Quote:It seems to me that it's a typical Ofcom bodge!
The National Audit Office produced a report critical of Ofcom/Oftel and its balls-up of DQ (
http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/nao_reports/04-05/0405211.pdf). The report concluded (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4358513.stm):*Residential consumers are paying more for directory enquiry services than under 192
*Consumers are confused by the array of numbers on offer and as a result use directory services with the most memorable numbers, which may not always offer the best prices
*Consumers are using directory enquiry services less frequently than they did prior to deregulation
*It is difficult to be certain whether service quality had changed as a result of deregulation as there were no accurate figures about the performance of the old 192 service.
Edward Leigh MP, chairman of the public accounts committee, was d4mning in his assessment of the role of Oftel, the forerunner of Ofcom, in deregulation.
"This is an instance where competition was not needed and is not helpful."
"Yet Oftel almost had a blind faith that competition was always good and jumped in feet first."
"The general public has lost out. Most of us are paying more and do not appear to be getting a better service."
Ofcom, which assumed control of telecoms regulation from Oftel at the end of 2003, said it recognised mistakes had been made.
"The information for consumers at the time of deregulation was not good enough," Matt Peacock (we've heard of him before), Ofcom director of communications, told BBC News.