Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Ex-Directory
12 Answers
My telephone number has been ex-directory for over 30 years. I had a surprise call on my landline on Saturday (the number is never given out) and when I asked where he'd got the number from he said it was available from BT online. I have tried to ring them today to have it removed but Connor in Dublin hung up on me. Cheers for that. I no longer use BT for my landline. Does anyone know how I can get the number removed from the public list please? It was made ex-directory on police advice.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Ex directory" is as it is suggested - the number is not included in the phone directory.
However, these days, many cold call/sales calls are made using a computer program which dials one number after another in sequence.
If your number is within the range of numbers in a particular dialling sequence you are likely to receive a 'phone call whether you are "ex directory" or not.
However, these days, many cold call/sales calls are made using a computer program which dials one number after another in sequence.
If your number is within the range of numbers in a particular dialling sequence you are likely to receive a 'phone call whether you are "ex directory" or not.
All UK directory enquiry services (whether that be the BT Phone Book or companies like 118 118) use the OSIS database, which collates data from all landline providers and it's only those providers who can authorises changes to that database.
By default all subscribers numbers are included in the database. While you were with BT your number was withheld from the database (because you'd instructed them to do so) but when you switched to your new provider you failed to tell them to withhold your number, so the default situation (where your number is automatically included in the database) applied from that date.
So it's not BT you need to be contacting. It's your current landline provider, as they're the only people who're allowed to change the database.
By default all subscribers numbers are included in the database. While you were with BT your number was withheld from the database (because you'd instructed them to do so) but when you switched to your new provider you failed to tell them to withhold your number, so the default situation (where your number is automatically included in the database) applied from that date.
So it's not BT you need to be contacting. It's your current landline provider, as they're the only people who're allowed to change the database.