idb wrote on Nov 20
th, 2013 at 1:35pm:
Any user of such numbers who believes that they derive a benefit from such numbering will have to fund that perceived benefit.
This is absurd. The benefit to the user is the Service Charge of up to 13p per minute.
idb wrote on Nov 20
th, 2013 at 1:35pm:
… my preferred solution is that the regulator sets a date - Jan 1, 2015, where *all* calls to 084/087 must be charged at geographic rates for the caller.
This suggests one of the courses of action that Ofcom has chosen not to follow. It would have compelled the confusion and expense of a change of number (from 084/087 to 09) to maintain the status quo, or perhaps the setting of a minimum Service Charge at greater than 13p per minute to prevent repetition of what happened when the 0870 range was effectively withdrawn.
I believe that either proposal from Ofcom would have attracted far greater criticism and opposition than that which it is currently struggling to overcome.
idb wrote on Nov 20
th, 2013 at 1:35pm:
We, the *consumer* neither benefit from nor need 084 or 087 numbers.
The only potential benefit to the consumer of any number with a Service Charge is the provision of a service that would not be provided without a charge on the caller being used to fund or subsidise it. Compelling users to declare the existence and level of the Service Charge is an effective means of ensuring that only those cases where the charge can be justified remain.
I believe that there are very few such cases on 084 numbers and few on 087. Measures being taken by those who are properly responsible for preventing citizens and consumers from being exploited by service providers in general (as against telecoms companies specifically) will compel many of those, who do not themselves "do the right thing", to switch to 03 or geographic numbers.
There may be cases where telephone access is withdrawn altogether if the provider cannot have it subsidised at the expense of callers. Such cases, along with those where increased unit cost leads to a reduction in quality of service, will need to be addressed individually.
It is important to understand the distinct roles and duties of the different regulators. I regret that my current level of understanding of international situations is poor, and I would welcome some guidance from those more closely engaged in such matters.