Your advert here!!!


Stop Press
Industry Comment
        Search

Our Guides
What is xxx? (FAQs)
Previous Mobile Insights
About Data Tags
About Mobile TV
About Push-to-Talk
Press Release archive
Free downloads
Our RSS/News Feed

About Dollargate
Free  weekly headlines
Editor/Publisher: Tony Dennis

Tone's Blog

Technical Editors:
Geoff Dennis

Jayker Shah

All enquiries:  Tel: +44 (0)7050 336647
Associated sites:






Last modified:
  30 Mar 2009
© DollarGate Publishing

eXTReMe Tracker

 

UK gov slammed over 0870 lines

Liberal Democrats have hit out at the government's continuing use of premium rate 0870 telephone numbers. Once again it proves that ICSTIS has no teeth.

Figures obtained by Liberal Democrat peer, Lord Tyler, show that the biggest offender is the DVLA (vehicle licensing body) which earned £3.7 million from information lines plus nearly £2 million from driving test inquiries.

The official telecoms watchdog, Ofcom, has claimed, "Government departments should follow the guidelines that were introduced after consultation following concern from the public."

The fact that government departments have ignored the guidelines shows yet again that the official telecoms enforcer, ICSTIS, has no real powers.

If calls are made to 0870 numbers from mobile phones, it can cost up to 40 pence a minute. Civil servants have obviously not got to grips with the fact that for many people, especially the young, a fixed telephone line is an unwanted luxury.

So the young can't call at supposedly discounted rates since even Freefone (0800) numbers attract charges for most mobile phone users.

It also makes the government look massively cynical. Examples of the general public having to fork out to hear 'public information' include lines set up after the London Bombings on July 7th and lines set up for relatives worried that their loved ones were killed by the tsunami.

By contrast, the TV companies which have cheated the public over calls made to quiz lines have done so mostly through sheer incompetence. The government's actions are, by contrast, deliberate.


The full Inquirer story ... UK government slammed over phoneline scam