How to Stop Those Annoying Telemarketing Calls -- FTC Saves the Day (and Night!)

Everyone, especially older adults, is victim to the random telemarketer calls that seem impossible to get rid of... until now.

Effective December 1, any telemarketing call that delivers a prerecorded message must include a quick and easy way to opt-out of receiving future calls. The opt-out must work both for consumers who answer these calls in person and for those whose answering machines or voicemail services receive the calls.

Prerecorded telemarketing messages are permitted only in limited circumstances – only when the caller has an established business relationship with the consumer being called. Now, additional restrictions on prerecorded messages are going into effect. Under Do Not Call amendments adopted in August, effective today, any permitted prerecorded message must provide the called consumer with an interactive means to opt out of receiving future calls from the seller or fundraiser using the prerecorded message. Moreover, the consumer must be able to opt out at any time while the message is playing by pressing a particular number or speaking a particular word. Once the consumer has opted out, his or her phone number must be automatically added to the in-house Do Not Call list of the calling seller or fundraiser. Then the call immediately must be disconnected so that the consumer’s line is cleared.

If the prerecorded telemarketing message is left on an answering machine or voicemail service, it must include a toll-free opt-out number that, when called, also connects to an automated voice or keypress opt-out mechanism. This will allow consumers to opt out at any hour of the day or night when they retrieve the message, without having to wait until the next business day to call.

All recorded telemarketing calls subject to the Commission’s Telemarketing Sales Rule (TSR) must comply with the new requirements, including calls to solicit sales of goods or services and calls placed by telemarketers to solicit charitable donations. Some calls delivering prerecorded messages (such as political calls, bona fide market survey calls, and calls made in-house by banks or telephone companies) are not covered by the new requirement, however, because the Commission lacks the legal authority to regulate them. In addition, prerecorded healthcare messages covered by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) are exempt from the new requirement.

The automated opt-out requirement is the first of two measures provided by the recent TSR amendment to protect consumers’ privacy at home. The second measure prohibits telemarketing calls that deliver prerecorded messages to anyone who has not agreed in advance to receive such calls. But until September 1, 2009, sellers may continue to use prerecorded messages in calling consumers with whom they have an established business relationship. After that date, sellers may use prerecorded messages only in calls to consumers who have expressly agreed in advance to receive them.

Copies of the prerecorded call amendments to the TSR are available from the FTC's Web site at http://www.ftc.gov and also from the FTC's Consumer Response Center, Room 130, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20580. The Federal Trade Commission works for consumers to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices and to provide information to help spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint in English or Spanish, visit the FTC's online Complaint Assistant at www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov or call 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357). The FTC enters complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to more than 1,500 civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. The FTC's Web site provides free information on a variety of consumer topics.

Source:  Federal Trade Commission  http://www.ftc.gov


Comments (4)

ctballance
Said this on 1-11-2009 At 08:39 pm
This does not help. Political, banking, (phoney) market surveys?

"Some calls delivering prerecorded messages (such as political calls, bona fide market survey calls, and calls made in-house by banks or telephone companies) are not covered by the new requirement..."
Said this on 1-13-2009 At 09:06 am
An inquiry to the FTC prompted the below response to the above comment... "He’s right. Only telemarketing calls are covered by the new rule changes. Calls that are not covered by the TSR or the Do Not Call Registry – including political calls and surveys are not covered by this requirement either. The FTC does not have authority over banking calls – that would be the FCC – but if telemarketers are calling and pretending to be taking a survey and then launching into a sales pitch, that would be illegal and the Commission can bring an enforcement action against them. If you feel that you’re getting calls that you should not be, because you’re number is on the DNC Registry, file a complaint with the Commission. The more complaints we get about any particular bad actor, the more likely it is we will bring an enforcement action.

Hope this helps. And now that election season is over, he also should start getting many fewer pre-recorded political calls."
Said this on 2-17-2009 At 02:50 am
I RATE THIS ARTICLE VERY GOOD.
frustrated
Said this on 7-25-2009 At 01:06 pm
I was hoping, just as the Do Not Call Registry has prevented soliciting calls from coming through, soliciting calls for charitable donations could be stopped from ringing through as well. I'm hit for these several calls each day!!! I give to the ones I recieve in the mail as I can. even this way, somehow, my name has been given out to so many, I just don't have the funds to give. Now it's becoming VERY annoying. I find myself not wanting to help out at all. Please find a way other than allowing the calls to come through first. If you did it for regular soliciting calls, can't you do the same for donation calls?
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