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Website, phone lines for do-not-call list overwhelmed

30.09.2008 17:01 Shopping - Source: cbc.ca

So many people are trying to register their phone numbers on the federal do-not-call list, the website has crashed and the phone lines have a constant busy tone.

Commenters to CBCNews.ca expressed frustration at not being able to get through, but not all of them were surprised at the breakdown.

"It appears the do-not-call registry site was so popular it brought down their server. I am getting … page cannot be displayed errors," wrote Alienc, of Riverview, N.B.

"Great idea but [too] bad the DNC registry website is unavailable.…Typical," wrote VACMAN, of Nova Scotia.

The popularity of the list was not unexpected. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission has projected that of Canada's 27 million residential phone lines, which include cellphone numbers, 16 million would be on the do-not-call list within two years.

However, it's possible the CRTC didn't expect millions to try to join the list in the first week. The CRTC confirmed the website went live at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, and about 200,000 people were able to register before it crashed eight or nine hours later.

Bell Canada, which is responsible for operating the list, is trying to get the website back up, but there are no time projections as to when that will be. The CRTC's advice is to wait a day or two and try again.

Two polls yesterday suggested that between 60 per cent and 72 per cent of Canadians surveyed said they intended to add their phone number to the list.

The CRTC has not yet returned calls by CBCNews.ca on the issue.

At least one commenter to CBCNews.ca questioned why the federal government couldn't build a website that could handle the high traffic.

"Come on people! With a national list everybody wants to be on being promoted on the airways as starting today, did you honestly think their servers would be able to handle the millions of hits it was bound to get today," wrote Dmiddle, of Winnipeg.

"I knew from the get go that this was going to happen, so I have no plans to sign up for at least a couple weeks.

"Besides, they had to have known this would happen. So why weren't they prepared? But it's a government program, so why should we expect they would anticipate the logical outcome of such a start. If they had just allowed people to register starting, oh say a couple months ago, with the knowledge that it would not become effective until today, people wouldn't have been in such a mad rush the moment the doors opened. Sheesh!!!!" wrote DMiddle.

Not surprisingly, conspiracy theories, humorous or otherwise, are already developing about the "true" reason people cannot register.

"The corporate welfare bums have hacked the website and knocked it out of service," wrote McWal_Job, of Athabasca, Alta.

"Don't try to register for the DNCL... the website just shut down and the phone lines don't work! I guess the CRTC has put themselves on the list!" wrote Lorne Bellamy, of Bradford, Ont.

People can register their phone numbers in two ways. They can sign up online at LNNTE-DNCL.gc.ca or call the toll-free numbers 1-866-580-3625 or 1-888-362-5889 (for the hearing impaired).

  •  

VIDEO

Andy Wilson reports: Some organizations excluded from consumer do-not-call list (2:21)CBC's Heather Hiscox speaks with Jack Gillis of the Consumer Federation of America (4:17)

Consumer Headlines

Website, phone lines for do-not-call list overwhelmed So many people are trying to register their phone numbers on the federal do-not-call list, the website has crashed and the phone lines have a constant busy tone.Do-not-call list will boost direct mail, marketers sayStarting Tuesday, Canadians will be able to register their phone numbers on a national do-not-call list, but they may find telemarketing calls replaced by junk mail and spam.Now it's tea: Unilever recalls some Lipton products, fearing melamineAnglo-Dutch food giant Unilever said Tuesday it is recalling some of its Lipton-brand milk tea powder in Hong Kong and Macau after they were found to contain traces of an industrial chemical.Food industry not trusted to police itself, poll suggests A majority of Canadians believe that allowing the food industry to police itself puts the public health at risk, according to a new poll. Radical change needed in privacy protection, Ont. watchdog says Profound changes in information and communications technologies require a new, radical approach to how we protect privacy, says Ontario Privacy Commissioner Ann Cavoukian, namely, the integration of privacy protection into new technologies right from inception.  

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