Confirm or debunk: Telemarketers calling our cell phones on our dime

This email is floating thru out system at work at present. I’ve been unable to confirm or debunk it, as I’ve had to deal with actual patient care instead of searching. So I ask my fellow dopers for help. True? Not?

Thanks in advance for your help.

Snopes is all over it.

googling it gives 2 results (which do indicate that it is what you say it is). Calling it gives me a busy tone.

Thanks, friedo. I’ll inform the PTB to get this scurrious rumor out of our system.

Not exactly on topic, but I did get a text message the other day offering me a FREE (their capitalization) ringtone. Since I’m on a prepaid plan the message cost me $1.05. The dollar is the daily usage fee and the nickel is the message fee. I haven’t had time to track down the spammer and complain, though.

I actually got my first piece of text spam about two weeks ago–it was one of those stupid penny stock “tips.” Luckily, it was only one, but any more and I’m really going to get pissed in a hurry.

From the horse’s mouth: National Do Not Call Registry

Not sure if it might be differant in your area, but here you can’t get charged for the spam message, you have to reply to the spam message and then you’re ‘subscribed’. Costs then vary from 50p to £2.50 per message, coming through at a rate of one to four per week, in my experience.

This has resulted in some ingenious ways to get people to reply, far beyond the usual offers and advertising. The best one I saw was a message that said

“Thanks you for subsribing. You will automatically be charged £1.50 per week for our service, text back to unsubscribe” or something to that effect.

Of course everyone who replied was then in my shop asking who these bastards were for a week and a half. Entertaining sometimes but when you’ve got an upset eight year old who’s lost the last of her pocket money thanks to some ruthless spam-heads, I don’t laugh so much.

I’ve had a couple of telemarketer calls on my cell phone recently where the caller wouldn’t stop talking when I tried to say something, just kept talking over me at a rapid pace.
Is this some kind of weird scam? I don’t see how it could possibly benefit them to call me up and then make it impossible for me to interact with them. The only possible reason would be to use up my cell minutes??
Or maybe it’s just a telemarketer who really, truly believes that her entire purpose as a telemarketer is to annoy, not to sell anything.

I have a business cell, but I registered it on the do-not-call list anyway. But what takes precedence legally anyway? Is the fact that I’m on a cell – even a business cell – enough to prevent spam calls? I’ve never gotten any yet, by the way.