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  1. #1
    Frank Thomas
    Guest
    Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid having my
    phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.

    Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better call and
    see whats going on.

    I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who starts
    asking questions from a script, including asking how I intended to pay and
    what my credit card number was. Spooked, I asked what country are you in?
    "We are not permitted to give our location out, I can only give the call
    center ID". I told her then sorry I am not allowed to give my credit card
    number to foreignors outside of the US and hung up.

    I called *2, and after the usual 3 minute hold, spoke to someone with clear,
    unscripted Southern, who checked my record (the on line payment had gone
    AWOL[future reference: write down on line payment confirmation number]) and
    offered to take my payment on the phone - for a $5 a fee. After venting some
    frustration about the on line AWOL payment, the rep kindly agreed to waive
    the fee. (I also asked about the 800 number and the Indians(?) on it, and
    was told yes, that was Sprint Financial Services).

    Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call 800-808-1336
    to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who probably makes $5 a
    day and give them your social security number and credit card numbers and
    its free. But if you want to talk to an American, dial *2 and be prepared
    to pay $5.






    See More: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint




  2. #2
    Kevin M.
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    > Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid
    > having my phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.
    > Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better call
    > and see whats going on.
    >
    > I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who
    > starts asking questions from a script, including asking how I
    > intended to pay and what my credit card number was. Spooked, I asked
    > what country are you in? "We are not permitted to give our location
    > out, I can only give the call center ID". I told her then sorry I am
    > not allowed to give my credit card number to foreignors outside of
    > the US and hung up.


    Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    became the way that you are.

    When you travel outside the US, do/will you NOT use credit cards? If so,
    why not? With the exception of AMEX traveler's checks, they're safer than
    any other form of payment, and assuming you're in a "westernized" country,
    they're far more convenient than anything else, except cash, maybe.

    When you pay for something in a 'sit-down' restaurant, do you give your CC
    to the waiter and feel safe as he walks away with it, out of your sight?

    > I called *2, and after the usual 3 minute hold, spoke to someone with
    > clear, unscripted Southern, who checked my record (the on line
    > payment had gone AWOL[future reference: write down on line payment
    > confirmation number]) and offered to take my payment on the phone -
    > for a $5 a fee. After venting some frustration about the on line AWOL
    > payment, the rep kindly agreed to waive the fee. (I also asked about
    > the 800 number and the Indians(?) on it, and was told yes, that was
    > Sprint Financial Services).


    I worked for SPCS Collections for several months. The $5 fee is scripted.
    If you don't ask for it, you get fired. There are conditions, however,
    that the caller can satisfy which will allow the Collections rep to drop
    the $5 fee, and you obviously satisfied those.

    > Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call
    > 800-808-1336 to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who
    > probably makes $5 a day and give them your social security number and
    > credit card numbers and its free. But if you want to talk to an
    > American, dial *2 and be prepared to pay $5.


    I worked for SPCS Collections for several months, and the payment via *2
    has ALWAYS been $5. This is nothing new. It's how SPCS pays the
    Collections reps and still allows you to purchase a subsidized phone with
    a good, cheap plan.

    When you interact with a human being in a business, the only way they get
    paid is a)tacking on a fee for 'human' attention, or b)building the cost
    of the 'human attention' into their product. Why is 'a' more offensive
    than 'b'?


    Kevin M.
    "Know your enemy, and know yourself; in one-thousand battles
    you shall never be in peril." -- Sun Tzu, *The Art of War*
    "Contentment... Complacency... Catastrophe!" -- Joseph Chevalier





  3. #3
    Frank Thomas
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint


    "Kevin M." <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:i2_Zc.1681$aW5.1493@fed1read07...
    ........................
    > Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    > became the way that you are.
    >
    > When you travel outside the US, do/will you NOT use credit cards? If so,
    > why not? With the exception of AMEX traveler's checks, they're safer than
    > any other form of payment, and assuming you're in a "westernized" country,
    > they're far more convenient than anything else, except cash, maybe.
    >
    > When you pay for something in a 'sit-down' restaurant, do you give your CC
    > to the waiter and feel safe as he walks away with it, out of your sight


    Answer is yes I do use credit cards outside the US, and I have had a credit
    card stolen overseas. Luckily did not accrue a loss.

    Its ALOT different with a call center then a waiter. All the waiter has is
    your credit card number. The call center has name, address, phone number,
    social security number. The potential for large scale identity theft in
    countries without the skills and resources to prosecute identity theft
    crimes (after all, the victims would not even be citizens) is in my opinion
    great.

    Eight years ago before outsource was a word (and before identity theft was a
    word), we were working with foreign subcontractors. I've been over yonder
    and did some training with them (where I had my credit card stolen). They
    are nice hard working people that happen to live in very substandard
    housing and get paid about $5 to $7 a day. They are happy to have a job.
    They got bills to pay, kids to put through school, inlaws to take care of,
    doctors and hospitals, just like we do. Thing is, as time goes by though,
    they wonder why they get $7 a day instead of $7 an hour. And they are
    sitting on a gold mine of personal identification information. In my view,
    sending highly personal and sensitive US customer data overseas to people
    like that, however nice and grateful they are for the work, is a major
    liability, any reasonable person can see that.

    In our firm, absolutely ZERO customer information goes overseas, no names,.
    no phones, addresses, other IDs, and absolutely no mission critical detailed
    design either. Grunt work , off peak overload (they work while you sleep) is
    what your foreign subs are good at. Sprint has other ideas it seems and
    more lawyers then we do and I guess is willing to the roll dice with the
    security of their customer's identity to save a few nickels.

    (The thing that kills me with an outsourcing is that we have been doing it a
    long time, and its really not that cheap. Sure the labor is cheap, but you
    gotta package it so that they can work on it, when they are done it has to
    be reviewed, periodically you have to do training missions over there.
    There is some built in inefficiency that offsets what they save. They only
    reason we still do it is not to save money but to take advantage of the time
    difference to keep production rolling 24 hours. )



    > I worked for SPCS Collections for several months. The $5 fee is scripted.
    > If you don't ask for it, you get fired. There are conditions, however,
    > that the caller can satisfy which will allow the Collections rep to drop
    > the $5 fee, and you obviously satisfied those.


    Thanks for the insight.

    > When you interact with a human being in a business, the only way they get
    > paid is a)tacking on a fee for 'human' attention, or b)building the cost
    > of the 'human attention' into their product. Why is 'a' more offensive
    > than 'b'?
    >


    Good point. The answer is that in our business we learned early on people
    hate being nickled and dimed to death. Give clients a cheap price up front
    and then bill them for every phone call, mileage, postage stamp etc., for a
    detailed invoice, statment, they get pretty pissed off. Give them a fair up
    front lump sum cost that includes all normal anticipated costs and they love
    you. You got to sell quality and completeness of service.

    Anyway, thanks for your insight into Sprint collections, if I have to call
    again I hope I get to talk to you.









  4. #4
    Scott
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 06:10:23 -0700, "Kevin M." <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    >Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >> Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid
    >> having my phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.
    >> Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better call
    >> and see whats going on.
    >>
    >> I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who
    >> starts asking questions from a script, including asking how I
    >> intended to pay and what my credit card number was. Spooked, I asked
    >> what country are you in? "We are not permitted to give our location
    >> out, I can only give the call center ID". I told her then sorry I am
    >> not allowed to give my credit card number to foreignors outside of
    >> the US and hung up.

    >
    >Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    >became the way that you are.
    >

    This person had made his payment. He gets a notice to call a number
    and they ask for his credit card number. When he asks for where the
    call center is, they refuse to tell him. I would be suspicious too.
    He did exactly the right hting by hanging up and making a call to a
    number where he can be sure he is talking to a Sprint representative.

    THere are call centers in foreign countries and there are also
    companies that contract out to prisons for the same function.

    You can never be too careful when someone unsolicited contacts you and
    wants private info.

    I think that he did exactly the right thing.


    >When you travel outside the US, do/will you NOT use credit cards? If so,
    >why not? With the exception of AMEX traveler's checks, they're safer than
    >any other form of payment, and assuming you're in a "westernized" country,
    >they're far more convenient than anything else, except cash, maybe.
    >
    >When you pay for something in a 'sit-down' restaurant, do you give your CC
    >to the waiter and feel safe as he walks away with it, out of your sight?
    >
    >> I called *2, and after the usual 3 minute hold, spoke to someone with
    >> clear, unscripted Southern, who checked my record (the on line
    >> payment had gone AWOL[future reference: write down on line payment
    >> confirmation number]) and offered to take my payment on the phone -
    >> for a $5 a fee. After venting some frustration about the on line AWOL
    >> payment, the rep kindly agreed to waive the fee. (I also asked about
    >> the 800 number and the Indians(?) on it, and was told yes, that was
    >> Sprint Financial Services).

    >
    >I worked for SPCS Collections for several months. The $5 fee is scripted.
    >If you don't ask for it, you get fired. There are conditions, however,
    >that the caller can satisfy which will allow the Collections rep to drop
    >the $5 fee, and you obviously satisfied those.
    >
    >> Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call
    >> 800-808-1336 to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who
    >> probably makes $5 a day and give them your social security number and
    >> credit card numbers and its free. But if you want to talk to an
    >> American, dial *2 and be prepared to pay $5.

    >
    >I worked for SPCS Collections for several months, and the payment via *2
    >has ALWAYS been $5. This is nothing new. It's how SPCS pays the
    >Collections reps and still allows you to purchase a subsidized phone with
    >a good, cheap plan.
    >
    >When you interact with a human being in a business, the only way they get
    >paid is a)tacking on a fee for 'human' attention, or b)building the cost
    >of the 'human attention' into their product. Why is 'a' more offensive
    >than 'b'?
    >
    >
    >Kevin M.
    >"Know your enemy, and know yourself; in one-thousand battles
    > you shall never be in peril." -- Sun Tzu, *The Art of War*
    >"Contentment... Complacency... Catastrophe!" -- Joseph Chevalier
    >





  5. #5
    Isaiah Beard
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Frank Thomas wrote:

    > do use credit cards outside the US, and I have had a credit
    > card stolen overseas. Luckily did not accrue a loss.


    No, it's not "luckily." You just didn't accrue a loss. Most credit
    card companies are very good about that zero liability policy they have.

    > Its ALOT different with a call center then a waiter. All the waiter has is
    > your credit card number.


    Actually, no, he has your credit card, not just the number. A lot can
    be done with just the card.

    > The call center has name, address, phone number,
    > social security number.


    ....you mean, all the stuff they had anyway, even if you never gave them
    your credit card number?

    > The potential for large scale identity theft in
    > countries without the skills and resources to prosecute identity theft
    > crimes (after all, the victims would not even be citizens) is in my opinion
    > great.


    Well, the real sticking point here is, you don't even know for certain
    if you were speaking to a foreign call center. A person with a thick
    accent doesn't automatically mean that you're speaking to someone
    overseas. We do have immigration, you know.

    Second, to be totally honest, there's not a whole lot someone in India
    or Russia can really do with your personal information. A car
    dealership or electronics store in an overseas country isn't going to be
    able to do much with a US social security number, and will probably look
    mighty suspiciously upon someone applying for credit using a foreign, US
    address.

    Overseas, a thief would have much better success with an already
    established credit account, a stolen credit card number. But again,
    that's where that whole zero liability things comes into play.

    > Eight years ago before outsource was a word (and before identity theft was a
    > word), we were working with foreign subcontractors. I've been over yonder
    > and did some training with them (where I had my credit card stolen). They
    > are nice hard working people that happen to live in very substandard
    > housing and get paid about $5 to $7 a day. They are happy to have a job.
    > They got bills to pay, kids to put through school, inlaws to take care of,
    > doctors and hospitals, just like we do. Thing is, as time goes by though,
    > they wonder why they get $7 a day instead of $7 an hour.
    > And they are
    > sitting on a gold mine of personal identification information.


    So in other words, you're saying that they're honest, hard working
    people, but they're thieves anyway.

    > In my view,
    > sending highly personal and sensitive US customer data overseas to people
    > like that, however nice and grateful they are for the work, is a major
    > liability, any reasonable person can see that.


    Actually, any reasonable person can see that the possibility for ID
    theft is just as bad, if not worse, in the US. Here, people who work
    for $5-$7 an hour are often there because their skill level, past work
    history, or a criminal record prevents them from getting something
    better. The cost of living is much higher, so they're most likely
    frequently strapped for cash... and here they are, sitting on a gold
    mine of personal identification information, and far easier to open
    fraudulent US accounts with US data.

    But I guess if they're American and an ex-con, well that's just better
    than letting good ol' clean-record Deepak from Calcutta look at your
    customer data, right?

    > In our firm, absolutely ZERO customer information goes overseas, no names,.
    > no phones, addresses, other IDs, and absolutely no mission critical detailed
    > design either. Grunt work , off peak overload (they work while you sleep) is
    > what your foreign subs are good at. Sprint has other ideas it seems and
    > more lawyers then we do and I guess is willing to the roll dice with the
    > security of their customer's identity to save a few nickels.


    Then perhaps you should vote with your dollars and take your racist
    nickels elsewhere?


    --
    E-mail fudged to thwart spammers.
    Transpose the c's and a's in my e-mail address to reply.




  6. #6
    Isaiah Beard
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Scott wrote:


    >>Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    >>became the way that you are.
    >>

    >
    > This person had made his payment. He gets a notice to call a number
    > and they ask for his credit card number. When he asks for where the
    > call center is, they refuse to tell him.


    Well, I can certainly put everyone's mind at ease. The number this
    person cited (800-808-1336) is most certainly a Sprint number. I just
    ran the number through SBC's RespOrg ID system, and Sprint
    Communications, L.P. is registered as the responsible organization for
    this number.


    > I would be suspicious too.
    > He did exactly the right hting by hanging up and making a call to a
    > number where he can be sure he is talking to a Sprint representative.


    If you are that suspicious, then yes, that's a good idea. But chances
    are, you're already checked the account and seen that your payment
    didn't go through, corroborating the message.


    --
    E-mail fudged to thwart spammers.
    Transpose the c's and a's in my e-mail address to reply.




  7. #7
    Thomas T. Veldhouse
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
    Hash: SHA1

    Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    > Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid having my
    > phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.
    >
    > Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better call and
    > see whats going on.
    >
    > I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who starts
    > asking questions from a script, including asking how I intended to pay and
    > what my credit card number was. Spooked, I asked what country are you in?
    > "We are not permitted to give our location out, I can only give the call
    > center ID". I told her then sorry I am not allowed to give my credit card
    > number to foreignors outside of the US and hung up.
    >
    > I called *2, and after the usual 3 minute hold, spoke to someone with clear,
    > unscripted Southern, who checked my record (the on line payment had gone
    > AWOL[future reference: write down on line payment confirmation number]) and
    > offered to take my payment on the phone - for a $5 a fee. After venting some
    > frustration about the on line AWOL payment, the rep kindly agreed to waive
    > the fee. (I also asked about the 800 number and the Indians(?) on it, and
    > was told yes, that was Sprint Financial Services).
    >
    > Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call 800-808-1336
    > to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who probably makes $5 a
    > day and give them your social security number and credit card numbers and
    > its free. But if you want to talk to an American, dial *2 and be prepared
    > to pay $5.
    >


    I agree with you 100%! However, don't be fooled into believing that
    your social security number and other personal information is not
    already floating around the Indian subcontinent in large quantity.
    Credit Card approvals are even done through the low budget call centers.
    I make a stink about this to every customer service rep [American reps
    anyway] when I get a chance, because I want them to report that
    companies will lose business because of this. I will pay more for an
    a product that doesn't outsource its customer service centers.
    Unfortunately, so far, I don't have the option to switch carriers as
    several others do it too ...

    - --

    Thomas T. Veldhouse
    Key Fingerprint: 2DB9 813F F510 82C2 E1AE 34D0 D69D 1EDC D5EC AED1

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  8. #8
    Thomas T. Veldhouse
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
    Hash: SHA1

    Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >
    > Its ALOT different with a call center then a waiter. All the waiter has is
    > your credit card number. The call center has name, address, phone number,
    > social security number. The potential for large scale identity theft in
    > countries without the skills and resources to prosecute identity theft
    > crimes (after all, the victims would not even be citizens) is in my opinion
    > great.
    >


    I assume you mean the "perpetrators" would not be American citizens ?

    > (The thing that kills me with an outsourcing is that we have been doing it a
    > long time, and its really not that cheap. Sure the labor is cheap, but you
    > gotta package it so that they can work on it, when they are done it has to
    > be reviewed, periodically you have to do training missions over there.
    > There is some built in inefficiency that offsets what they save. They only
    > reason we still do it is not to save money but to take advantage of the time
    > difference to keep production rolling 24 hours. )
    >


    And more often than not, there is an issue with quality. I have yet to
    deal with offshore or onshore/nearshore foreign nationals [especially
    India] where you get consistantly good quality. I also have to say
    that, and this could sound bad, but my experience with Russians has been
    superb! But my experience with *shore from India has been hit or miss
    with an emphasis on miss. Apparently Dell agrees with me on this.


    - --

    Thomas T. Veldhouse
    Key Fingerprint: 2DB9 813F F510 82C2 E1AE 34D0 D69D 1EDC D5EC AED1

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  9. #9
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Frank Thomas wrote:
    > I called *2, and after the usual 3 minute hold, spoke to someone with clear,
    > unscripted Southern, who checked my record (the on line payment had gone
    > AWOL[future reference: write down on line payment confirmation number]) and
    > offered to take my payment on the phone - for a $5 a fee. After venting some
    > frustration about the on line AWOL payment, the rep kindly agreed to waive
    > the fee. (I also asked about the 800 number and the Indians(?) on it, and
    > was told yes, that was Sprint Financial Services).
    >
    > Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call 800-808-1336
    > to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who probably makes $5 a
    > day and give them your social security number and credit card numbers and
    > its free. But if you want to talk to an American, dial *2 and be prepared
    > to pay $5.


    Not necessarily. There were a couple of times at the Mentor, Ohio Sprint store
    that I had to talk to an employee to make a payment because the payment machine
    was down -- and that normally also costs money. They waived the $5 fee each time.

    If you are in a situation like this, just ask them to waive the fee. They
    usually will if you were unable to make a payment without talking to a rep or
    had a similar problem with an automated payment system.

    --
    JustThe.net Internet & New Media Services, http://JustThe.net/
    Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / 888.480.4NET (4638) / [email protected]
    PGP Key available from your friendly local key server (0xE3AE35ED)
    Apple Valley, California Nothing scares me anymore. I have three kids.



  10. #10
    Steve Sobol
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Isaiah Beard wrote:

    > Well, I can certainly put everyone's mind at ease. The number this
    > person cited (800-808-1336) is most certainly a Sprint number. I just
    > ran the number through SBC's RespOrg ID system, and Sprint
    > Communications, L.P. is registered as the responsible organization for
    > this number.


    Means nothing.

    That means that Sprint handles calls to the number. It could be Sprint, it
    could be United Telephone (if the company even exists anymore and hasn't been
    folded back into Sprint), it could be Sprint PCS. *Or it could be a Sprint
    customer who routes their tollfree calls through Sprint.*


    --
    JustThe.net Internet & New Media Services, http://JustThe.net/
    Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / 888.480.4NET (4638) / [email protected]
    PGP Key available from your friendly local key server (0xE3AE35ED)
    Apple Valley, California Nothing scares me anymore. I have three kids.



  11. #11
    John Richards
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    "Frank Thomas" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
    > Moral of the story: If you get a message from Sprint to call 800-808-1336
    > to pay your bill, you can quickly talk to someone who probably makes $5 a
    > day and give them your social security number and credit card numbers and
    > its free. But if you want to talk to an American, dial *2 and be prepared
    > to pay $5.


    Or do as I do: have Sprint automatically charge your cell bill to your
    credit card. You won't have to talk to anybody. The payment will never
    be late. Plus I get a cash rebate from the credit card charges.

    --

    John Richards



  12. #12
    Kevin M.
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    Scott <[email protected]> wrote:
    > "Kevin M." <[email protected]> wrote:
    >>Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >>> Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid
    >>> having my phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.
    >>> Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better
    >>> call and see whats going on.
    >>>
    >>> I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who
    >>> starts asking questions from a script, including asking how I
    >>> intended to pay and what my credit card number was. Spooked, I
    >>> asked what country are you in? "We are not permitted to give our
    >>> location out, I can only give the call center ID". I told her then
    >>> sorry I am not allowed to give my credit card number to foreignors
    >>> outside of the US and hung up.

    >>
    >>Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    >>became the way that you are.
    >>

    > This person had made his payment. He gets a notice to call a number
    > and they ask for his credit card number. When he asks for where the
    > call center is, they refuse to tell him. I would be suspicious too.


    I take it that you've never worked in a call center. I've managed one.
    This is standard operating procedure withing the call center "industry".
    Why? Well, you have hundreds of phone reps talking to thousands of
    customers every day, and can you just IMAGINE what would happen if a
    caller who knew where the call center he just talked to was located
    decided to DO SOMETHING? Whoa! ;D

    > He did exactly the right thing by hanging up and making a call to a
    > number where he can be sure he is talking to a Sprint representative.


    Why, EXACTLY?

    > There are call centers in foreign countries and there are also
    > companies that contract out to prisons for the same function.


    So you don't trust people that are/have been in prison? Ok.

    > You can never be too careful when someone unsolicited contacts
    > you and wants private info.


    I think you've going to find that, eventually, you will either have to
    change you attitude and accept your company's implicit promoise to
    safeguard your data to the best of their ability, or you won't be able to
    do detailed business with almost any American company. Sorry, but that's
    just the way it's headed.

    > I think that he did exactly the right thing.


    Again, why, EXACTLY?


    Kevin M.
    "Know your enemy, and know yourself; in one-thousand battles
    you shall never be in peril." -- Sun Tzu, *The Art of War*
    "Contentment... Complacency... Catastrophe!" -- Joseph Chevalier





  13. #13
    Scott
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 04:10:29 -0700, "Kevin M." <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    >Scott <[email protected]> wrote:
    >> "Kevin M." <[email protected]> wrote:
    >>>Frank Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >>>> Yesterday I got a message on my phone, that told me to that avoid
    >>>> having my phone service cut off, to call an 800 number immediately.
    >>>> Having paid my bill two weeks before on line, I figured I better
    >>>> call and see whats going on.
    >>>>
    >>>> I find myself talking to someone with heavily accented English who
    >>>> starts asking questions from a script, including asking how I
    >>>> intended to pay and what my credit card number was. Spooked, I
    >>>> asked what country are you in? "We are not permitted to give our
    >>>> location out, I can only give the call center ID". I told her then
    >>>> sorry I am not allowed to give my credit card number to foreignors
    >>>> outside of the US and hung up.
    >>>
    >>>Your attitude sounds a little paranoid, but I'm interested in how you
    >>>became the way that you are.
    >>>

    >> This person had made his payment. He gets a notice to call a number
    >> and they ask for his credit card number. When he asks for where the
    >> call center is, they refuse to tell him. I would be suspicious too.

    >
    >I take it that you've never worked in a call center. I've managed one.
    >This is standard operating procedure withing the call center "industry".
    >Why? Well, you have hundreds of phone reps talking to thousands of
    >customers every day, and can you just IMAGINE what would happen if a
    >caller who knew where the call center he just talked to was located
    >decided to DO SOMETHING? Whoa! ;D
    >
    >> He did exactly the right thing by hanging up and making a call to a
    >> number where he can be sure he is talking to a Sprint representative.

    >
    >Why, EXACTLY?
    >

    He received a message about a payment he thought he had already made.
    The call center refused to tell him any information about where they
    are. They were asking for information such as his credit card number.

    Any one of those items is enough to make you question the authenticity
    of the call. All three and the right thing to do is to call Sprint
    directly from a number you KNOW is good, that way there can be no
    doubt who you are talking to.


    >> There are call centers in foreign countries and there are also
    >> companies that contract out to prisons for the same function.

    >
    >So you don't trust people that are/have been in prison? Ok.
    >
    >> You can never be too careful when someone unsolicited contacts
    >> you and wants private info.

    >
    >I think you've going to find that, eventually, you will either have to
    >change you attitude and accept your company's implicit promoise to
    >safeguard your data to the best of their ability, or you won't be able to
    >do detailed business with almost any American company. Sorry, but that's
    >just the way it's headed.

    There is an implicit promise to safeguard your data? When you provide
    information to a company, you are literally giving that info to almost
    everyone that works there. I rarely give out my SSN, when some
    companies ask for it, they don't really need it (yes Sprint does when
    you initally start service to check your credit history).

    I have known people who have been victims of identity theft and it can
    take a lot of time and work to get your good name back and even then,
    you know that some criminals have that information and can use it
    again in the future.

    I have on quite a few occasions refused to do business with companies
    that demand information because they think they need it. Just becuase
    someone tells you that they NEED that information does not mean that
    they actually do.
    >
    >> I think that he did exactly the right thing.

    >
    >Again, why, EXACTLY?
    >


    See my posts, pretty self explanatory.
    >
    >Kevin M.
    >"Know your enemy, and know yourself; in one-thousand battles
    > you shall never be in peril." -- Sun Tzu, *The Art of War*
    >"Contentment... Complacency... Catastrophe!" -- Joseph Chevalier
    >





  14. #14
    JRW
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    > They only
    > reason we still do it is not to save money but to take advantage of the time
    > difference to keep production rolling 24 hours. )


    That makes no sense at all. Who says U.S. workers can't work a night
    shift to keep production rolling 24 hours?





  15. #15
    John Richards
    Guest

    Re: It now costs 5$ to talk to an American at Sprint

    "Kevin M." <[email protected]> wrote in message news:aoh_c.4624$aW5.3727@fed1read07...
    > I take it that you've never worked in a call center. I've managed one.
    > This is standard operating procedure withing the call center "industry".
    > Why? Well, you have hundreds of phone reps talking to thousands of
    > customers every day, and can you just IMAGINE what would happen if a
    > caller who knew where the call center he just talked to was located
    > decided to DO SOMETHING? Whoa! ;D


    That's silly. I worked in a call center for three years, and I had no
    problem telling the caller the city where the call center was.
    He still wouldn't know the street address, and besides, we had pretty
    good physical access security measures.

    --

    John Richards



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