Orange too!!!!
I thought that I had managed to dodge the profiling bullet, looks like I need to find a new network now.
I wonder if orange are opt-in or opt-out?
PH, because even she can figure out people don't want this.
The ad-fatigued may groan at the news that Qualcomm has splashed out $32m on data-gathering outfit Xiam. The Irish company specialises in analysing the habits of mobile phone users in order to target advertising at them, and has customers including Orange UK. Targeted advertising is all the rage these days, but the ways in …
that the general public wised up to this "ISP Internet Takeover" stunt and everyone:
set their wireless access points open,
installed cookie modifying firmware on the router
and enabled local node file sharing server facilitys,
the wireless access would auto-hop between access points (and ISP's), set to hop every few minutes, and log-on was all managed seamlessly by a piece of software not unlike "devicescape"...
needless to say all adverts were blocked at the access points and the ISP's stunt left them hated by their subscriber base as they clawed for the last remaining "exploitable ignorant".
...t'was all most strange, but it worked.
Internet Service Providers NOT Advertisement Service Providers
DO. NOT. WANT.
I keep getting calls from Orange, trying to get me to upgrade my phone with them, as I'm near the end of my contractual period.
Unfortunately, I don't actually _HAVE_ an Orange phone, nor have I ever had one. My mobile number (that they call me on) is O2, has always been O2, and has an O2 prefix. Trying to get the person on the other end of the phone to understand this is often an excercise in utter futility, because they usually don't speak any English apart from what's on the screen in front of them, and sentences like "This is not an Orange phone" seem to be too complex....
If this is how Orange "target" their advertising on their established business, gods help any Orange broadband users* once this starts!!
*or, more accurately, any Freeserve customers who were sold to Wanadoo, who were then bought by Orange. Yeesh.
There is a big database out there of everyone's mobile number. Tele-sales just start at the top and keep going.
It is such a convenient service. Upgrade your contract over the phone. They just need you to confirm some personal details. If they say it quickly enough, you may not hear which network they are trying to transfer you to.
I always say that they must already have all the details they need if they are offering me a free phone and, just before I put the phone down, I say that I look forward to receiving my free phone in the post.
I have been offered so many free phones and not one of them has arrived.
That is false advertising, that is.
No one gives out personal information over the phone, do they?