nicholas43 wrote on Jun 25
th, 2008 at 3:10pm:
Is it true that
(a) Number Translation is a service that honest companies can reasonably want, but there was and is no technical reason for fronting it by special numbers? They could (maybe actually can?) get it fronted by an 01 or 02 number, but obviously they would then have to pay the market price for whatever NT they require - as they will on the new 03 numbers?
Yes it is true all the same facilities can be provided on 01/02. The Foreign & Commonwealth Office has an 020 based phone system with all the features you suggest on a geographic phone number or numbers.
Quote:(b) the historic 0345 was well-intentioned, in the days when people paid more for non-local calls? (Companies using it had to pay to receive calls, didn't they?)
(c) Once 0345 morphed to 0845, 0845 and 0870 were sold as numbers companies could rely on keeping, while Oftel/Ofcom fooled around changing 01 to 071 to 020 7 (etc etc) By that time, there was such a huge profit margin in the retail price of landline to landline calls, that Telcos were able to sell 0870, and latterly also 0845, numbers to large users with cutprice NT technology, or cash rebates, or both.
I think OFTEL allowed the whole system to come in to being always knowing that it was a wonderful opportunity to separate retail phone call pricing from business phone call pricing and protect phone company margins by cutting headline retail call prices while allowing calls to businesses to become ever more expensive protecting telco revenues. I campaigned against 0990/0870 and 0845/0345 as long ago as 1998 and it was clear even that they cost me more to call than other numbers and that OFTEL was fully in bed with the telecoms industry to orchestrate this scam even at that stage. The numbers were marketed to the Police etc by the telecoms companies knowing full well it was a way to earn hidden revenue share on the numbers.
Quote:(d) Ofcom failed to spot, or deliberately overlooked, that allowing revenue sharing on 0870 and 0845 would fossilize their high prices. Meanwhile, the market price of call from a landline to an honest 01 or 02 number has dropped to 5 pence (most of which goes on logging the call, sharing the pitiful revenue, and putting your itemised bill on line?
By the time Ofcom came in to existence the problems with 084/7 ripoffs were blatant and widespread and should have been dealt with by their predecessors OFTEL. Ofcom has persistently failed to act against these scam numbers under pressure from powerful friends of New Labour like Sky and Capita that they do not wish to see profitable 084/7 revenue share scamming brought to an end. Ofcom consut, consult and consult and the end result is no action and the consumer still being blatantly ripped off and subjected to misleading price indications. 084/7 numbers even continue to be misdescribed as Lo-Call/Local Call and National Rate on phone bills, even though Ofcom's General Conditions govern what must be shown in phone bills.