POLALA.COM
welcome to my space
X
Article search:  
Welcome to:polala.com
NAVIGATION: Home >>
Consumers Flocking to Do-Not-Call Site
Published by: mike 2008-07-24

Consumer interest in the Federal Trade Commission's Do-Not-Call Registry remains high with more than 10 million Americans signing up for the service began on Friday. The vast majority (85 percent) has used the FTC's online site, donotcall.gov, to list their telephone numbers in the registry.

InternetNews Realtime IT News - Do Not Call List Sparks Call for ::
than 8 in 10 respondents want to see government create Do Not Spam registry. Consumers flocking to the Federal Trade Commissions (FTC) new DoNotCall.gov
http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/2229621
HOME
The new government site allows consumers to list their numbers with the FTC in order to block telemarketers from calling them at home. Calls from charities, political organizations and surveys are not covered by the FTC's telemarketing blocking.

Chuck Newton: The Home Office::
Call and email these attorneys at times when you do not need anything. About 19% of online consumers used public WiFi in 2007, according to Jupiter
http://stayviolation.typepad.com/chucknewton/the_home_office/index.html
HOME
"Consumer response has been enthusiastic," said FTC Chairman Timothy J. Muris. "The highest sustained system access we've seen occurred Friday evening between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. EDT when an average of 158 telephone numbers were entered into the system per second."

Shopping at the Chaebol Cybermall (intl edition)::
Consumers are flocking to group-oriented retail sites Decidedly not. Call it Web shopping, Korean-style.
http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_12/b3673184.htm
HOME
On Friday, 7 million telephone numbers were logged into the system; Saturday the number slowed to 4.6 million; and Sunday the number was 2 million. FTC officials have said they expect 60 million households to sign up for the new service.

The FTC said late Monday more than three million consumers have sent a registration request to the online site but have not clicked on the response e-mail and confirmed their registration.

Under the new telemarketing blocking policy, telemarketers who call a consumer's home number on the list could be fined up to $11,000 per call. The government has also added a toll-free number for consumers to complain about any company that does call, after their name is established in the national call blocking registry.

If telemarketers harass consumers after these measures have been taken, then lawsuits could be filed by individual consumers and state attorneys general.




Pre-Article:Calif. Top Court Spurns Intel in Spam Case
Next-Article:Stocks Hit Holiday On Up Note

PRINT Add to favorites
#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info aboutConsumers Flocking to Do-Not-Call Site, Please add it free.
  • Globix Scores Bankruptcy Deal to Restructure Debt
  • Online Fraud Complaints Triple
  • Intransa Rakes In $25 Million, Targets SMBs
  • HP Can't Help Stocks
  • Dell Tumbles on Sales Downgrade
  • AMD Takes a Hit in Price Wars
  • More Called to Testify in HP Scandal
  • White House Leaks New Cyber Security Plan
  • Wave Systems Crests With IBM Deal
  • Stocks Plunge On Earnings, Economic Worries
  • Microsoft, Polycom Team on Conferencing
  • Technical Analysis: Watching Critical Levels
  • Surveys Show 'Surge' in IT Pay
  • Technical Analysis: Bulls Turn Cautious
  • AT&T Doubles China Reach
  • Korean Internet Users Top 19M in 2000
  • Analysts Bid Adieu to Baidu
  • Microsoft Takes Plug-and-Play to ITC
  • Digital Campaigning Underutilized
  • Transmeta Restructures, Swaps CEO
  • Ex-CA Chief Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison
  • Napster to Remain Offline, Court Says
  • Novellus Reports Tepid Growth
  • EMC Doubles Draw on Software Licenses
  • Shopping for Hospitals
  • Paetec, US LEC Sign $1.3B Merger
  • Webswappers.com Spots Gap in Gift Market
  • PayPal Settles Suits For $5.2M
  • HP Exceeds Expectations

  • Salesforce.com Hits Bump on Road to IPO
  • Yahoo! to MapQuest: Get Lost
  • Wireless Wednesday
  • Enron: A Wake-up Call for Records Management
  • Intel Steers Toward The Middle
  • AOL Beats Street Estimates
  • VZ Wireless Westward Expansion on Track
  • Wireless, DSL Drive Verizon Profit
  • Rate Cut Versus Earnings Warnings: Which Will Prevail?
  • Tax Credits For Cutting 'E-Waste'
  • Dell Helps ... A Little
  • Case Calls For Time Warner-AOL Split
  • Technical Analysis: Still Waiting On The Nasdaq
  • High Court Grants Hollywood's Christmas Wish
  • Yahoo Beats Estimates
  • House Approves DTV Bill
  • EMI Sues Bertelsmann in Latest Napster Backlash
  • KPN Mobile, NTT DoCoMo, TIM Launch European Mobile Internet Portal
  • Coming of Age at the Patent Office
  • IBM News Is A Snooze
  • On Eve of Decision, Global Crossing Still Selling
  • Producer Prices, Greenspan Speech Unnerve Investors
  • Wiretaps For VoIP
  • House Subpoenas Two HP Execs
  • Symantec Lands 3 Firms for $355M
  • Microsoft Resumes Lindows Fight
  • Microtune Vs. Broadcom Adds 'Antitrust' To Spat
  • 'Dude, You're Meeting Your Targets!'

  • About us -Site map -Advertisement -Jion us -Contact usExchange linksSponsor us
    Copyright© 2008 polala.com All Rights Reserved
    Site made&Support support@polala.com    E-mail: web@polala.com