ABC Ads Target Answering Machines? 247
Nerftoe writes "ZDTV an article about
automated phone calls to promote its Friday lineup of shows. The odd thing is, ABC doesn't want to talk to humans. They just want to leave their message on your answering machine. What if I real person answers the phone, you ask? That's right, the automated system simply hangs up." I'm not in one of the markets that is doing this, but I have a personal policy of boycotting any business that tele-solicits me. (course the only show on ABC I actually watch is Who's Line is it Anyway, but since Comedy Central airs the much funnier sans-drew English version several times a day anyway, I don't consider that a huge loss either).
Re:Take me off your calling list (Score:2)
Yes $500 - easy money!
What's the point? I don't get it. (Score:2)
A: fast forward through the message. Newer machines just let you skip with a single button push.
B: Get so angry at this blatant waste of time and invasion of personal space that they actively avoid the ABC network, even if it means skipping Regis.
This makes no sense at all. Anyone who'd be influenced positively by an answering machine ad is probably too stupid to own and operate a machine in the first place, and accordingly has a job that pays so bad they can't afford any of the crap that gets advertised on ABC to begin with.
Hell, most systems only work when a human answers, they don't hang up. The only people who should be considering running answering machine ads for ABC are the other networks. If NBC ran ads for ABC that way, they'd be so pissed at ABC they might well skip their Regis fix.
- -Josh Turiel
...works great except (Score:1)
I've been using this technique for years now - nobody on the line when I pick up, hang up. Why don't more people do this? Or why don't people learn that it's OK to interrupt a telemarketer's spiel with a kind "thank you, not interested" then hang up? Or just hang up when you feel like it? I think we need to offer Senior Citizens "telephone rudeness" classes to counteract the years of polite telephone etiqutte they have been brought up with that makes them so susceptible to these telemarketers!
The only problem I've had with the no-answer technique is with people calling from overseas (well, people I want to talk to). Sometimes there is a slight delay at the beginning of the connection, but you can usually tell because there is a bit more line noise than from a telemarketer.
Now that I think about it, even more annoying than those delayed telemarketers are the calls from machines that actaully tell you "please hold for an important message". Jeez, ok, you called me and you expect me to wait on hold as soon as I pick up? Right.
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Re:tele-solicitors (Score:1)
Haha.. I make myself laugh.. Try this:
The answering machine is big in the city where I live..
wishus
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Re:Is this even legal? (Score:2)
Right, but it does leave messages.
Re:Is this even legal? (Score:1)
Couldn't ABC make the argument that the population of the USA has an established business relationship with them based simply on the fact that everyone has watched ABC at some point? They make money by selling our eyeballs, so if we give them our eyes to sell, that sounds like a business relationship to me!
Re:Telemarketers (Score:2)
After the first five seconds, I hang up, trusting that if it's someone I want to talk to, they'll call back.
If you pick up the phone and hear "Please hold" you are advised to hang up as it is either telemarketing or someone to whom you owe money.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:1)
*ahem*
Anyway, it's really getting out of hand and we need to do some legislation to make these calls much more scarce.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:1)
--Brandon
Predictive Dialer (Score:2)
List of number is input/imported.
Dialer dials each number, really really fast.
If there is an answer, the dialer connects the call to one of the telemarketers. This is why, often there is a one or two second delay from when you say hello, and when the telemarketer starts in.
If the dialer get a connection and there isn't a telemarketer ready to take the call, i.e. they are all on the phone, the dialer hangs up and will try the call again later.
Annoying, but the good predictive dialers can call tens of thousands of numbers an hour. Somehow the dialers is hooked straight into the PBX and can dial the numbers at amazing rates. My $.02 worth.
Sometimes Caller ID Lies (Score:1)
Where I work there are maybe, I dunno, a thousand people in the building. When someone, anyone, picked up the phone on their desk and dialed an outside number, the number that showed up on the target's caller ID was the number to the receptionist. Who had to handle a good number of irate calls - "WHY DID YOU CALL ME?!?" - from people who simply wouldn't listen to the facts that it could have been anyone in the building.
As it turns out, we just told the phone co to block ID to save the trouble. Too bad - because I'd love to block anonymous calls with my nifty little Radio Shack Caller ID F-You Box, but I can't afford to miss a call from The Boss.
The lesson: The number you call back may not be the number that placed the call.
There's always time for politeness!
- Politenessman
No Solicitation (Score:1)
No, I don't work for US West. I actually don't particularly like them.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Tytso dun said:
ObDisclaimer: IANAL. I do not even pretend to be a lawyer on the Internet. Your mileage may vary considerably.
At least here in Kentucky, this type of sillybuggers would be illegal on at least two counts:
possible telephone harassment (as in calling, and as soon as a live human picks up, disconnecting--this is different from "predictive dialing" which is the cause of most hangups with telemarketers (basically, nobody available to take the call when your phone number gets rang)
A nifty provision in Kentucky's telemarketing law that prohibits nearly all recorded telemarketing announcements (you have to put a live human on the phone within ten seconds if the company doesn't have a prior business relationship with you, and in all cases you have to provide a number that may be called to be added to a do-not-call list).
Conceivably, you could prolly even get them on federal telemarketing laws for providing no easy way to be added to a do-not-call list and in fact doing everything they can to avoid do-not-call requests (many courts would be likely to see the fact they hang up the snecking phone when a live human picks it up as a deliberate attempt to avoid following federal telemarketing regs, and may even see it as prima facie evidence of "willful" disregard--read: $1500 per offence if you sue in small claims court).
Re:All the more reason for a message like this... (Score:1)
I did this before I got CallerID and it seemd to work. Everyone I know will usually acknowledge your "hello" within a second or two if they are a friend or relative. If not, then they will call back again and you can assume that it's someone you know. A telemarketer will usually not re-call again right away, and if they do then you definitely need to flame them...
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
>
> The problem is that the phone company turns around and offers a service to businesses: blocked anonymous call rejection override. That way, the businesses that pay the fee can still get through.
>
> They need to start selling is a blocked anonymous call rejection override override.
Why? So we can pay the phone company more to prevent marketers - whose harassment the phone companies already endorse by selling them ACR overriding services - from harassing us?
Why? So that after we've paid (twice!) for protection from harassment, the phone company can then sell ACR-override-override-override ability to the goddamn telemarketers, putting us right back where we started?
Fuck that. What we need is legislation such as the ballot initiative currently going around in California that would ban telemarketing altogether, thereby stopping the problem at its source.
Call rejection isn't the scam. The real scam is the fact thet the phone company makes a small fortune selling weapons to the combatants on both sides of the ongoing privacy arms race.
Re:Telemarketers (Score:1)
"I'm not trying to sell you anything but would you mind answering a few questions?"
"Umm. OK." (Big Mistake)
"If we were to offer you a whatever it is with a 30% discount, would you be interested?"
$1500 per offense - Payable by el Presidente? (Score:1)
Of course the biggest offenders here in SF, CA are the political campaigns, both Democrat and Republican. I remember getting LOTS of Bill Clinton, Dianne Feinstein, Willie Brown, et al. recorded messages last fall when the SF mayor's race was on. I'm sure the Repubs do the same thing in Orange County (say). If CA had this law, or similar federal law were in effect, the campaigns would face some very severe liability!
sulli
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:1)
--Phil (I, personally, have never before heard of "blocked anonymous call rejection override".)
Hoax? (Score:1)
....
Illegal (Score:2)
It's also amazing how often I'll get hangup phone calls from telemarketers. Grr...
They'd better be the only ones (Score:1)
I don't really see why ABC would be choosing such a low brow way of advertising, anyway. It feels as wrong as Apple advertising a new product through "forward this to everyone on your list" icq messages.
--
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Damn. Lots of modem users are about to be arrest in Texas.
-d9
Isn't this illegal? (Score:2)
/.
tactics (Score:1)
Ok, if you really want to stick it to the poor schlub doing that job, then go ahead and waste his time - 'cause you are making him lose money. That's fair enough, since they did actually call you, but realize who, exactly, you are getting your revenge on! I feel sorry for those dudes, so I just hang up (sometimes I even politely say "no thank you" in the middle of their jabbering, but sometimes not)
One guy I know just says hello then sets the phone down in front of the TV just to see how long they keep talking to nobody in particular.
A former boss of mine who is Korean thought he would outsmart them by only speaking Korean - of course they immediately switched him to a Korean-speaking telemarketer! (I think it was one of those long-distance companies, so maybe that's not so much of a surprise).
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How do you get your number off the list? (Score:1)
waiting (Score:1)
And why is it again that you actually wait for them to switch you to a live person? Just hang up!
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Re:Here is the link` (Score:3)
Re:Anonymous Call Rejection (Score:1)
Something else I've noticed is that you can with about 99% accuracy detect a telemarketing call by the delay of their inital response. When you answer the phone and say "Hello" it usually takes a second for them to respond. Next time you get a telemarketing call, take note of this... if the person on the other end doesn't initially respond as quick as a normal caller would, odds are good it's a telemarketer. And I have a one sound answer to those calls.... "click."
Forgot one (Score:1)
So that's what all those hang ups have been for... (Score:2)
I can't stand this kind of crap. I live and work not too far from L.A., something like this on my answering machine would have me finding ABC here in town and giving them what for. It's bad enough when automated telemarketing systems call me and expect me to listen to a recording.
DANGER: ignorant moderators on the loose (Score:1)
The parent thread discusses the English version. The parent thread discusses the ABC version. The main thrust of the story is about telemarketers, but the story also opens up other discussions too.
So moderate me down too. Ignorant pigs!
Re:sig's answering machine (Score:1)
Re:sig's answering machine (Score:1)
Too Late (Score:3)
just to continue... (Score:1)
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I think I know who did it. (Score:2)
Was it a short, kinda roundish guy, covered in white fur and had large, floppy ears? He also has an affinity for using a switchblade.
Yeah, I think this is the guy [sluggy.com].
Was illegal in California ten years ago (Score:3)
Must be a human who makes the call, and only switches to a recording when the recipient agrees to listen to it. This guy had a war dialer.
Must disconnect when the recipient disconnects. This is to allow someone to hang up and call 911 if necessary. This idiot's machine kept the line tied up for several minutes.
To make it short, I left my name and asked for a callback, then had a zillion reasons for being busy, until he finally gave me his number. Then a quick call to Pac Bell, who refused to do anything, and a call to the state PUC, who straightened them out.
--
Getting Back at Telemarketers (Score:3)
longer get to do this, but, back in the day,
when I'd get a telemarketer calling, I'd
SIMPLY INITIATE PHONE SEX!!!
Ask the telemarketer what they're wearing.
Ask them to take it off very slowly...
etc...
Funny as hell!
Re:Is this even legal? (Score:3)
That's why they're hanging up when a human answers the phone!
It's illegal to have a machine dial up and play a recorded spiel. It's easy to prove it if you live in a state that allows a single party to tape a phone call with or without the consent of the other party. A taped call with a spiel that drones on and on despite repeated queries of "Hello? Are you a human or a recording?" is pretty damning evidence that it's a robo-dialer.
But it's much harder to prove that the message on your answering machine was generated by a machine. Telemarketers can, have, and will continue to, perjure themselves on the stand by saying "Yes, that message was left by a live human", thereby turning the burden of proof on the person charging them under the TCPA.
Yet more reason why the entire industry should be outlawed.
Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:5)
Re:ABC has dumber ideas than this. (Score:2)
I think you mean:
ABC: Finding yet another use for the color yellow [yahoo.com].
Hmm.... (Score:2)
You guessed it. Calling the "Who Wants to be a Millionaire" 1-800 number! Did you know that you can't block your phone number being relayed to a Toll-Free, 900, or 977 number?
I bet they sell this list to their advertisers too.
~GoRK
Nope. It aint. (Score:2)
It plainly states:
(b) Restrictions on use of automated telephone equipment
(1) Prohibitions
It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States -
(B) to initiate any telephone call to any residential
telephone line using an artificial or prerecorded voice to
deliver a message without the prior express consent of the
called party, unless the call is initiated for emergency
purposes or is exempted by rule or order by the Commission
under paragraph (2)(B);
All the more reason for a message like this... (Score:3)
HELLO?
(Pause)
HANG ON A SECOND...
(Sound of stomping across the floor. Music stops. Sound of stomping across the floor.)
Hello?
(Pause)
Oh... Well he's not here, and I'm just a machine, so you probably should leave a message. (BEEP)
Re:Telemarketers (Score:2)
Me: Yes he's here, what is this in relation to?
Telemarketer: We'd like to sell him a...
Me: Ok, I fetch him, just a minute please
Me [leaves receiver off hook, and goes back doing whatever I was doing before]
Me [20 minutes later, after a quick glance at my ISDN logs]: Gee, they are getting stupider day by day: this one stayed 13 minutes!
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:3)
Any /. readers work for ABC? (Score:3)
The best response to telemarketers (Score:2)
[Phone Rings] Me: Hello? Hello?
[Telemarketer answers] TM: Blah blah buy product blah blah.
Me: Yes, I'm very interested, but I'm quite busy. Hang on one sec, I'll be RIGHT back.
I sit back down to dinner, phone off hook.
Several minutes later, that noise that tells me to hang up the phone starts, so I get up and hang up the phone.
The best part is, the most valuable thing they have is an interested customer, second is time. I make them waste time by pretending to be interested, until they decide I must not be... and eventually they hang up. Try it some time.
an Eye for an Eye (Score:2)
Nonono, let them talk to Eliza! (Score:2)
Computer: Hi I'm Eliza.
Marketeer:
C: Does it please you to believe that you're from XXXX and have a great offer for me?
M: Yes!
C: Hmmm....Interesting, could you explain a little bit better?"
M:
C: You seem quite sure!
..
C: I'm actually quite boring, lets talk about you..
And so on
Link.
Illegal in the entire U.S, and they won't do it. (Score:4)
You see, prerecorded calls are *ILLEGAL*, in general, under the TCPA. The prospect of $500 minimum statutory damages *PER PERSON* probably stopped them.
Anyway, this is old news, it went through the TCPA lists a few days ago, and it's already dead.
Re:Is this even legal? (it's a wardialer) (Score:2)
Sounds like quite a similar situation to me.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
I've got this already, essentially. I have a voice modem in my linux box, so I hacked up a perl script to make it my answering machine. Whenever callerid data comes up as Unknown or Private, the computer answers immediately (usually just after the first ring, sometimes before the phone itself actually rings). Works like a charm. Telemarketers never bug me now, and on the rare occasion that someone I know has callerid blocking, they can either leave a message or call back using *82.
Yup these machines are illegal for commercial use (Score:2)
I think you should get $1500 but I couldn't convince the smaill claims court commissioner, even though I had documentary evidence the other guy was perjuring himself.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:4)
Some areas where Bell Atlantic are offer anonymous call rejection, where callers that don't identify themselves via caller ID get a message saying that the recipient of the call is rejecting them. Of course, it's not available (yet) in my area...
Re:Telemarketers can be a source of entertainment! (Score:2)
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Mike
--
Mike Mangino
Sr. Software Engineer, SubmitOrder.com
point - counter point (Score:2)
We get this... (Score:2)
...all the time in the Chicago area. It's getting to the point where nearly half of the phone calls we receive have `dead air' on the other end. Then, some time later, we get a call from a real telemarketer. The current theory is that the telemarketers have their computer call to see if anyone's at home, then queue up the call to one of their telemarketing drones who make the real call.
OK, this isn't exactly what the main posting's about. But this is: I have received several messages on our Ameritech voice mail containing what sound like computer synthesized messages. Mostly regarding whether I want/need new cellular service (Hint to Motorola: NO TO BOTH QUESTIONS!) Since I cannot fast forward through voice mail on Ameritech's service, this really torques me off. If it keeps up I'll have to cancel my voice mail and go back to a tape machine. Wonder if I complain to Ameritech enough whether they'll do anything about the annoyance... Nah! What am I thinking?
--
Here's an evil revenge plot... (Score:3)
Ah, just a thought. At least until I get some schematics.
--
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
My point is, don't pay the phone company to reject calls, pay an extra $1 or 2 and get it done on the caller ID box it's self. Then you don't have to worry about caller ID blocking override.
--Brandon
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
ABC has dumber ideas than this. (Score:2)
BTW, other companies have used answering machines to send advertising. It's similar to "Important Memos!" about vacation packages in Florida coming through the fax machines of office buildings. The phone system where I now work was hit three months ago with telemarketers calling at 5:00 AM and leaving voice mail commercials. Funny thing was, the quality was so bad, you couldn't hear what they were saying over the staticky background music.
This is illegal! (Score:2)
Sounds close enough to me. Can we have this shot down before it gets out of control? IANAL of course, but I think we can defend against this...
Call Privacy (Score:3)
For those who don't know about or have access to call privacy, it does the following: for all anonymous or blocked calls, the caller is intercepted and forced to say their name (or my name as some of my friends at the office would do!). When I pick up the phone I get to hear the message and either refuse it, answer it, or send it to voice mail. For my friends with cell phones, or co-workers, who don't show up on my caller ID display, I've told them a simple code to bypass the system so that they don't hang around.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:4)
Supposedly he was told while it was happening (he was blindfolded and tied) that it was because the office he managed kept call the person (the assailant) back and being rude when asked to not call in the future.
They told him that if the office didn't shut down, they'd break his back the next time.
Was a bit hunt for the guy, didn't hear that he'd ever been caught, or anything about the telemarketer.
Can't say I feel a lot of sympathy... When I was just out a school I worked, for two days, as a telemarketer. The boss was dishonest, they sold magazines and no matter which ones you picked, they sent you (and billed for) the same ones. They instructed people to harrass people on cell phones to make them buy, because many people would pay just to get you off the phone, no being strong-willed enough to hang up.
I quit that and never looked back... anyone making money in that business is a crook, plain and simple.
My room mate's answering machine message (Score:2)
A local hardware store sells a little button you can push when you get a call from a telemarketer. It plays a pre-recorded request to remove you from their call list, quotes the approproate legal passages at them, and disconnects.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Nice service, but when the Italian guys offer it, we call it a protection racket.
Re:sig's answering machine (Score:2)
--
Telemarketers can be a source of entertainment! (Score:5)
Most recently, MCI called trying to sell me long distance. I acted amazed at hearing another human voice, and revealed that I had been 'hiding in my Y2K bunker for the last 7 months!' My roommate even got in on it and began shouting in the background about 'cracking open the airlock'. It was a riot!
Other ideas I have tried:
1. If they are trying to sell you a newspaper or magazine, insist that you are psychic and do not need their product, then become disgusted by what they are thinking at that moment.
2. Act like you are in the midst of hostage negotiations. Play the cop side of the conversation. "So if I agree to subscribe to that magazine, will you release some of the hostages?"
3. In an agitated and paranoid voice, ask them how they got the number. Insist that they are lying and are really 'part of the conspiracy' or 'one of them'. There are endless possibilities with this one.
There are also some really great things you can do with a prepared tape of sound effects.
Have fun!
Thad
Re:They have already caned this plan (Score:2)
'Just like an advertisment on TV', sure, except that TV shows are free, the phone and voice mail are payed for already.
I'd support a complete ban on any unsolicited commercial calling, and a $500 fine or something hefty to back it up. With jail time for anyone found repeat offending.
Anouther reason I only have a cell phone (Score:2)
It is illegal to make unsolicitated calls to a cell phone (US for sure, not sure about other countires) because I pay for the time. I don't answer my land line phone, as that is for the computer, and will soon be cancled when something better comes through. Turns out that with free long distance it is cheaper for me and my roommates to use a cell phone with 600-1000 (day vs weekend) mintues a month.
This is funny. (Score:3)
Give it up ABC. Why not take friday nights and put on back to back episodes of the Drew Carey Show and Who's Line is it Anyway? like you did all week long during the last few months?
Or howabout a new "reality television" show called "Who Wants to be a Pauper?" where we watch failed contestants from "Who Wants to be a Millionare" try to survive among the nations homeless eating rats and fishing street drains for cigarette butts? (Each week one of the contestants would be voted out and forced to play "Big Brother" - a fate worse than "MTV's Real World". The final contestant gets a chance to slap Regis and choke him with his monocrome tie.
Re:Is this even legal? (Score:2)
I wonder if an automated system telling another automated system to remove the first automated system from the calling list of the second automated system would work? Probably require yet another automated system to edit the list.
Please call me, I can use the money (Score:2)
(3) The term ''telephone solicitation'' means the initiation of a telephone call or message for the purpose of encouraging the purchase or rental of, or investment in, property, goods, or services, which is transmitted to any person, [unless based on a prior relationship]
It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States ... (B) to initiate any telephone call to any residential telephone line using an artificial or prerecorded voice to deliver a message without the prior express consent of the called party, unless the call is initiated for emergency purposes or is exempted by rule or order by the Commission under paragraph (2)(B);
(3) Private right of action A person or entity may, if otherwise permitted by the laws or rules of court of a State, bring in an appropriate court of that State - (A) an action based on a violation of this subsection or the regulations prescribed under this subsection to enjoin such violation, (B) an action to recover for actual monetary loss from such a violation, or to receive $500 in damages for each such violation, whichever is greater, [emphasis added] or (C) both such actions. If the court finds that the defendant willfully or knowingly violated this subsection or the regulations prescribed under this subsection, the court may, in its discretion, increase the amount of the award to an amount equal to not more than 3 times the amount available under subparagraph (B) of this paragraph.
In other words, if ABC calls you and either (a) hangs up without talking to you or (b) leaves a prerecorded message on your answering machine, you can take them to small-claims court and get somewhere between $500 and $1500. Not bad for a day's work!
Incidentally, this is the same section that prohibits junk faxes. It can be pretty profitable to read the entire statute.
Re:I like telemarketers (Score:2)
Phone rings, and I answer:
me: "what?"
[5 second pause...i knew it was coming]
her: "good morning, I'm calling for...blah blah blah blah" [i let her talk for about 30 seconds... I was about to hang up and then I got an idea..]
me: "wait a second...let me ask you a question about the interest rate, I'm confused. Is that okay?"
her: "Sure!"
me: [deep i-want-you voice]"what are you wearing?"
her: "what?"
me: "what are you wearning? is it pink. i like pink."
her: "am I wearing anything PINK? THAT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS."
me: "huh. geez. you could at least talk dirty to me... just like mom use to."
at that point she got all upset and hung up.
nonetheless, we got a kick out of it... reminded me of the Seinfield episode.
---
SPAM (Score:2)
In my e-mail box, I can read the subject ahead of time, and delete it.
On my voicemail, I have to wait for that slow voice to read out all of the info on the message, or even play the darn thing, before I can burn it.
Goodness, I'd rather get spam in my e-mail from them.
Besides, how freaking effective do these idiots think such a marketting tactics would be. I mean, I don't always listen to a friend, a critic, or a stranger telling me to watch shows. Now an annoying machine, which is the only message on my machine will do the same thing.
"Hello Dungeon Dweller. We know that we are the only message on your machine, that you have no friends and no life, so we decided to tell you that all of the cool people are watching 'Suddenly Susan' and her quirky antics. Byeeeeee."
Yeah, that will sell great.
We're all different.
Re:Is this even legal? (Score:5)
From Subpart L - Restrictions on Telephone Solicitation
a.2.Initiate any telephone call to any residential telephone line using an artificial or prerecorded voice to deliver a message without the prior express consent of the called party, unless the call is initiated for emergency purposes or is exempted by sec. 64.1200(c)
section c says this:
c.The term "telephone call" in sec. 64.1200(a)(2) shall not include a call or message by, or on behalf of, a caller:
1.that is not made for a commercial purpose,
2.that is made for a commercial purpose but does not include the transmission of any unsolicited advertisement,
3.to any person with whom the caller has an established business relationship at the time the call is made, or
4.which is a tax-exempt nonprofit organization.
So there you go! ABC is giving out $500 checks to everyone who is lucky enough to get a call! Make sure you save those answering machine tapes, boys and girls. The small claims court judge will want to listen to them. While you're at it, go over to www.junkbusters.com and print out a copy of the legislation for the judge. It should be a very easy case to win.
Re:Telemarketers (Score:2)
TM: Hi, this is [name] from [Big Marketing Company]. Would you be interested in...?
Me: No thanks.
TM: Are you confident?
Me: Yes.
TM: Is that your final answer?
Me: That is my final answer.
[Game show sounds in background]
TM: No, I'm sorry. That is the wrong answer.
=================================
Is this even legal? (Score:5)
With this, they hang up before I can ask to be put on that list. Does the law that requires them to honor such requests allow this?
And what about bans on computer calling? Or do they have a real human talk to the answering machine (talk about a boring job)?
Not just ABC does it (Score:2)
Take me off your calling list (Score:2)
If they never talk to a human, though, then they will never be subject to this law. Seems pretty sneaky to me.
-----------------------------------------------
OPT OUT OF TELEMARKETING! (Score:2)
It does work.
--
This is a common practice with political campaigns (Score:2)
matt
Re:All the more reason for a message like this... (Score:2)
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
The problem is that the phone company turns around and offers a service to businesses: blocked anonymous call rejection override. That way, the businesses that pay the fee can still get through.
They need to start selling is a blocked anonymous call rejection override override.
I concur (Score:2)
We're all different.
Dark Side (Score:2)
"I feel a distrubates in the force" - ObiWan
Soon as some spammer pirates a copy of this software, all hell is going to break lose. Phone rings constanly, but everytime you answer it, it disconnects. You come home from work and have an entire tape filled with 500 messages, or 4 hours of "voice spam".
Oh you don't think it will happen? Phone numbers are easy to get compared to email address. In fact most, if not all cities organsize a list for free, avaiable to spammers of "live" phone numbers, it is called the phone book.
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Not necessarily illegal, but the phone company would be after you.
The phone company uses its resources to circulate information for us (its customers) in the form of a phone book. This is to be used for looking up phone numbers of people you know.
If you were to use the phone book for telemarketing or snail mail advertising, you would eventually get a "dummy" mailbox. This phone number and address do not exist, because there is no real person associated to it.
The phone company uses this to catch people would are using the phone book for advertising.
You then get a lawsuit filed against you for theft of services or something like that. The person I know settled out of court.
I heard about this 2nd hand from a teacher at the U. of Pittsburgh.
-d9
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Somebody in the Marketing dept. who took a Law 101 class trying to find a loophole?
Malk-a-mite
They have already caned this plan (Score:5)
Telemarketers (Score:2)
Telemarketer: Hello, is Mr. Tosh there?
Me: Yes he's here, what is this in relation to?
Telemarketer: We'd like to sell him a...
Me: He's got better things to do than talk to you.
*click*
I'd rather have messages on my machine, it only takes a second to delete if you've got a digial answerer and you don't have to go through the trouble of talking to the (often) moronic people on the line. However, what ABC is doing seems illegal, but I'm not sure on that, wonder if they got all the numbers off people sigining up for Who Wants to be a Millionaire?
Which is more annoying.. Or Yet Another /. Poll (Score:2)
Telemarketers (yeah sure you give me YOUR home phone# and I'll call you when I'm free)
Annoying Pauses wehn you DO answer the phone (I usually hang up on them immediately, or let them try to sell their product to my three year old who just LOOOVES to talk on the phone)
or a telemarketer who hangs up when you answer (I agree with the above poster about that being a little disconcerting)
well I guess they went the way of door-to-door salesmen... What's the next great Arthur Miller Spin off..... Death of a Telemarketer (Spammer)???
tele-solicitors (Score:3)
I recently bought an answering machine with 3 separate mailboxes.. You have to push *2 or *3 to leave a message in boxes 2 or 3, but if you don't press anything it defaults to box 1. My friends and family know to press the "secret code" so I can easily discern between messages I want to hear and messages I probably don't.
I toyed with the idea of charging for telephone solicitations, and even called a few companies back to get their mailing address so I could send them an invoice. Most of these were local businesses, horrified at the thought and instantly put me on their do-not-call list. I never followed through with the actual mailing of invoices, but no one called my bluff either.
of course, someone will post the obligatory link to junkbusters' telemarketing script, but that doesn't really help with these machine calls, so i won't bother.
wishus
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Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Hmm... I would bet that the same thing could be done with mgetty fairly easily. That way I wouldn't have to pay for a special Caller-ID box, I would have yet another excuse to tinker with my Linux box, and I could say that my solution "ran on Linux."
Now just imagine a beowulf cluster of those babies!
Awww fuck... (Score:2)
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Re:Federal law applies to ALL states (Score:5)
The details are:
(d) Required oral disclosures. It is an abusive telemarketing act or practice and a violation of this Rule for a telemarketer in an outbound telephone call to fail to disclose promptly and in a clear and conspicuous manner to the person receiving the call, the following information: (1) The identity of the seller; ...
Since the ABC telemarketing device (and I believe advertizing television shows still falls under telemarketing acts) will purposily fail to identify itself, I believe this is an attempt on ABC to intentionally conduct an "abusive telemarketing practice."
Re:Isn't this illegal in some states? (Score:2)
Re:OPT OUT OF TELEMARKETING! (Score:2)
c/"EMail marketing"/"Junk Mail marketing"/ btw.
It works. I called in and demanded that I be removed from the telemarketing and bulk mail lists. I *do not* receive telemarketing calls from any large businesses any more. The exceedingly few calls I've received have been from local carpet cleaners, and my own bank doing surveys.
I get far less junk mail than I used to. It's not all gone, by any means, but it *is* reduced.
I haven't attempted the EMail opt out. I don't believe it would be at all effective: most of the junk EMail I receive is obviously from nincompoops who wouldn't belong to the DMA.
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Back when I was a modem user (Score:2)
While I was chatting with someone (Probably on icb, I don't think I was into irc at the time) I got call-nuked by a church's automated invitation service. Since then I've had an unreasoning hatred of schemes like this.
Now if only there were a physical copper connection between them and me so I could run some wicked voltage to them...