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DSC Tech Library
Predictive Dialer
This section of our technical library presents information and documentation relating to Predictive Dialers and Auto Dialer software and products.
The PACER and Wizard phone systems are PC based call center phone systems that are recognized as premier inbound and outbound computer telephony systems. Features such as automatic call distribution (ACD), interactive voice response (IVR) and call recording have added a new dimension to the predictive dialer and auto dialer capabilities of these systems. These computer based dialing systems can perform various types of auto dialing campaigns simultaneously. These types include Predictive Dialing, Progressive Dialing, Preview Dialing and Dial on Demand.
Complying with the Telemarketing Sales Rule
Introduction
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
issued the amended Telemarketing Sales Rule (TSR) on
January 29, 2003. Like the original TSR issued in 1995,
the amended Rule gives effect to the Telemarketing and
Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act. This legislation
gives the FTC and state attorneys general law enforcement
tools to combat telemarketing fraud, give consumers
added privacy protections and defenses against unscrupulous
telemarketers, and help consumers tell the difference
between fraudulent and legitimate telemarketing.
One significant amendment to the TSR
prohibits calling consumers who have put their phone
numbers on the National Do Not Call Registry. Another
change covers the solicitation of charitable contributions
by for-profit telemarketers.
Other key provisions:
- require disclosures of specific information
- prohibit misrepresentations
- limit when telemarketers may call consumers
- require transmission of Caller ID information
- prohibit abandoned outbound calls, subject to a
safe harbor
- prohibit unauthorized billing
- set payment restrictions for the sale of certain
goods and services
- require that specific business records be kept
for two years
The Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) enforces the Telephone Consumer Protection Act
(TCPA), which also regulates telemarketing. The FCC
recently amended its TCPA regulations, which touch on
many of the topics covered by the TSR. For more information
about the TCPA, contact the FCC at www.fcc.gov.
The TSR and the TCPA regulations cover nearly all telemarketing
with
similar rules.
Many states also have laws regulating
telemarketing. The FTC and the FCC are working with
states to harmonize Do Not Call requirements at state
and federal levels for a unified national system enabling
“one-stop” service for consumers, as well
as businesses seeking to comply with the requirements.
For information about a particular state’s laws,
contact the state attorney general’s office or
another state consumer protection agency.
If your telemarketing campaigns involve
any calls across state lines—whether you make
outbound calls or receive calls in response to advertising—
you may be subject to the TSR’s provisions. This
guide describes the types of organizations and activities
that are subject to the TSR and explains how to comply.
It is the FTC staff ’s view of the law’s
requirements and is not binding on the Commission.
If you have questions after
reading this guide, contact:
Division of Marketing Practices
Bureau of Consumer Protection
Federal Trade Commission
Washington, DC 20580
(202) 326-3737
The Amended
TSR at a Glance
Briefly stated, the amended TSR:
- supplements the company-specific Do Not Call provision
of the original Rule with new provisions based on
a National Do Not Call Registry.
- creates an “established business relationship”
exception to the National Do Not Call provisions so
that a company may call a consumer with whom it has
such a relationship, even if the consumer’s
number is on the Registry.
- allows a company to call a consumer who has given
the company express written permission to call, even
if the consumer’s number is on the Registry.
- prohibits denying or interfering with a consumer’s
Do Not Call request.
- prohibits misuse of Do Not Call lists.
- covers charitable solicitations placed by for-profit
telefunders. The National Do Not Call Registry provisions
do not apply to for-profit telefunders; rather, for-profit
telefunders must keep their own Do Not Call lists
and honor donors’ requests not to be called.
- requires sellers and telemarketers to obtain express
verifiable authorization when payment is made by methods
other than credit card or debit card, and limits the
use of the written confirmation method.
- requires sellers and telemarketers offering credit
card loss protection plans to disclose specific information.
- prohibits misrepresentations in the sale of credit
card loss protection plans.
- requires sellers and telemarketers making an offer
that involves a negative option feature to disclose
specific information.
- prohibits misrepresentations about negative options.
- specifies that all required disclosures be made
truthfully.
- requires additional disclosures for prize promotions.
- prohibits disclosing or receiving, for consideration,
unencrypted consumer account numbers.
- requires sellers and telemarketers to get a consumer’s
express informed consent before submitting the consumer’s
billing information for payment.
- sets out guidelines for what constitutes evidence
of express informed consent in transactions involving
“pre-acquired account information” and
“free-to-pay conversion” offers.
- requires telemarketers, for purposes of Caller
ID, to transmit the telephone number, and, when made
available by the telemarketer’s telephone company,
the telemarketer’s name.
- prohibits telemarketers from abandoning any outbound
telephone call, subject to a safe harbor.
- extends the applicability of most provisions of
the Rule to “upselling.”
- requires telemarketers and sellers to maintain
records of express informed consent and express agreement.
- narrows certain exemptions.
- clarifies that facsimile transmissions, electronic
mail, and similar methods of delivery are direct mail
for purposes of the direct mail exemption.
Charities
and For-Profit Telemarketers Calling on Their Behalf
The USA PATRIOT Act, passed in 2001,
brought charitable solicitations by for-profit telemarketers
within the scope of the TSR. As a result, most of the
TSR’s provisions now are applicable to “telefunders”—telemarketers
who solicit charitable contributions.
Telefunders are required to:
- make certain prompt disclosures in every outbound
call.
- get express verifiable authorization if accepting
payment by methods other than credit or debit card.
- maintain records for 24 months.
- comply with the entity-specific Do Not Call requirements,
but are exempt from the National Do Not Call Registry
provision.
Telefunders are prohibited from:
- making a false or misleading statement to induce
a charitable contribution.
- making any of several specific prohibited misrepresentations.
- engaging in credit card laundering.
- engaging in acts defined as abusive under the TSR,
such as calling before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m., disclosing
or receiving consumers’ unencrypted account
information, and denying or interfering with a consumer’s
right to be placed on a Do Not Call list.
Who Must
Comply with the Amended TSR?
The amended TSR regulates “telemarketing”—
defined in the Rule as “a plan, program, or campaign
. . . to induce the purchase of goods or services or
a charitable contribution” involving more than
one interstate telephone call. (The FCC regulates both
intrastate and interstate calling. More information
is available from www.fcc.gov)
With some important exceptions, any businesses or individuals
that take part in “telemarketing” must comply
with the Rule. This is true whether, as “telemarketers,”
they initiate or receive telephone calls to or from
consumers, or as “sellers,” they
provide, offer to provide, or arrange to provide goods
or services to consumers in exchange for payment. It
makes no difference whether a company makes or receives
calls using low-tech equipment or the newest technology—such
as voice response units (VRUs) and other automated systems.
Similarly, it makes no difference whether the calls
are made from outside the United States; so long as
they are made to consumers in the United States, those
making the calls, unless otherwise exempt, must comply
with the TSR’s provisions. If the calls are made
to induce the purchase of goods, services, or a charitable
contribution, the company is engaging in “telemarketing.”
Certain sections of the Rule apply
to individuals or companies other
than “sellers” or “telemarketers”
if these individuals or companies provide substantial
assistance or support to sellers or telemarketers. The
Rule also applies to individuals or companies that provide
telemarketers with unauthorized access to the credit
card system.
Exemptions
to the Amended TSR
Some types of businesses, individuals,
and activities are outside the FTC’s jurisdiction,
and therefore, not covered by the TSR. Certain calls
or callers are exempt from the Rule, too. Moreover,
some of the exemptions from the original Rule have been
narrowed in the Amended Rule. As a result, some calls
or callers may be completely exempt or they may be partially
exempt—that is, they may have to comply with some
of the Rule’s provisions. The following sections
explain the coverage of the Rule and the exemptions.
Be aware that the FCC also regulates telemarketing practices;
its jurisdiction extends to some entities and activities
that are not subject to regulation by the FTC. For more
information about the FCC’s rules, visit www.fcc.gov
Some Types of Businesses and Individuals
Some types of businesses are not
covered by the Rule even though they conduct telemarketing
campaigns that may involve some interstate telephone
calls to sell goods or services. These three types of
entities are not subject to the FTC’s jurisdiction,
and not covered by the Rule:
- banks, federal credit unions, and federal savings
and loans.
- common carriers—such as long-distance telephone
companies and airlines—when they are engaging
in common carrier activity.
- non-profit organizations—those entities that
are not organized to carry on business for their own,
or their members’, profit.
These types of entities are not covered
by the Rule because they are specifically exempt from
the FTC’s jurisdiction. Nevertheless, any other
individual or company that contracts with one of these
three types of entities to provide telemarketing services
must comply with the Rule.
Examples:
- A nonbank company that contracts with a bank to
provide telemarketing services on the bank’s
behalf is covered.
- A non-airline company that contracts with an airline
to provide telemarketing services on behalf of the
airline is covered.
- A company that is acting for profit is covered
by the Rule if it solicits charitable contributions
on behalf of a non-profit organization.
Keep in mind that a company soliciting
a charitable contribution is not required to comply
with the Rule’s National Do Not Call Registry
provisions.
Under the provisions of the Telemarketing
Act, a number of entities and individuals associated
with them that sell investments and are subject to the
jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission
or the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are not
covered by the Rule, even if they engage in a plan,
program, or campaign to sell through interstate telephone
calls.
These entities and individuals are covered by the FCC’s
telemarketing rules. For more information, visit www.fcc.gov.
Coverage of the Business of Insurance
Is Limited
The McCarran-Ferguson Act provides
that the FTC Act, and by extension, the TSR, are applicable
to the business of insurance to the extent that such
business is not regulated by state law. Whether the
McCarran-Ferguson exemption removes insurance-related
telemarketing from coverage of the TSR depends on the
extent to which state law regulates the telemarketing
at issue and whether
enforcement of the TSR would conflict with, and effectively
supersede, those state regulations. Unlike the jurisdictional
exemptions for banks and non-profit organizations, which
do not extend to third-party telemarketers making calls
on their behalf, in the case of the telemarketing of
insurance products and services, the TSR does not necessarily
apply simply because the campaign is conducted by a
third-party telemarketer.
Some Types of Calls
Some types of calls also
are not covered by the Rule, regardless of whether the
entity making or receiving the call is covered. These
include:
- unsolicited calls from consumers.
- calls placed by consumers in response to a catalog.
- business-to-business calls that do not involve
retail sales of nondurable office or cleaning supplies.
- calls made in response to general media advertising
(with some important exceptions).
- calls made in response to direct mail advertising
(with some important exceptions).
Exemptions
Explained
Unsolicited Calls from
Consumers
Any call from a consumer that is not placed in response
to a solicitation by the seller, charitable organization,
or telemarketer is exempt from coverage. Because the
consumer initiates the call without any inducement from
the seller or telemarketer, the call is not considered
part of a telemarketing plan, program, or campaign conducted
to sell goods or services or to induce a charitable
contribution. Some examples include calls to:
- make hotel, airline, car rental, or similar reservations.
- place carry-out or restaurant delivery orders.
- contact a department store or charity without prompting
from an advertisement or solicitation.
- obtain information or technical support.
Consumer calls in response
to a recorded message: Calls are not considered
“unsolicited” when placed by consumers in
response to a recorded message—whether left on
the consumer’s answering machine, or presented
when the consumer answers under the call abandonment
“safe harbor.”
Upsells: If a seller
or telemarketer “upsells” a consumer
during an unsolicited call initiated by the consumer,
the upsell is covered by the Rule.
Most Calls Made in Response
to a Catalog
Generally, the Rule does not apply to calls placed by
consumers in response to a mailed catalog if the catalog:
- contains a written description or illustration
of the goods or services offered for sale;
- includes the business address of the seller;
- includes multiple pages of written material or
illustrations;
- has been issued at least once a year; and
- the catalog seller doesn’t solicit consumers
by telephone, but only receives calls initiated by
consumers in response to the catalog, and during the
calls, only accepts orders without additional solicitation.
The catalog seller may provide the consumer with information
about—or attempt to sell the consumer—
other items in the same catalog that prompted the
consumer’s call or in a similar catalog.
If
a telemarketer offers goods or services that are
not in the catalog that prompted the consumer’s
call—or in a substantially similar catalog—the
sales transaction is covered by the Rule. Regardless
of the TSR’s application to a particular
sale, catalog merchandise sales also are covered
by the FTC’s Mail or Telephone Order Merchandise
Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 435). |
Business-to-Business Calls,
Unless They Involve the Sale of Nondurable Office or
Cleaning Supplies
Most phone calls between a telemarketer and a business
are exempt from the Rule. But business-to-business calls
to induce the retail sale of nondurable office or cleaning
supplies are covered. Examples of nondurable office
or cleaning supplies include paper, pencils, solvents,
copying machine toner, and ink—in short, anything
that, when used, is depleted, and must be replaced.
Such goods as software, computer disks, copiers, computers,
mops, and buckets are considered durable because they
can be used again.
Although sellers and telemarketers
involved in telemarketing sales to businesses of nondurable
office or cleaning supplies must comply with the Rule’s
requirements and prohibitions, the Rule specifically
exempts them from the recordkeeping requirements and
from the National Do Not Call Registry provisions. These
sellers and telemarketers do not have to create or keep
any particular records, or purge numbers on the National
Do Not Call Registry from their call lists to comply
with the Rule.
Most Calls Responding to
General Media Advertising
The Rule generally does not apply to consumer calls
made in response to general media advertising, including:
television commercials; infomercials; home shopping
programs; print advertisements in magazines, newspapers,
the Yellow Pages, or similar general directories; radio
ads; banner ads on the Internet; and other forms of
mass media advertising and solicitation. Nevertheless,
if a seller or telemarketer “upsells” a
consumer during a call initiated by the consumer, the
upsell is covered by the Rule. In addition,
the Rule does cover calls from consumers
in response to general media advertisements relating
to business opportunities not covered by the Franchise
Rule, credit card loss protection, credit repair, recovery
services, advance-fee loans, or
investment opportunities.
Some Calls Responding
to Direct Mail Advertising Are Exempt
Direct mail advertising includes, but is not limited
to, postcards, flyers, door hangers, brochures, “certificates,”
letters, email, facsimile transmissions, or similar
methods of delivery sent to someone urging a call to
a specified telephone number regarding an offer of some
sort. For purposes of the Rule, “direct mail”
is not limited to messages sent via conventional mail
delivery or private couriers. The exemption for calls
responding to direct mail advertising that meets the
Rule’s requirements is available both to telemarketers
soliciting sales of goods or services and to telefunders
soliciting charitable contributions.
Sales solicitations: Generally,
consumer calls in response to a direct mail solicitation
that clearly, conspicuously, and truthfully makes the
disclosures required by the Rule are exempt from the
Rule. These disclosures are: cost and quantity; material
restrictions, limitations or conditions; any “no-refund”
policy; and, if the offer includes a prize promotion,
credit card loss protection, or a negative option feature,
the information about any of those elements of the offer
required by the Rule. If you are a seller or telemarketer
who uses direct mail, you may use this exemption only
if your direct mail solicitation messages make the disclosures
required by Section 310.3(a)(1) of the Rule clearly,
conspicuously, and truthfully.
Charitable solicitations:
Consumer calls in response to direct mail messages that
solicit charitable contributions benefit from the limited
direct mail exemption, provided they contain no material
misrepresentation about the nature, purpose, or mission
of the entity on whose behalf the contribution is requested;
the tax deductibility of any contribution; the purpose
for which the contribution will be used; the percentage
or amount of the contribution that will go to a charitable
organization or program; any material aspect of a prize
promotion; or a charitable organization or telemarketer’s
affiliations, endorsements, or sponsorships.
The exemption is for sales calls elicited
by direct mail advertising that truthfully
provides a consumer with the specific information required
under the Rule. In the case of charitable solicitation
calls elicited by direct mail advertising, the exemption
applies to direct mail advertising that conscientiously
avoids the prohibited misrepresentations.
There is no exemption for calls responding
to any direct mail advertising that relates to credit
card loss protection, credit repair, recovery services,
advance-fee loans, investment opportunities, prize promotions,
or business opportunities other than those covered by
the Franchise Rule. This is regardless of whether the
advertisement makes the disclosures required by the
Rule and contains no misrepresentations.
Also, any instances of upselling following
an exempt transaction are covered by the Rule.
“Upselling”
is not exempt. Upselling occurs
when a seller or telemarketer tries to sell additional
goods or services during a single phone call,
after an initial transaction.
Upsell transactions are covered
by the TSR. Even if the initial
transaction is exempt because it is an unsolicited
call from a consumer, a response to a general
media advertisement or certain direct mail solicitations,
or an outbound non-sales call (say, a customer
service call), any upsell following the initial
transaction is subject to all relevant provisions
of the Rule.
Examples:
A consumer calls a department store to inquire
about the price of a microwave oven. Because
the call is not the result of a solicitation
by the seller, the initial inquiry is exempt
from the Rule. If the seller tries to upsell
a refrigerator during the same call, the upsell
transaction is subject to the Rule.
A consumer calls in response to an infomercial
advertising a home gym product for sale. If
the home gym product is the only item offered
during the call, the call is exempt. But if
the telemarketer offers a free-trial offer to
a cookbook series after the sales pitch for
the home gym, the cookbook offer constitutes
a separate transaction and is an upsell covered
by the TSR. If both the home gym product and
the cookbook series are prominently featured
in the general media advertisement, transactions
involving either or both products fall within
the general media exemption. But if the cookbook
is visible on the set of the infomercial, mentioned
only in passing, or mentioned as an afterthought,
pitching the cookbook during the a consumer’s
call about the home gym product is considered
an upsell and is not exempt from the Rule.
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Partial Exemptions
Some calls are exempt from most provisions
of the TSR, but not all. These include:
- calls relating to the sale of 900-Number pay-per-call
services.
- calls relating to the sale of franchises or certain
business opportunities.
- calls that are part of a transaction that involves
a face-to-face sales presentation.
Calls
Relating to the Sale of 900-Number Services
The sale of 900-Number pay-per-call
services, which is subject to the FTC’s 900-Number
Rule, is exempt from most provisions of the TSR. Still,
to comply with the TSR, sellers of pay-per-call services
must not:
- call any number on the National Do Not Call Registry
or on that seller’s Do Not Call list.
- deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
- call outside permissible calling hours.
- abandon calls.
- fail to transmit Caller ID information.
- threaten or intimidate a consumer or use obscene
language.
- cause any telephone to ring or engage a person
in conversation with the intent to annoy, abuse, or
harass the person called.
Partial coverage under the TSR does
not affect the obligation of sellers and providers of
900-Number Services to comply with the
900-Number Rule (16 C.F. R. Part 308).
Calls Relating
to the Sale of Franchises or Business Opportunities
Calls relating to the sale of franchises
or business opportunities that are covered by the FTC’s
Franchise Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 436) are exempt from
most provisions of the TSR. To comply with the TSR,
sellers and telemarketers selling franchise or business
opportunities subject to the Franchise Rule must not:
- call numbers that are on the National Do Not Call
Registry or on that seller’s Do Not Call list.
- deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
- call outside permissible calling hours.
- abandon calls.
- fail to transmit Caller ID information.
- threaten or intimidate a consumer or use obscene
language.
- cause any telephone to ring or engage a person
in conversation with the intent to annoy, abuse, or
harass the person called.
Partial coverage under the TSR does
not affect the obligation of franchisors to comply with
the Franchise Rule.
Calls
that are Part of a Transaction Involving a Face-to-Face
Sales Presentation
The TSR generally does not cover
telephone transactions where the sale of goods or services
or a charitable contribution is not completed until
after a face-to-face presentation by the seller or charitable
organization, and the consumer is not required to pay
or authorize payment until then. This exemption is for
transactions that begin with a face-to-face sales presentation
and are completed in a telephone call, as well as those
that begin with a telephone call and are completed in
a face-to-face sales presentation.
The key to the face-to-face exemption
is the direct and personal contact between the buyer
and seller. The goal of the Rule is to protect consumers
against deceptive or abusive practices that can arise
when a consumer has no direct contact with an invisible
and anonymous seller other than the telephone sales
call. A face-to-face meeting provides the consumer with
more information about—and direct contact with—
the seller, and helps limit potential problems the Rule
is designed to remedy.
Nevertheless, even in transactions
where there is a face-to-face meeting, telemarketers
must not:
- call numbers on the National Do Not Call Registry
or on that seller’s Do Not Call list.
- deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
- call outside permissible calling hours.
- abandon calls.
- fail to transmit Caller ID information.
- threaten or intimidate a consumer or use obscene
language.
- cause any telephone to ring or engage a person
in conversation with the intent to annoy, abuse, or
harass the person called.
If the transaction is completed in
a face-to-face meeting at the consumer’s home
or away from the seller’s place of business, the
seller must comply with the FTC’s Cooling Off
Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 429).
Requirements
for Sellers and Telemarketers
Sellers and Telemarketers Must
Disclose Material Information
The Rule requires sellers and telemarketers,
whether making outbound calls to consumers or receiving
inbound calls from consumers, to provide certain material
information before the consumer pays for the goods or
services that are the subject of the sales offer. Material
information is information that would likely affect
a person’s choice of goods or services or the
person’s decision to make a charitable contribution.
More simply, it is information a consumer needs to make
an informed decision about whether to purchase goods
or services or make a donation. Sellers and telemarketers
may provide the material information either orally or
in writing. Failure to provide any of the required information
truthfully and in a “clear and conspicuous”
manner, before the consumer pays for the goods or services
offered, is a deceptive telemarketing act or practice
that violates the Rule and subjects a seller or telemarketer
to a civil penalty of $11,000 for each violation.
When making outbound calls, a telemarketer
must promptly disclose certain types of information
to consumers orally in the sales presentation.
Before a Consumer
Pays: Before sellers and telemarketers
get a consumer’s consent to purchase—or
persuade a consumer to send full or partial payment
by check, money order, wire, cash, or any other
means —they must provide the consumer with
the information required by Section 310.3(a)(1)
of the Rule. Sellers and telemarketers also must
provide the required information before asking
for any credit card, bank account, or other information
that they will or could use to obtain payment.
In addition, sellers and telemarketers must provide
the required information before requesting, arranging
for, or asking a consumer to request or arrange
for a courier to pick up payment for the goods
or services offered. Couriers include Federal
Express, DHL, UPS, agents of the seller or telemarketer,
or any other person who will go to a consumer’s
home or other location to pick up payment for
the goods or services being offered.
When sellers and telemarketers have pre-acquired
account information, they must provide the required
disclosures before the customer provides express
informed consent. Pre-acquired account information
is any information that enables you to cause a
charge against a consumer’s account without
obtaining the account number directly from the
consumer during the transaction for which the
consumer will be charged.
Clear and Conspicuous: Clear
and conspicuous means that information is presented
in a way that a consumer will notice and understand.
The goal is that disclosures be communicated as
effectively as the sales message. When written,
clear and conspicuous information generally is
printed in a type size that a consumer can readily
see and understand; that has the same emphasis
and degree of contrast with the background as
the sales offer; and that is not buried on the
back or bottom, or in unrelated information that
a person wouldn’t think important enough
to read. When a seller or telemarketer makes required
disclosures in a written document that is sent
to a consumer and follows up with an outbound
sales call to the consumer, the disclosures are
considered clear and conspicuous only if they
are sent close enough in time to the call so that
the consumer associates the call with the written
disclosures.When disclosures are oral, clear and
conspicuous means at an understandable speed and
pace and in the same tone and volume as the sales
offer. |
What Information Must Sellers and Telemarketers Provide
to Consumers?
The law requires that when sellers
and telemarketers offer to sell goods or services, they
must provide the consumer with material
information about the offered goods or services necessary
to avoid misleading consumers. The term material
means likely to affect someone’s choice of goods
or services or decision to make a charitable contribution,
or someone’s conduct with regard to a purchase
or donation.
The Rule specifies six broad categories
of material information that sellers and telemarketers
must provide to consumers:
1. Cost
and Quantity
The Rule requires sellers and telemarketers
to disclose the total costs to purchase, receive, or
use the offered goods or services. While disclosing
the total number of installment payments and the amount
of each payment satisfies this requirement, the number
and amount of such payments must correlate to the billing
schedule that will be implemented. For example, the
Rule’s requirements would not be met if you were
to state the product’s cost per week if the consumer
has to pay installments on a monthly or quarterly basis.
The Rule also requires you to tell a consumer the total
quantity of goods the consumer must pay for and receive.
You must provide both these items of material information
to the consumer before the consumer pays for the goods
or services that are the subject of the sales offer.
You may provide this material information orally or
in writing, as long as the information is
clear and conspicuous.
Sometimes, though, the total cost
and quantity are not fixed when the initial transaction
takes place, but, instead, are determined over time.
For example, in a negative option plan,
like those offered by some record or book clubs, the
consumer may agree to purchase a specific number of
items over a specified time period. The consumer receives
periodic announcements of the selections; each announcement
describes the selection, which will be sent automatically
and billed to the consumer unless the consumer tells
the company not to send it. Similarly, a continuity
plan offers subscriptions to collections
of goods. During the course of the plan, the consumer
can choose to purchase some or all the items offered
in the collection. Consumers who agree to buy an introductory
selection also agree to receive additional selections
on a regular schedule until they cancel their subscription
to the plan.
Both negative option and continuity
plans are structured to provide consumers the opportunity
to purchase a series of products over time. The cost
of the plan as a whole is determined by the number and
type of items in the series the consumer decides to
accept, and at the time of the initial sales offer,
neither the seller nor the consumer necessarily knows
how much product the consumer will purchase, or the
total cost of the products.
To comply with the Rule, a seller
or telemarketer offering a negative option or a continuity
plan must disclose the total costs and quantity of goods
or services that are part of the initial offer; the
total quantity of additional goods or services that
a consumer must purchase over the duration of the plan;
and the cost, or range of costs, to purchase each additional
good or service separately. Some negative option plans
are subject to the FTC’s Negative Option Rule.
Cost and Quantity
Disclosure in the Marketing of Credit Products:
If sellers and telemarketers are offering credit
products subject to the Truth in Lending Act (TILA)
or Regulation Z, compliance with the credit disclosure
requirements and the timing of the disclosures mandated
by TILA or Regulation Z constitute compliance with
the total cost and quantity disclosure requirements
of the TSR with respect to the credit instrument.
Nevertheless, the cost and quantity of any goods
or services purchased with that credit also must
be disclosed. |
2. Material
Restrictions, Limitations, or Conditions
The Rule requires sellers and telemarketers
to disclose all material restrictions, limitations,
or conditions to purchase, receive, or use goods or
services that they are offering to the consumer. Material
information is information that a consumer needs to
make an informed purchasing decision. A material restriction,
limitation, or condition is one that, if known to the
consumer, would likely affect the decision to purchase
the goods or services offered; to purchase them at the
offered price; to purchase them from that particular
seller; or to make a charitable contribution. Examples
of material information that must be disclosed include:
- a requirement that a consumer pay for offered goods
or services by cashier’s check, money order,
or in cash.
- in the case of an offer of a credit card, a requirement
that a consumer make a deposit in order to receive
and use the card offered (that is, that the credit
card is a secured card).
- in the case of a vacation certificate, a restriction,
limitation, or condition that prevents a purchaser
from using the certificate during the summer; or that
requires a purchaser to make reservations a year in
advance to travel using the certificate; or that requires
the consumer to incur expenses beyond the price of
the certificate to redeem the certificate for a vacation.
- the underlying illegality of goods or services,
such as the illegality of foreign lottery chances.
Sellers and telemarketers may disclose
orally or in writing information about material restrictions,
limitations, or conditions to purchase, receive, or
use the goods or services being offered, as long as
the information is clear and conspicuous and disclosed
before the consumer pays.
3. No-Refund
Policy
If there’s a policy of honoring
requests for refunds, cancellations of sales or orders,
exchanges, or re-purchases, sellers and
telemarketers must disclose information about the policy
only if they make a statement about the policy during
the sales presentation. If the sales presentation includes
a statement about such a policy, it must also include
a clear and conspicuous disclosure of all terms and
conditions of the policy that are likely to affect a
consumer’s decision on whether to purchase the
goods or services offered.
If the seller’s policy is that
“all sales are final” — that
is, no refunds, cancellations of sales or orders, or
exchanges or re-purchases are allowed —the Rule
requires you to let consumers know before they pay for
the goods or services being offered. You may give this
information to consumers orally or in writing, and the
information must be clear and conspicuous.
4. Prize
Promotions
A prize promotion
includes (1) any sweepstakes or other game of chance,
and (2) any representation that someone has won, has
been selected to receive, or may be eligible to receive
a prize or purported prize. A prize is anything
offered and given to a consumer by chance.
For the element of chance to be present,
all that is necessary under the Rule is that the consumer
is guaranteed to receive an item, and, at the time of
the offer, the telemarketer does not identify the specific
item that the person will receive. For example, say
you send a solicitation promising recipients that they
will receive one of four or five listed items but you
do not tell recipients which of the listed items they
will receive. In that case, any item the consumer receives
is a prize, and the solicitation is a prize promotion.
A seller or telemarketer that offers
a prize promotion must provide consumers with several
items of information before the consumer pays for any
goods or services being offered. This information may
be given to consumers orally or in writing, and the
information must be clear and conspicuous. You must
tell consumers:
- the odds of winning the prize(s). If the odds can’t
be calculated in advance because they depend on the
number of people who enter the promotion, for example,
you must tell that to consumers, along with any other
factors used to calculate the odds.
- that they can participate in the prize promotion
or win a prize without buying anything or making any
payment, and that any purchase or payment will not
increase the chances of winning. When offering a prize
promotion in outbound calls, you must
disclose this information orally and promptly. A legitimate
prize promotion does not require any purchase or payment
of money for a consumer to participate or win. If
a purchase or payment of money is required for eligibility
for a prize, it is not a prize promotion; it is a
lottery, which is generally unlawful under federal
and state lottery laws.
- how they can enter the prize promotion without
paying any money or purchasing any goods or services.
This disclosure must include instructions on how to
enter, or an address or local or toll-free telephone
number where consumers can get the no-purchase/no-payment
entry information.
- about any material costs or conditions to receive
or redeem any prize. For example, if one of the offered
prizes is a "vacation,” but the recipient
must pay for her own accommodations, that’s
a cost or condition that is likely to affect the consumer’s
response to the offer and therefore, must be disclosed.
5. Credit
Card Loss Protection
A seller or telemarketer offering
a credit card loss protection plan—one that claims
to protect, insure, or otherwise limit a consumer’s
liability in the event of unauthorized use of a customer’s
credit card—must disclose the limits on a cardholder’s
liability under federal law for unauthorized use of
a credit card (15 U.S.C. § 1643). Since the law
limits cardholder liability for unauthorized use—for
example, when a credit card is lost or stolen—to
no more than $50, disclosure of this information to
consumers will help ensure that they have the material
information necessary to decide whether the protection
plan offered is worth the cost.
6. Negative
Option Features
The term “negative option feature”
is used in the Rule. It is when the seller interprets
the consumer’s silence, or failure to take an
affirmative action to reject goods or services or cancel
an agreement as acceptance of the offer. One type of
negative option offer is a “free-to-pay conversion”
offer (also known as a “free-trial offer”),
where customers receive a product or service for free
for an initial period and then have to pay for it if
they don’t take some affirmative action to cancel
before the end of the period. Other types of negative
option features include continuity plans and other arrangements
where consumers automatically receive and incur charges
for shipments in an ongoing series unless they take
affirmative action to stop the shipment.
Under the TSR, any seller or telemarketer
whose offer of a product or service involves a negative
option feature must truthfully, clearly, and conspicuously
disclose three pieces of information:
- the fact that the customer’s account will
be charged unless he or she takes an affirmative action—such
as canceling—to avoid the charge.
- the date(s) on which the charge(s) will be submitted
for payment.
- the specific steps the customer must take to avoid
the charges.
While the best practice is to provide
an actual date on which payment will be submitted, it
is acceptable to disclose an approximate date if you
don’t—or can’t—know the actual
date, provided the approximate date gives the consumer
reasonable notice of when to expect the debit or charge.
As for disclosing how the consumer can avoid charges,
it is not sufficient under the Rule to disclose that
a consumer would have to call a toll-free number to
cancel without disclosing the number.
Prompt Disclosures in Outbound
Telemarketing Calls
Promptly:
“Promptly” is defined by Webster’s
Dictionary as “performed at once or without
delay.” For purposes of the Rule, “promptly”
means before any sales pitch is given and before
any charitable solicitation is made. Required information
about a prize promotion must be given before or
when the prize offered is described. |
Oral Disclosures
in Outbound Sales Calls and Upselling Transactions
An outbound call
is a call initiated by a telemarketer to a consumer.
The Rule requires that a telemarketer making an outbound
sales call promptly disclose
the following four items of information truthfully,
clearly, and conspicuously:
The identity of the seller.
The seller is the entity that provides goods or services
to the consumer in exchange for payment. The identity
of the telemarketer, or person making the call, need
not be disclosed if it is different from the identity
of the seller. If the seller commonly uses a fictitious
name that is registered with appropriate state authorities,
it is fine to use that name instead of the seller’s
legal name.
That the purpose of the
call is to sell goods or services. The
Rule requires that the purpose of the call be disclosed
truthfully and promptly to consumers. How you describe
or explain the purpose of the call is up to you, as
long as your description is not likely to mislead consumers.
For example, it would be untruthful to state that a
call is a “courtesy call,” if it’s
a sales call.
The nature of the goods
or services being offered. This
is a brief description of items you are offering for
sale.
In the case of a prize
promotion, that no purchase or payment is necessary
to participate or win, and that a purchase or payment
does not increase the chances of winning. If
the consumer asks, you must disclose—without delay—
instructions on how to enter the prize promotion without
paying any money or purchasing any goods or services.
These same disclosures must be made
in an upselling transaction if any
of the information in these disclosures is different
from the initial disclosures (if the initial transaction
was an outbound call subject to the Rule) or if no disclosures
were required in the initial transaction, such as a
non-sales customer service call. For example, in an
external upsell, where the second transaction
in a single telephone call involves a second seller,
you must tell the consumer the identity of the second
seller—the one on whose behalf the upsell offer
is being made. On the other hand, in an internal
upsell, where additional goods or services are
offered by the same seller as the initial transaction,
no new disclosure of the seller’s identity is
necessary because the information is the same as that
provided in the initial transaction.
Multiple Purpose Calls.
Some calls have more than one purpose.
They may involve the sale of goods or services
and another objective, like conducting a prize
promotion or determining customer satisfaction.
They may involve a charitable solicitation combined
with a prize promotion. In any multiple purpose
call where the seller or telemarketer is planning
to sell goods or services in at least some of
the calls, four disclosures must be made
promptly—that is, during the first part
of the call before the non-sales portion of the
call. Similarly, in any multiple purpose call
where the telemarketer is planning to solicit
charitable contributions in at least some of the
calls, two disclosures must be made promptly—that
is, during the first part of the call, before
the noncharitable solicitation part of the call.
Example
Say a seller calls a consumer to determine
whether he or she is satisfied with a previous
purchase and then plans to move into a sales
presentation if the consumer is satisfied. Since
the seller plans to make a sales presentation
in at least some of the calls (the seller plans
to end the call if the consumer is not satisfied),
four disclosures must be made promptly
during the initial portion of the call and before
inquiring about customer satisfaction.
However, a seller may make calls to welcome
new customers and ask whether they are satisfied
with goods or services they recently purchased.
If the seller doesn’t plan to sell anything
to these customers during any of these calls,
the four oral disclosures are not required.
That’s the case even if customers ask
about the sellers’ other goods or services,
and the seller responds by describing the goods
or services. Because the seller has no plans
to sell goods or services during these calls,
the disclosures are not required.
|
Oral Disclosures
in Outbound Calls to Solicit Charitable Contributions
Telefunders must make two prompt
oral disclosures clearly and conspicuously:
The identity of the charitable
organization on whose behalf the solicitation is being
made. The charitable organization is the
entity on whose behalf a charitable contribution is
sought. The identity of the telemarketer, or person
making the call, need not be disclosed. If the charitable
organization commonly uses a fictitious name that is
registered with appropriate state authorities, that
name may be disclosed instead of the charitable organization’s
legal name.
That the purpose of the
call is to solicit a charitable contribution.
The Rule requires that the purpose of the call
be disclosed promptly to consumers. How the purpose
of the call is described or explained is up to you,
as long as your description or explanation is not likely
to mislead consumers.
How does a for-profit
company that telemarkets for a non-profit organization
make the required oral disclosures? When
a for-profit company makes interstate calls to
solicit charitable contributions for a non-profit
organization, the for-profit telemarketer must
make the required prompt disclosures for charitable
solicitation calls. The company must identify
the entity on behalf of whom the charitable solicitation
is made and state that the purpose of the call
is to solicit a charitable contribution. However,
if a for-profit company solicits charitable contributions
on behalf of a charity and offers goods or services
that are of more than nominal value — a
book, magazine subscription, or perhaps a membership
— to induce donations, the required oral
disclosures for both sales and charitable contributions
must be made. “Nominal” means a value
less than the amount of any contribution being
solicited. In a situation where the goods or services
offered are of more than nominal value, stating
the name of the non-profit organization on whose
behalf the call is being made is sufficient. This
disclosure also would satisfy the requirement
that the entity on whose behalf a charitable contribution
is being solicited be identified.
Examples:
“I am calling on behalf of [name of
non-profit organization] to offer you a subscription
to the organization’s newsletter, which
[description of newsletter] and to ask for a
donation to help support the work of [name of
non-profit organization].”
“I am calling for [name of non-profit
organization] to seek your support. For a donation
of $25 or more, [name of non-profit organization]
will extend to you a one-year membership, which
entitles you to [description of the membership].
Your donation will help us to continue the [non-profit
organization’s] important work . . .”
|
Misrepresentations are Prohibited
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from making false or misleading statements to induce
anyone to pay for goods or services or make a charitable
contribution. For example:
- you cannot falsely claim that you need a consumer’s
bank account number or credit card number only for
identification purposes, when, in fact, you will use
the number as payment for the goods or services offered.
- a seller of precious metals cannot induce anyone
to invest by falsely claiming that the seller offers
the metals at or near wholesale price.
- it would be illegal under the Rule to solicit a
charitable contribution by claiming that 100 percent
of the funds collected would benefit the stated charity,
when only 30 percent of the money goes to the charity.
In addition, the Rule prohibits sellers
and telemarketers from misrepresenting specific categories
of information about a telemarketing transaction that
are likely to affect a consumer’s decision to
purchase the goods or services offered. The Rule also
prohibits both express and implied misrepresentations.
Sellers and telemarketers cannot circumvent the Rule
by creating a false
impression in a consumer’s mind through the artful
use of half-truths or misleading or incomplete information.
In sales
transactions, the Rule prohibits misrepresentations
about the following:
1. Cost and Quantity
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting the total costs to purchase, receive,
or use the goods or services offered, or the quantity
of goods or services offered at the stated price. For
example, you may not tell consumers that they may purchase
a magazine subscription for three years at $1.50 a month,
when the subscription is available at that price for
one year only.
2. Material Restrictions,
Limitations, or Conditions
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material restriction, limitation,
or condition to purchase, receive, or use goods or services
offered to the consumer. For example, you may not falsely
claim that a hotel certificate may be used any time
at any major hotel chain in the country, when it can
be used only at certain times or at a limited number
of hotels.
3. Performance, Efficacy,
or Central Characteristics
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material aspect of the performance,
efficacy, nature, or central characteristics of the
goods or services offered to the consumer. For example,
it is a violation of the Rule to claim falsely that:
- a water processor offered for sale can eliminate
all known contaminants from tap water.
- a service offered by the seller can improve a person’s
credit rating.
- a machine will operate properly without maintenance.
- precious metals outperform other types of investments.
- a seller can recover money lost by the consumer
in a previous telemarketing transaction.
- a purchaser of a business venture can earn “more
money in a week than you now earn in a year”
or achieve specific levels of income.
4. Refund, Repurchase,
or Cancellation Policies
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material aspect—one that
likely would have an effect on the onsumer’s purchasing
decision—of the nature or terms of the seller’s
refund, cancellation, exchange, or repurchase policies.
For example, the Rule prohibits you from claiming that
“our policy is to make our customers happy—if
at any time you’re not absolutely delighted, just
send the merchandise back,” if there are
time limits, “restocking” charges, or other
important restrictions on the return of the goods. It
also prohibits sellers and telemarketers from claiming
that tickets may be cancelled any time up to the date
of an event when cancellation requests like that would
not be honored.
5. Material Aspects of
Prize Promotions
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material aspect of a prize
promotion: you may not lie about any aspect of a prize
promotion that is likely to affect a consumer’s
decision to buy any goods or services offered in conjunction
with a prize promotion, to buy them at the offered price,
or to buy them from you. For example, you may not misrepresent:
- the odds of being able to receive a prize (for
example, falsely saying that everyone who enters is
guaranteed to win a prize, or falsely claiming that
a particular person is “the top winner in
the entire state”).
- the nature or value of a prize (for example, falsely
claiming a prize is an “expensive genuine
diamond tennis bracelet,” when the prize
has only nominal value or doesn’t contain any
diamonds).
- that a purchase or payment is required to win a
prize or participate in a prize promotion (for example,
falsely claiming that
a consumer must buy magazine subscriptions to enter
a prize promotion).
6. Material Aspects of
Investment Opportunities
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material aspect of an investment
opportunity. You may not make any false or misleading
statements about an investment opportunity that are
likely to affect a prospective purchaser’s decision
to invest. You may not misrepresent any information
needed to make an informed investment decision. Examples
of material aspects of an investment opportunity include:
the risk involved in the investment, the liquidity of
the investment, or the earnings potential or profitability
of the investment. Depending on the nature of the investment
opportunity, other material aspects may include markup
over acquisition costs; past performance, marketability,
or value of an investment; or fees charged in credit-financed
purchases of precious metals.
7. Affiliations, Endorsements,
or Sponsorships
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting affiliations with—or endorsements
or sponsorships by—any person, organization, or
government entity. For example, you cannot falsely claim
that you’re a member of the Better Business Bureau
or the local chamber of commerce, or that you’re
affiliated with the local police or some national charity.
Neither can you create the impression in a consumer’s
mind that the postal permit number displayed on a mail
solicitation is a sign that the U.S. Postal Service
has approved a promotion. In addition, sellers and telemarketers
cannot falsely claim or create the impression in a consumer’s
mind that they are related to or affiliated with a company
with which the consumer usually does business.
8. Credit Card Loss Protection
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting that any customer needs offered
goods or services to receive protection against unauthorized
charges that he or she already has under federal law
(15 U.S.C. § 1643). For example, you cannot falsely
claim that a consumer who doesn’t purchase the
credit card loss protection you’re offering might
be liable for thousands of dollars in unauthorized charges
should a credit card be stolen. In fact, the law caps
a customer’s liability for unauthorized charges
on her credit card at $50.
9. Negative Option Features
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from misrepresenting any material aspect of a negative
option feature of an offer, including: the fact that
the consumer’s account will be charged unless
the consumer takes an affirmative action to avoid the
charges, the dates the charges will be submitted for
payment, and the specific steps the customer must take
to avoid the charges. For example, the Rule prohibits
you from representing that to avoid being charged, the
consumer need only call a tollfree number to cancel
if, in fact, the number is never answered. In this case,
you would be misrepresenting the specific steps the
customer must take to avoid the charge, because the
steps described wouldn’t achieve that purpose.
In charitable
solicitation calls, the Rule prohibits misrepresentations
about:
1. The Nature, Purpose,
or Mission of the Entity on Whose Behalf the Solicitation
is Made
The Rule prohibits telefunders from
misrepresenting the nature, purpose, or mission of any
entity on whose behalf a charitable contribution is
being solicited. It would violate the Rule for a telefunder
to claim, expressly or by implication, that a charitable
contribution is being requested on behalf of a charity
that seeks to protect endangered species if the purpose
of the charity is to support a local petting zoo of
barnyard animals. And a telefunder may not represent
that a charitable organization engages in cancer research
if the organization simply educates the public about
cancer through its fundraising calls.
2. Tax Deductibility
Whether a contribution is tax deductible—or
an organization is tax exempt—may be an important
consideration when potential donors are deciding whether
or how much to contribute. The Rule therefore prohibits
telefunders from misrepresenting, expressly or by implication,
that any charitable contribution is partly or fully
tax deductible, or falsely implying that an organization
on whose behalf a contribution is solicited is “tax
exempt.”
3. Purpose of a Contribution
The Rule prohibits telefunders from
misrepresenting how the requested contribution will
be used. This includes not only how a donation will
be spent, but also the locality where the direct effect
of the donation will be felt. The purpose for which
a contribution is sought usually is important to a donor,
and any misrepresentations about that would be likely
to mislead a consumer. It would violate the Rule for
you to state or imply that a donation will benefit sick
children in the local area if the money collected is
not spent to benefit sick children or is not spent to
benefit sick kids in the donor’s local area. You
also cannot claim that a donation will be used to pay
for bullet-proof vests for local law enforcement officers
if the money goes to some other purpose. The charitable
purpose described to potential donors may not be peripheral
or incidental to the primary purpose for which the donation
will be used.
4. Percentage or Amount
of Contribution that Goes to the Charitable Organization
or Program
The Rule prohibits telefunders from
misrepresenting the percentage or amount of the contribution
that goes to a charitable
organization or program. This prohibition covers statements
made in response to the questions of potential donors,
as well as unprompted standalone statements. Even though
the TSR does not require you to affirmatively disclose
the percentage or amount of the contribution that goes
to a charitable organization or program, if a potential
donor raises the question, you must answer truthfully
and must not misrepresent this information in any way.
5. Material Aspects of
Prize Promotions
The Rule prohibits telefunders from
misrepresenting any material aspects of a prize promotion
in conjunction with a charitable solicitation. You may
not make a false statement about any aspect of a prize
promotion that could affect a donor’s decision
to make a charitable contribution in conjunction with
the prize promotion.
6. Affiliations, Endorsements,
or Sponsorship
The Rule prohibits telefunders from
misrepresenting their own or a charitable organization’s
affiliation with, or endorsement or sponsorship by,
any person, organizations, or government entity. For
example, you cannot falsely claim that the organization
on whose behalf you are calling is affiliated with,
sponsored by, endorsed by, or otherwise approved by
any other entity or organization. Nor could you falsely
claim to be endorsed or “approved by” the
local police. In addition, you cannot falsely claim
— or create the impression—that you are
related to or affiliated with a charity that the donor
has heard of or contributed to in the past.
Payment Methods Other than Debit
and Credit Cards
The Rule requires “express
verifiable authorization” when the payment is
made by a method other than a credit card (subject to
the Truth in Lending Act and Regulation Z), or a debit
card (subject to the Electronic Fund Transfer Act and
Regulation E). Because many novel payment methods lack
protection against unauthorized charges and dispute
resolution rights should the customer be unhappy with
the goods or services, the Rule requires that when customers
in telemarketing transactions pay by such methods, sellers
and telemarketers must meet a higher standard for proving
authorization. This provision, the prohibition on sharing
unencrypted account numbers, and the requirement that
a consumer’s express informed consent be obtained
in every telemarketing transaction, are in place to
protect consumers from unauthorized charges.
What about cash,
checks, and money orders? The “express
verifiable authorization” requirement does
not apply to conventional checks that the consumer
writes, signs, and mails, or to payments by money
order, cash, gift certificates, or direct billing
(where the customer or donor receives a written
bill or statement before having to pay). These
payment methods have been used for years, and
consumers are familiar with the advantages and
relative risks of each. But there are payment
methods that consumers may be unfamiliar with
and that lack fundamental protections. In the
latter instance, the Rule requires more proof
of authorization to protect consumers from unauthorized
charges: If payment is made by demand draft or
“phone check,”mortgage or utility
billing (where goods or services other than the
mortgage or utility payment is billed on these
accounts), or a similar unconventional method,
a telemarketer must obtain the customer or donor’s
“express verifiable authorization.”
Who is responsible for obtaining
verifiable authorization? Under
the Rule, sellers and telemarketers that receive
payment by methods other than credit or debit
cards are responsible for obtaining verifiable
authorization in those transactions. Even if you
use the services of a third party to process or
submit billing information other than credit or
debit card information, you are responsible for
ensuring that the disclosure requirements of the
Rule for verifying authorization are met. Under
the Rule, a third party also can be held liable
for violating the Rule if the third party substantially
assists a seller or telemarketer and knows—or
consciously avoids knowing—that the seller
or telemarketer is violating the Rule by failing
to obtain verifiable authorization.
Processing and submitting account information
constitutes substantial assistance to a seller
or telemarketer. Therefore, if a third party is
processing account information for a seller or
telemarketer, the third party should ensure that
whoever is obtaining consumers’ account
information obtains verifiable authorization in
accordance with the Rule’s requirements.
A third party who processes and submits bank account
information cannot avoid liability by not asking
questions about whether authorization procedures
comply with the Rule. Indeed, a third party can
be held liable under the Rule if it knows that
the authorization procedures do not comply with
the Rule and it processes or submits account information
for payment anyway.
Does the Rule apply if I only supply
the software to process or submit bank account
information for payment? Maybe.
Providing the means to submit a consumer’s
account information for payment constitutes substantial
assistance to a seller or telemarketer. If the
seller or telemarketer who is using the software
is violating the Rule, a law enforcement agency
may ask about the extent to which the software
provider ensured that authorization procedures
were in place to comply with the Rule. A software
provider cannot sell its product with its “eyes
closed” to the business practices used by
the software purchaser, consciously avoiding any
knowledge of the wrongdoing. Deceptive telemarketers
favor novel payment methods, such as demand drafts.
Therefore, third parties should know who they’re
doing business with — and whether the people
they do business with are complying with the Rule. |
Under the Rule, authorization is considered
verifiable if it is obtained in one of three ways:
- advance written authorization from the consumer;
- an audio recording of the consumer giving express
oral authorization; or
- written confirmation of the transaction sent to
the consumer before you submit the charge for payment.
Here are the requirements for each
type of authorization.
Written
Authorization
Any form of written authorization
from a consumer is acceptable, as long as it has the
consumer’s signature. For example, a consumer
may transmit written authorization to the seller or
telemarketer by facsimile or may send a “voided”
signed check as written authorization. An electronic
signature also is valid, provided it would be recognized
as a valid signature under applicable federal or state
contract law.
Oral Authorization
Any audio recording of an oral authorization3
for payment must clearly demonstrate that the consumer
has received each of seven specific pieces of information
about the transaction and that the consumer has authorized
that funds be taken from (or charged to) his or her
account based on the required disclosures by the seller
or telemarketer. A general question like, “Do
you understand all the terms of the sale?” followed
by a consumer’s “uh-huh” or “yeah”
is not enough to demonstrate authorization. The tape
recording must show that the consumer received each
piece of information below and that, based on this information,
the consumer understood and acknowledged each term of
the transaction and authorized the transaction.
A consumer must be told and must
acknowledge:
- the number of debits, charges, or payments (if
more than one).
- the date the debits, charges, or payments will
be submitted for payment.
- the amount of the debits, charges, or payments.
- the customer or donor’s name.
- the customer or donor’s billing information,
identified in specific enough terms that the consumer
understands which account will be used to collect
payment for the transaction.
- a telephone number that is answered during normal
business hours by someone who can answer the consumer’s
questions.
- the date of the consumer’s oral authorization.
The Rule also requires that audiorecorded
oral authorization be made available upon request to
the customer or donor, as well as to the customer or
donor’s bank or other billing entity.
The Electronic Fund
Transfer Act (EFTA)
Other laws, such as the EFTA (15 U.S.C. §
1693 et seq.), may impose different obligations
about obtaining a consumer’s authorization
of a charge. It is the responsibility of each
seller and telemarketer to determine how to comply
with all applicable laws and rules. Compliance
with the TSR requirements for obtaining authorization
does not eliminate the obligation to comply with
EFTA and other applicable laws. |
Authorization
by Written Confirmation
If sellers and telemarketers choose
verifiable authorization through written confirmation,
they must send the confirmation to the consumer via
first class mail—and identify it clearly and conspicuously
as confirmation of payment— before
submitting the consumer’s billing information
for payment. That does not mean that you must wait to
submit this information until a consumer receives
the confirmation: The Rule requires only that you send
it before you submit the billing information for payment.
The Rule leaves it to sellers and
telemarketers to determine what procedures are necessary
to ensure that confirmations are sent prior to submission,
to put these procedures in place, and to ensure that
records are generated and maintained to document that
confirmations are sent at the appropriate time and required
refunds are provided.
The written confirmation must contain
all the information required in a tape recorded authorization.
In addition, if you choose to use the written confirmation
method of authorization, you must have a refund policy
in place and must disclose in the written confirmation
how to obtain a refund if the consumer disputes the
written confirmation. The Rule’s prohibition on
misrepresenting a refund policy applies in the context
of obtaining verifiable authorization by means of written
confirmation. Note: In transactions involving
pre-acquired account information combined with a free-to-pay
conversion, sellers and telemarketers may not use the
written confirmation method of obtaining authorization.
In these transactions, written confirmation does not
constitute “express verifiable authorization.”
Date the debit,
charge, or payment will be submitted for payment
This disclosure ensures that consumers know when
to expect the charge or debit. To comply with
this requirement, it makes good sense to provide
an actual date on which payment will be submitted:
“This debit from your checking account
will occur on April 14, 2004.” However,
it is acceptable for you to disclose an approximate
date if you don’t—or can’t—know
the actual date, provided the approximate date
gives the consumer reasonable notice of when to
expect the debit or charge. For example, you could
tell a consumer, “The charge will appear
on your next mortgage statement,” or “Your
account will be charged within two weeks from
today.”
Similarly, in a transaction involving a continuity
plan, it would be sufficient for you to note when
any initial charge will be submitted for payment,
and then at what intervals each successive payment
would be submitted, should the customer opt not
to decline to purchase additional goods or services.
For example, in a book club plan, you could tell
a customer that the initial $4.95 charge would
be debited from his or her bank account on May
15, and that each month after that, his or her
account will be billed one week from the date
of each successive shipment.
Billing information in specific
enough terms that the consumer understands what
account will be used to collect payment for the
transaction
To identify the account with sufficient specificity
for the customer or donor to understand what account
will be charged, you must state the name of the
account and enough other distinguishing information
about the account to ensure that the customer
understands which account will be charged.
For example, telling the consumer that the charge
will be placed on his mortgage account is not
specific enough information. It would be necessary
to identify the account further, perhaps by the
name of the lender and the property address, or
a reference to some portion of the account number
or expiration date. It is your obligation to ensure
that the consumer knows specifically what account
will be charged for the goods or services. |
Assisting
and Facilitating Sellers or Telemarketers Who Violate
the Rule is Prohibited
It is a violation of the Rule to
substantially assist a seller or telemarketer while
knowing—or consciously avoiding knowing—that
the seller or telemarketer is violating the Rule. Thus
taking deliberate steps to ensure one’s own ignorance
of a seller or telemarketer’s Rule violations
is an ineffective strategy to avoid liability. The help
that a third-party provides must be more than casual
or incidental dealing with a seller or telemarketer
that is not related to a violation of the Rule. For
example, cleaning a telemarketer’s office, delivering
lunches to the telemarketer’s premises, or engaging
in some other activity with little or no relation to
the conduct that violates the Rule would not be enough
to support liability as an assistor or facilitator.
Third parties who do business with
sellers and telemarketers should be aware that their
dealings may provide a factual basis to support an inference
that they know—or deliberately remain ignorant
of—the Rule violations of these sellers and telemarketers.
For example, a third party who provides sellers or telemarketers
with mailing lists, help in creating sales scripts or
direct mail pieces, or any other substantial assistance
while knowing or deliberately avoiding knowing that
the seller or telemarketer is engaged in a Rule violation
may be violating the Rule.
Credit
Card Laundering is Prohibited
Credit card laundering is the misuse
of a “merchant account” with a financial
institution. A merchant account is a kind of bank account:
it is what a seller or telemarketer needs to gain access
to a credit card collection and payment system and to
get cash for goods and services sold. Obtaining access
to the credit card system through another’s merchant
account without the authorization of the financial institution
is credit card laundering. This practice violates the
Rule, and is a criminal offense under federal law and
the laws of some states.
Here’s how the system works
for companies that make legitimate use of the credit
card system: To be able to accept payment from a consumer
who wants to charge the price of goods or services to
a credit card, a seller or telemarketer must have a
“merchant account” with a financial institution
that is a member of a credit card system (for example,
Visa or MasterCard) that issued the consumer’s
credit card. When the consumer pays by credit card,
the merchant generates a credit card sales draft. The
seller then deposits the draft into the seller’s
merchant account, and obtains the cash amount of the
deposited draft. The financial institution sends the
credit card sales draft through the particular credit
card system, which posts a corresponding charge to the
consumer’s
credit card account.
In credit card laundering work, sellers
and telemarketers who are unable to establish a merchant
account with a financial institution
sometimes use the unlawful services of a launderer (also
known, inaccurately, as a “factor”). A launderer
opens a “back door” into the credit card
system by providing access to a merchant account—and
the whole credit card collection and payment system—without
the authorization of the financial institution or the
credit card system. Except as expressly permitted by
a credit card system, it is a Rule violation for anyone:
- with a merchant account to deposit into the credit
card system any credit card sales draft generated
by a telemarketing transaction that is not the result
of a sale to the buyer by the person who has the merchant
account.
- to use or solicit someone who has a merchant account
(or an employee, representative, or agent of someone
who has a merchant account) to deposit into the credit
card system any credit card sales draft generated
by a telemarketing transaction that is not the result
of a sale to the buyer by the person who has the merchant
account.
- o obtain access to the credit card system through
a business relationship or an affiliation with a merchant,
when the access is not authorized under the terms
of the merchant account or by the applicable credit
card system.
Unauthorized
Billing
It is a violation of the Rule to
cause billing information to be submitted for payment—
directly or indirectly—without the express
informed consent of the customer or donor.
The Rule requires that in any telemarketing transaction,
sellers and telemarketers obtain the express informed
consent of the customer or donor to be charged a specific
amount on a particular identified account, to pay for
the goods or services offered, or to make a charitable
contribution.
Express Informed Consent Is Required
in Every Telemarketing Transaction
The Rule contains no specific requirements
for how sellers and telemarketers must obtain express
informed consent in transactions where they do not use
pre-acquired account information. As
a practical matter, however, in these transactions it
would be necessary for you to get the account number
to be charged from the consumer, because the information
isn’t available any other way. In obtaining this
information from the consumer, you must get his express
agreement to be charged for the goods or services being
offered and to be charged using the account number he
or she provides. Any false or misleading statement to
induce someone to divulge his or her account information
to pay for goods or services or to make a charitable
contribution is an additional
Rule violation.
What is express
informed consent? Under the Rule,
consent is express if it is affirmatively
and unambiguously articulated by the consumer.
Silence is not express consent, nor is an ambivalent
response like, “Well, maybe . . .,”
“Gee, I don’t know about that . .
.,” or a noncommital “uh-huh.”
For consent to be informed, a consumer, prior
to giving consent, must receive all the disclosures
required by the Rule.
For example, consent would not meet the requirement
that it be “informed” if the consumer
does not receive all the Rule’s required
material disclosures—both the prompt oral
disclosures for outbound calls and the disclosures
of all material information required in all telemarketing
transactions. Consent is an affirmative statement
that the consumer agrees to purchase the goods
or services (or to make the charitable contribution)
and is aware that the charges will be billed to
a particular account. |
Obtaining Express Informed Consent
in Telemarketing Transactions Involving Pre-acquired
Account Information
Pre-acquired account information
is any information that enables sellers and telemarketers
to place a charge against a consumer’s account
without getting the account information directly from
the consumer during the transaction for which the account
will be charged. The use of pre-acquired account information
radically changes the usual dynamic in sales transactions,
which requires that a telemarketer obtain the customer’s
acceptance of the offer, as well as the customer’s
account number to be charged. Telemarketers using pre-acquired
account information are able to cause a charge to a
consumer’s account without getting the account
number from the consumer during the transaction. The
Rule establishes safeguards to protect consumers in
all telemarketing transactions in which sellers and
telemarketers have pre-acquired account information.
The Rule establishes separate requirements
for pre-acquired account information transactions involving
“free-to-pay conversion”
offers.
Free-to-pay conversion offers,
sometimes known as “free-trial offers,”
are offers or agreements where customers receive
a product or service for free for an initial period
and then incur an obligation to pay unless they
take affirmative action to cancel before the end
of the period. |
That’s because when used together
with free-to-pay conversion offers, pre-acquired account
information has resulted in significant numbers of unauthorized
charges to consumers who think they can’t be charged
at the end of a free trial because they haven’t
provided their account information. The Rule specifies
what sellers and telemarketers must do to prevent this
from occurring and to get a consumer’s express
informed consent.
When pre-acquired
account information is used and the offer includes a
free-to-pay conversion feature, telemarketers must:
- obtain from the customer at least the last four
digits of the account number to be charged.
- obtain the customer’s express agreement to
be charged for the goods or services and to be charged
using the account number for which the customer has
provided at least the last four digits.
- make and maintain an audio recording of the entire
telemarketing transaction.
Obtaining the last four
digits from the customer: To
meet the requirement that sellers and telemarketers
“obtain from the customer” at least the
last four digits of the account number to be charged,
you must ask the customer to provide this information,
and the customer must provide it to demonstrate an understanding
that by doing so, he or she is agreeing to make a purchase.
You must inform the customer that you have the customer’s
account number or the ability to charge the account
without getting the full account number from the consumer.
Reading the information to the customer and asking for
confirmation of the digits is not complying with the
Rule. Neither is it sufficient to read the digits to
the customer, and then ask the customer to recite them
back. In addition, it is not adequate to reuse digits
that a customer may have provided for identification
purposes during another portion of the call—such
as in an inbound call where you ask the customer to
provide his or her account number by pressing digits
on the telephone keypad.
Express Agreement to
be Charged: To meet the requirement that
telemarketers get a customer’s express agreement
to be charged for the goods and services—and to
be charged using the account number for which he or
she has provided at least four digits—you must
ensure that the consumer expressly and unambiguously
agrees to both the purchase and the means of payment.
The four digits the customer provides must actually
be the last four digits of the account to be charged.
If the four digits the customer provides aren’t
the last four digits of the account, the customer hasn’t
expressly agreed to be charged, and the transaction
is void for lack of express verifiable authorization.
This is not to be
interpreted as mandating that a seller or telemarketer
have the unencrypted last four digits of a customer’s
account number to compare the digits the customer provided
to the actual account number. Rather, the agencies
that issued rules under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act caution
financial institutions against sharing the unencrypted
last four digits of a customer’s account with
a telemarketer, even to ensure that the customer has
provided these digits accurately in giving express informed
consent. The meaning here is simply that a
charge cannot be processed unless the four digits provided
by the customer are in fact the last four digits of
the account to be charged. One way to ensure that the
four digits match is to perform a real-time inquiry
to verify that the leading digits of the pre-acquired
account number plus the four provided by the customer
are a valid account. There are other ways to do this;
the Rule does not require any particular method.
Audio Recording of the
Transaction: In a transaction where sellers
and telemarketers have pre-acquired account information
and are offering goods or services on a free-to-pay
conversion basis, the entire telemarketing transaction
must be recorded on audio. The audio recording must
capture the material terms provided to the consumer,
as well as the context and manner in which the offer
is presented, because this can be critical to demonstrate
that a consumer’s consent is both express and
informed. In a single-transaction call, this means taping
the entire call; in a multi-purpose call it means recording
the entirety of each transaction using pre-acquired
account information coupled with a free-to-pay conversion
offer.
In a situation where telemarketers
are bound by state law to obtain consent to record the
transaction, they may ask permission to tape before
beginning to record; this is the only portion of the
call that may be conducted without recording. If it
is necessary to explain the purpose of the call or to
identify the seller to obtain the customer’s permission
to record, telemarketers must reiterate this information
once the recording begins to demonstrate that the required
prompt disclosures were made in the outbound call.
When pre-acquired
account information is used but the offer does not include
a free-to-pay conversion feature, telemarketers must:
- at a minimum, identify the account to be charged
with enough specificity for the customer or donor
to understand.
- obtain the customer or donor’s express agreement
to be charged for the goods or services and to be
charged using the account number the seller or telemarketer
has identified.
The Rule’s requirements for
obtaining express informed consent in these transactions
are less strict than when a free-to-pay conversion feature
is involved. That’s because while pre-acquired
account information itself can lead to unauthorized
billing, the record shows this is less likely when there’s
no free-to-pay conversion offer.
Identifying the Account
with Sufficient Specificity: A telemarketer
must state the name of the account and enough other
distinguishing information about the account to ensure
that the customer understands which account will be
charged. For example, it is not good enough to tell
the consumer only that a charge will be placed on his
Visa credit card. You must identify the card more precisely,
either by stating the name of the issuing bank, or some
portion of the account number. As the telemarketer,
you are obligated to ensure that the consumer knows
exactly which account will be charged for the goods
or services. The underlying intention of the Rule is
that the telemarketer expressly inform the customer
that the seller or telemarketer already has the number
of the customer’s specifically identified account
or has the ability to charge that account without getting
the account number from the consumer.
Express Agreement to
be Charged: The Rule does not specify
a particular procedure for sellers and telemarketers
to follow when using pre-acquired account information
without a free-to-pay conversion so you can demonstrate
that the customer has expressly agreed to be charged.
To comply with this requirement, you must elicit an
affirmative and unambiguous statement from the consumer
that demonstrates his intention to agree to be charged,
and to be charged on a specific account. Silence is
not a substitute for such a statement, nor are ambivalent
or noncommital responses like, “Well, maybe .
. .” or “uh-huh.”
Protecting
Consumers’ Privacy
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from engaging in certain abusive practices that infringe
on a consumer’s right to be let alone. The Rule’s
privacy protections include prohibitions on:
- calling a person whose number is on the National
Do Not Call Registry or a person who has asked not
to get telemarketing calls from a particular company
or charity.
- misusing a Do Not Call list.
- denying or interfering with a person’s Do
Not Call rights.
- calling outside the permissible hours.
- abandoning an outbound telephone call.
- failing to transmit Caller ID information.
- using threats, intimidation, or profane or obscene
language.
- causing any telephone to ring or engaging any person
in telephone conversation repeatedly or continuously
with intent to
annoy, abuse, or harass.
The Do Not Call Provisions
The original Rule contained a provision
prohibiting calls to any consumer who previously asked
not to get calls from or on behalf of a particular seller.
The amended Rule retains that provision, and adds a
new one prohibiting calls to any numbers consumers have
placed on the National Do Not Call Registry maintained
by the FTC.
The Entity-Specific
Do Not Call Provision
It is a Rule violation to call any
consumer who has asked not to be called again (the “entity-specific
Do Not Call” provision). A telemarketer may not
call a consumer who previously has asked not to receive
any more calls from or on behalf of a particular seller
or charitable organization. It also is a Rule violation
for a seller who has been asked by a consumer not to
call again to cause a telemarketer to call that consumer.
Sellers and telemarketers are responsible for maintaining
their individual Do Not Call lists of consumers who
have asked not to receive calls placed by, or on behalf
of, a particular seller. Calling a consumer who has
asked not to be called potentially exposes a seller
and telemarketer to a civil penalty of $11,000 per violation.
What if a consumer
asks a specific division of a corporation not to
call? Does a call from a different division violate
the Rule? Distinct corporate divisions
generally are considered separate sellers under
this Rule. Factors relevant to determining whether
distinct divisions of a single corporation are treated
as separate sellers include whether there is substantial
diversity between the operational structure of the
divisions and whether the goods or services sold
by the divisions are substantially different from
each other. If a consumer tells one division of
a company not to call again, a distinct corporate
division of the same company may make another telemarketing
call to that consumer. Nevertheless, a single seller
without distinct corporate divisions may not call
a consumer who asks not to be called again, even
if the seller is offering a different good or service
for sale. |
On the question of charitable solicitations,
telefunders must maintain individual Do Not Call lists
for charities on whose behalf they make telemarketing
calls. Calling someone who has asked not to be called
on behalf of a charitable organization potentially exposes
the telefunder who places the call to a civil penalty
of $11,000 per violation.
Example:
Charity A is a non-profit charitable organization
not covered by the TSR. Charity A engages Telefunder
1, a for-profit service bureau subject to the
TSR, to conduct fundraising telephone campaigns
on its behalf. Charity A uses Telefunder 1 to
conduct a fundraising campaign for six months,
then uses Telefunder 2, another for-profit service
bureau, for the next six months. It will violate
the Rule for Telefunder 2 to initiate an outbound
telephone call on behalf of Charity A to a person
who has already asked not to be called on behalf
of Charity A. It is the responsibility of Telefunder
2 to get the Do Not Call list relating to Charity
A compiled and maintained by Telefunder 1, and
to keep from placing calls to anyone on that list
when calling on behalf of Charity A.
If Telefunder 2 also conducts a fundraising campaign
for Charity B, Telefunder 2 may call potential
donors on behalf of Charity B even if they’re
on Charity A’s Do Not Call list. But when
calling on behalf of Charity B, Telefunder 2 may
not call potential donors on Charity B’s
Do Not Call list. |
The National
Do Not Call Registry Provision
The FTC’s National Do Not Call
Registry has been accepting registrations from consumers
who choose not to receiving telemarketing sales calls
since June 27, 2003. Consumers can place their telephone
numbers on the National Registry by
making a toll-free telephone call or via the Internet.
Consumer registrations are valid for five years, or
until the consumer asks to be taken off the National
Registry or the number is disconnected. Only telephone
numbers are included in the National Registry. This
means that all household members
who share a number will stop receiving most telemarketing
calls after the number is registered. Consumers may
register both their residential “land line”
telephone numbers and their wireless telephone numbers.
Sellers, telemarketers, and their
service providers have been able to access the Registry
through a dedicated Web site since September 2003. It
is a Rule violation to make any covered calls beginning
October 1, 2003 without having accessed the Registry.
Sellers and telemarketers will have to update their
call lists—that is, delete all numbers in the
National Do Not Call Registry from their lists—at
least every three months.
As of October 1, 2003, sellers
and telemarketers are prohibited from calling any consumer
whose number is in the database. Violators
will be subject to civil penalties of up to $11,000
per violation, as well as injunctive remedies.
This provision does not apply
to business-to-business calls or calls to consumers
from or on behalf of charities. Still, telefunders calling
to solicit charitable contributions must honor a donor’s
request not to be called on behalf of a particular charitable
organization.
How the
National Do Not Call Registry Works
Coverage Under the TSR
What calls are covered?
The Do Not Call provisions of the TSR cover any plan,
program, or campaign to sell goods or services involving
interstate phone calls. This includes calls by telemarketers
who solicit consumers, often on behalf of third-party
sellers. It also includes sellers who are paid to provide,
offer to provide, or arrange to provide goods or services
to consumers. However, sellers and telemarketers should
also be aware that the FCC regulates telemarketing calls.
For more information, see the FCC’s Web site,
www.fcc.gov
What types of calls are not
covered by the National Do Not Call Registry?
The Do Not Call provisions do not cover calls from political
organizations, charities, telephone surveys, or companies
with which a consumer has an existing business relationship.
However, sellers and telemarketers should also be aware
that the FCC regulates telemarketing calls. For more
information, see the FCC’s Web site, www.fcc.gov
If a call includes a telephone
survey and a sales pitch, is it covered?
Yes. Callers purporting to take a survey, but also offering
to sell goods or services, must comply with the Do Not
Call provisions. But if the call is for the sole purpose
of conducting a survey, it is exempt. However, sellers
and telemarketers should also be aware that the FCC
regulates telemarketing calls. For more information,
see the FCC’s Web site, www.fcc.gov
Accessing the Registry
Who can access the National
Registry?
Access to the National Registry is limited to sellers,
telemarketers, and other service providers. Sellers
are companies that provide, offer to provide, or arrange
for others to provide goods or services to a customer
in return for some type of payment as part of a telemarketing
transaction. Telemarketers are companies that make telephone
calls to consumers on behalf of sellers. Service providers
are companies that offer services to sellers engaged
in telemarketing transactions, such as providing lists
of telephone numbers to call, or removing telephone
numbers from the sellers’ lists.
Some sellers are exempt from the
FTC’s Rules but are required to access the National
Registry under the FCC’s Rules. Other sellers
(charities and political organizations) are exempt from
accessing the National Registry under both agencies’
rules. These exempt sellers still may access the National
Registry voluntarily and do not have to pay a fee for
that access. They must, however, submit appropriate
certification information to gain access to the National
Registry.
Can I use numbers on the
National Registry for any purpose other than preventing
telemarketing calls?
No. The National Registry may not be used for any purpose
other than preventing telemarketing calls to the telephone
numbers on the Registry. Any entity that accesses the
National Registry will be required to certify, under
penalty of law, that it is accessing the Registry solely
to comply with the TSR or to prevent calls to numbers
on the Registry.
How can I access the National
Registry?
The FTC is preparing a fully automated and secure Web
site at www.telemarketing.donotcall.gov
to provide members of the telemarketing industry with
access to the National Registry’s database of
telephone numbers, sorted by area code. The first time
you access the National Registry, you must provide identifying
information about yourself and your company. If you
are a telemarketer or service provider accessing the
National Registry on behalf of your seller-clients,
you will be required to identify your
seller-clients and provide their unique account numbers.
The only consumer information available from the National
Registry is
telephone numbers. After you (or the company telemarketing
on your behalf) have accessed the National Registry
the first time, you’ll have the option of downloading
only changes in the data that have occurred since the
last time you accessed the Registry.
When can I access the National
Do Not Call Registry?
Effective September 2, 2003, the National Do Not Call
Registry will be available to the telemarketing industry.
Enforcement of the National Do Not Call Registry begins
October 1, 2003. Companies required to access the National
Registry and remove the numbers on the Registry from
their calling lists must do so by October 1, 2003, to
be in compliance.
What information must I provide
to access the National Registry?
The first time you access the system, you will be asked
to provide certain limited identifying information,
such as your company name and address, contact person,
and the contact person’s telephone number and
email address. If you are accessing the National Registry
on behalf of a seller-client, you also will have to
identify that seller-client.
How often will I have to
access the National Registry and remove numbers from
my calling list?
After October 1, 2003, you will have to synchronize
your lists with an updated version of the National Registry
every three months.
How often may I download
data from the National Registry?
You will be able to access data as often as you like
during the course of your annual period for those area
codes for which you have paid. However, to protect system
integrity, you may download data files from the National
Registry only once in any 24-hour period.
What information can I access
from the National Registry?
The only consumer information that companies will receive
from the National Registry is registrants’ telephone
numbers. The
numbers will be sorted and available by area code. Companies
will be able to access as many area codes as desired
(and paid for), by selecting, for example, all area
codes within a certain state. Of course, companies also
will be able to access the entire National Registry.
May I check just a few numbers
at a time to see if they are registered?
Companies that have provided the required identification
information and certification and paid the appropriate
fee (if they want to access more than five area codes)
will be allowed to check a small number of telephone
numbers (10 or less) at a time via interactive Internet
pages. This will permit small volume callers to comply
with the Do Not Call requirements of the TSR without
having to download a potentially large list of all registered
telephone numbers within a particular area.
What format will the National
Registry use?
Data will be available from the National Registry using
Internet-based formats and download methods that serve
both small and large businesses. Data also will be available
in three different sets: full lists, change lists, and
small list look-ups. Full lists and change lists will
be available as flat files or XML tagged data files.
You will indicate your preference for flat files or
XML tagged data files as part of your profile.
With a Web browser, you will access
a secure Web page that will allow you to select the
download set that you prefer. For the small list look-up,
you will be asked to enter from one to 10 telephone
numbers on an online form. After entering the numbers
and clicking on a button, the National Registry will
display the list of numbers you entered and whether
each
number is in the Registry.
You will be limited to the numbers
in the area code(s) to which you have subscribed. The
full list will contain just 10-digit telephone numbers,
with a single number on each line. For the change list
in flat file format, each line of the file will contain
a telephone number, the date of the change, and an “A”
(for Added) or “D” (for Deleted). The change
list data will be fixed-width fields.
For those who select XML tagged data,
the XML tags will include: a login and encrypted password;
the name and email address of the company contact person;
certification that access to the National Registry is
solely to comply with the provisions of the TSR; the
account number(s) for which the download is being performed;
and whether a full list or change list is to be downloaded.
For both flat files and XML tagged
data, if you select a change list, you will be provided
all telephone numbers that have been added to, or deleted
from, the National Registry since the date of your previous
access. Change lists, for both flat files and XML tagged
data, will be available to provide changes on a daily
basis (representing the additions and deletions from
the day before).
To assist in automating the download
process, the National Registry will offer the option
to set up Web services for requesting change lists in
XML tagged data format.
Paying for Access
How much does it cost to
access the Registry?
Data for up to five area codes will be available for
free. Beyond that, there is an annual fee of $25 per
area code of data, with a maximum annual fee of $7,375
for the entire U.S. database.
How often will I have to
pay a fee?
The fee must be paid annually. Payment of the fee provides
access to the data for an “annual period,”
which is defined as the twelve months following the
first day of the month in which the seller paid the
fee. For example, a seller who pays its annual fee on
September 15, 2003, has an “annual period”
that runs from September 1, 2003 through August 31,
2004.
Who must pay the fee?
All sellers covered by the TSR must pay the appropriate
fee for an area code of data before they call, or cause
a telemarketer to call, any consumer within that area
code, even those consumers whose telephone numbers are
not on the National Registry. The only exceptions are
for sellers that call only consumers with which they
have an existing business relationship or written agreement
to call, and do not access the National Registry for
any other purpose. Charities and political organizations
that voluntarily want to access the National Registry
to prevent calling consumers whose numbers are on the
Registry may access the Registry at no cost.
Telemarketers and service providers
may access the National Registry, at no cost, through
the use of their seller-client’s unique account
number. Even though they are not required by law to
do so, telemarketers and service providers may gain
access to the National Registry on their own behalf,
but they must pay a separate fee for that ability. But
before placing calls on behalf of a seller-client, telemarketers
are required to ensure that their seller-client has
paid the appropriate annual fee.
How can I pay the fee?
Fees will be payable via credit card (which will permit
the transfer of data in the same session, if the payment
is approved) or electronic fund transfer (EFT). EFT
will require you to wait approximately three days for
the funds to clear before data access will be provided.
You must pay the fee prior to gaining access to the
National Registry. Sellers and exempt entities can pay
the fee directly or through their telemarketers or service
providers (to which the seller or exempt entity has
provided the necessary authority).
What if I pay for a small
number of area codes, and then later in the year expand
my business to call more area codes? Will I have to
pay twice?
If you need to access data from more area codes than
you initially selected, you may do so, but you will
have to pay for access to those additional area codes.
Obtaining additional data from the National Registry
during the first six months of your annual period will
require a payment of $25 for each new area code. During
the second six month period, the charge to obtain data
from each new area code is $15. Payment for additional
data provides you with access to the additional data
for the remainder of your annual period.
What happens after I pay for
access?
After payment is processed, you will be given a unique
account number and permitted access to the appropriate
portions of the National Registry. Using that account
number in future visits to the Web site will speed the
time needed for access. On subsequent visits to the
Web site, you will be able to download either a full
updated list of numbers from your selected area codes
or a more limited list, consisting of changes to the
National Registry (both additions and deletions) that
have occurred since the day of your last download. This
limits the amount of data that you need to download
during each visit. The change file will consist of each
telephone number that has changed, whether it was added
or deleted, and the date of the change.
If I’m a telemarketer
or service provider working for a seller, can I use
the seller’s account number to access the National
Registry?
A telemarketer or other service provider working on
behalf of a seller may access the National Registry
directly or through the use of its seller-client’s
unique account number. If access is gained through its
seller-client’s account number, the telemarketer
or service provider will not have to pay a separate
fee for that access. The extent of its access will be
limited to the area codes requested and paid for by
its seller-client. The telemarketer or service provider
also will be permitted to access the National Registry
at no additional cost, once the annual fee has been
paid by its seller-client. Of course, sellers or telemarketers
must use a version of the National Registry that’s
no more than three months old before they make any telemarketing
calls.
If a telemarketer or service provider
is accessing the National Registry directly, that is,
if a telemarketer or service provider decides to obtain
the information on its own behalf, it will have to pay
a separate fee and comply with all requirements placed
on sellers accessing the Registry. Such a telemarketer
or service provider will be provided an account number
that can be used only by that company. In other words,
that account number is not transferrable.
What if a seller uses one
telemarketer at the beginning of the year and switches
to another later in the year? Will the seller have to
pay twice?
No. Each seller will have a unique account number that
it can give to the telemarketers and service providers
who may access the National Registry on the seller’s
behalf.
Compliance
What happens to companies
that don’t pay for access to the National Registry?
A company that is a seller or telemarketer could be
liable for placing any telemarketing calls (even to
numbers NOT on the National Registry) unless the seller
has paid the required fee for access to the Registry.
Violators may be subject to fines of up to $11,000 per
violation. Each call may be considered a separate violation.
However, sellers and telemarketers should also be aware
that the FCC regulates telemarketing calls. For more
information, see the FCC’s Web site, www.fcc.gov
What if I call a number that’s
not on the National Registry without checking the Registry
first?
It’s against the law to call (or cause a telemarketer
to call) any number on the National Registry (unless
the seller has an established business relationship
with the consumer whose number is being called, or the
consumer has given written agreement to be called).
But it’s also against the law for a seller to
call (or cause a telemarketer to call) any person whose
number is within a given area code unless the seller
first has paid the annual fee for access to the portion
of the National Registry that includes numbers within
that area code.
In addition, it’s against the
law for a telemarketer, calling on behalf of a seller,
to call any person whose number is within a given area
code unless the seller has first paid the annual fee
for access to the portion of the National Registry that
includes numbers within that area code. Telemarketers
must make sure that their seller-clients have paid for
access to the National Registry before placing any telemarketing
calls on their behalf. However, sellers and telemarketers
should also be aware that the FCC regulates telemarketing
calls. For more information, see the FCC’s Web
site, www.fcc.gov
What’s my liability
if my company inadvertently calls a number on the National
Registry?
The TSR has a “safe harbor” for inadvertent
mistakes. If a seller or telemarketer can show that,
as part of its routine business practice, it meets all
the requirements of the safe harbor, it will not be
subject to civil penalties or sanctions for mistakenly
calling a consumer who has asked for no more calls,
or for calling a person on the National Registry. However,
sellers and telemarketers should also be aware that
the FCC regulates telemarketing calls. For more information,
see the FCC’s Web site, www.fcc.gov
How do the registries operated
by the FTC, the, FCC, and the various states fit together?
On June 26, 2003, the FCC announced that it was joining
the FTC in creating and enforcing one National Registry.
Together, the FTC and the FCC have jurisdiction over
nearly all sales calls placed to U.S. consumers.
Over half the states currently administer
their own Do Not Call lists. Most of these states will
add the numbers on their registries to the National
Do Not Call Registry. However, the TSR does NOT preempt
state law, so sellers, telemarketers, and others who
do
telemarketing will have to check with various states
to determine what is required for compliance at the
state level. For information
about the FCC’s telemarketing regulations, visit
the FCC’s Web site at www.fcc.gov.
A full copy of the FCC’s regulations can be found
at: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-03-153A1.pdf
The FTC and FCC are working to harmonize
state and federal Do Not Call laws. The goal is to achieve
a single National Registry for the convenience and efficiency
of consumers as well as businesses.
Troubleshooting
What if I have problems when
I try to access the National Registry?
The Web site at www.telemarketing.donotcall.gov
has help available online during regular business hours
via a secure electronic form.
How does the National
Registry impact small, home-based direct sellers?
FTC staff does not contemplate enforcing the National
Do Not Call Registry provisions against individuals
who make sales calls out of their own homes to
personal friends, family members, or small numbers
of personal referrals. In fact, most of the calls
made by such small direct sellers probably would
be local or “intrastate” calls, and
therefore not covered by the TSR. The TSR applies
to telemarketing campaigns that involve more than
one interstate call.
Nevertheless, small home-based direct sellers
should be aware that the Do Not Call regulations
of the FCC cover intrastate calls. The FCC regulations
exempt “personal relationship” calls—where
the party called is a family member, friend, or
acquaintance of the telemarketer making the call.
As a matter of goodwill, small direct sellers
may want to avoid contacting a person whose number
is on the Registry. The National Do Not Call Registry
has a free, single number look-up feature to enable
small direct sellers to verify whether an individual
number is in the Registry database. |
Where can I get more information
about compliance?
The best source of information about complying with
the Do Not Call provisions of the TSR is the FTC’s
Web site at www.ftc.gov/donotcall.
It includes business information about the National
Registry. You can view the entire TSR at that site.
It’s important that sellers
and others involved in telemarketing recognize that
both the FTC and the FCC regulate telemarketing practices.
Those involved in telemarketing should review regulations
put in place by both agencies. The FCC’s regulations
may be found at: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-03-153A1.pdf
Do Not Call Safe Harbor
If a seller or telemarketer can establish
that as part of its routine business practice,
it meets the following requirements, it will not
be subject to civil penalties or sanctions for
erroneously calling a consumer who has asked not
to be called, or for calling a number on the National
Registry:
- the seller or telemarketer has established
and implemented written procedures to honor
consumers’ requests that they not be called.
- the seller or telemarketer has trained its
personnel, and any entity assisting in its compliance,
in these procedures.
- the seller, telemarketer, or someone else
acting on behalf of the seller or charitable
organization has maintained and recorded an
entity-specific Do Not Call list.
- the seller or telemarketer uses, and maintains
records documenting, a process to prevent calls
to any telephone number on an entity-specific
Do Not Call list or the National Do Not Call
Registry. This, provided that the latter process
involves using a version of the National Registry
from the FTC no more than three months before
the date any call is made.
- the seller, telemarketer, or someone else
acting on behalf of the seller or charitable
organization monitors and enforces compliance
with the entity’s written Do Not Call
procedures.
- the call is a result of error.
What happens if a consumer is called
after he or she has asked not to be called? If
a seller or telemarketer calls a consumer who
has:
- placed his number on the National Registry
- not given written and signed permission to
call
- either no established business relationship
with the seller, or has asked to get no more
calls from or on behalf of that seller . . .
the seller and telemarketer may be liable for
a Rule violation. If an investigation reveals
that neither the seller nor the telemarketer had
written Do Not Call procedures in place, both
will be liable for the Rule violation. If the
seller had written Do Not Call procedures, but
the telemarketer ignored them, the telemarketer
will be liable for the Rule violation; the seller
also might be liable, unless it could demonstrate
that it monitored and enforced Do Not Call compliance
and otherwise implemented its written procedures.
Ultimately, a seller is responsible for keeping
a current entityspecific Do Not Call list, either
through a telemarketing service it hires or its
own efforts.
What does “error” mean?
If a seller or telemarketer has and implements
written Do Not Call procedures, it will not be
liable for a Rule violation if a subsequent call
is the result of error. But it may be subject
to an enforcement investigation, which would focus
on the effectiveness of the procedures in place,
how they are implemented, and if all personnel
are trained in Do Not Call procedures. If there
is a high incidence of “errors,” it
may be determined that the procedures are inadequate
to comply with the Rule’s Do Not Call requirements,
the safe harbor is not fulfilled, and the calls
violate the Rule. On the other hand, if there
is a low incidence of “errors,” there
may not be a Rule violation. The determination
of whether an excusable “error” occurs
is based on the facts of each case. A safe rule
of thumb to ensure that adequate Do Not Call procedures
are implemented is to test periodically for quality
control and effectiveness. |
Exemptions to the National Do Not
Call Registry Provisions
The Established Business
Relationship Exemption
Sellers and telemarketers may call
a consumer with whom a seller has an established business
relationship, provided the consumer has not asked to
be on the seller’s entity-specific Do Not Call
list. The Rule states that there are two kinds of established
business relationships.
One is based on the consumer’s
purchase, rental, or lease of the seller’s goods
or services, or a financial transaction between the
consumer and seller, within 18 months preceding a telemarketing
call. The 18-month period runs from the date of the
last payment, transaction, or shipment between the consumer
and the seller.
The other is based on a consumer’s
inquiry or application regarding a seller’s goods
or services, and exists for three months starting from
the date the consumer makes the inquiry or application.
This enables sellers to return calls to interested prospects
even if their telephone numbers are on the National
Registry.
Examples:
A magazine seller may make a telemarketing call
to a customer whose number is on the National
Registry for 18 months after the date of the customer’s
last payment for magazines or for 18 months after
the seller’s last shipment date of magazines,
whichever is later.
A consumer calls a company to ask for more information
about a particular product. If the company returns
the consumer’s call within three months
from the date of the inquiry, whether the consumer’s
telephone number is on the National Registry is
immaterial. But after that three month period,
the company would need either the consumer’s
express agreement to get more calls or a transaction-based
established business relationship to support more
calls. |
To whom does the established
business relationship apply?
An established business relationship is between a seller
and a customer; it is not necessarily between one of
the seller’s subsidiaries or affiliates and that
customer. The test for whether a subsidiary or affiliate
can claim an established business relationship with
a sister company’s customer is: would the customer
expect to receive a call from such an entity, or would
the customer feel such a call is inconsistent with having
placed his or her number on the National Do Not Call
Registry?
Factors to be considered in this
analysis include the nature and type of goods or services
offered and the identity of the affiliate. Are the affiliate’s
goods or services similar to the seller’s? Is
the affiliate’s name identical or similar to the
seller’s? The greater
the similarity between the nature and type of goods
sold by the seller and any subsidiary or affiliate and
the greater the similarity in identity between the seller
and any subsidiary and affiliate, the more likely it
is that the call would fall within the established business
relationship exemption.
Examples:
A consumer who purchased aluminum siding from
“Alpha Company Siding,” a subsidiary
of “Alpha Corp.,” likely would not
be surprised to receive a call from “Alpha
Company Kitchen Remodeling,” also a subsidiary
of “Alpha Corp.” The name of the seller
and the subsidiary are similar, as are the type
of goods or services offered—home repair
and remodeling.
If a consumer purchases a computer with peripherals—printer,
keyboard, speakers—from a local retail store,
the consumer will have an established business
relationship with that store for 18 months from
the date of purchase. In addition, the consumer
may have an established business relationship
with the computer manufacturer and possibly the
manufacturer of the peripherals, as well as the
operating system manufacturer, as long as the
customer has a contractual relationship with any
of these entities. If the printer comes with a
manufacturer’s written warranty, the manufacturer
of the printer has an established business relationship
with the customer. If the operating system comes
with a manufacturer’s written warranty,
the manufacturer of the system has an established
business relationship with the customer, too.
However, if a consumer buys
a subscription to a magazine from a magazine publisher
that happens to be owned by a corporation with
diverse holdings, the customer’s established
business relationship would exist only with the
magazine publisher, not the corporate parent or
any other corporate subsidiaries. |
The Written Permission
to Call Exemption
The Rule allows sellers and telemarketers
to call any consumer who gives his or her express agreement
to receive calls, even if the consumer’s number
is in the National Do Not Call Registry. The consumer
must give express agreement in writing to receive calls
placed by—or on behalf of—the seller, including
the number to which calls may be made, and the consumer’s
signature. The signature may be a valid electronic signature,
if the agreement is reached online.
f a seller seeks a consumer’s
permission to call, the request must be clear and conspicuous,
and the consumer’s assent must be affirmative.
If the request is made in writing, it cannot be hidden;
printed in small, pale, or non-contrasting type; hidden
on the back or bottom of the document; or buried in
unrelated information where a person would not expect
to find such a request. A consumer must provide consent
affirmatively, such as by checking a box. For example,
a consumer responding to an email request for
permission to call would not be deemed to have provided
such permission if the “Please call me”
button was pre-checked as a default.
In the FTC’s enforcement experience,
sweepstakes entry forms often have been used in a deceptive
manner to obtain “authorization” from a
consumer to incur a charge or some other detriment.
Authorization or permission obtained through subterfuge
is ineffective. The FTC scrutinizes any use of such
sweepstakes entry forms as a way to get a consumer’s
permission to place telemarketing calls to her number.
Other Provisions
Relating to Do Not Call
Selling or Using a Do
Not Call List for Purposes Other than Compliance
It is a violation of the Rule for
anyone to sell, rent, lease, purchase, or use an entity-specific
Do Not Call list or the National Registry for any purpose
other than complying with the Rule’s Do Not Call
provisions or preventing calls to numbers on such lists.
This provision applies to list brokers, third-party
services, and others, in addition to sellers and telemarketers.
It is intended to ensure that consumers’ phone
numbers on Do Not Call lists and the National Registry
are not misused. It is a violation of this provision
for a seller to market its own entityspecific Do Not
Call list to another entity for use as a “do call”
list.
Sellers and telemarketers (on behalf
of sellers) must purchase access to the relevant Do
Not Call data from the National Registry database. The
Rule prohibits participating in any arrangement to share
the cost of accessing the National Registry database.
A telemarketer may not divide the costs to access the
National Registry database among various client sellers;
access for each client seller must be purchased separately.
Similarly, a telemarketer may not access the National
Registry to obtain Do Not Call data and transfer the
data to or share it with another telemarketer.
Denying or Interfering
with Someone’s Do Not Call Rights
It is a Rule violation to deny or
interfere with someone’s right to be placed on
the National Do Not Call Registry or on any entity-specific
Do Not Call list. This provision prohibits a telemarketer
from refusing to accept a consumer’s entity-specific
Do Not Call request, whether by hanging up the telephone
when the consumer asserts the request, harassing the
consumer for having made such a request, or simply failing
to diligently capture information about a consumer’s
Do Not Call request and add it to the appropriate entity-specific
Do Not Call list. In addition, it would violate this
part of the Rule for any person to purport to accept
telephone numbers or other information for entry into
the National Do Not Call Registry. No data from third
parties is accepted into the National Do Not Call Registry.
Calling Time Restrictions
Unless a telemarketer has a person’s
prior consent to do otherwise, it is violation of the
Rule to make outbound telemarketing calls to the person’s
home outside the hours of 8 a.m. and 9 p.m.
Call Abandonment (and Safe Harbor)
The Rule expressly prohibits telemarketers
from abandoning any outbound telephone call, but has
an alternative that allows some flexibility while enabling
you to avoid liability under this provision. The
call abandonment provision and safe harbor take effect
October 1, 2003.
Abandoned calls often result from
the telemarketers’ use of predictive dialers to
call consumers. Predictive dialers promote telemarketers’
efficiency by simultaneously calling multiple consumers
for every available sales representative. This maximizes
the amount of time telemarketing sales representatives
spend talking to consumers and minimizes representatives’
“downtime.” But it also means some calls
are abandoned: consumers are either hung up on or kept
waiting for long periods until a representative is available.
Under the Rule’s definition,
an outbound telephone call is “abandoned”
if a person answers it and the telemarketer does not
connect the call to a sales representative within two
seconds of the person’s completed greeting. The
use of prerecorded message telemarketing, where a sales
pitch begins with or is made entirely by a prerecorded
message, violates the TSR because the telemarketer is
not connecting the call to a sales representative within
two seconds of the person’s completed greeting.
What about situations
where a consumer agrees to receive pre-recorded
message telemarketing calls? FTC staff
do not anticipate enforcing this provision against
sellers and telemarketers who have the prior consent
of a called consumer. For example, a dry cleaner
in Kansas City, doing business in both Missouri
and Kansas, gets permission from its customers to
call them with prerecorded messages about the schedule
for pick-up and delivery. The dry cleaner does not
risk a law enforcement action from the FTC for violating
the call abandonment prohibition, because a pre-recorded
message call, made with the prior permission of
the called party, is not an abandoned call. |
The abandoned call safe harbor provides
that a telemarketer will not face enforcement action
for violating the call abandonment prohibition if the
telemarketer:
- uses technology that ensures abandonment of no
more than three percent of all calls answered by a
live person, measured per day per calling campaign.
- allows the telephone to ring for 15 seconds or
four rings before disconnecting an unanswered call.
- plays a recorded message stating the name and telephone
number of the seller on whose behalf the call was
placed whenever a live sales representative is unavailable
within two seconds of a live person answering the
call.
- maintains records documenting adherence to the
three requirements above.
To take advantage of the safe harbor,
a telemarketer must first ensure that a live representative
takes the call in at least 97 percent of the calls answered
by consumers. Calls answered by machine, calls that
are not answered at all, and calls to non-working numbers
do not count in this calculation.
The “per day,
per calling campaign” measure
A telemarketer running simultaneous campaigns (on
behalf of the same or different sellers) cannot
average the abandonment rates for all campaigns,
offsetting for example, a six percent abandonment
rate for one campaign with a zero percent abandonment
rate for another. Each separate campaign is subject
to a maximum abandonment rate of three percent per
day. |
A telemarketer also must eliminate
“early hangups” by allowing an unanswered
call to ring either four times or for 15 seconds before
disconnecting the call. This element of the safe harbor
ensures that consumers have reasonable time to answer
a call and are not subjected to “dead air”
after one, two, or three rings.
In addition, in the small permissible
percentage of calls in which a live representative may
not be available within two seconds of the consumer’s
completed greeting, the telemarketer must play a recorded
message. The message must state the name and telephone
number of the seller responsible for the call, enabling
the consumer to know who was calling and, should the
consumer wish, to return the call. The Rule expressly
states that sellers and telemarketers still must comply
with relevant state and federal laws, including, but
not limited to, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act
(47 U.S.C. § 227) and FCC regulations at 47 C.F.R.
Part 64.1200. The FCC regulations prohibit such recorded
messages from containing a sales pitch, but, like the
TSR provision discussed here, require that the message
state “only the name and telephone number of the
business, entity, or individual on whose behalf the
call was placed and that the call was for ‘telemarketing
purposes.’” The recorded message must not
contain a sales pitch. The number on the recorded message
must be one to which a consumer can call to place an
entity specific Do Not Call request.
Finally, a telemarketer wishing to
avail itself of the safe harbor for abandoned calls
must keep records that document its compliance with
the first three safe harbor components in accordance
with the recordkeeping provision of the Rule (Section
310.5). The records must establish that the abandonment
rate has not exceeded three percent and that the ring
time and recorded message requirements have been fulfilled.
Transmitting Caller ID Information
It is a violation of the Rule to
fail to transmit or cause to be transmitted the telephone
number, and, when available by the telemarketer’s
telephone company, the name of the telemarketer to any
consumer’s caller identification service.
This provision takes effect January 29, 2004.
To comply with this requirement, a
telemarketer may transmit its own number and, where
available, its own name, to consumers’ caller
identification services. The Rule also allows a substitution
of the name of the seller (or charitable organization)
on whose behalf the telemarketer is calling, and the
seller’s (or charitable organization’s)
customer (or donor) service telephone number, which
is answered during regular business hours. The Rule
permits a service bureau calling on behalf of many client-sellers
to transmit a client-seller’s customer service
number (or the donor service number of a charitable
organization client) as well as the names of these entities,
if the service bureau’s telephone company has
the capacity to transmit this information.
There may be situations when a consumer
who subscribes to a Caller ID service does not receive
a telemarketer’s transmission of Caller ID information
despite the fact that the telemarketer has arranged
with its carrier to transmit this information in every
call. This can happen if the Caller ID information is
dropped somewhere between the telemarketer’s call
center and the consumer’s telephone. Telemarketers
who can show that they took all available steps to ensure
transmission of Caller ID information in every call
will not be liable for isolated inadvertent instances
when the Caller ID information fails to make it to the
consumer’s receiver. Nevertheless, a telemarketer’s
use of calling equipment that is not capable of transmitting
Caller ID information is no excuse for failure to transmit
the required information.
The FCC’s telemarketing regulations
under the TCPA also include provisions governing the
transmission of Caller ID (47 C.F.R. § 64.1200).
Threats, Intimidation, and Profane
or Obscene Language
Sellers and telemarketers are prohibited
from using threats, intimidation, and profane or obscene
language in a telemarketing transaction. This prohibition
covers all types of threats, including threats of bodily
injury, financial ruin, and threats to ruin credit.
It also prohibits intimidation, including acts that
put undue pressure on a consumer, or that call into
question a person’s intelligence, honesty, reliability,
or concern for family. Repeated calls to an individual
who has declined to accept an offer also may be viewed
as
an act of intimidation.
Calling Consumers Repeatedly or
Continuously, with the Intent to Annoy, Abuse, or Harass
A consumer asks to be placed on a
company’s Do Not Call list. If the telemarketer
who receives that request decides to dial the consumer’s
number repeatedly, hanging up each time or making obnoxious
or offensive remarks to the consumer in retaliation,
the calls would violate this provision of the Rule.
Repeated calls urging a consumer to take advantage of
an offer also would violate this provision, provided
they are made with the intent to annoy, abuse, or harass.
Fraudulent
Telemarketing Operations
Several distinct practices occur in
fraudulent telemarketing operations. The TSR takes specific
aim at these practices.
Disclosing or Receiving Unencrypted
Account Numbers for Consideration
Along with the provisions on express
verifiable authorization and unauthorized billing, another
provision is designed to ensure that consumers are not
charged without their consent. Basically, the Rule makes
it illegal to disclose or receive unencrypted account
numbers for consideration, unless the disclosure or
receipt is to process a payment for a transaction the
consumer has consented to after receiving all necessary
disclosures and other protections the Rule provides.
Other than processing a transaction to which the consumer
has consented, there is no legitimate purpose for disclosing
or receiving a consumer’s unencrypted account
number. Because of the likelihood that people illicitly
trading in unencrypted account numbers will misuse the
information by placing unauthorized charges against
consumers’ accounts, this practice is deemed abusive
and is prohibited under the Rule.
The term “unencrypted”
means not only complete, visible account numbers, whether
provided in lists or singly, but also encrypted information
with a key to decrypt. “Consideration” can
take a variety of forms, all of which are aimed at compensating
the provider of the account number information. Forms
of consideration include cash or other forms of payment
for the list up front or after the sale, and payment
of a percentage of each “sale” made using
the account numbers, among others.
Payment Restrictions on Sales of
Credit Repair Services
Credit repair services promise consumers
with a bad credit history that they can remove negative
information from, or otherwise improve, a consumer’s
credit history, credit record, or credit rating, regardless
of whether the information is accurate.
The Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers
from requesting or receiving payment for credit repair
services before two events occur:
One, the time frame during which
the seller has promised services will be provided
must have expired. Sellers can represent the time
frame for the delivery of the services either orally
or in writing, including in the contract for the
services. If there’s a discrepancy between the
various representations by the credit repair seller,
the longest time frame represented determines when
payment may be requested or received.
Two, the seller must provide the
consumer with evidence that the improvement promised
in the consumer’s credit record has been achieved.
The evidence must be a consumer report from a consumer
reporting agency, issued more than six months after
the results were achieved. Nothing in the TSR affects
the requirement in the Fair Credit Reporting Act that
a consumer report may be obtained only for a specific
permissible purpose.
This prohibition is directed
at the deceptive marketing and sale of bogus credit
repair services; it is not directed at the nondeceptive
telemarketing of secured credit cards or legitimate
credit monitoring services. No one can permanently
remove or “erase” negative entries
on a consumer’s credit report if the information
is accurate and current. Deceptive credit repair
services may be able to cause negative credit
information to disappear from a consumer’s
credit report temporarily by flooding a credit
bureau with letters disputing the accuracy of
the negative entries. But once the credit bureau
verifies with creditors that the negative items
are accurate, they will reappear on a consumer’s
credit report and stay there for up to seven years
and, in the case of a bankruptcy, for 10 years.
If an item is inaccurate, incomplete, or more
than seven or 10 years old, consumers can remove
or correct the information themselves at no charge
if they follow the dispute procedures in the Fair
Credit Reporting Act. Consumers do not need the
services of a third party to correct an inaccurate
or out-of-date credit report. No one can do anything
to “repair” a bad credit report that
is accurate and up to date. |
Payment Restrictions on Sales of
Recovery Services
So-called “recovery services”
target consumers who have already been victimized by
telemarketing fraud. In these operations, a deceptive
telemarketer calls a consumer who has lost money or
failed to receive a promised prize in a previous scam.
The recovery room telemarketer falsely promises to recover
the lost money or the promised prize, in exchange for
a fee paid in advance. But even after the fee is paid,
the services promised are not provided. Typically, the
consumer never hears from the telemarketer again.
The Rule prohibits any recovery service
from asking for or accepting payment for any goods or
services purporting to help a consumer recover funds
paid in a previous telemarketing transaction—or
to recover anything of value promised to a consumer
in a previous telemarketing transaction—until
seven business days after the funds or other items recovered
are delivered to the consumer.
The Rule’s restriction on when
recovery rooms can ask for and accept payment does not
apply to services provided by licensed attorneys. In
addition, the Rule takes aim only at recovery services
that promise the return of money or other items of value
paid for or promised to the consumer in a previous telemarketing
transaction. It does not apply to attempts to recover
money or items lost outside of telemarketing.
This prohibition does not cover debt
collection services. In fact, debt collection services
are not covered by the Rule in general, because they
are not “conducted to induce the purchase of goods
or services”— a prerequisite for Rule coverage
as dictated by the Rule’s definition of “telemarketing.”
Debt collectors must comply with the FTC’s Fair
Debt Collection Practices Act.
Payment Restrictions on Sales of
Advance-Fee Loans
In advance-fee loan schemes, a telemarketer,
in exchange for a fee paid in advance, promises to get
a loan or a credit card for a consumer or represents
a high likelihood of success in getting or arranging
a loan or other extension of credit for a consumer,
regardless of the consumer’s credit history or
credit record. After the consumer pays the fee, he or
she typically doesn’t receive the promised loan
or other extension of credit. Advance-fee loans generally
are marketed to consumers who have bad credit histories
or difficulty getting credit for other reasons. The
Rule prohibits sellers and telemarketers who guarantee
or represent a high likelihood of success in obtaining
or arranging a loan or other extension of credit from
asking for or accepting payment until a consumer gets
the extension of credit promised.
This prohibition on advance fees for
loans or other extensions of credit applies only if
sellers and telemarketers guarantee or represent a high
likelihood of success in obtaining or arranging for
a loan or other extension of credit. Legitimate creditors
may offer various extensions of credit through telemarketing
and may require an application fee or appraisal fee
in advance. There must be no guarantee or representation
of a high likelihood that the consumer will obtain the
extension of credit. This prohibition in the Rule does
not apply to firm, “pre-approved” offers
of credit by creditors who properly use a “pre-screened”
list in accordance with the FTC staff commentary on
the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
Recordkeeping
Requirements
The Rule requires most sellers and
telemarketers to keep certain records that relate to
their telemarketing activities. The Rule’s recordkeeping
requirements do not apply to sellers and telemarketers
of nondurable office and cleaning supplies. The following
records must be maintained for two years from the date
that the record is produced:
- advertising and promotional materials
- information about prize recipients
- sales records
- employee records
- all verifiable authorizations or records of express
informed consent or express agreement.
Explanations of these categories
follow.
Advertising and Promotional Materials
Sellers and telemarketers must keep
at least one specimen copy of all substantially different
advertising, brochures, telemarketing scripts, and promotional
materials. It is not required to keep copies of documents
that are virtually identical except for immaterial variations
or minor alterations. Obviously, if no scripts or advertising
or promotional materials are used in connection with
the telemarketing activity, no materials need to be
retained.
Information about Prize Recipients
The Rule requires sellers and telemarketers
to maintain the name and last known address of each
prize recipient, as well as the prize awarded, for all
prizes represented to be worth at least $25. The value
of a prize is determined by what you directly state
or imply to a consumer. If you represent to a consumer,
directly or by implication, that a prize is worth $25
or more, you must keep records about the prize recipients,
even if the actual value of the prize is less than $25.
On the other hand, when there are no direct or implied
representations about the value of a prize, you must
keep records for prizes that cost you $25 or more to
purchase.
Sales Records
The Rule requires sellers and telemarketers
to maintain the following information about your sales:
the name and last known address of each customer; the
goods or services purchased; the date the goods or services
were shipped or provided; and the amount the customer
paid for the goods or services. Only records relating
to actual sales need to be maintained; you are not required
to keep records of all customer contacts when customers
do not make a purchase.
Consumer credit
products: For offers of consumer credit
products subject to the Truth in Lending Act
(TILA) and Regulation Z, compliance with the
recordkeeping requirements under those regulations
is sufficient for compliance with the TSR recordkeeping
requirement.
Magazine sales: For the sale
of magazines through a fulfillment house, where
sellers and telemarketers do not know or have
control over the dates of shipment, you may
comply with the requirement to keep a record
of the shipment date by keeping a record of
the date the order was placed with the fulfillment
house or the date that the service is to begin. |
Employee Records
Sellers and telemarketers must keep
employee records for all current and former employees
directly involved in telephone sales. These records
include the name (and any fictitious name used), the
last known home address and telephone number, and the
job title(s) of each employee. If fictitious names are
used by employees, the Rule requires that each fictitious
name be traceable to a specific employee. Businesses
must maintain up-to-date information on current employees
and last-known information on former employees. Sellers
and telemarketers are not required to update information
on former employees. In addition, records of individuals
not directly involved in telephone sales do not have
to be kept for purposes of the Rule. Nevertheless, such
information may be required under other state or federal
laws.
Verifiable Authorizations or Records
of Express Informed Consent or Express Agreement
When the method of payment is not
a credit card (subject to the protections of the Truth
in Lending Act and Regulation Z), or a debit card (subject
to the protections of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act
and Regulation E), sellers and telemarketers must obtain
a consumer’s express verifiable authorization
before causing billing information to be submitted for
payment. The Rule requires you to maintain a record
of all verifiable authorizations that must be provided
or received under the Rule. This requirement does not
apply to conventional checks, written, signed, and mailed
to you by the consumer, or to certain other methods,
listed in the section on express verifiable authorization.
Sellers and telemarketers should retain
records of the verifiable authorization for each transaction,
in any form, manner, or format consistent with the methods
of authorization permitted under the Rule. For example,
if you obtain a written authorization from the consumer,
a copy of it must be maintained; if authorization is
via audio recording, a copy of the recording must be
maintained. While the recording may be retained in any
format, it must include all the information that must
be disclosed to the consumer, as well as the consumer’s
oral authorization. If a consumer gives written confirmation,
you must maintain all the information provided in the
confirmation.
For records of express informed consent
and express agreement (required by the unauthorized
billing provision of the Rule [Section 310.4(a)(6)]
and the National Do Not Call Registry provision [Section
310.4(b)(1)(iii)(B)(i)]), you must create and maintain
records of consent and agreement for each required transaction,
and keep them in much the same way you keep such records
in the ordinary course of business.
Maintaining Records
The Rule is not intended to impose
any new recordkeeping procedures on sellers and telemarketers.
You may maintain the records in any manner, format,
or place that you keep such records in the ordinary
course of business, including in electronic storage,
on microfiche, or on paper.
Who Must Keep Records?
Sellers and telemarketers do not
have to keep duplicative records if they have a written
agreement allocating responsibility for complying with
the recordkeeping requirements.Without a written agreement
between the parties, or if the written agreement is
unclear as to who must maintain the required records,
telemarketers must keep employee records, while sellers
must keep the advertising and promotional materials,
information on prize recipients, sales records, and
verifiable authorizations. In the event of
dissolution or termination of the business of a seller
or telemarketer, the principal of the business must
maintain all records of the business. In the event of
a sale, assignment, or other change in ownership of
the seller or telemarketer’s business, the successor
business must maintain the records.
Does the Rule require
that other information be maintained concerning
the verifiable authorizations? No,
but it is sound policy for sellers and telemarketers
who use the written confirmation method of authorization
for non-debit and credit card payments to maintain
records showing that the confirmation was sent
to the customer before the customer’s billing
information was submitted for payment. In addition,
you may want to keep records of any refunds you
provide to consumers who claim that the written
confirmation was inaccurate. If law enforcement
authorities get consumer complaints about unauthorized
billing, they may ask the seller or telemarketer
to produce the information to show that the Rule
requirements were followed. |
Who Can Enforce
the Rule?
The FTC, the states, and private
citizens may bring civil actions in federal district
courts to enforce the Rule. State attorneys general
or any other officer authorized by the state to bring
actions on behalf of its residents may bring actions
by the states. Private citizens may bring an action
to enforce the Rule if they have suffered $50,000 or
more in actual damages.
If state officials or private citizens
bring a legal action under the Rule, they must provide
written notice of their action to the FTC before filing
a complaint, if feasible, or immediately upon filing
the action. The notice must include a copy of the complaint
and any other pleadings to be filed with the court.
Private litigants and state officials should send such
notices to:
Office of the Director
Bureau of Consumer Protection
Federal Trade Commission
Washington, D.C. 20580
State officials also may submit electronic
notice, and copies of pleadings, via the Consumer Sentinel
Web site. Information about Consumer Sentinel is available
at www.consumer.gov/sentinel
Penalties
for Violating the Rule
Anyone who violates the Rule is subject
to civil penalties of up to $11,000 per violation. In
addition, violators may be subject to nationwide injunctions
that prohibit certain conduct, and may be required to
pay redress to injured consumers.
Additional
Sources of Information
Direct Marketing Association, Inc.
Washington Office:
1111 19th Street, N.W., Suite 1100
Washington, D.C. 20036-3603
(202) 955-5030
The FTC has information available
about the following subjects at www.ftc.gov or from its tollfree HelpLine, 1-877-FTC-HELP:
- FTC’s Franchise Rule
- FTC’s 900-Number Rule
- FTC’s Cooling Off Rule
- FTC’s Mail or Telephone Order Merchandise
Rule
- FTC’s Negative Option Rule
- Continuity Plans
- Fair Credit Reporting Act
- FTC’s Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
- The Truth in Lending Act
The FCC has information about the
TCPA.
Federal Communications Commission
Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau
Complaints & Inquiries Division
445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554
email: fccinfo@fcc.gov
www.fcc.gov/cgb/complaints.html
1-888-CALL-FCC (1-888-225-5322)—voice
1-888-TELL-FCC (1-888-835-5322)—TTY
Footnotes
- These entities are: brokers, dealers,
transfer agents, municipal securities dealers, municipal
securities brokers, government securities brokers,
and government securities dealers (as those terms
are defined in Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940); and futures commission merchants,
including brokers, commodity trading advisers, commodity
pool operators, leverage transaction merchants, floor
brokers, or floor traders (as those terms are defined
in Section 6(1) of the Commodity Exchange Act).
- An investment opportunity is anything
that is offered, offered for sale, sold, or traded
based on representations about past, present, or future
income, profit, or appreciation. Examples of investment
opportunities include art, rare coins, oil and gas
leases, precious or strategic metals, gemstones, or
FCC license or spectrum lottery schemes. In addition,
business ventures that are not covered by the FTC’s
Franchise Rule are investment opportunities.
- State laws vary on permitting
the recording of telephone conversations and the requirements
to obtain consent of the recorded party. Consult an
attorney for guidance on these issues.
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