Dave wrote on Feb 13
th, 2007 at 2:43pm:
I agree, although having 0870 (and possibly 0845) charged at 01/02 rates mixed in with 0844/0871 is completely confusing. Either all 084/087 revenue sharing should be moved to 09 (or failing that, another clear prefix), or 084/087 should be left as is. Although in no way ideal, the latter would at least mean that revenue sharing and non-revenue sharing wouldn't be mixed. Clear pricing information should be introduced.
Pragmatically I believe the most practically acceptable and yet also ethically sound solution would be as follows:-
1. No new 084 or 087 numbers issued after 1st Feb 2008
2. All 0845 and 0870 move to geographic rate on 1st Feb 2008. One year transition period after which their number must be changed to one in the 03 number range allowing time for adequate publicity and new leaflet printing.
3. 0844 and 0871 placed under ICSTIS control on 1st Feb 2008. One year transition period after which their number must be changed to 09 and full ICSTIS rules applied. Call queues should be limited to no more than 3 minutes on 09 numbers costing under 15p per minute. Call queues should be limited to no more than 15 seconds on 09 numbers costing 15p per minute or above.
Therefore after 1st Feb 2009 all numbers charged at geographic rates would be on 01, 02 or 03. All numbers charged at premium rate on 09 and all Freephone numbers on 08. Simple and comprehensible and stopping all scamming.
Also mobile phones should be forced to connect numbers to agreed legitimate 0800 numbers from government information services, breakdown services etc free of charge. Other 0800 numbers should be able to be charged at the current over minutes charge for bundled minutes packages but the standard geographic 01/02 charge on Pay As You Go mobiles. If an 0800 number wants people to call it for free they must sign a declaration they are not a call routing service and be liable for the loss of revenue to mobile companies if they are proven to be such a service subsequently. This would allow 0800 to be free of charge on a mobile for legitimate 0800 uses. There are underlying business reasons why expecting mobile customers to be able to route all their calls via other call routing services using an 0800 number is not realistic.