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Friday, July 25, 2014

Registering for the UK Telephone Preference Service cuts unwanted phone calls by about a third, says Ofcom

New research published by UK communications regulator Ofcom shows that signing up to the Telephone Preference Service reduces the number of unsolicited ‘live’ marketing or sales calls by around a third.

The TPS is a free service that enables consumers to opt out of receiving unsolicited sales or marketing calls on their fixed-line or mobile phone numbers. Organisations are legally required to ensure they don’t call numbers registered on the TPS unless they have the consumer’s consent to contact them.

However, some companies break these rules - and it’s often particularly difficult to enforce the law when rogue companies are based outside the UK.

Ofcom and the Information Commissioner’s Office commissioned a study to measure how effective the TPS is. It discovered that registering with the TPS reduced the average volume of live sales or marketing calls per month by 31%. In total, 45% of those registered with the TPS said they didn’t receive any live sales calls at all, compared to just 26% of those who hadn’t registered.

The study also found that registering reduced the total volume of all types of nuisance calls, including silent calls, abandoned calls and recorded marketing messages, even though these aren’t covered by the TPS. Registering with the TPS resulted in a 35% fall in the number of all nuisance calls received per month.

Claudio Pollack, Ofcom’s Consumer Group Director, said “It’s encouraging that people who register with the Telephone Preference Service see a significant reduction in nuisance calls. But we understand how frustrating it is to still receive some unsolicited sales calls despite being TPS-registered. That’s why we welcome tough enforcement action from the ICO against rogue companies who breach the rules as part of regulators’ joint work to help tackle nuisance calls.”

Ofcom and the ICO are both part of a taskforce that’s looking at the rules on marketing consent and whether these are working in the best interest of consumers.

[Ofcom report]

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Opinion Articles

Heroes of Emerging Markets: the podcast

Heroes of Emerging Markets is an interactive, intimate panel discussion that looks at the opportunities of doing mobile business in emerging markets.  The event took place on 28th February 2012 during Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

We’ve recorded the entire event and have turned it into a podcast. You can listen on our desktop web site here, by downloading the MP3 audio file or by finding TheFonecast.com on iTunes.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 12th March 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

It’s all gone a bit quiet. Is it the calm after the Mobile World Congress storm... or is it the knowledge that an Apple announcement will push anything else out of the headlines, even before the product itself has been revealed?

Either way, the last seven days have had significantly fewer news stories than the beginning of the month. But that’s not to say they’ve been completely news-free.

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Hacking a smartphone by using differential power analysis

Mark Bridge writes:

Mobile security always seems to be on the agenda – but one of the companies demonstrating its services at Mobile World Congress 2012 had a particularly stark warning.

Cryptography Research was demonstrating what’s called differential power analysis or side-channel analysis, which can be used to reveal encrypted information from a smartphone or tablet without ever needing to get hold of the device.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 5th March 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

Mobile World Congress is over for another year. Also gone is the mobile industry’s sudden obsession with public transport and student protests in Barcelona. But away from the local news, what’s been going on?

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Windows 8 – 2012’s Biggest Mobile Milestone

James Rosewell writes:

Microsoft’s Windows 8 announcement today is as significant to the mobile industry as Apple’s iPad launch 2 years ago. Windows 8 will work on tablets, ultra books, desktops, laptops and 82” big screens. Not only that but it’ll support touch on all these devices.

“We're in a world where tablets are about touch, and PCs are about keyboard. We're changing those assumptions” Steven Sinofsky President, Windows and Windows Live Division says.

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