't think anyone was terribly surprised that the registry was upheld. There was a lot of public support and this is, after all, a big election year.
      I think there were a lot of people concerned that the court wouldn't respond this way. The telemarketing industry has deep pockets to spend on lobbying and/or buying out congressmen/women's votes. (Granted, they aren't the only industry that does this, just the only ones that matter in the particular case.) Congress has shown time and again they could care less what their constituents really want, just as long as their industry masters are happy. Yes, even in election years. Besides, what do they really have to worry about? Most average joe citizens don't even pay attention to the local news, they're not to likely to hear about how their congressperson shoved a last-minute addon to some bill, with the addon being totally anti-consumer.
      • by yoshi_mon ( 172895 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @08:17PM (#8311703)
        I think there were a lot of people concerned that the court wouldn't respond this way. The telemarketing industry has deep pockets to spend on lobbying and/or buying out congressmen/women's votes.

        The point is in this case it was not up to the congresscritters but the courts which are not nearly as easily bought as the former.

        The hard part, for now until all the loopholes need be patched, has been done by getting the bill passed. We must now watch to make sure it does not get repealed or nutered by said congresscritters when we arn't looking.
    • by jfengel ( 409917 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:43PM (#8310279) Homepage Journal
      In theory, the fact that this is an election year doesn't matter for the judge. Appeals court judges are appointed for life precisely to put them above politics (which moves the politics to the nomination and approvals side of things).

      Popularity can get the law passed, but only the constitution (and the common law) go into whether the judge approves it.

      In theory.
    • I don't think anyone was terribly surprised that the registry was upheld. There was a lot of public support and this is, after all, a big election year.

      How does this apply to judges which are not elected?
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:44PM (#8310288)
      What will be interesting to see is how fast the telemarketing firms find work-arounds.

      "Hello? Yes, this is the United Way. We're calling to let you know that under arrangement with Company X a small donation allows us to offer you. . . "

      KFG
    • by Dukael_Mikakis ( 686324 ) <andrewfoersterNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:45PM (#8310290)
      You're right. From my understanding these sorts of nuisance restrictions are just an elaborate song and dance between companies (spammers/telemarketers) and the government. The government hears all the complaining from consumers (via Dateline or whatever) and some elaborate method of restricting such marketing without trampling the Constitution (upheld because telephone lines/bandwidth are private commodities?) and then it's the telemarketers' turn to peruse the writing and find the loopholes (which the parent mentioned) to sneak past the regulation, and the government has to redraft a new law, ad infinitum.

      If the government violates the Constitution, game over. Likewise if these businesses violate legitimate law.

      Who loses? Well, of course, the citizens, who must contend with increasingly restrictive laws regarding telephone/email usage and increasingly sophisticated and much-more-difficult-to-screen marketing tactics.

      Politicians get their big victory (yeah, in an election year). And as always lawyers win on both sides trying to uphold or crack through these laws.

      And it does seem ironic (and soft) that the exemptions are for those businesses that telemarket the most. Banks about mortgages and credit cards, "airlines" offering travel packages, and the like. Seems reminiscent of the recent "anti-spam" initiative. It sounds good to the voting populace, but it also has the campaign-financing corporations drooling with delight.

      Politics.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:52PM (#8310383)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Win a free car! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by funny-jack ( 741994 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:55PM (#8310424) Homepage
      One example of this already:

      In our local shopping mall there is a shiny new car parked in the walkway. Next to it is a box with a pile of "entry forms" on the top of it, enticing people to enter to win a new car, or a pile of cash or whatever.

      When you read the fine print on the back of the card, you find that by filling out the card, you are giving them and anyone they feel like sharing it with permission to contact you via phone or mail.

      I just wonder what would happen if someone filled out one of these for me (being on the Do Not Call list) without my knowledge or permission, and they contacted me. Hmm...
    • The FTC deals with Federal Comm matters. You probably have another office overseeing matters within your State. Take the oppertunity to impose some regulations of your own...

      Found your own $familyname Communications Assurance Group. Write up a policy forbidding any unsolicited phone calls. Post that policy on some web server in Kerplunkistan being fed by tcp/ip over tin-can-with-string protocol. Impose $10k fines for any violation. Take the name and number for anyone violating the policy. If they co
    • by blincoln ( 592401 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:08PM (#8310558) Homepage Journal
      I am sure they will come up with something

      They already have.

      I get more telemarketing calls now (4-6+ a day) than I did *before* the registry.

      I was shocked (well, not really) to find out just how many non-profit agencies there are who want to get their hands on my money, as well as companies that have done business with me in the past 18 months.

      I'm sure they're using the "do-not-call" list as a source for numbers. I feel like a sucker for ever signing up.

      The most irritating one is an autodialer that repeats a recording about how I've been selected to receive a magically shitty vacation for only $99, but doesn't mention the name of the company so I can't report them. I was getting multiple messages a week from it on my voicemail for months.
      • but doesn't mention the name of the company so I can't report them

        So report them based on whatever contact information the recording left in the message. Unless none was mentioned?

        "Hi, you just won a vacation to Cancun! We just thought you'd like to know. Thank you!" *Click*
        • So report them based on whatever contact information the recording left in the message.

          There is none. If you get the call live, you can press nine to talk to a human who will take your credit card number, but I don't know of any way to weasel the company name out of them.
          • If you get the call live, you can press nine to talk to a human who will take your credit card number, but I don't know of any way to weasel the company name out of them.

            Hmmmm... how difficult would it be for the Feds and the credit card companies to set up a batch of "honeypot" credit card numbers that could be used to establish a paper trail on this sort of thing?

            (To forestall one objection, no, it isn't "entrapment" if the crook initiated the illegal activity without being specifically prompted in th

      • The National DNC list has been a blessing to my house. The endless daily and nightly telemarketing calls have finally ceased! The sound of a ringing phone is no longer a source of dread and continual disruption.

        I rarely congratulate our government, but I'm proud of the judges involved who realized the need for this legislation.

    • From the actual website, under "more information"

      https://www.donotcall.gov/FAQ/FAQBusiness.aspx# W ho

      One caveat: if a consumer asks a company not to call, the company may not call, even if there is an established business relationship. Indeed, a company may not call a consumer - regardless of whether the consumer's number is on the registry - if the consumer has asked to be put on the company's own do not call list.

      Basically if you ask them not to call when you sign up for their services, they are lega
    • I agree it should have been passed, but it had little to do with popular support. The judiciary system is separate from the legislative one. Majority rule does not apply as it does in Congress. However I won't doubt that the public support didn't have any influence.
  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:33PM (#8310144) Homepage Journal
    "in safeguarding personal privacy and reducing the danger of telemarketing abuse without burdening an excessive amount of speech."

    "without burdening an excessive amount of speech"? How about, "an excessive burdening of free speech"?

    Must have been one of those "C" average appointments I keep hearing about.

    'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.'

    Yeah, that's a hoot, but rest assured, their operators aren't exactly standing by on this one, they're probably lobbying like all get out.

    • Re:Such language! (Score:3, Interesting)

      by RLW ( 662014 )
      Since I have put my number on the do not call list I can eat dinner in peace. If those companies want to communicate their commercial interests with me, they can write a letter or buy an add on TV. The constant ringing of the phone is too invasive.

      But you are correct in that the judge wrapped up the argument in such a way that it gave telemarketing some sort of limited right which had to be weighed against the benefits of limiting calls.

      The real bummer is still the judge in Denver(?) ruled that the li
  • Great News! (Score:5, Funny)

    by mekkab ( 133181 ) * on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:34PM (#8310150) Homepage Journal
    Wooooo hooooo! Chalk one up for the little guy. Now if I could just get every other 80's fan from calling my phone number (867-5309-eee-ine) I'd be a happy man!

    P.S.- no, my name is NOT jenny.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:36PM (#8310181)
    Even when I pay Qwest to block telemarketers, THEY call me to sell me stuff.
    • But Qwest advertise the fact that they make telemarketing calls.

      Have you not seen the commercial with the elderly couple eating ribs? When the phone rings, they get all excited at the prospect of it being a telmarketing call from Qwest.

      Sure put me off being a customer.
  • Please explain. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:38PM (#8310206)
    Interestingly enough, 'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.' Isn't it now obvious these people have a double-standard when it comes to reaching out and touching someone?

    Where's the double standard? They have yet to challenge the legality of you not picking up your phone.
    • Where's the double standard? They have yet to challenge the legality of you not picking up your phone.

      I think they fight the right to make your phone ring at awkward hours. They don't challenge the right you have to not answer them, insult the heck out of them or slam the phone down on them.

      In short, they're in the same sort of situation as the MPAA and RIAA : they have businesses nobody wants anymore, and everybody would be happy to be rid of, so they use any argument and any method to ensure they stay
  • Too Bad... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Looks like somebody in the industry wasn't willing to cough up enough cash to get the decision over turned.
  • by rjelks ( 635588 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:39PM (#8310215) Homepage
    My personal favorite was a call a got a few years ago. A qwest customer service rep. called at dinnertime to sell a new service. The new service in question... blocking telemarketers's calls. I asked her if it would block calls like hers and she told me, "No, you are our customer so we can still call you." I didn't opt for the service.

    -
  • by theMerovingian ( 722983 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:39PM (#8310221) Journal

    'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.'

    I bet they were just in the middle of dinner, all you have to do is try your call again at 9pm.

    • The problem is that it costs $2 a month (for Verizon, at least). My conversation went something like this:

      verizon: listing is free
      me: I don't want to be listed
      verizon: that's an extra charge of $2/mo
      me: you're charging me $2/mo for you NOT to do something?
      verizon: yes. listing is free
      me: you keep saying that like its a good thing.
      verizon: yes sir. What would you like to do?
      me: How does my name appear when it's listed?
      verizon: First initial and then last name.
      me: OK. Fine. Listed.
      verizon: Wh
  • Of Course. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:41PM (#8310238)
    "Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment."

    Perhaps we should call them over and over again, just to be sure. Around dinner time, and maybe again later.

    And all hours of the weekend. Definitely then.

  • by fembots ( 753724 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:41PM (#8310242) Homepage
    Fairly soon we'll have a Can-Call Act 2004 which allows telemarketers to call anyone as long as they identify themselves (hi, this is Mike) at the beginning of the call, and allows callees to opt-out (hang up the phone).
  • by overbyj ( 696078 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:42PM (#8310247)
    I have always been annoyed at the telemarketing industry's arguments as to why they should be able to do this. They have always maintained that it was free speech. What they fail to realize is that it is free speech that I have to pay for! Sure, I would have a phone anyway, but basically they are wasting my money. If they want to market on the street corner, go right ahead because that truly is free speech (obviously within limits) but when you come into my home on the telephone line I am paying for, then it crosses the line and that is not free speech.

    This leads me to another thought. I have always wondered why the telemarketing industry doesn't pay for people's phone lines in return for getting phone spam. ISP's do it, why not here?
    • by plover ( 150551 ) * on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:01PM (#8310489) Homepage Journal
      The judge's opinion in this case was that a person's home has always enjoyed a unique place with respect to the homeowner's rights. The concept of "cost" to the recipient didn't enter into his argument.

      Here's the relevant quote from Frisby v. Schultz the court cited in this ruling:

      One important aspect of residential privacy is protection of the unwilling listener. ... [A] special benefit of the privacy all citizens enjoy within their own walls, which the State may legislate to protect, is an ability to avoid intrusions. Thus, we have repeatedly held that individuals are not required to welcome unwanted speech into their own homes and that the government may protect this freedom.

    • Just to clarify - anyone wanting to call you should get your permission first, before they come into your home on the telephone line you're paying for. Is that it?
      • That may be the original poster's idea, (and I realize you're just trolling for a fight with him here,) but that's not what the court based this decision on. It is, however, one of the arguments used to prevent telemarketing calls over cell phones and is the basis of the junk fax law.

        The court said basically that since you can post a "No soliciting" sign and positively affirm your intention to keep solicitors from your door, you have that right and that the government is within their boundaries to pass l

  • by ScreamingLordByron ( 649928 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:43PM (#8310266) Homepage
    It is refreshing to see the Courts stepping forward to reassert the legal precedent that free speach does not equal unlimited commercial speach. With the continuing growth of political influence of coporations both in the U.S. and world wide and the increasing rights granted to the these coporate entities, a clear delinitation of the the rights of individuals (as guaranteed by the Constitution) vs. the rights that have been accorded to corporations (largely as a result of campaign contributions ... giving rise to the related debate of does $ = speach in the political arena)is certainly called for. Despite the cat calls of the much of the right wing of american politics decrying the "black robed tyranny" of the american judiciary, I for one am glad to see the legal system prtecting the rights of individuals and refusing to water down the rights granted to individuals by affording equal footing to artifical entites such as corporations! Three Cheers for the proletariot! ;)
    • Ummm...the right wing wanted this just as bad as the left. The only people who did not want this law were telemarketers.

      I don't see how you can claim a law that was so popular on both sides of the fence as some sort of victory for one side or another. The fact is, the right wing likes judges just fine -- when they have problems with a judge, their issue is that the judge may have overstepped his bounds (using interpretation of a case as legislation). They're elected for life (so politics won't affect the

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:43PM (#8310274)
    Either the DNC lists are working or my phone has been out of order for a while. I'd as a friend to call and check but I only know virtual people.
    • Either the DNC lists are working or my phone has been out of order for a while. I'd as a friend to call and check but I only know virtual people.

      No problem, just post your telephone number here and I'm sure it'll be tested...
  • I was really pulling for this judgement to be held up. My reasoning, if the law had been shot down, due to the loopholes the polticians left themselves, then maybe they would have drafted a law which included themselves in it. On the other hand, they may have just tried to sweep the whole issue under the rug and forget about it, so I guess I'll just be happy with the half win we got.

  • should be glad (Score:5, Insightful)

    by potpie ( 706881 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:47PM (#8310314) Journal
    They should be GLAD to have people block their calls, because the people blocking their calls are (probably with some exceptions) the people who aren't going to buy anything from them. It eliminates wasted phone time. Now they should rejoice that they can cut costs by focusing on the few people who actually WILL buy from them, probably just to talk to another human being (that is, if it's not an automated system).
    • by GGardner ( 97375 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:01PM (#8310494)
      The NYT ran an article about this a while back -- they interviewed people who didn't want to buy things from unsolicited phone calls, but ended up doing so anyways, because they "felt sorry" for the person making the phone call. One woman they interviewed bought 5 $1k replacement windows, which she later admitted, "probably wasn't a good idea". She also said that she would sign up for a do not call list, to prevent her from mercy purchases in the future.

      Don't think that the telemarketters don't know their own business.

  • by B.D.Mills ( 18626 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:48PM (#8310334)
    Can someone explain why the telemarketers are fighting this with everything at their disposal, when this list actually helps them? By excluding the numbers of people that are not interested in receiving telemarketing solicitations, it increases the likelihood that a particular call is to someone who is willing to buy. The DNC list also has other benefits that have not been foreseen by the telemarketers. For example, telephone numbers for fax machines and modems can be placed on this list so that telemarketers don't waste their time calling them.
    • The reason is simple. You have assumed that adding your name to the DNC means that you would never buy something over the phone. Although that seems logical, it's a bad assumption. To stereotype a bit, think of a husband adding the number to the DNC because the wife keeps buying the "crap" over the phone. Telemarketers want to keep talking to the wife.
    • I'm not so sure (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Sparky77 ( 633674 )
      By excluding the numbers of people that are not interested in receiving telemarketing solicitations, it increases the likelihood that a particular call is to someone who is willing to buy.

      They don't care much about targeting certian persons. Like spammers, they just throw as much crap out there as possible to get a greater return.

      For example, telephone numbers for fax machines and modems can be placed on this list so that telemarketers don't waste their time calling them.

      Telemarketers almost exclus
    • I've said it before and I'll say it again.

      Telemarketers are not people like you and me in about the same way as Jeffery Dalhmer isn't a person like you and me.

      The problem is, because so many folks signed up for it, it very clearly shows them that people really didn't want to be called on the phone, which leads to more troubles down the road for telemarketing-related industries.
    • by multimed ( 189254 ) <mrmultimedia@y[ ]o.com ['aho' in gap]> on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:13PM (#8310614)
      Because telemarketers don't care that the people they call don't buy anything during the call or even that the people are terribly pissed off and possibly won't ever buy anything from the seller again. Most telemarkers don't sell anything--they're service companies who get paid for making the calls. It's pretty similar to spam in that regard--the ones that actually are contacting the prospect (and I'll use that term lightly) are generally paid for the bulk of contacts, not the actual response rate of the ads. They're in the information business--their databases are what companies pay for and even if the people don't buy anything on any given campaign, telemarketers make their money off simply having live ones on the other end.

    • Firstly, not every person who is annoyed by telemarketers is up to speed with this DNC list. They might not get around to it, or they might not even have heard of it...

      Secondly, there's those who are just easy marks. They can't say no. If the DNC list allows these easily-pushed-around types to opt out before a smarmy salesperson corners them in their own living room, then this can only hurt those kinds of sales.
  • by segment ( 695309 ) <sil@@@politrix...org> on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:48PM (#8310336) Homepage Journal
    The National Do Not Call Registry gives you a choice about whether to receive telemarketing calls at home.

    Define telemarketing calls. What I think will happen is companies will adapt with something to obscure the dubious title of telemarketing companies. Think about it for a second... So company X cannot call you soliciting products, but a charity can still call you. So now using some lax LLC laws, a telemarketer can reinvent itself as some form of charity Company X charity... Sure they can pitch something honest sounding but let's take a look at namebranding for a second...

    charity: "Good day sir, we're with the Microsoft Save the World foundation..."

    Sure it sounds dumb, but I'm sure telemarketers will find a way around this. By the way no mention of how this includes those annoying companies calling you to do independent studies, surveys, etc. At least from what I saw on the page.

    Oh well, it will be a matter of time (likely after November) where an anonymous plane mysteriously drops a bag of cash on someone politicians desk, and these laws are re-argued and reverse. Just like the Public Utility Holding Company Act, Federal Power Act, and Federal Communications Act. All down the tubes.

  • by superpulpsicle ( 533373 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:50PM (#8310358)
    Marketer: Hi we are a nonprofit agency.

    Guy at home: Sorry, I am on the do-no-call list

    Marketer: Yes, but we have an exceptional product which you might be interested in, in exchange for your donation.

    Guy at home: How the hell can you be nonprofit and sell shit at the same time?

    • > Marketer: Hi we are a nonprofit agency.
      >
      > Guy at home: Sorry, I am on the do-no-call list
      >
      > Marketer: Yes, but we have an exceptional product which you might be interested in, in exchange for your donation.
      >
      >Guy at home: How the hell can you be nonprofit and sell shit at the same time?

      Simple! Use this price list [xenu.net] from a representative 501(c)3 UFO cult!

      How do you get to be a 501(c)3 UFO cult? You DDOS the IRS [xenu.net] with "individual" subpoenas, and if you've got enough

    • Mastercard are non-profit...
  • It's time... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Trolling4Dollars ( 627073 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:51PM (#8310362) Journal
    ...to get these fools who think they have a "right" to market to everyone to shut the hell up. A lot of us are sick of everything being done for profit at the expense of our own quality of life. Wouldn't it be nice if you could open your inbox, look in your mailbox, answer your phone or door, and know that there wouldn't be someone trying to sell you useless crap that you aren't interested in on the other end? How novel an idea. And then on top of all of this we get other assholes coming in trying to make money off of filtering out what we don't want disrupting us. (Privacy Manager from the phone company, or move to an ISP that has spam filtering even if they are more expensive or have other limitations you don't want) So you have to PAY to keep people from trying to sell you stuff? Has it really come to that?

    This is not what the founding fathers had in mind. The America we are living in has been co-opted by people infected with a severe mental problem. That problem is the idea that you can't be "successful" unless you make more money than everyone else. When did we start encouraging this kind of thing? And Why? I suppose this is what we deserve for being a culture that worships the dollar. I'm sorry, but I'd like to be excommunicated right now. I don't want to have anything to do with people who measure their value in net worth. Instead I want to be part of a culture that that discourages stupidity. One where being able to "kick ass" or "rule" is of no value. I want to be part of a culture that realizes that if life is to be fair, we have to educate everyone and address each individual case as a society. I want to be in a culture where education is not K-12, but age four - death.

    But I'm getting ahead of myself. My main point is that the DNC list wouldn't be neccessary if we hadn't fostered the ills of competetive personalities and avarice. If there wasn't a drive in our society to make the most money regardless of how good or poor your product is, this wouldn't be a problem. It wouldn't be a problem if, as a culture, we DIDN'T buy the crap that is sold via telemarketing and spam and direct mail. It especially wouldn't be a problem if instead we encouraged companies to make GOOD products and then rest on the quality of their product to sell them. After all, isn't that what competition and free market is really all about? The cream rising to the top so to speak?

    I have no problem with people wanting to sell things as long as they realize it's not a right, it's a privelege. And, as the consumer, it's my right to decide on my own if the product is right for me... or even useful in any way. Sorry, but even if I was bald, I don't think I'd be buying spray on hair. It just doesn't seem like a good idea.
  • by ChaosDiscord ( 4913 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:51PM (#8310363) Homepage Journal
    My state's Do-Not-Call List has kept my phone blissfully silent for the last year or so. But the various DNC List laws have several loopholes. Perhaps the worst is the political campaign loophole. Worse yet, many of those campaigns are using automated responders which simply play a recording if you (or your answering machine) answers. Our primary is today, over the last three days I've gotten a half dozen unwelcome political calls and a dozen hung up calls that I can only guess are predictive dialers [fcc.gov]. For a phone that normally rings one a week this was a huge irritation. At least they haven't started calling my cell phone (yet).
  • no fun (Score:4, Funny)

    by xot ( 663131 ) <fragiledeath@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:52PM (#8310386) Journal
    I work for an outsourced Telemarketing company and i can tell you the DNC lists are NO fun at all to manage!
    And now that its got wide coverage , everyone we call wants to be or has applied to be on the FTC's list.All this is besides the numerous state lists that are maintained by all the states.
    • Man, I'm crying for you... it must be so difficult to have to check to see if someone has explicitly asked that you not pester them with your invasion of their privacy before you pester them with your invasion of their privacy.

      Telemarketers should be legal hunting.

    • Re:no fun (Score:5, Funny)

      by lrucker ( 621551 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:04PM (#8310517)
      I work for an outsourced Telemarketing company

      You're involved in outsourcing and telemarketing - and you expect sympathy here?

    • Re:no fun (Score:3, Informative)

      by Tackhead ( 54550 )
      > I work for an outsourced Telemarketing company and i can tell you the DNC lists are NO fun at all to manage!
      >
      > And now that its got wide coverage , everyone we call wants to be or has applied to be on the FTC's list.All this is besides the numerous state lists that are maintained by all the states.

      "Good!"

      If that doesn't make my opinion clear, I have another response that should make it three times as clear.

      "Good! Fuck you!"

    • Re:no fun (Score:2, Interesting)

      by texassage ( 473102 )
      I used to work for an outsourced Telemarketing company. (Not that I am proud of it)

      DNC lists are just another list of numbers that you scrub against. Most clients have HUGE lists of numbers and don't want all of them called on a particular campaign. You also have to scrub continously based on timezone, regional activities (I.E. calling during a hurricane is usually not appreciated), local, state and now the federal DNC lists.

      They are NOT difficult to manage. What is difficult is finding enough good nu
  • by holzp ( 87423 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:54PM (#8310405)
    we can expect a Do-Not-Slashdot list to follow?
  • I don't even have a landline phone anymore, except at my business. Caller ID helps restrict telemarketers fairly well there.

    I use my cell phone as my primary personal phone, and telemarketing companies are not allowed to call it because it would place the call cost burden on me. Situation solved.

    On the other hand, you don't own your phone number. Most (if not all) phone companies offer a low cost service to blocking unknown callers.

    Our Constitution is pretty firm on what Congress has the power to do o
    • I use my cell phone as my primary personal phone, and telemarketing companies are not allowed to call it because it would place the call cost burden on me.

      Let's see, I pay for my land-line as well as my cellular phone. By my count that means that the burden of the call is on me on both counts. Granted they take some of the burden when they call long distance, but I'm still paying for their advertisement.

      Since the burden is on me, there is no Constitutional reason to "defend" their "right" to call me. I s
    • Our Constitution is pretty firm on what Congress has the power to do on a federal level, and I can not see how Congress has the power to control who can call you and who can't. If someone is a burden, find one of the many solutions that already exist, rather than placing yet another law on the books that really helps no one and harms many.

      For the most part, I agree with you that we already have so many bad laws on the books that we don't need any more. Regarding the powers granted to Congress by the Con

  • Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment. Not suprising, considering they were all very busy looking for new jobs...
  • by DrSkwid ( 118965 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @05:58PM (#8310453) Journal

    I registered on the UK's do not call list (a list that's not exactly advertised)

    http://www.tpsonline.org.uk [tpsonline.org.uk]

    I was totally fed up with the weekly telesales calls.

    I registered in September 2002. I've had the letter on my desk ever since, ready to complain.

    It was not until today (nice synchronicity) that I got my first sales call.

    The sales drone thought I was pretty interested in the call, asking for their address and telephone number and the exact nature of the 'wonderful special offer'. Of course, what I was doing was getting the drone to tell me the details required to fill in the online complaint form.

    She sounded genuinely shocked when I said "Thank you, I feel it is only fair to inform you that you are in breach of the Telecommunications (Data Protection & Privacy) Regulations 1999 and as such have just been reported to the TPS".

    hehe well worth the wait :)

    • by jonblaze ( 140753 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @07:28PM (#8311316)
      She sounded genuinely shocked when I said "Thank you, I feel it is only fair to inform you that you are in breach of the Telecommunications (Data Protection & Privacy) Regulations 1999 and as such have just been reported to the TPS".

      You did put a cover sheet on your TPS Report, right? Didn't you get that memo?
  • loud speakers (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Stallmanite ( 752733 )
    I don't see how spam or telemarketing is a free speech issue any more then say, making a political speech with very loud speakers, in the middle of the night, while people are trying to sleep.
  • For Australians (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:06PM (#8310541)
    Aussies can sign up at the Australian Direct Marketing Association [adma.com.au]. The form is here [adma.com.au] and covers email, snail mail, SMS, as well as telephone. I have noticed a decrease in telephone spamming since joining up.

    You can also go to yourprivacy.com.au [yourprivacy.com.au] and fill out a form to protect your information being farmed from electorals rolls etc. Right here [yourprivacy.com.au] in fact. The same website has a telecommunications do not call form [yourprivacy.com.au] (that doesn't seem to include snail mail).
  • somewhat dubious (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sharkdba ( 625280 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:37PM (#8310845) Journal
    As much as I am annoyed by telemarketing, spam and all sort of other unsolicited products/services, I am dubious about this. I'm all for the Do-not-call list, but in this case telemarketers do have a point. Why allow charities and not them? The only reason so few people are complaining (even here on /.) is that most people are annoyed by telemarketing. If this was about a more neutral service, there would be serious complaints.

    A better approach would be a do-not-call list with options: 1 option for "do not call me at all", and another option with "do not call me, but still allow charities", or something in this matter. This would give power to individual consumer, and remove any validity from telemarketers complaints.
  • by monique ( 10006 ) on Tuesday February 17, 2004 @06:50PM (#8310953) Journal
    Why it is that non-profits and political campaigns are exempt in the first place?

    My reaction when reading this blurb is, "Damn right, it's unfair -- ban them, too!"

    I don't care if you're representing Joe Blow Lightbulbs Inc. or Mary Sue Parapalegic Midgit Orphans.org ... I don't want you to call, email, or mail me! Leave me the f*** alone! Don't call me; I'll call you. kthxbye.

  • On the USA today story I got the following related links. Someone should tell USA today that this was an anti-telemarketing story. And I love the last link, no confusion with www.donotcall.gov.

    State Telemarketing Lists Autodialer Lists for each of the 50 states and Washington DC www.telsearch.com

    Telemarketing Business to Business Telemarketing High Quality and Very Affordable http://www.unicallinc.com

    Tele-SalesForce.com World Class Telesales People, World Class Results! www.Tele-SalesForce.com L

  • Make money fast (Score:2, Interesting)

    by linuxpaul ( 156516 )
    by suing the bastards.

    All this national DNC list buisness is an epilogue. The real meat-and-potatoes is in a 1991 law making all but the most carefully scripted and trained telemarketing campaigns illegal (only about 2% of calls I received last year could be considered legal). Best of all the law provides a minimum of $500 per call to the consumer that falls victim.

    Don't believe me? Google for Telephone Consumer protection Act, or TCPA, you will find dozens of how-to sites, and even some lists of ca

  • 'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.'

    They must have all just sat down to dinner. Some people (ahem) just call at the most inconvenient of times.

  • 'Officials in the telemarketing industry did not immediately return calls seeking comment.'

    This little sentence is not a key part of the story -- it is a common phrase used in journalism (I have been a reporter for 2 newspapers) to basically mean, "We left a message at the last minute on their machine but they didn't call back before my deadline" but actually sounds like it's the source's fault.
  • If you have an answering machine, try recording this [privatecitizen.com] S.I.T. (Special Information Tone) [privatecitizen.com] just before your regular greeting message. At least it will confuse your mother-in-law, even if some PD (Predictive Dialer [techtarget.com]) softwares can get around it somehow.

    The three well-known tones have the frequencies 985.2 Hz, 1370.6 Hz, and 1776.7 Hz.

Our policy is, when in doubt, do the right thing. -- Roy L. Ash, ex-president, Litton Industries

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