I received a forwarded email from my Wife. I checked snopes and don’t see anything about it. Is this legit?
> REMINDER…
>
> All cell phone numbers are being released to telemarketing
> companies
>
> tomorrow and you will start to receive sale calls.
>
> YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR THESE CALLS.
>
> To prevent this, call the following number from your cell
> phone:
> 1-888-382-1222.
>
> It is the National DO NOT CALL list. It will only take a
> minute of your
> time.
Thanks
I’ve had to pull that snopes article a few times, so I knew how to find it, but whenever there’s a phone number involved (this is how I found it when it ran in our local newspaper) I just google the phone number and it came back with the snopes article.
I have never paid to receive a phone call on my cell phone. Unless one exceeds the number of minutes they pay for with their carrier, no one pays to receive phone calls. This is probably true anywhere in the world.
Elsewhere in the world, you don’t pay to receive cell phone calls even if you exceed the number of minutes you pay for. Also, received phone calls don’t count against the minutes you pay for.
Monthly rate for X minutes plans have been standard in the US for a decade at least. 15 or so years ago, when cell phones were the size of a telephone book and many people called them car phones, you did, in fact pay by the minute for incoming and outgoing calls. Makes you wonder just how old this email is.
I think what they’d meant is that outside of America, you aren’t charged minutes against your monthly total when you receive calls, only when you place them.
In America, we pay for “Minutes used,” whether they are incoming or outgoing.
In Canada two of the largest cellular providers now charge for unsolicited incoming text messages! This is what happens when the State doesn’t regulate the industry.
This is contradictory. This is like me saying I have never paid to get into a movie. Because I buy the ticket and then get into the movie for free. So you pay for a plan which includes X minutes and those X minutes are free? How are they “free”?
The whole point is that in Europe received calls are free as in really, truly, free. They do not count in any way, shape or form. You can have a pay-as-you-go phone with a balance of 1 euro and if you make no calls but receive calls all the time, three months later your balance is still 1 euro.
In Europe the philosophy seems to be that whoever makes the phone call pays for it and mobile phones have different prefixes so the caller knows he is making a call to a mobile phone and will pay for it.
In America the philosophy seems to be that the user has a cell phone for his own convenience and pays for that convenience himself and the cell phones have the same local area codes so the caller does not know he is calling a cell phone.
So to make sure I understand, if I use my home phone to call a cell phone, I’m charged extra for the call? (“Extra” as in, more than it would have been had I been calling another land line.)
What about cell to cell calls? If I use my cell phone to call a cell phone, do I pay extra, above what I would have paid if I had used the cell phone to call a land line?
-FrL-
BTW I use a “pay as you go” plan and to my recollection all the plans I looked at when shopping around required payment for both incoming and outgoing minutes. So payment for incoming cell calls definitely happens.
Because historically in the US almost everybody had land line phones with unlimited local calls. When cell phones first came out people were upset that they had to pay extra for calls to local cell phones. There is no easy way in the US to tell if a number is a land line or a cell phone. So the decision was made to make the owner of the cell phone pay for the air time.
I would like to know the answer to this as well. Quick googeling did not yield an answer.
A quick googeling make it seem that this is a lot like the US. It depends on the cell phone plan. It look like there is a lot of free in network calling in Europe just like there is in the US.