metcars 397 Posted November 14, 2018 (edited) Just read the story in the magazine about the guy that went to prison for accessing private data and selling it on to his mates. My phone rings every day with offers i have no interest in from people who have obviously obtained my details without my consent. Why can't they catch those people and send them to prison? In fact this morning at 8:15 i had a call about laser eye surgery, strange that i was in the optician a few weeks back. And i NEVER sign/agree to anything! Hmmm i wonder? Edited November 14, 2018 by met Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DBDlloyds 18 Posted November 14, 2018 16 minutes ago, met said: Just read the story in the magazine about the guy that went to prison for accessing private data and selling it on to his mates. My phone rings every day with offers i have no interest in from people who have obviously obtained my details without my consent. Why can't they catch those people and send them to prison? In fact this morning at 8:15 i had a call about laser eye surgery, strange that i was in the optician a few weeks back. And i NEVER sign/agree to anything! Hmmm i wonder? I agree with you on this.... for me the only impact the recent legislation has had for me is to increase the calls it seems. It is difficult as we have to answer calls in case it’s a potential sale opportunity. The trouble is the crafy buggers are ringing from mobiles now. For me I find it massively annoying, especially when you are quiet as you answer hoping it’s a punter and you get some bell piece asking about the accident you have recently had...... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark101 536 Posted November 14, 2018 5 minutes ago, DBDlloyds said: For me I find it massively annoying, especially when you are quiet as you answer hoping it’s a punter and you get some bell piece asking about the accident you have recently had...... Or the accident you Mom and Dad had 50 years ago 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
metcars 397 Posted November 14, 2018 (edited) And those annoying automated calls that are silent until you speak and trigger them into working. Whenever i receive a call i always pause for a few seconds! Interesting that apparently automated call dialers are supposed to be illegal, but they just call them something else and carry on using them. I don't think we'll ever be able to protect ourselves from these col calls. The information containing our details is available for purchase by anyone with enough money. But i suspect this same information is finding its way from the 'top' down rather than from the 'bottom' up? 54 minutes ago, Mark101 said: Or the accident you Mom and Dad had 50 years ago You think PPI, compensation and ambulance chasing lawyers werebad. Just wait until you are over 50 and the bloody pension companies start on you! Edited November 14, 2018 by met Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dave2302 387 Posted November 14, 2018 I find "Fuck Off you unbelievably stupid cunt" works well for me !! Mind you do have to be sure it isn't a customer first !! And don't ask me how I found that out, after having a string of them calls one after the other one morning Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark101 536 Posted November 14, 2018 1 minute ago, Dave2302 said: I find "Fuck Off you unbelievably stupid cunt" works well for me !! Mind you do have to be sure it isn't a customer first !! And don't ask me how I found that out, after having a string of them calls one after the other one morning Unless it is a warranty claim Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dave2302 387 Posted November 14, 2018 LOL it wasn't, Guy rang back a few hours later, he knows me thankfully, we had a good laugh and he still comes here for his Repairs / Servicing Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BHM 994 Posted November 14, 2018 On an alternative £20 phone that I’d bought from Asda, I listed a personal car on Scumtree. Within 15 minutes I had a call from some solicitor’s (allegedly) about my accident. Same thing again an hour later. and repeat. and repeat again. It seems these Asian claims chasers are fleeting phone no.s from Gumtree & chancing their arms phoning up any new phone no.s. Pure scum. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RJEauto 18 Posted November 15, 2018 23 hours ago, BHM said: On an alternative £20 phone that I’d bought from Asda, I listed a personal car on Scumtree. Within 15 minutes I had a call from some solicitor’s (allegedly) about my accident. Same thing again an hour later. and repeat. and repeat again. It seems these Asian claims chasers are fleeting phone no.s from Gumtree & chancing their arms phoning up any new phone no.s. Pure scum. Funny you say that. I have so many of these calls and once said "no I don't drive, don't believe in cars, never been in any accidents" to which they replied why are you selling your car on Gumtree then? Also recently had a personal car advertised there and the increase in cold calls to my mobile is insane!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MartynRipley 0 Posted April 8, 2019 Data Breaches and what's in store GDPR characterizes that it is the duty of the information controller to illuminate the significant information insurance specialists just as the people whose information has been undermined in case of a security rupture. This ought to be done inside the initial 72 hours from when the association wound up mindful of the break or potential rupture. In the UK, the expert to contact is the ICO (the Information Commissioner's Office). Associations are asked to assemble a method rundown to be disseminated to all faculty on the proper behaviour if a rupture is suspected as pursues: Specific time, date and spot of the break, A nitty-gritty portrayal of all parts of the kind of information associated with the rupture, Whenever known, the exact reason for the break and subtleties about how it was found, Rundown of frameworks influenced, The office/branch/office and staff engaged with finding or causing the break, A note of any restorative activity promptly jumping out at cure or reduce the effect of the suspected or real break. Having set up a proactive rupture reaction activity plan and a direction strategy inside your association regarding what to do if there should arise an occurrence of a suspected or real break is an indispensable apparatus for GDPR consistency. This enables your business to limit and fix rapidly any security breaks, yet additionally, demonstrate your clients and the ICO that you are a dependable association and committed to security. This is particularly vital as the GDPR fines are altogether higher than those under the Data Protection Act. https://seersco.com/articles/what-is-gdpr-and-why-is-it-so-important/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
trade vet 702 Posted April 8, 2019 Thank you MR Ripley,but I think most of us on here would prefer to follow Scottish Dave and his own Proactive Rupture Reaction Activity Plan you refer to,rather than yours.I have to say it may not be a good idea for you to copy his plan,he might get very annoyed......Good Luck with your business. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dave2302 387 Posted April 8, 2019 35 minutes ago, trade vet said: I think most of us on here would prefer to follow Scottish Dave and his own Proactive Rupture Reaction Activity Plan I did a huge PRRAP yesterday night after a Mixed Bhuna Vindaloo with Mushroom Rice, Bombay Aloo and Sag Paneer ............................................ At first I thought I'd shit myself Share this post Link to post Share on other sites