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John Rumm John Rumm is offline
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Default Nuisance caller attempts increasing again

On 22/03/2019 23:41, Scott wrote:
On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 22:43:50 +0000, John Rumm
wrote:

On 22/03/2019 15:06, Mark wrote:
On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 10:55:07 +0000, John Rumm
wrote:

On 21/03/2019 17:21, Steve Walker wrote:
On 21/03/2019 16:44, Scott wrote:
On Thu, 21 Mar 2019 16:26:52 +0000, Mark
wrote:

On Thu, 21 Mar 2019 16:07:42 +0000, "dennis@home"
wrote:

On 21/03/2019 13:49, Mark wrote:
On Thu, 21 Mar 2019 13:08:38 +0000, Steve Walker
wrote:

On 21/03/2019 08:19, Brian Gaff wrote:
I've noticed a gradual rise to mobile numbers as well over say,
the last
month or so.
Â*Â*Â* some are not spoofed but genuine chancers trying to sell
stuff, usually
some financial service or crap junk from China.

At least some do have an opt outÂ* number to hit, and having
checked this
against charges, it seems to be legitimate and worked.

Those opt-outs should be changed to opt-ins - it's very hard to
opt-out
when you've picked up the landline on an only slightly updated, 80
year
old, rotary dial phone!

IIRC the law says that it must be "opt-in" not "opt-out".


UK law doesn't apply to other countries so they can still phone you.

UK law should apply to companies that do business in the UK.

Depends what you mean by 'do business'.Â* If they have a branch or
office in the UK, I agree with you but if they are based abroad and
phoning UK numbers, I don't see how that would work.Â* You can't get
somebody extradited for an alleged crime that took place outside the
jurisdiction.Â* By that logic, if someone used a clone of my credit
card in Hong Kong, they could be brought to court and prosecuted in
the UK.Â* How would that work?Â* Extraordinary rendition?

How many nuisance calls have you received where the services or goods
being offered are being advertised for a company that does not have a UK
presence? I've not had one. They have all been for double glazing, new
boilers, new kitchens, accident compensation, etc., where there is a
clear UK presence that is simply using overseas call centres to get
around the UK laws.

Registering with the telephone preference service will knock out the
majority of legit uk based cold callers.

I don't believe there are any "legit" UK based cold callers.


If you have not registered on the TPS then any UK firm is free to call
you, or indeed a random phone number if its unregistered.

Depends how they obtained your number. If you supplied the number and
did not consent to marketing calls (that means opt-in) this would be a
breach of the GDPR.


GDPR is a relatively new kid on the block. Again scammers are unlikely
to care.

(note also that consent is only one of several justifications for
"processing" personal data, so the fact that you have not consented, doe
not make the act necessarily a GDPR fail).

If company A sold your number to company B
without your consent, this would be a breach of the GDPR. Granted, if
your number is in the public directory there is nothing to stop them
calling you.




--
Cheers,

John.

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