dorf wrote on Jan 5
th, 2008 at 4:50pm:
… [Ofcom] do not want to do anything …
… The government … do not want an end to the stealth taxes
… their telecoms buddies do not want an end to call queuing on Premium numbers
… Citizen Consumers do not want it and will not accept it.
The only issue and focus of the campaign now must be CALL QUEUING ON PREMIUM NUMBERS MUST BE PROHIBITED.
Dorf
It is possible that some “citizen / consumers” accessing commercially operated 10p per minute helplines would rather wait for an agent to be available than the alternative. That would probably be no service at all, or a very high fixed price cost per call.
Whilst one may question the judgement of those who call TV quiz lines, one cannot deny the fact that there are many of them.
Many of those who can afford to do so would rather wait their turn in a queue to speak to a GP receptionist at busy times than repeatedly hang-up and re-dial on the off-chance of getting through - revenue sharing is totally unacceptable for NHS contractors, but one cannot simply say that everyone would rather re-dial.
Your cause is nonetheless just and a fair basis for campaigning. If however one accepts your arguments, it stands little chance of success without some means of recruiting a sizeable amount of public engagement, or causing a significant change in consumer behaviour (well beyond that already achieved by saynoto0870).
Please continue to press your point and seek to solicit support, which I am happy to give myself, although only in general terms with some qualifications.
At the same time, please also allow others, who may not yet be fully won over to share your analysis, to pursue more limited objectives that they believe to have some hope of success.
One point of clarification – are you happy for call queuing to be permitted if charged at the same competitively-priced, but profitable, rates applied to normal calls by the various telcos?
One point of clear disagreement – the term “citizen/consumer” is a b*stard invention of Ofcom, intended to wrongly conflate its two distinct and potentially conflicting principle duties under section 3 of the Communications Act. It devalues the significance of citizenship and serves to misrepresent the role of consumers in markets. (If you wish to debate this OT point, let us do so offline.)
David