Charade
<font color=royalblue>I'm the one on the LEFT side
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- Jan 2, 2005
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http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=consumer&id=5136218
If your wireless carrier isn't making money off the phone number you're calling it might just lock that number out of your system. AT&T Cingular has started blocking certain phone numbers that the company says are costing it millions of dollars in losses and consumer advocates say this is already creating a ripple effect.
Mary Lou Perry has been using a free conference call service to talk to her Mary Kay Cosmetics colleagues everyday. But six days ago, her wireless provider, Cingular, started blocking her from dialing into the conference call in number.
"I'm absolutely outraged, that they can ban specific numbers from our lines," Perry said.
Cingular, which has now merged with AT&T, is in a billing dispute with companies that offer consumers free conference call services.
Cingular told Action News that this is not about consumer rights; it's about the economic self-interest of the companies that provide free conference call services, that Cingular ends up paying access charges when customers call in the end could hinder Cingular's ability to offer customer services at fair prices. Cingular's terms of service are explicit in calling one person to another and not a group situation.
"That's the case they should work it out through the courts or federal regulators and not tie consumers out of using a completely legitimate and legal service," said Beth McConnell of PennPIRG.
The Pennsylvania public interest research group believes what AT&T Cingular is doing is illegal. PennPIRG also said the company is setting a dangerous precedent.
"If Cingular can block phone calls through free conference call services what's next? Are they going to start blocking phone calls to their rivals say to Sprint because you're interested in changing your service? What's next on the Internet they deliver lines to our homes are they going to start blocking websites of consumer groups that criticize their practices?" McConnell said.
PennPIRG says wireless carriers Sprint and Qwest have also started blocking free conference call numbers. Qwest says it has the right to refuse delivery of certain calls to certain companies that Qwest believes is using the network illegally.

