http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=528&e=5&cid=528&u=/ap/20030
226/ap_on_hi_te/telemarketer_tool

A telemarketing tool that penetrates home privacy defenses is upping the
ante in a technology battle between sales callers and consumers seeking
shelter from unsolicited calls.

Castel Inc., a maker of automated dialing technology, boasts that its
DirectQuest software is immune to the TeleZapper, a $40 gadget designed to
thwart sales calls by faking the tones of a disconnected number.


Beverly, Mass.-based Castel has been mailing brochures to telemarketers and
other prospective customers touting the software, which also includes a
feature that lets salesmen transmit any phone number or text message to
residents' caller ID displays.


That second component allows DirectQuest to dodge such phone company privacy
services as SBC's Privacy Manager and Sprint's Privacy ID, both of which
reject calls that don't provide caller ID information.


Castel's software is built for the high-volume "predictive dialers" that use
multiple lines to phone residential numbers and connect salesmen to people
who answer.


"It's a privacy arms race," said Robert Bulmash of the privacy group Private
Citizen, based in Naperville, Ill. "The industry is crowing that 'We don't
want to call people that don't want to be called,' and at the same time it's
calling them."


Consumer privacy devices will increasingly lose effectiveness as
telemarketing firms switch to the new dialing technology - which costs
roughly $2,700 per calling operator, said Bulmash.


Royal Electronics Inc., which manufactures the TeleZapper, says millions of
them have been sold. The device is designed to trick predictive dialers into
dropping the call by playing the three shrill tones of a disconnected
number.


The privacy services sold by phone companies target another weakness of the
predictive dialer - their inability to transmit caller ID.


Castel chief executive Geoff Burr labels as "unsophisticated" dialers that
succumb to privacy devices. "Serious professional operations don't use that
equipment - or they won't be for long," he said.


Burr said DirectQuest is not aimed at bothering consumers, but the
opposite - making sales calls less intrusive. By providing the identity of
the company on behalf of which the telemarketer is calling, DirectQuest
gives people the option not to take the call.


The software also helps telemarketers mind federal guidelines that require
accurate and descriptive caller IDs, said Burr.


"If you're an operator that calls on behalf of MasterCard, you're supposed
to put out 'MasterCard' and a number that gets to MasterCard," he said.


Instead of listening for sounds that identify the status of a phone line,
DirectQuest learns the line's condition by reading signals from phone
company computers, said Walter Elicker, Castel's marketing director.


Elicker said privacy gadgets don't just thwart telemarketers but also bill
collectors who use predictive dialers. "Collections people want to make damn
certain they're not fooled by these kinds of devices," he said.


A more effective means of blocking sales calls lies with the emerging
federal Do Not Call list as well as similar lists kept by some two dozen
U.S. states, Burr said.


The Federal Trade Commission has said its Do Not Call list will begin
collecting names this summer and be in operation by the fall. Telemarketers
who phone listed numbers can be fined up to $11,000 for each violation.





Effectiveness of Do Not Call lists, at least for now, is a pipe dream,
Bulmash said. The FTC doesn't regulate telemarketing-heavy industries like
long-distance phone companies, banks, airlines and insurance companies.

State lists, too, often make exemptions for funeral homes and car dealers.
No agency can prevent phone calls by political campaigns, charities and
surveyors.

Predictive dialers fueled huge growth in the telemarketing.

A Federal Communications Commission (news - web sites) memo says
telemarketers attempt 104 million calls a day to U.S. businesses and
consumers. Sales revenue rose from about $435 billion in 1990 to around $660
billion in 2001.

Telemarketing advocates fear Do Not Call lists could devastate those
revenues and the jobs that depend on them.

An article in the February issue of Customer [EMAIL PROTECTED] Solutions, a
telemarketing industry magazine, said FTC restrictions could eliminate three
million jobs.

The article estimated that the top 75 U.S. telemarketing firms paid for 13.2
billion minutes of long-distance phone service last year. At 4 cents a
minute, that amounts to $528 million in telecommunications revenue.



xponent
Owns A Now Useless Telezapper Maru
rob
Ours entrace we surely carry on
And change the passing of the sun
We don't even need to try we are one
And I do think very well
As the truth unfolds you
Silently



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