Federal Trade Commission to ban unsolicited “robocalls”
Many of those annoying prerecorded telemarketing calls will be history starting Sept. 1, thanks to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
The FTC said Thursday that it is banning “robocalls” to consumers, unless the telemarketer has written permission from a customer that he or she wants to receive these calls.
FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz said American consumers have made it “crystal clear that few things annoy them more than the billions of commercial telemarketing robocalls they receive every year.”
Violators will face penalties of up to $16,000 per call.
The ban is part of the amendments to the FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule unveiled a year ago.
There are a number of exceptions, however. Calls that are not trying to sell goods and services to consumers will be exempt, such as those that provide information like flight cancellations and delivery notices and those from debt collectors. Other calls not covered by the Telemarketing Sales Rule include those from politicians, charities that contact consumers directly, banks, insurers, phone companies, survey calls and certain health-care messages such as prescription notifications. These don’t fall under the jurisdiction of the FTC, a commission spokesman said.
Before the ban, consumers had to specifically join a do-not-call list to avoid prerecorded telemarketing calls. But after Sept. 1, consumers shouldn’t get most of these calls anymore. If they do get one, they can file a complaint with the commission online through FTC.gov or by calling 1-877-FTC-HELP.
Bob Brammer, a spokesman for the Iowa attorney general’s office, said the AG’s office continues to receive numerous complaints from residents about robocalls, which it refers to the FTC.
“Prohibiting robocalls more thoroughly in the first place and not just depending on Do Not Call (rules) can be very good,” Brammer said. “The calls that we’ve been getting indicate that (telemarketers) have just been flouting the Do Not Call rules.”