Slashdot Mirror


Do Not Call Registry Set to Become Permanent

coondoggie passed us a NetworkWorld article about an initiative by the Senate to transform the Do Not Call list into a permanent institution. Originally individuals on the list were to have their place on the list revoked; up to a third of the people who signed up might have fallen off the list by the Autumn without renewing legislation. A move by the Senate this past Wednesday will permanently prevent salesmen from calling those who have registered for the list. "Aside from what telemarketing junk the bill does prevent, experts note what may also be a big deal is a provision that is NOT in this bill and that is protection for those other annoying time wasters: political robo calls."

3 of 183 comments (clear)

  1. Finally.... by Iphtashu+Fitz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My congresscritters are finally doing something I approve of!

  2. What happens when numbers are reassigned? by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What happens to the status of the number when someone discontinues usage of the telephone number, say by moving or canceling your service and moving to VoIP? IF the number is then at some point reassigned to another person, does that number remain on the Do-Not-Call list? If it does, is that legitimate, as an individual can only vouch for their own phone numbers, and not that of a third-party?

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  3. Re:Isn't stopping all calls by DanQuixote · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Here is an effective (though laborious) way to deal with that.

    1. Register on National Do-Not-Call list.
    2. Wait 3 month beginning period.
    3. Get caller ID.
    4. Wait for another call.
    5. Be pleasant to the person, if you can order something cheap, say $10, do it.
    6. Get their address and phone number as you place the order.
    7. Photograph the Caller ID display as evidence.
    8. Take good notes including date, time, person talked to, company name, as more evidence.
    9. Copy the bill you receive for $10 as conclusive evidence of marketing intent.
    10. Go to your county courthouse, lodge a small claim for $500 for a telemarketing violation.
    11. Send them proper notice they are being sued.
    12. Since they are often out of state, they won't show and you get default judgment.
    13. If they do show, you have proof of listing, notice, call, and call purpose.
    14. For bonus dollars, ($500 per item) look into whether they have, train to, practice and publish upon demand the required company calling policies.
    15. Profit!!!

    I've tried it, it works.

    --
    "We think people rightly feel that once they buy something, it stays bought," --Suw Charman, Open Rights Grp