Quote:The point most people seem to be missing about this disgusting abuse is that 118866 is supposed to be an access code, allocated to a specific provider (just as 18866 is). With such codes it is supposed to be the provider that bills you direct for service. It is not supposed to be possible for any consumer who is not a registered customer of the access code provider to incur a charge or in fact to be connected to their service. Try dialing 18866 if you are not a registered customer on the particular number you are dialing from, for example....
This is not true of a DQ service. You can dial
any DQ service (from a BT line anyhow) and you can use them without registering. The likes of Call18866/1899 are call providers/carriers that we use to 'carry' our calls over their network and therefore benefit from cheaper calls. It is these (Call18866/1899) call providers that ask you to register.
DQ 118866 was a legit company charging an average price for DQ enquries and I believe it wasn't intentional that they had similar numbers but from my research it appears that when it was taken over by RingTrue Solutions they increased the DQ charge to £1.50 connection charge from the average charge (generally around 50p connection charge). That to me, indicates, they are not trying to provide a DQ service to us as they are nowhere near competitive at that price, but instead have realised people must have been dialling them instead of Call18866 and therefore decided to take advantage of our mistake.