jrawle wrote on Nov 20
th, 2008 at 7:18pm:
[...]For the third time, I'm not asking for freephone numbers to be free from a mobile. If they were taken from inclusive minutes, that would solve many of the problems caused by them not being free.
Which is exactly what happens here in the US. A call to a toll-free number, 800, 877 etc, is
generally billed, for cellular users, at exactly the same rate as a call to any other US area code. If one has 600 inclusive call minutes (or air-time), then those minutes could be used to call from, say Miami to Los Angeles, or from Miami to a toll-free number, which
should be the prevailing situation in the UK, as it indeed used to be for many UK cellular contract plans.
jrawle wrote on Nov 20
th, 2008 at 7:18pm:
The reason they are not included is because the companies see it as a nice earner, largely relying on consumer ignorance once again.
A nice earner due to the ineptitude and corruption of the British regulator which, of course, could intervene, yet doesn't.
This sordid situation is not helped by UK government ministers, typified by Jonathan Shaw's (incidentally my representative in UK parliament) response in the parliamentary update thread:
"We have considered whether it would be better for our customers to switch to the use of 03xx but we believe that the use of
0800 and 0845 continues to provide the solution which is, on balance,
most advantageous to our customers as a whole."
He should make the most of the limelight while it lasts - his chances of re-election are, I suspect, pretty slim.