Telemarketer Blows Whistle on Tape-Altering Scam
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.
What happened to people reporting this sort of stuff before they had a grudge against the company? Why do only former employees report this sort of thing?
The solicitation most definitely looked like a bill (front page and back page). 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.
Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
So, I know Epixtar added their "lightning-quick" phone-bill-altering deal to the tapes after the fact. However, what I want to know is: Is there some sort of legal requirement for how slow/quickly such statements have to be said? I mean, car commercials/ads routinely have quickly-spoken disclaimers at the end of ads and such. If Epixtar had merely tacked on the "we can alter your bill" or whatever phrase, only spoken at a Micro Machines guy speed so it seemed like crackly phone noise, would that be legal?
It almost is a good enough reason to drop the landline entirely. It adds to the TCO of a landline.
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.
The truth shall set you free!
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.
This actually happened to my dad. Keep in mind my dad works nights, and typically sleeps all day.
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.
o/~ All God's children shall be free in Pirates of the Caribbean, when we reach that Magic Kingdom in the sky... o/~
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
EXACTLY. Having been forced into telemarketing for a short period of time myself (due to financial reasons) I can attest that very few people that are able to continue telemarketing work full time have no souls. I didn't last 40 hours, and the only reason I lasted that long was because i had my fiancee providing emotional support, and I couldn't afford to quit.
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.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
The overall situation is worse than the article leads you to believe. This is something that I wouldn't expect to see fully explained on any major news site like MSNBC. The situation is thus: You don't need any proof -- or real proof -- in order to steal money from people via their phone bills.
... but by 1997 I could only change my own behavior in response to the groundswell of all the legalized fraud that was going on.
By that year, I knew that I had to hangup immediately to avoid entanglement with a calling telemarketer, and that my phone bills had to be carefully scrutinized every month. *
... you issue about 10 thousand blatantly false charges to 10 thousand homes and small businesses via your "Internet service company" and collect from the percentage that don't bother to (effectively) fight your fraud.
The next month, you go after another 10 thousand addresses.
After a year, you'll have to close down the business to stay ahead of the cops, but by then you've accumulated over half a mill.
You pay yourself well, your mafioso helpers okay, and then invest in the next scammer slammer business.
... much of it is organized crime, and it should be treated as such.
They should be arrested, charged and prosecuted for what they do.
Hopefully when arrested they try to resist and are shot dead on the spot.
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 -- delivered or not, worthwhile or not -- could be tacked onto the billing statement, which would be automatically sent and almost automatically paid for. It was simply too good to believe for mafiosi large and small
This new environment has encouraged sociopathic wariness to contact with businesses. Congratulations, Corporate America!
By 1998, I could clearly see a workable but fraudulent business model arising. It's relatively simple
You don't need vox proof of anything, but such things can be falsified when necessary. One anecdote (names altered) springs to mind of what happened within my circle of friends. I know a small, used bookstore named Smather's Books, run by Ms. Smith. One month she noticed a $29.95 item tacked onto her small-business phone bill for "Internet Yellow Pages service" (or something like that). She called to investigate, and when she finally got to the right person at at the IYP service company, they played a recording for her from "Mister Smather". On the tape she clearly heard Mr. Smather authorizing the IYP service.
This would all be fine and dandy, except for the fact that there is no Mr. Smather.
"Smather's Books" is just a name she made up that was close to her own name. The tape was falsified. Even after she pointed this out to the IYP company, she didn't get very far with them, and only after complaining to the telco did the charge get dropped from her bill.
The use of threat and deception to acquire money is morally criminal. Make no mistake at all on this telemarketing and other boiler-room matters
* By 2001, I no longer answered my phone, preferring to screen all calls.
[You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
No the best thing to do is to exercise your rights. Saying you are not interested and hanging up does nothing. They can continue to call after that. You need to SPECIFICALLY demand that your name be placed ON their Do Not Call list (i.e. not removed from some other generic list...this is important). Then demand a copy of their written policy regarding the maintenance of their Do Not Call list. They are required to send this do you as a matter of federal law (47 USC 227 - Telephone Consumer protection Act of 1991). Then if they continue to call, sue them in court for damages that are owed to you by statute.
Cave, wreck, and deep diver.
A lot of scams could be nipped in the bud by
one simple right. I should have the RIGHT to
request that only my phone company put charges
on my phone bill.
My cable company does not put charges on my
electric bill.
My electric company does not put charges on
my gas bill.
My gas company does not put charges on my
water bill.
But my phone company tells me that by law they
must put charges on my bill from carriers, even
if I don't have a business relationship with
them.
Of course you have the right to remand a charge
and have the company bill you for it. But you
have to notice the charge first. I'll tell you,
the phone bill is the one bill I scrutinize every
month. I have had several fraudulent charges on
my bill in the last 5 years.
If scam artists had to bill you direct like any
other business, that would not eliminate fraud,
but it would keep people from going 8 months
without even noticing.