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| Tags: ban, telemarketing |
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Bruce Draney wrote in message ...
Mike Murray wrote: On 25 Sep 2003 11:34:18 -0500, Bruce Draney wrote: What most people haven't realized is that the government cannot afford to prosecute no-call list violations by telemarketers which are certain to occur. Maybe they can't afford to prosecute *all* of them. But they can go after the big ones -- the guys who have assets -- the fines are big enough that these cases will pay for themselves. I think I said that they would set a couple of examples and hope that everyone else follows along. Do you suppose they'll be some loopholes that telemarketers will find here? I just have a sneaking suspicion they might, like calling from Canada or Mexico, or just off the coast of the U.S.. Hmmm, but that might be a tad more expensive for telemarketers, if they have to call from outside the US. On the other hand, perhaps that's the trend: they can hire telemarketers from Pakistan, and pay the callers pennies on the dollar. Halfway across the globe, the callers would have to work the graveyard shift, but big deal. Besides, in some way, I suspect that it would be easier to enforce a ban against telemarketers from outside of the US. The phone companies could simply trace the call, and block all further incoming phone calls from that phone number. How many federal prosecutors do you suppose the Bush administration is going to put on prosecuting an accidental (or a deliberate) no call list member being bothered? How many prosecutors has he assigned to go after small pot growers? They obviously won't do it on a onesie-twosie basis -- they'll go after the egregious violators -- a thousand calls at ten grand a pop -- pretty soon you're talking real money. We'll just have to wait and see how much enforcement there really is. I'm betting there will very little money or resource devoted to it. In typical the federal government will pay lip service to the idea and gut the funding for it for the most part. Judging by the present administration's Education plan, which has virtually no funding to back up its vast promises, I'd expect about the same level of financial and personnel or less to be involved in this concept. And how many telemarketers *pretend* to be market researchers? And how many calls which appear to be "market research" really build sucker lists of prequalified prospects that the telemarketers will later zero in on? This is a definite concern and one that bears watching. Market researchers are not much different than telemarketers. They use *my* private facilities, at *their* time and convenience, to conduct activities for their own financial gain. If market research really is a loophole, it's one that ought to be closed. It won't be, because in many cases market research is essential for the Federal government itself, for the political process and for the economy. Let private enterprise solve this. People who *want* to participate in market research can enter their rates in a central database, and the market researcher automagically gets billed when the call is made. Not going to happen. there are in fact many reputable telemarketing companies that will comply with the law, Good for them. They have access to the do-not-call list. They should have no problem staying out of trouble. There are also a lot of disreputable ones who won't follow it and will never get caught or prosecuted. while the swindlers and thieves will find ways to break or circumvent the laws and stay one step ahead of the authorities who will never have the money to prosecute them. This is a problem of laws, swindlers and thieves in general. Yes, there are all kinds of hoops though which we can jump, all kinds of ways we can inconvenience ourselves, to save the telemarketer the hassle of looking at a do-not-call list. You jump through hoops all of the time for almost every other aspect of your life as well, but if you want to rant at t-marketers feel free. If they're the greatest of your worries, you're in pretty good shape. One of the cheapest and easiest ways is the caller ID. Caller ID costs about 5 bucks a month, and is often offered only as part of a more expensive package. Why should an individual buy this, if that individual has no other use for it? Is this a serious question? $5.00 a month? Wow. Stop the presses, $5.00 a month, how outrageous. Let's see I could stop most telemarketing calls bothering my family for $5.00 a month, or I could get the government to prosecute and fine all telemarketers calling me for billions a year. Which is the better deal? It wouldn't cost anything close to "billions a year". And you can do the math: if 50,000,000 eventually want to get put on a Do Not Call list, and they have to pay $60/year, that also works out to Billions of dollars a year, just to "stop" "most" telemarketing calls with Caller ID. Of course, Caller ID only gives you the information on whether to answer the call: you still have your phone ring. Interestingly, almost ALL telemarketers block Caller ID information, rather than identify the name of the company, and the number from where they are calling. So you're jumping through hoops on *every* phone call, peering at the caller-id, waiting until the caller starts leaving a message before picking up the phone. Incidentally, doesn't this constrain the type of answering machine you can use? Maybe not every family wants to leave a speaker phone on all the time. Maybe some people prefer to use the central office answering facility, in which case, you'd have to retrieve the call when it was done and maybe return it on *your* nickel if was important. Not at all. I'm not so anal, that I have to answer a ringing phone just to see if it's an annoying telemarketer. All this for calls you'd normally just answer. Jesus. I have seen counter people waiting on me in person, tell me to hold on while they answer the telephone so it doesn't ring more than three times. Tell me about how anal-retentive Americans are about being a telephone slave. Because of time constraints, telemarketers and market researchers rely upon the "McDonalds, drive thru" behavior of most Americans in the 21st century. The corporate "secret" is that the phone is almost always answered by the 5th ring if someone is home. Therefore most telemarketing companies set their dialing systems to ring no more than 5 times before moving on to the next "customer". Time is money even for telemarketers. Wrong! There's no cost to them at all. The marketeer isn't just sitting there waiting for you to answer. Most telemarketers use predictive dialers. These machines dial several numbers concurrently and pass control to the marketeer only when the phone is answered (or some set number of rings have occurred). Get a lot of those calls where no one is on the other end? That's probably a predictive dialer where some other sucker answered just before you did, and the machine gave *him* to the marketeer and discarded you. Bzzzzt!!!!! Thanks for playing. What has he won Johnny? Telemarketers are paid by the hour. They aren't sitting waiting for you to answer your phone after it's rung 5 times. Whether they're dialing three numbers or 100 numbers at once, they aren't letting yours ring for more than 3-5 times I can guarantee you, unless they're dialing manually. I can't believe you're serious. You're at your desk. The phone rings, and you sit there like a gork watching it until it rings five times, annoying everybody else in the house. And you lack the virtue of patience if you fail to do this? I don't think so. It sounds to me that you've conditioned yourself to be a phone slave, which is why you and other Americans like you continually get ****ed off at telemarketers. If you're sitting at your desk and picking up the phone on the first ring, no wonder you want the government to protect you from telemarketers. Good luck by the way. Is it because a ringing phone is annoying? Is it because you can't continue reading your paper or writing your document or whatever until it's finished ringing? Is it because you have conditioned yourself to be a slave to a ringing phone? Ask yourself why if you don't want to be disturbed by a ringing phone you don't read your paper in a room where there is no phone, or why you don't turn off the phone until your paper reading is done? Relax while the phone is ringing? Sure. Besides, if enough people do this, won't they just set their predictive dialers to ring a while longer? Time and money are the two biggest reasons. Plus, they know that people like you cannot let a phone ring more than 3 times before picking it up, regardless of whether it's a meaningless or important call. Nor do laws against theft protect against thieves. Or laws against assault protect against bullies. But they kinda inhibit 'em from getting on a good roll. So your view is that the government must make your phone management skills more efficient and that anything you, yourself might do to prevent you from being harrassed by unwanted phone calls is jumping through hoops. Best Regards, Bruce |
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