by williamconley » Wed Jan 08, 2014 8:21 pm
And yet the actual case is still invisible on the web. Does get several mentions by many (widespread, credible) sources. Improvement, but then again dangerous.
Many legal sources are trying to quash the autodialer definition to state the without a Generator (of its own), it's not an autodialer. Previous suits presumably went with the "capacity to store" and (must have) allowed for an external "generator" to supply the numbers to be store (should the need arise, even though you may not have used such a generator).
But they need to be careful because they are making a lot of noise about that generator restriction with high hopes that this technicality will "get them off the hook" by using the argument that this "generator" was somehow the crux of the reasoning behind the law. Back from the days when any Call Center would generate 1,000,000 numbers with Excel (if they had a recent version of Excel capable of 1M records) and then just dial them.
When the reality of the matter is that this is about AutoDialers and if the law is forced to be "looked over" instead of just "quick changed", it will be rewritten to disallow based on "automatically dialing" without a human entering the phone number by pushing each button. Suddenly that will cover even MORE equipment and situations.
Then the argument is "well, that would cover cell phones, too! they can generate a call without human intervention!"
The answer will be: Then A, don't use automation in a cell phone to call the general public (ie: people you don't actually know) and B, redefine it to remove "capacity" and simply state "if a human did not enter the number, one digit at a time, into a phone and then press a button to dial said number ... that was an autodialer! Be it a Cell phone, soft phone, server, text, etc: autodial".
So there may be forward progress based on your point of view, or it may get worse based on your point of view. Those who Sue based on TCPA could get a great bonus if this changes, or they may merely have to sue those who use equipment that includes a generator ... but somehow I don't think that's the way it'll go.
And I *still" have not seen the actual ruling, which is odd, because stuff like this is usually published loudly. Oh well. Get some popcorn and sit back. Gonna be a long show i think.
Now I really do want to read the actual docket decision. LOL
Funnier yet: If this does get an "interpretation ruling" that says generator is required ... will call centers merely "relax" and be sure they do NOT have a generator? Or ... the next day will 500 rooms "fire up" and cause the rule to be changed within six months (probably be some sort of Emergency Rulemaking session). That's where the popcorn comes in.
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