Telco regulator to give ICSTIS teeth

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Ofcom is to beef up the powers and penalties of the consumer watchdog for premium rate phone lines and make telcos more responsible for protecting consumers from rip-offs.

The regulator wants an increase in the £100,000 limit for fines that the Independent Committee for the Supervision of Standards of Telephone Information Services (ICSTIS) watchdog can levy.

And Ofcom wants telcos to hang on to consumers' cash for 30 days before handing it over to service providers. In the case of disputes, the telcos will be obliged to hang on to the cash for 90 days. They will also be obliged to make more checks on companies offering premium services.

An ICTIS spokesman said: "We estimate that we will get 80,000 complaints about premium rate services this year and that is clearly unacceptable. We welcome the recommendations that Ofcom has made as the result of its review.

"We want to see the industry flourish and stop consumers being ripped off. You can make money very quickly and this has attracted some scams."

But getting the teeth to the watchdog will be a complicated series of procedures. ICSTIS will be consulting with Ofcom and the Department for Trade and Industry about making the changes to its code of practice. When these changes are agreed they will have to be submitted to the EU for a statutory three-month consultation period.

ICSTIS hopes to be ready to submit its new code to Brussels by the middle of next year and the the spokesman said: "We hope to get the new powers quickly, rather than slowly, so we can start cracking down."

ICSTIS says that the premium-rate line business is a £1bn-a-year industry.

Talkback

The sooner ICSTIS gets some teeth the better, but it needs the stomach to use them and kick some butt when these scammers screw people out of money.

Give ICSTIS the powers they need to force scam companies to pay ripped off customers back, even if it does drive the company concerned out of business.

Then unscrupulous companies will soon start taking notice.

via Facebook 9 December, 2004 16:11
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