irrelevant wrote on Oct 15
th, 2008 at 6:27am:
Also in that act, in section 14, is a prohibition of processing of the location of the caller, unless they have specifically given their permission beforehand.
Not quite. 14.2 is broken into two parts.
In part (a) There is no prohibition "where the user or subscriber cannot be identified from such data".
It is therefore perfectly acceptable for a call to be directed to a call centre covering the general geographic area from where the call was made, or for the general location of the caller to be made available to the person receiving the call.
When you phone your partner to say that you have been kept late at work, you can conceal the precise place you are calling from, but not the general location. Choose a pub very close to the office.
Part (b) requires consent where a value added service is to be provided.
It must be noted that regulation 14 (like 10) covers the activities of Telcos. In the case of mobiles, it covers the cell from which the call was made.
We are however drifting off-topic, as we are supposed to be discussing DNIS. I cannot see any privacy implications with this. The dialled number is clearly information that one is happy to provide, having chosen to dial it.