Monday, 7 November 2011

Potentially good news


Junk mail is an irritating scourge in the modern world: wasteful of resources and time, demanding attention like an obnoxious child, and hiding the important post amongst a sea of glossy paper waste. Royal Mail have received a high crap score from us for their part in promoting it. Well, the good news is that a new initiative should make it easier to opt out in future.
"The average UK household receives more than 370 items of unsolicited paper mail a year, the majority of it unaddressed." Source

Sadly the Telephone Preference Service is still useless. It is funded by the companies which make money from spam calls, so was never going to be any use in combating them, was it? I receive spam calls every day, despite being registered with this service. I tried to complain to the TPS but they only act if you have the company name and their phone number. Since the spam callers I spoke to refused to give a real company name, and also it was impossible to get their phone number, it means that the TPS refuse to do anything. So when the situation occurs where you need someone to step in, they turn their backs on you! In their automated (and no-reply) response, they said:
"You may already be aware that TPS does not have the facilities to know which companies are calling you and therefore relies on the complainant to ascertain this information upon the receipt of an unsolicited direct marketing call."
Pretty crappy, TPS.

Sunday, 6 November 2011

Pestering Banks

Note the annoying nag screen - there is no
option to permanently disable it

When you use Internet Banking with the Co-operative Bank they now always make a popup box appear trying to persuade you to install extra software - see image above. Most people won't want to do that. Not only is it extra hassle (on top of the stupid and wasteful gadgets that many customers refuse to use on ethical grounds) but the Co-operative Bank state that they won't compensate you if the software damages your PC or data or causes problems.



However, even though most customers therefore won't want to install extra, unwanted software, the only option on the popup box is 'Remind Me Later'. Why isn't there an option for 'Don't tell me again, I'm not interested'? It is incredibly irritating to keep seeing reminders to do something you don't want to do, and never intend to. Who wants to be continually nagged by a large company? It doesn't show much respect for their customers.

When the bank was contacted they just said that they were not going to remove the message, they will continue to nag their customers to install unwanted software. Pretty crappy!

Oh, and there are many people who consider it to be dodgy software that is designed to be a pain up the arse to install - see the comments at the end of this post.