Quote:Having innocently started this thread in order to understand the situation, I now feel I have intruded on a private conversation.
Not at all. In the replies from Dave and SCV you have answers from two of the UK's foremost experts on the subject matter. By publishing the information in a forum, the answers are available to a wide readership.
Quote:I always believed that premium rate numbers were introduced to allow service based companies to carry on their businesses over the telephone or via a broadband connection.
These were 0870 numbers.
It depends what you mean by "premium rate".
09 numbers are Premium Rate Services (PRS) with heavy regulation.
084 and 087 numbers where revenue sharing is allowed are "premium rate" with a small "p".
0870 used to exist as 0345 and 0645 in the 1990s. Back then, calling a local landline e.g. 0303 (now 01303) based on your own location was cheap but calling a distant landline e.g. 041 (now 0141) was expensive.
The non-geographic "local rate" numbers were brought in so you could ring your bank head office or the gas or electric board at the other end of the country for the same price as a local call. This was a Good Thing.
Number prefixes got switched around in 1995 and 2000 but several years later (2005?) landline companies
1. stopped charging different rates for 01 and 02 numbers based on distance called.
2. introduced "inclusive packages" where calls to 01 and 02 numbers during the evenings and weekends were free, and charged per minute during the day,
3. and latterly introduced packages where all calls to 01 and 02 numbers are free at all times. The latter option rapidly became the most popular.
Now that most people pay nothing for 01 and 02 calls, and now that "local rate" doesn't exist, all 08 numbers that have a revenue-share arrangement are "premium rate" (small p) numbers. That's 0842,3,4, 0845 and 0871,2,3.
0870 was "premium rate", but the revenue share was stopped in 2009 or so and some landline providers now allow 0870 in with inclusive calls.
Quote:However, the new breed of manager now running UK companies decided that their companies could become more efficient by centralising their telecommunications functions, adopting the call centre concept and providing their customers with an 0845 number, which had somehow been accepted by most people as making a "local call" from anywhere in the country.
If this was in fact true, then fine.
0845 was "local" in the early days - but not true since 2006.
Quote:However, the premium rate number providers then discovered that they could "sell" the "local call" concept to many diverse organisations, such as doctors surgeries, dentists, government departments et al.
By the time the mass-sell of "local rate" numbers began, these numbers were no longer "local rate". There's a number of complaints to the ASA about this in 2006 and they were all upheld. A cursory Google search will show the vast majority of providers of 084 and 087 numbers still advertising them as "get a local rate number for your business".
Quote:The selling proposition seems to have been call revenue sharing or "free telecoms equipment".
It does, with the hiding of the true costs to callers by the use of meaninglass and illegal "local rate" and "national rate" nomenclature, as well as the weazel words "other operators and mobiles may charge more" when the truth is "will" instead of "may" and "a lot more" in place of "more".
Quote:It then seems that call providers decided they would like to "eat at the trough" and 0845 numbers quickly became premium rate numbers but with the attraction of being able to be "sold" to the public as "lo-cost" or even worse "local calls".
Any number with revenue share is by definition "premium" (small p). I'm sure that most businesses that advertise their number as "local rate" do so because that is what they believe they have signed up for, and what the number provider told them they were selling.
Quote:Why does it always seem that the UK has become "rip-off" capital of the world?
Because we have huge amounts of regulators who either do nothing, or take ages to take action.
Quote:Why do I have to phone a premium rate number to talk to my local library.
Why, when I buy into the concept of on-line banking, do I now find that I an forced to phone the equivalent of premium rate numbers if I have a problem?
The Consumer Rights Directive should force most of these cases to migrate to an 03 number. 03 numbers cost the same as 01 and 02 from mobiles and from landlines.
Quote:Reading the posts it seems to me that an acceptance of the situation is developing.
There's little "acceptance" by the public of being ripped off. The Consumer Rights Directive will be a Good Thing - if it is enforced.
Quote:It is just that apparently, I naively believed that this website and forum was about getting rid of premium rate numbers.
Perhaps it is and I just don't understand.
Different people here have different agendas. There's no way that anyone is going to be able to "get rid of premium rate numbers". There are certain businesses where the caller should be paying extra for the call. There are many where this is not acceptable.
Some responsible companies have woken up and swapped to 03 or to 01/02 numbers. For those that haven't, this site acts as a clearing house for the sharing of numbers where the caller is not ripped off.