The Food Blog for Hungry Bachelors
Powered by MaxBlogPress  

I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geograhy, natural history, naval architecture, navigation, commerce, and agriculture, in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, music architecture, statuary, tapestry, and porcelain.
- John Adams

filipino-voices
Your ad here

« The 2008 Philippine rice crisis?
» (Is there a) Deal or no deal?

Society in General

For a do-not-call law

04.11.08 | 2 Comments


If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

We really need a do-not-call law here in the Philippines.

This do-not-call law covers unsolicited commercial phone calls, text messages, and email messages on personal or work phones, mobile phones, or email addresses. There shall be a national database of phone numbers and email addresses, to be maintained by the Department of Trade, and accessible by businesses so that they will not call, text, or email the said numbers and addresses.

The telecommunications carriers shall be required to issue phones with caller ID capabilities (and if possible, recording capabilities as well). This is to make sure that call recipients can take note of calls, specially when the call is unsolicited and commercial in nature.

Unsolicited calls/text/email refer to calls made by an entity to a person to offer loans, credit cards, jobs, or other promotions that are not sought for by that person; asking for donations and other forms of charity are also included. Calls made for verification purposes (like for valid credit card and loan applications) are considered solicited and as such should not be covered by this proposed law.

Heaven knows how many man-minutes, electricity charges, and bandwidth are wasted by these unsolicited calls. They can also be annoying. Aside from that, these unsolicited calls are violations of privacy.

And oh, selling databases of contact details should be outlawed, too - violation of privacy.

I had a post about my annoyance with these unsolicited calls. Have you received unsolicited calls before? Do you think we should have a do-not-call law?

Like my article? Leave a tip! Or, treat me to a cup of coffee!
Tags:

Visit the AWBHoldings.com Online Store!


RSS feed | Trackback URI

2 Comments »

Comment by jhay
Comment Permalink: 2008-04-15 21:01:02
Using Mozilla Firefox Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.13 on Windows Windows XP

I wonder how it will be implemented?

I also received an unsolicited phone call from a well known insurance company. They said that I won an accident insurance plan for free as part of their anniversary celebrations.

Well and good. But as far as I can remember, I haven’t heard any shred of information about their insurance giveaways nor have I actively joined any contest or procedure for me to be eligible for winning their price.

Troublesome indeed.

jhay’s last blog post..Problems with Globe 3G/GPRS & MMS

Comment by Arbet
Comment Permalink: 2008-04-16 09:26:02
Using Mozilla Firefox Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.13 on Windows Windows XP

A government agency will maintain a register of contact information that businesses cannot contact without permission.

 
 
Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Subscribe to comments via email
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.

Comments will be sent to the moderation queue.


« The 2008 Philippine rice crisis?
» (Is there a) Deal or no deal?