The slightly sniffy comments from Phone Pay Plus might suggest that they see it as okay for companies to adopt this tactic but members of the public should just accept a barrage of unsolicited nuisance calls.
They may at some point address abuses from friendly sellers of "essential" services.
Good on him.
Its too early in the day for me to do any maths but I am not sure that this chaps sums add up. He says that he is now getting 13 calls a month. If he is only making 7p a call, its clear that he is out of pocket.
I have dealt with cold calling in a much simpler way. I have taken the phone off the hook. I have told all my friends that I have done so and supplied them with my Mobile number, so they can contact me if they need to. If I need to use my phone I can, remembering to take it off the hook again afterwards.
We moved our phone from the living room down to the dining room. Now cold calls don't bother us, because we can't hear the phone from upstairs, and our mates only ever call us on our mobiles (because it seems that everyone now has 'free minutes' on their call plan).
In fact, the only reason we have a landline is because...actually I'm not sure why we have one. Might have something to do with our broadband contract.
"Sorry mate, can you speak up...I'm a little hard of hearing...I'm sorry...did you say mis-sold insurance or missile insurance? I don't have any missles..."
He was just on the radio, he has made around £300 in 3 years which means he has been on the phone to the cold callers for about 71 hours, havig conversations about the weather and XBox! They get charged 10ppm and he makes 7ppm. Only his mum dad and best friend have his other number.