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This time,
mobile phone users hope for real relief from pesky calls
Indo Asian News Services/ Sify.com, December 06, 2010
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Dheeraj Kumar, a
real esate broker here and frequent traveller,
finally hopes he will be spared from the unwanted
calls from tele-marketing firms and the hole they
burn in his wallet following new norms announced
by the telecom watchdog.
Experts also agree
that this time the penalty on errant companies
that can stretch up to Rs.250,000 will be a major
deterrent. But what worry them now are the
unregistered tele-marketing companies, even though
the new rules cover them as well.
'I can't skip calls
from unknown numbers. But by accepting these
unwanted calls all that I got were inflated bills.
This was particularly unfair when I was abroad.
You know how expensive international roaming is,'
Kumar said.
'I hope people now
get some respite,' Kumar told IANS speaking about
himself and also those among the nearly
690-million mobile phone subscribers who have been
bothered day-in and day-out by such calls.
The Telecom
Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) realised its
previous attempt to curb unsolicited calls had not
really worked and accordingly announced a set of
new measures. The salient features of the
regulations, to become effective from Jan 1, are:
-Defaulting firms
to pay fine of Rs.25,000 for first offence,
stretching to Rs.250,000; -Customers can choose to
block all calls or allow messages/calls under
seven categories: finance, realty, education,
health, consumer goods, entertainment and tourism;
-Telemarketeers to
be allocated numbers starting with '70' for easy
identification; -No communication allowed from 9
p.m. to 9 a.m.; -Customer registration to be
activated within seven days instead of 45 days;
and -Banks and insurance firms can only send
messages on transactions, no calls.
To address the
possible misuse by unregistered tele-marketers,
the telecom watchdog has also proposed that
individuals cannot get a package that permits more
than 100 SMSs per day. And those in existence have
to be withdrawn from Jan 1.
Experts like Mahesh
Uppal, director of consultancy ComFirst India,
feel the new norms have some limitations when it
comes to unregistered tele-marketing firms -- they
have been the bigger menace in the past and may
continue to be so.
'If I open a shop,
I can send bulk SMSs to 50 people to advertise my
shop. But it will be very difficult for the
operator to cancel my number just after a
complaint from an individual customer,' said Uppal.
But a top official
at the telecom watchdog said enough provisions are
there to deal with such issues. 'If found that
tele-marketing activities are being done by an
unregistered person, the phone can be cut and
penalty imposed after notice,' he said.
Pradeep S. Mehta,
secretary general of the non-profit rights
organisation Consumer Unity and Trust Society,
says the rules and regulations are comprehensive.
Much now matters on how they are implemented.
'These are all
welcome steps. The main concern is unregistered
tele-marketeers. Such promoters can have multiple
mobile numbers. It is, therefore, important to see
how the telecom watchdog deals with them,' Mehta
told IANS.
At the same time,
another set of stake-holders are also quite happy
with the new norms -- the service providers
themselves, as evident from the remarks of Sunil
Bharti Mittal, chairman of India's largest mobile
phone group, Bharti Airtel.
'Many a time we as
operators are unfairly blamed. These calls also
block our networks. I am really hoping with the
new recommendations, there will be an end to the
menace our customers have to go through.'
This news can also be viewed at:
http://sify.com/
http://www.newkerala.com/
http://www.punjabnewsline.com/,
http://khabar.ndtv.com/
http://www.mynews.in/
http://www.ummid.com/
http://www.ciol.com/
http://www.prokerala.com/
http://www.24dunia.com/
http://www.andhravilas.com/
http://www.in.com/
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