We seem to be getting 4 or 5 telemarketing calls a day that are recordings. They’re selling satellites, mortgages, and debt reduction. Our number is on the national Do Not Call list (I checked), and has been for some time.
It seems they’re using pre-recorded messages to get around having a person on the line that you can ask for their company name, to put you on the do not call list, etc.
Is anyone else getting a lot of these recorded telemarketing calls in the last few weeks?
Yes, we have been getting tons of calls from two particular phone numbers, from “Tracy” and “Dorothy” at “The mortgage company”. Over and over and over, obvious wardialling, of our business lines, emergency “must-answer” phones and cell phones.
I have been keeping logs of the calls and sending them to the FCC, which responded that such calls to a business are not in violation of the TCPA (if they were doing this to a home number it’d be numerous violations of federal law), FCc said “Contact the FTC” which I have done, waiting to hear back from them.
Having dealt with this sort of problem before I can say that you have to be very persistent, follow all the rules for documenting things, and keep following up with the agency in question in order to get some action.
My phone company (Verizon) offers call blocking, where I can block all calls without caller ID identification, or I can block specific numbers. It costs about $5 a month, but the peace and quiet at dinner time is worth it.
Yeah, what’s really funny is when one of those telemarketers calls and gets my answering machine. A recorded message travels from one machine to another machine, without any human interaction until I hit the “Delete” button.
But yeah, the repeated recorded calls from some smarmy sounding guy who has a VERY important matter to talk to us about (but not so important, mind you, for him to call us himself).
For the repetitive calls (like the one identical recorded message I got 5 times in one evening), you would have the number after the first time, in theory.
That said, a lot of the time, the caller ID doesn’t spit anything out, instead saying “Incomplete Data”
The only problem with this is if someone you want to allow to contact you, for whatever reason, is not caller ID-enabled. (blocked number, calling from a payphone etc.)
Here in Indiana, our state Attorney General is in the news because his policy of banning unsolicited automated political calls is the subject of a lawsuit from a Virginia company which paints itself as a valiant defender of free speech. :rolleyes: