dorf wrote on Jul 4
th, 2008 at 12:08pm:
It seems to me that games of Ofcom have become to tire and delude some campaigners and consumers!
What you all seem to be missing here is that originally Freephone numbers were exactly that. They were defined by Oftel to be free to the caller because they are paid for by the receiving subscriber. They were stated in the NTNP to be that. When the supposed "regulator" allowed telcos to get away with charging the originating subscriber to make a "Freephone" call this immediately meant that the same call was being paid for twice over! Remember that mobile telcos were not the first to start this abuse; it was actually some of the early land-line carriers!
So the most important issue to focus on with this continuing abuse is that it is outrageous that any call should be charged for twice over. This is fraudulent and if anything an even worse abuse ...
Apologies for being so slow in replying; I haven't been here much recently
The calls are not being paid for twice over
The reason that the mobile companies had problems with them is that the receivers of the call would not pay the higher tariffs that the mobile networks consider their charges should be. For example, a landline receiving a call via their 0800 number might pay an average of 1 to 3 pence a minute to their provider for the call diversion; a mobile network usually expects its per minute charges to be higher than this.
When Orange and T-mobile and Virgin had free 0800 and 0808 calls, a number of callthrough services were using such access, and on the cheapest some of their ongoing destinations cost from 0.5 pence a minute (e.g. on 18185). It's pretty obvious that there just isn't enough margin there that the mobile network would receive any part of that revenue from the call provider.
Similar problems occur abroad. On some mobile networks, and also from callboxes, freephone calls are indeed free. And some of the callthrough providers have higher published charges when used on a mobile network or from a phonebox, and they pay part of this across. But where the mobile networks have experienced calls on numbers that they recognise as paying them no revenue share, the calls are blocked. I've not only read other people talking about this in for example Netherlands, but had a family member in Germany experiment with several calling card and similar methods on one of the German mobile networks. About 5 are blocked and two worked, which did have modest surcharges (but since then I've found cheaper calls from Germany anyway, from 8 or 9 cents a minute)
So, although the mobile network tariffs to freephone numbers are now as ludicrously over the top as to most other 08xxx numbers, I disbelieve that there is any actual fraudulent double-charging as you repetitively assert, and I suggest that your impression that Ofcom is consequently corrupt in turning a blind eye is unlikely to apply to these cases.
But Ofcom is lazy and really hasn't sorted this out like some other countries have. There could be either actually free calls and selective barring of those numbers that abuse the system, or a reasonable amount per minute, somewhere in the 5 to 15 pence a minute range depending how their other rates compare