So, a few nights ago, in an interesting lead-up to the long weekend, I received a nuisance phone call.
It was suitably pathetic, and I hung up as soon as I realised what it was, but it got me thinking about how a) having an unlisted phone number would be both awesome AND fantastic, and in fact, b) everyone should have a silent/unlisted number by default, and c) people should only have their phone number included in the White Pages if they requested it.
Sadly, I found this is not the case. Telstra charges you an extra fee (around $3 a month -- I know it's not much, but let's hold fast to our principles here) to keep your details private.
A man named Steven Atkins, who is now on my hero list next to Wolverine, MacGyver, and Sydney from Alias, was "so annoyed at having to pay for a silent line
he complained to four regulators, including the Australian
Communications and Media Authority and the Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission."*
Surprisingly, they all dismissed his complaint.
The Australian Privacy Foundation (APF) believed that Mr Atkins had a valid case, and that charging for unlisted numbers was in conflict with National Privacy Principle 8.
(To read the APF's findings on Mr Atkins's case, you can go to the APF web site and look for Charging for unlisted numbers (silent lines) under papers published in 2006, or click here to download and view the paper in a Rich Text Format. It will probably open in Word or your default text editor.)
The Consumers' Telecommunications Network also wrote to the federal Communications Minister saying that the silent number charge "penalised consumers who were unable to afford to protect their
privacy."*
The reply was that "the matter was
one for the phone companies and that no legislative changes were
being considered."*
So much for principles.
* Reference: Telstra rings up $30m a year in silent number fees, Sydney Morning Herald, January 21, 2007.