Quote:But......... Are we getting anywhere at all ?
Amazingly nobody has managed to 'persuade' OFCOM to legislate that the use of 'National Rate' is nothing but a LIE. Why Oh blessed Why can they get away with PRINTING on literature 'National Rate' and not be committed to using the correct word PREMIUM. (Trading Standards take note)
I and others have written to M.P.'s . This usually elicits a flurry of paperwork and defence--- Nothing Changes
Look out Pint Of Real Ale - Here I come !
Lavillegour,
I very much like your writing style even though it seems to be quite some time since we received the benefit of your own perceptive wisdom here. Given your amusing comments about the pint of real ale and the lady from Liverpool Victoria I suspect that your forum avatar of Homer Simpson is possibly well chosen.
I also get the feeling that you possibly feel as Homer does about the slim prospects of the ordinary citizen righting the many wrongs of this world.
Like you I cannot believe that the overpaid but supine ranks of career enhancing Ofcom employees have still not even found it within their admittedly minimal competence to ban the kind of lies which BT's NTS number selling division still aggressively perpetuates to this very day
here.
I understand that banning revenue share itself on 0845 and 0870 is a hot potato and requires consultation and advance notice but after 1st July 2004 (when BT abolished Standard Line Rental and made BT Option 1 the norm) I can see no excuse whatsoever for Ofcom having not immediately sought parliamentary powers or made regulations to ban the use of the words National Rate and Local Rate or for that matter National Call and Lo-Call in connection with the marketing of 0870 and 0845 numbers. The fact they have still not done so while they go on and on procrastinating on their NTS consultation shows either that they are grossly incompetent, or that they are an utterly powerless regulator or possibly that too many of them simply have no sense at all of the general public interest compared to the commercial interests of telecoms companies.
In my dealings with Ofcom I have so far only come across one senior employee there who does appear to be convincingly motivated by a sense of genuine integrity and public service but what good can that one person do when seemingly surrounded by a sea of more cynical colleagues who seem to take whatever course of action presents the least risk of government censure plus loss of funding and thus ensures the highest possible staff salaries and bonuses and thus also the most generous possible pension scheme.