derrick wrote on Feb 26
th, 2006 at 10:36am:
After looking at the I C complaints page and the rigmarole that one has to through, printing of forms, copies of e-mails, postage etc and the fact that there appears to be a waiting list and that the number will probably be available before the I C gets round to it I don't think I will bother.
I have repeatedly challenged the Information Commissioner over their lack of an online complaints forms as being a total disgrace that is deliberately designed to obstruct the general public and that also causes them to fall down on their EGovernment targets. They now say they will have online forms in a few months time.
I finally received the below reply indicating they will accept complaints by email as long as you replicate the information and questions in their downloadable PDF complaint forms. I successfully filed by email a complaint against a uk mobile phone shop using an Indian call centre to try and sell mobile phone contracts with Vodafone to people like me who have long since been TPS registered. The eventual reply was that although Millifone were in breach of TPS rules as there hadn't been many other complaints the IC wasn't going to take any action. But this Indian call centre withholds their CLI and pretends they are Vodafone and it was only by persistence that I managed to trick them in to revealing their uk client was Millifone.
See below emails saying IC will accept emailed complaints:-
-----Original Message-----
From: Susan Fox [mailto:Susan.Fox@ico.gsi.gov.uk]
Sent: 16 September 2005 12:08
Subject: RE: Continued Failure of ICO's Office to Provide Online Regulation 21 Complaint Form
Thank you for your email about downloading complaints forms on our website. I completely understand your frustration that our site does not currently allow you to submit a form online. I hope you will be pleased to hear that our website is currently undergoing a major improvement programme, and that an online complaints facility should be available to customers next year.
As regards your problem with unwanted telephone calls, you can send your complaint to us by email if you prefer, to mail@ico.gsi.gov.uk. Please provide all the information that you would have included on the form. I believe our Casework and Advice Manager, Caroline Monk, gave you some advice on this issue in her letter to you of 26 July 2005.
Once again, thank you for your feedback. We are always interested in our users’ views on the site, as it helps us to develop a better service.
Yours sincerely
Susan Fox
Director of Communications and External Relations
tel 01625 545 776
susan.fox@ico.gsigov.uk
www.ico.gov.uk-----Original Message-----
Sent: 15 September 2005 16:12
To: susan.fox@ico.gov.uk
Subject: Continued Failure of ICO's Office to Provide Online Regulation 21 Complaint Form
Dear Ms Fox,
Further to my email to Richard Thomas in July (see below) I must now write to you to complain that although I have now received another International Withheld telesales call from an Indian call centre working for a uk mobile phone shop in breach of TPS regulations (this time I have tracked the firm responsible as
www.millifone.com by asking the gentlemen calling where I could find out more information about the product he was selling) I find that there is still no online form on your website with which to make a Regulation 21 complaint.
I find it totally unacceptable that in late 2005 the Information Commissioner's office should not be able to get its act together to make an online complaint form available and that it instead forces the public to download a PDF form, print it out, sign it, find a stamp and trudge to the post box with it. Also I do not see how the ICO can be complying with various egovernment statements by still only making available such a primitive and manually based Regulation 21 reporting regime.
More worrying though is the fact that most members of the public receiving such sales calls will think the TPS is the place to complain and so will submit their complaint to them using the TPS online form. Then several weeks later when momentum has been lost the member of the public gets a letter from the TPS saying they cannot take any formal action and that the member of the public has to go to the ICO instead (why the