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New Rules to Protect UK Consumers from Silent Calls

March 2 2006

UK regulator Ofcom has announced the implementation of new measures designed to strengthen consumer protection from silent telephone calls. Most such calls are not generated with malicious intent but occur when call centres using automated calling systems generate more calls than their available agents can deal with.

When the person called answers the telephone, there is no agent available, resulting in silence on the line. After a public consultation announced in October 2005, Ofcom is now introducing a new policy on persistent misuse to be implemented with immediate effect.

Ofcom's policy aims significantly to reduce the total number of calls abandoned by call centres and to ensure that consumers can clearly identify the source of any abandoned call that they receive.

The new rules include three key requirements:

  1. Abandoned call rates must be below 3% of all calls made in any 24 hour period for each campaign. An Ofcom investigation into silent calls last year found that some call centres' abandoned call rates can be significantly higher than the 5% maximum required by existing voluntary industry codes. Ofcom believes that setting an enforceable 3% limit will significantly reduce the volume of abandoned calls, while allowing the legitimate and responsible use of automated calling systems;
  2. All abandoned calls must carry a short recorded information message identifying the source of the call; and
  3. Calling line identification (CLI) must be included on all outbound calls generated by automated calling systems. CLI allows people to dial 1471 and access the telephone number of the person or organisation calling them.
Ofcom will take action to enforce the new rules where appropriate, including investigation of UK-based organisations using offshore call centres found to be in breach of specific requirements. Organisations are required to keep records for a minimum of six months to demonstrate their compliance. Ofcom plans to review the policy after 12 months to assess whether further changes are necessary.

According to Ofcom Chief Executive Stephen Carter, 'There is a clear case for action here. We now have powers which will enable us to act effectively against silent calls.'

Ofcom is the independent regulator and competition authority for the UK communications industries and can be found online at www.ofcom.org.uk


All articles 2006-23 written and edited by Mel Crowther and/or Nick Thomas, 2024- by Nick Thomas, unless otherwise stated.

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