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Geist Creates His Own Do-Not-Call List 94

average_cdn writes "Canadians looking to put a stop to pesky telemarketing calls before the federal government's do-not-call registry takes effect this summer have a new tool at their disposal. At IOptOut.ca, Canadians can enter their phone number and e-mail address and simply choose the organizations they would prefer not to hear from while the website generates a mass request that the user be added to those companies' do-not-call lists. The site, a beta version of which was launched yesterday, is the brainchild of University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist and features information on how to avoid telemarketing calls from more than 140 different companies and organizations. Mr. Geist said that iOptOut helps Canadians finish the job that the do-not-call registry failed to complete."
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Geist Creates His Own Do-Not-Call List

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  • ...for Canada!
  • Very cool! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @06:39PM (#22900240) Homepage
    Very cool, I'll probably tell my family about this.

    However, I've noticed that since we moved two years ago, and we got a Vonage account, we don't actually get any unsolicited calls (except for the cable company which keeps trying to sell us their home phone service, but that has mostly stopped). I think it's either because we're not in the Bell directory, or because if I go over 500 minutes a month, then I pay some per minute charge, and that technically makes it illegal for telemarketers to call me, just like cell phones.
    • Re:Very cool! (Score:5, Informative)

      by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @06:55PM (#22900420)
      Fastest way to get a telemarketer off of the phone: "This is a cell phone."

      Never been called by the same company twice and most just hang up on me without even a good bye.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by waveman ( 66141 )
        One thing I do is I say "Just a moment". Then I leave the phone off the hook for about ten minutes. This wastes their time quite effectively. I even had one of them get quite angry at me, which was good.
        • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward

          One thing I do is I say "Just a moment". Then I leave the phone off the hook for about ten minutes. This wastes their time quite effectively. I even had one of them get quite angry at me, which was good.

          I do the same thing, but every few minutes I pick up the receiver and say "hang on just a minute." One guy stayed on the line for 20 minutes. I finally couldn't keep a straight face anymore and started laughing and asking him "how stupid can you be?" Very very rude, I know, but so are the telemarketers.

          • The telemarketers aren't stupid, they're normal people that need a paycheck and telemarketing is a job that takes very little skill. There's ads for telemarketing jobs at my school all the time, and a lot of my fellow poor college students have mentioned it. The telemarketing companies, I agree, are fucking dumb.
            • People always seem to "shoot the messenger" rather than the company doing the actual advertising. It's not the poor telemarketer's fault, they may have no other job options and they need to eat too.
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by mpe ( 36238 )
                People always seem to "shoot the messenger" rather than the company doing the actual advertising.

                How is the person being called ment to know who this company is? Giving the name, address and telephone number of the company concerned may not be part of the caller's script; they may have been trained to give misleading information and it's very unlikely that they will know the executives home phone numbers for either their own comapny or a "client".
                • Well, what I'm saying is that harassing telemarketers isn't helping anything, it just makes both of you unhappy (unless you enjoy that of course). I'm not saying to actually hunt down the companies and complain to them, but it would be a more fruitful action than simply annoying the telemarketer. Unless of course you are able to get the telemarketer to remove you from their lists or whatever.
            • by KDR_11k ( 778916 )
              Yeah but that doesn't mean we can't make their life hard for picking a job that involves being an annoying asshole.
        • Re:Very cool! (Score:5, Interesting)

          by cybereal ( 621599 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @09:26PM (#22901608) Homepage

          One thing I do is I say "Just a moment". Then I leave the phone off the hook for about ten minutes. This wastes their time quite effectively. I even had one of them get quite angry at me, which was good.

          Due to unfortunate requirement for food, water, and shelter, I had to be a telemarketer for several years. Truly this was the most painful job I've ever had, and I've worked at Taco Bell. Your strategy of leaving the phone off the hook for a while is not remotely unique. But I assure you, many telemarketers appreciate it. Seriously.

          What you may fail to recognize is that telemarketing is a slave driving business. The people on the phone, we didn't make squat off the sales. What we did was maintain our right to continue working a complete day. If you didn't maintain a certain quota, they would simply send you home. And the wages? Well there was this fancy thing called a "differential." What that meant was, if you made X hours in the pay period, your wage would be increased by Y dollars. So to make the meager 7.25/hr. I was told I'd be making, I'd have to work at least 60 of the 80 hours possible in a two week period. Obviously not a difficult thing to do in a normal job but..

          Imagine for a moment that you made just enough money to get by, you had maybe $30 a week after all of your bills were paid to buy groceries for you, your wife, and your daughter. You worked as a cold calling sales person, constantly searching but never finding another, more reasonable job. IN the meantime, you went to work each day, starting at 7 am to call the east coast, and sell things that nobody in their right mind would ever want to buy. If you did not make at least two sales per hour on average, you would be sent home before lunch time. Now imagine that, despite working very hard, your two weeks came up and you missed the mark. Suddenly your paycheck wasn't only less because of fewer hours, no, your rate was 30% less, putting you around 50% of what you would normally have made. What the hell would you do?

          Not all callcenters are this bad, not all phone jobs as painful, but many are and I hope some of you can have a better understanding of the tenacity of phone sales people.

          Oh and another aspect more relevant to your "method" is that the calls must be made constantly. Non-stop, save a few very short breaks throughout the day for the restroom. That means that the moment you hang up, the phone immediately calls another person. In fact, when enough agents are on the floor, the phone system PRE-DIALS so that when you click off one call, you're IMMEDIATELY on another. This goes on all day long. You try that sometime, and tell me how you feel after several months of it. So trust me when I say, that 10 minute break your telemarketer risked enduring was a godsend to them.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward
            Heh I did it for a few months for a "respectable" company (Sears) selling extended warranties - sorry - "maintenance agreements". We could call Sears customers that were in the database and the computer spotted that their warranty on their fridge/lawnmower/whatever was about to expire. It wasn't as bad as cold calling since they WERE customers and we were told to initially inquire if they were happy with their product - but then when it came time to offer them the extended warranty (usually at around hal
          • Re:Very cool! (Score:4, Interesting)

            by billcopc ( 196330 ) <vrillco@yahoo.com> on Friday March 28, 2008 @10:11PM (#22901872) Homepage
            The problem with any "bad" job is people continue to work there.

            If call centers suck so bad, why do people take the jobs ? You're encouraging the abuse by enabling these bureaucratic slave drivers. I don't know of anyone who likes call centers, not as an employee, not as a victim either. The only people who like them are the so-called "clients", the ones whose products are being sold or supported, because not only is it cheap, but it also cuts maintenance costs thanks to the many people who would rather buy a new thingamajig than have to deal with retarded call center queues all afternoon.

            One thing is consistent: there are always companies looking to hire, in fact many of them complain that it's so hard to find good people. I know why: they're all pissing their life away in a call center for peanuts, while the good jobs go unfilled. If you've got the social skills, patience and computer smarts to survive a call center job, those same skills could be applied in just about any other office environment for less stress and maybe even more money.

            Shit, I know a lot of people sitting in cushy government jobs who barely have two brain cells to rub together. They wouldn't last a day working for a telemarketer, yet they're making four times as much money for a quarter of the effort. Full benefits, too!
            • Re:Very cool! (Score:4, Insightful)

              by Dunbal ( 464142 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @11:18PM (#22902218)
              Because they hire almost anybody and minimum wage is better than NO wage.

              Their turnover on employees is pretty damned high though. I don't know many "career telemarketers".
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by porpnorber ( 851345 )
                So vote for someone who will replace the minimum wage with a no questions asked universal basic income. There is no reason to collaborate in building a society that sucks to live in!
                • As a hard core liberal, I find neither the universal basic income (a dis-incentive to be productive) nor this current capitalist piggish society's sucky status quo, to be a desirable option.
                  • As something like an old-school liberal who knows some mathematics, I think you're very wrong. The argument for a universal income is the same as the argument for gun control: forced moves break otherwise self-regulating systems. Eating and breathing are not optional. People backed against the wall are not in the position to make rational choices; they are not in the position to make any choices. So any hope that they will act locally in such a way as to improve society globally is forlorn.

                    How I envision th

                    • by Dunbal ( 464142 )
                      I think most geniuses would perform better in a world where they had to fear from offending their bosses--and, indeed, spent less of their time covering basic necessities.

                            The problem with the world is that the genius is usually the salaried employee/wage-slave, and the boss is the guy/gal who could brown-nose the most.

                            I have never worked for someone smarter than me, until I started working for myself.
            • by p0tat03 ( 985078 )

              I don't think *any* telemarketers are in their jobs because they *want* to be there. Sometimes you just don't have a choice - I for one do not blame someone if they choose to pester me with phone calls instead of starving.

              I don't think the job market is really as sweet as you are making it out to be. For one thing, the economy goes up and down, people are unemployed constantly, and entire industries even seem to collapse occasionally. I wouldn't be surprised if some dotcommers had to make ends meet in cal

            • If call centers suck so bad, why do people take the jobs ?

              Because the alternative is starvation. As someone who has had to do telemarketing (only for two weeks, thank heavens), I can't imagine any less pressing reason anyone would do it.

              • Actually the alternative is social security. It's not great, but I'll actually respect someone in-between jobs better than someone who willingly makes a part of my life unpleasant in exchange for money.

                In my book, someone working for a bastard is guilty by association. The employee of my enemy is still my enemy.
          • by mpe ( 36238 )
            Due to unfortunate requirement for food, water, and shelter, I had to be a telemarketer for several years.

            Were there really no other possible jobs you could have done?

            What you may fail to recognize is that telemarketing is a slave driving business. The people on the phone, we didn't make squat off the sales.

            Any employer will try and pay its employees the least it possibly can. This is even the case with businesses in the "grey" or "black" economy.
            The reason "telemarketing" along with "door to door" se
        • I actually sympathize with the poor bastards that have to take such a crappy job. I assume they lack better choices. I don't sympathize nearly enough to listen to a spiel but I do try to say f*** off politely.
      • Even faster. Pick up, say "Hello?" If there's no response within 1-2 seconds its a telemarketer and you can immediately hang up. They call lots of people at the same time and it takes a few seconds for them to put a human on when you pick up. Completely foolproof, and I haven't talked to a telemarketer in years.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by allanw ( 842185 )
          Are you absolutely sure you're not getting any false positives there?
          • Pretty sure. First of all, I only do this for numbers I don't recognize. If its a real human they will respond in a reasonable time. I can't think of any situation where an important call would use an automatic dialer. I've been called by Visa about some issue with my card, and they always use real humans that respond right away.
        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          by jwsmith00 ( 262885 )
          I prefer "Hello (short pause) Hello (long pause) Hello (long pause) Hello (short pause) Is anyone there? (short pause) Hello" Click. They sometimes call back after they realize there was nothing wrong on their end.
          • by mpe ( 36238 ) on Saturday March 29, 2008 @03:26AM (#22903222)
            I prefer "Hello (short pause) Hello (long pause) Hello (long pause) Hello (short pause) Is anyone there? (short pause) Hello" Click. They sometimes call back after they realize there was nothing wrong on their end.

            An alternative would be to do the same thing, but in a language the caller is not expecting and hopefully dosn't understand. Possibly one of the few situations where it can be an advantage to know Klingon.
      • Re:Very cool! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Jorophose ( 1062218 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @08:46PM (#22901340)
        For some reason people like to rage against telemarkerters...

        But really now this is the most reasonable way to handle the situation if you don't want to be called back because management doesn't seem to understand the concept of "No thank you, I'm not interested.".

        I've worked with telemarketers, and the stuff people do to them is rather crazy. It's not the grunts you want to bitch at, complain to the heads of the company.
        • 've worked with telemarketers, and the stuff people do to them is rather crazy.


          Considering "crazy stuff" is done to telemarketers, presumably moreso than other industries, we have to assume there's something fundmentally wrong with telemarketing and *all* those involved, not just the heads of the company. I mean the average person being called never speaks to the head of a company -- they speak to a telemarketer on the front line. Telemarketing takes a special type of person.

        • I've worked with telemarketers, and the stuff people do to them is rather crazy. It's not the grunts you want to bitch at, complain to the heads of the company.

          Sure I do. Not because I mean them ill-will, but because the more miserable I can make the job, (a) the higher turnover will be (thus causing problems for the management because of the effort required to hire new people and the lost productivity due to training and ramp-up time) and (b) the more money people demand in order to do it (thus causing

          • Not because I mean them ill-will, but because the more miserable I can make the job, (a) the higher turnover will be (thus causing problems for the management because of the effort required to hire new people and the lost productivity due to training and ramp-up time) and (b) the more money people demand in order to do it (thus causing problems for management).

            Telemarketing is already miserable enough that no one will do it for any price longer than they absolutely have to. If you're reduced to working

        • by mpe ( 36238 )
          I've worked with telemarketers, and the stuff people do to them is rather crazy. It's not the grunts you want to bitch at, complain to the heads of the company.

          So all telemarketers will transfer you to a director if you ask or give you a list of names and direct (including home) numbers if they cannot transfer the call there and then?
    • by rikkards ( 98006 )
      We used to get bugged the most by Direct Energy. The last time they called I told them that since they don't seem to respect my wishes, why would I want to do business with them. It's been a while.

      Normally I say "Take me off your call list". This usually works. However there is one that I still get which is an automated call and if you don't say you are interested, it will hang up. Next time, I may hit 1 as I am interested... in getting off their call list.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Dunbal ( 464142 )
        I usually interrupt the telemarketer and ask his or her name and the company they represent. Then I tell them to place me on their "do not call" list. Usually this works. A few times I have been called back by the same company days later. Again I immediately interrupt the telemarketer, ask their name, and ask to speak to their supervisor. Once the supervisor comes on, I inform him or her that I am currently recording this call, and that on day X at time Y I was called by employee "Z", asked to be placed on
        • I have a secret number. That way I can opt-in on everybody that should have it. I have a cell phone which is public but currently almost no companies call at it (and most of them where I've been a customer at one point). This doesn't keep of auto dialers, but I generally tell them that they phoned a secret number and ask them to put me on their do not call list, and nowadays I recieve maybe one call a month at tops.
  • If the government fails, at least someone knows the spirit of governance! Lets wish Mr. Geist (spirit in Germanic languages) the very best. Is this a possible cure for spam where its legal or the laws are inadequate? Would this sort of citizen action hold up in the USA, where the most profit from spam is made? (This is total speculation based on original research.)

             
    • by garett_spencley ( 193892 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @06:59PM (#22900456) Journal
      "Is this a possible cure for spam where its legal or the laws are inadequate?"

      All this does is send an e-mail on your behalf to various organizations asking that you be placed on their internal do-not-call-list. By-law any company in Canada that engages in telemarketing must remove you from their call list when requested.

      The ironic part is that the system actually sends out bulk e-mail in order to operate. Whether or not that is "SPAM" is open to interpretation.
      • by hedwards ( 940851 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @08:14PM (#22901122)

        The ironic part is that the system actually sends out bulk e-mail in order to operate. Whether or not that is "SPAM" is open to interpretation.
        That would really depend whether or not the emails were solicited and whether or not they stopped when requested.

        Calling somebody should be considered consent so far as one is contacting the individual to opt out or inform them of the mistake. If the system only does that and stops after the notification is made then it isn't spam.

        The only tricky part is setting things up so that it isn't ripe for abuse. And ensuring that the system won't continuously churn out emails for requests that have already been completed.

        http://www.catalogchoice.org/ [catalogchoice.org] is a similar idea applied to catalogs. The site just sends opt outs, and in some cases opt ins when the person wants a new catalog, and they send a request to the business to stop sending more. The basic way that it's set up makes it advantageous for both sides.

        You have to give them your address and the name on the mailing, but it's just information which is already publicly available to the company to get the correct mailing stopped.
    • by DittoBox ( 978894 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @07:58PM (#22900996) Homepage
      Your post advocates a

      (x) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. your idea will not work. here is why it won't work. (one or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      (x) spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      ( ) mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      ( ) no one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) it is defenseless against brute force attacks
      ( ) it will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      ( ) users of email will not put up with it
      ( ) microsoft will not put up with it
      ( ) the police will not put up with it
      (x) requires too much cooperation from spammers
      ( ) requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      ( ) many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      (x) open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) asshats
      ( ) jurisdictional problems
      ( ) unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      ( ) huge existing software investment in smtp
      ( ) susceptibility of protocols other than smtp to attack
      ( ) willingness of users to install os patches received by email
      (x) armies of worm riddled broadband-connected windows boxes
      ( ) eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      (x) extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) technically illiterate politicians
      ( ) extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      ( ) outlook
      (x) botnets

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      ( ) ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      (x) any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) smtp headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) blacklists suck
      ( ) whitelists suck
      ( ) we should be able to talk about viagra without being censored
      ( ) countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      ( ) sending email should be free
      ( ) why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) incompatibility with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) i don't want the government reading my email
      ( ) killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      furthermore, this is what i think about you:

      (x) sorry dude, but i don't think it would work.
      ( ) this is a stupid idea, and you're a stupid person for suggesting it.
      ( ) nice try, assh0le! i'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!
      • For some reason, I find posts like this absolutely fasinating. Are these actually typed out or generated? I'd totally put ideas against a test like this. It's like organized criticism!
        • We just keep the blank form and place Xs where appropriate. It's fun because everything fits it so far :^D
  • Do not call (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TheRecklessWanderer ( 929556 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @06:59PM (#22900454) Journal
    I think I'll just stick to my never listed and currently unlisted phone number.
    • by mrbcs ( 737902 )
      Bots don't need a phone book.. they just call incrementally. I've had telemarketer call on an unlisted and number blocked phone. There's no way they got that number from anyone.. yet they called... and got hung up on.
  • Farming (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ChatHuant ( 801522 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @07:07PM (#22900530)
    Good way to collect active and not spam-trapped e-mail addresses, and maybe link them to phone numbers as well. As a company, I may not send mail or call the phone numbers Mr. Geist is so nicely forwarding to me, but what stops me from selling them to spammers? I don't have a direct relationship with the customer, so, AFAICT there is no legal issue.
    • Spamming these e-mail-addresses is probably very inefficient. They are trying to avoid advertisement after all.
      • Spamming these addresses has effectively zero cost. Therefore, since there are real people at the other end, there is no reason for a spammer not to add them to their overall list.
    • by celest ( 100606 )
      You are mistaken. It is a legal issue.

      PIPEDA requires that you use any electronically collected personal information (including information sent via email) only for the purpose for which it was given, and you must get explicit consent to use it in any other manner.

      As such, companies that receive personal information in an email request asking that they never be contacted may only ever (legally) use that information for the purpose of ensuring that the requesting person is never contacted.

      Anything else is a
  • ZEIT Geist...

    He has made his mark in time...
  • It's sad when incompetent people fail to do a job they were payed to do but then a guy with much less in resources goes and does it no problem. Sadly this is happening more and more lately.
  • And judging by the current number of posts, someone added this article to the do-not-care list.
  • by owlnation ( 858981 ) on Friday March 28, 2008 @07:56PM (#22900976)
    who ya gonna call?

    Geistbusters!
  • Having worked as a telemarketer for a few weeks, the most effective way to get them to not call is to say: a) No English. b) I'm not over 18...and no nobody else in the house is either.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Ah, yes - it's even better if you actually speak an obscure language. I speak Welsh at people with clipboards or Bibles who try to talk to me in the street - strangely, I'd never thought of trying it with telemarketers. Though I think often the problem is that they have my name from somewhere, so I have to at least find out whether they're legitimately calling to, say, offer me a job or something before telling them to screw themselves.
      • by mpe ( 36238 )
        Ah, yes - it's even better if you actually speak an obscure language. I speak Welsh at people with clipboards or Bibles who try to talk to me in the street - strangely, I'd never thought of trying it with telemarketers.

        Presumably you don't live anywhere near Wales :)
        • :) England, in fact. But even in South Wales, where I grew up, Welsh is really a minority language. There, though, I speak to the clipboard/Bible people in French instead!
    • Tips for getting rid of a marketer once you have one on the phone are helpful, but the real question is how to stop them from disturbing the peace of your home and disrupting your concentration in the first place.
      • Tips for getting rid of a marketer once you have one on the phone are helpful, but the real question is how to stop them from disturbing the peace of your home and disrupting your concentration in the first place.

        1. Remember that your telephone is a device for your own convenience, not anyone else's. Therefore...
        2. Turn off the ringer on your phone
        3. Don't answer the phone
        4. If using a landline - Turn down the volume on the answering machine

        And, if there are certain people that you must allow to

  • What is so fucking difficult about simply saying, "No thanks," and hanging up, or just hanging up, period, no conversation required? No need to be rude, angry, uncivil or impolite, just businesslike. And I don't need lists, web sites, government agencies and university professors, albeit one that has my thorough respect, to accomplish something as simple as "no."

    I used to work myself into a froth over these calls until I realized it's just a phone call.
    • That's fine, except that they call you back. The newspaper used to call me once a week to see if I wanted a subscription. Their calls are specifically designed to make you feel guilty for hanging up on them.

      What's wrong with getting yourself added to their internal do not call list? What's wrong with a convenient service that adds you to all of them at once?
      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )
        What? If I suspect you're a telemarketer, you've got about 3 seconds to explain why you're not a telemarketer, and another 10 seconds to qualify that statement. The second I get any grief I hang up. You're letting them waste way too much of your life if they get to the point where they can try and guilt you about something.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )
          I'm not talking about ME. I don't feel the least bit of guilt about telling them I'm REALLY interested and then setting the phone on my subwoofer for the next ten minutes.

          Now, my grandmother, she comes from a different era, when hanging up on someone who's talking to you is something you didn't do. She's also characteristic of the demographic who tend to believe things nice people on the phone tell them. In other words, precisely the demographic scummy telemarketers are after.

          Personally, I think the worl
    • We get 3 or 4 calls a day. I'm sure some have it even worse. Our phone has become almost useless because we only answer numbers that we know. It gets on your nerves. I don't know how you can say it's a simple task to deal with; it's a never ending task.
    • What is so fucking difficult about simply saying, "No thanks," and hanging up, or just hanging up, period, no conversation required? No need to be rude, angry, uncivil or impolite, just businesslike.

      Comments like this really need an "irony" tag. An alternative POV would be "My phone my rules. If you don't like the results of calling me then don't do it."
  • great tip, did this immediately. TD will never call me again!!!
  • why would you have to opt out? should be reverse. And where did they get your number? With proper privacy laws those calls should be a non issue and indeed they are here (germany). Unless you have a contract with someone they are not allowed to bother you and mostly that works.
    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      why would you have to opt out? should be reverse. And where did they get your number? With proper privacy laws those calls should be a non issue and indeed they are here (germany). Unless you have a contract with someone they are not allowed to bother you and mostly that works.

      Also where this is done properly consent for a company to call you for one purpose does not imply consent for any other purposes. e.g. if you give them a number for a company to contact you about the delivery of goods they can't the

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