How to stop scamdicappers from calling you - Federal Do Not Call list now operational

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Enjoy - I already called this afternoon, and finally just now was able to bring up the web site ... if you call that 888 number, be sure you are calling from the phone number you wish to register ... the next time Feist rings you up after October 1, you can nail him to the wall and rip him off ...

Fox news article

Friday, June 27, 2003

WASHINGTON — Thousands of long-suffering Americans rushed on Friday to place their home phone numbers on the Federal Trade Commission's (search) "do-not-call" list, swamping telephone lines and a Web site set up to handle demand.

The public's simmering frustration with telemarketers erupted as people hurried to sign up for the list, registering about 635,000 telephone numbers in the program's first 14 hours and visiting the program's Web site 1,000 times every second.

Registration opened just after midnight, according to the FTC, which operates the registry.

People who sign up this summer should see a decrease in telemarketing (search) calls after the FTC begins enforcing the list on Oct. 1. The service will block about 80 percent of the calls, the FTC said.

"Unwanted telemarketing calls are intrusive, they are annoying, and they're all too common," said President Bush, who formally launched the list at a White House ceremony. "We're taking practical action to address this problem."

Consumers can register their home or cell phone numbers with the free government service by visiting the Web site www.donotcall.gov. Telephone registration using a toll-free number — 1-888-382-1222 — is available in states west of the Mississippi River, including Minnesota and Louisiana. The phone number will operate nationwide by July 7, the FTC said.

Slightly more than half of the numbers registered by Friday afternoon were done by phone, the FTC said.

The Web site was responding slowly on the first day because of "extraordinary amounts of traffic," the FTC said. The commission was scrambling to add more computer equipment to handle the load.

"Consumers do not need to sign up today," the agency said in a statement.

On the Web site, consumers provide the numbers they want protected and an e-mail address to receive a confirmation message. The site also lets them verify that a number is registered or remove a number.

Telephone registration is being done in stages to ensure the system can handle the volume of calls, the FTC said. The commission expects up to 60 million phone numbers to be registered in the first year. Registrations will have to be renewed every five years.

Consumers will not have to pay to get on the list, as it will be funded by telemarketers.

Plunging long-distance rates and computerized dialers have led to a five-fold increase in telemarketing calls over the past decade, prompting a deluge of consumer complaints.

Telemarketing groups have sued to scratch the effort, arguing that it abridges free-speech (search) rights, and say it could decimate an industry that employs 2 million.

The Federal Communications Commission (search) voted 5-0 Thursday to add its authority to the do-not-call list, blocking telemarketing calls from within a state — the FTC could only police interstate calls — and from industries whose calls the agency regulates, including airlines, banks and telephone companies.

Of the states with do-not-call lists, 13 plan to add their lists of 8.1 million numbers to the national registry this summer, three have legislation pending to allow them to share, and 11 will not share the information, the FTC said. Consumers on state lists added to the national one need not register again.

Beginning in September, telemarketers will have to check the list every three months to see who doesn't want to be called. Those who call listed people could be fined up to $11,000 for each violation. Consumers would file complaints to an automated phone or online system.

Exemptions from the list include calls from charities, pollsters and on behalf of politicians. Registered consumers also can give written permission to get calls from certain companies.

A company also may call someone on the no-call list if that person has bought, leased or rented from the company within the past 18 months. Telemarketers also may call people if they have inquired about or applied for something from the company during the past three months.

But consumers can avoid those calls by asking to be put on an individual company's do-not-call list.

Congress authorized the FTC to collect up to $18.1 million from telemarketers to pay the program's expenses in the first year.
 

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