Dave wrote on May 30
th, 2013 at 3:57pm:
I see the bone of contention as being that they use these numbers innappropriately in the first place. I do not see consumers being given a choice to avoid a premium charge as being a final solution.
Surely the final solution is the full implementation of the draft European Directive completely banning the use of anything other than standard rated geographic numbers or non geographic numbers charged at that rate for customer service applications.
Until and unless that happens this website surely remains dedicated to listing geographic alternatives to avoid the customer being ripped off in having to deal with a company/body's own incompetence in failing to make all forms of interaction with it available online and/or failing to fully and completely answer all possible customers questions in FAQ documents on their website. Also at least 25% of the population are still not able to conduct their interactions with organisations on the internet due to computer/web illiteracy.
Quote:I work on the alternative numbers part of this site because I believe that many applications of 084 and 087 numbers are unjust as their users would not be able to openly stand by imposition of their Service Charges.
Would you like to cite for other forum members any possible just applications of the use of 084 and 087 prefixed phone numbers. Personally I am not aware of any at all apart from numbers used to provide cheaper means of accessing international or Uk mobile calls without using Voip or an Indirect Access Service (eg 18185 etc). And such just uses of 084/7 could easily be catered for by a new lower class cost of 09 numbers or use of the unused 06 prefix that could not be mistaken as normal priced numbers.
Also charges to 084 and 087 become ever more unjust as more and more traffic to these numbers shifts over to calls originated from mobiles rather than landlines and most mobile companies refuse to include these calls in call bundles and instead charge rates which are deliberately exploitative and completely disproportionate to their own real additional costs in carrying them.
I find it staggering that somebody who puts so much time in to gathering numbers for and maintaining this website does not have a simple consistent root and branch objection to the existence of all forms of revenue share number. I personally cannot even support the ones used for sex chat services or to ring lawyers etc as they all rely on the premise of stealth charging and the user not having to make a decision up front on what they are going to pay. In my opinion if PRS services exist at all on landlines they should all have PIN number protection and work on a separate Pre Pay advance credit loading basis.
Quote:The fact remains that if an organisation publishes one number for one purpose and another for another purpose that this is done for a reason.
All the advantages that you cite of different numbers for different functions can be done with geographic numbers. It does not excuse ripoff hidden premium rate charge numbers as a way to filter calls. Also with advanced IVR menu systems more than one number for a company's customers for voice calls is becoming less and less necessary.
Quote:Why else would an organisation state the purpose of each of its phone numbers other than to try and prevent callers from getting through to departments which can't deal with their calls?
Alternative numbers from a company's main switchboard geographic number are usualy quoted where they are 084/7 to exploit revenue share out of customers and to get customers to pay for equipment and outgoing calls it should be paying for.
Quote:What techniques they are using is irrelevant. There is an open market in telecommunications services and therefore consumers have choice as to which to subscribe to which meets their needs.
What a load of old tosh. There is anything but an open market in telecoms services. There is actually an aggressive process of landline subscribers having to cross subsidise investment in higher speed landline broadband, even if they only use the phone. The telcos operate as aggressive cartels who copy minimum connection charges and line price hikes from each other.
Quote:I fail to see why just because the vast majority of domestic telephone users subscribe to services that do not offer the ability to block calls from UK landlines that big organisations should be prevented from subscribing to such services.
Then you seem to be in the wrong job being a moderator on a site with a user base who generally deplore and despise all forms of ripoff of the ordinary domestic telecoms consumer.
In my opinion any service that lets a company block any whole class of users from calling it is quite wrong
and in order to ensure a properly competitive market in telecoms anyone who has an 01/02 number should not be able to discriminate against particular callers calling it depending whether they have called it directly or called it via an NTS service that has rerouted the call to it.
If companies can do this they can then stop callers using the lowest cost route to call them and that is bad for an open and healthy market in telecoms. You apparently seem to only be worried about ensuring an open and competitive market for corporate users to charge their callers as much as they feel like charging.