Mr. Clark,
For what it is worth, Mr. Smith made postings earlier to this very site, complaining of the dilemma that he felt his (then current) work environment put him in. If his statements accurately reflect what he observed, the *evidence* he has comes from his own personal observations. Granted, all that my statement here establishes is that Mr. Smith is (at the very least) consistent in his claims.
Personally, I doubt that Mr. Smith is lying. What would there be in it, for him? What kind of 'hidden agenda' could he have? If he has an issue with the call center industry, as opposed to his former employers and co-workers, he will not find a sympathetic audience *here*, of all forums. If he wants to stain the reputation of the call center industry in Mexico, or of his former employers, he should be writing to U.S. Attorney's General and Congressmen, and not CC Voice.
To Daniel Smith-- *some* of the points you are making are quite valid, but I cannot agree with all of them. To wit:
1. Your point about exact addresses and security is well taken.
You should keep in mind, however, that sometimes call centers may employ people who have, shall we say, intellectual lapses. If you tell employees-- "you can reveal the country and city in which we do business, but not the address" you have given them something extra to remember and handle. "Don't tell any customer where we are, period" is easier to remember. Telling them it is to protect *them* gives them a reason to remember it. This may just be erring on the side of caution. I should think that accents give away the rep's country-of-origin fairly fast anyhow-- few operations can afford to spend a small fortune on accent coaching.
2. Do you really think "they would switch telephone service providers in a heartbeat if they knew the truth"? I think you have to be exaggerating *somewhat*, Mr. Smith.
Yes, some people may choose service providers for nationalistic reasons. Yet if the same or better service comes at a lower cost to the buyer personally, nationalism fades fairly fast. If you do not believe me, please check the country-of-origin labels inside your shirts.
3. Your customers have a right to know who is handling their private information, and they have a right to know that this information is safe. You state that "Your customers have a right to know who is handling their private information, and they have a right to know that this information is safe."
If by this you mean customers have a **legal** right to this, you are simply wrong. If you mean a *moral* right to this, I'm not prepared to comment on that, beyond saying that there are obviously millions of people that disagree with you-- whether or not you are right.
The legal rights that people have are defined in their national constitutions, legislated codes, federal and state/provincial/ prefectural/municipal statutes, judicial decisions, and in some jurisdictions, the writings of eminent jurists.
The legal rights that people have do vary from place to place, but I am not aware of any U.S. jurisdiction (for example) that entitles people to know the identity and location of the people handling their private information-- whether this is for their telephone service provider or otherwise. If this surprises you, look up "skip tracing" software on-line. Find out just how much anyone willing to spend a few dollars can find out about you (or anyone). All of this is information about you that, at some point, was **sold** into the public domain. Not only are you not entitled to know who handles it, the people that handle it, do not even have to keep track. They can sell it-- and they do, all the time. All of this is perfectly legal. If you don't think it should be, I agree with you. But the U.S. Congress does not.
Nor am I aware of any U.S. jurisdiction that entitles people to know the security procedures that are (or are not) put in place to safeguard their credit or personal information. I think you can figure out why-- the safeguards for mine are the safeguards for yours. If I know how the safeguards for mine work, I can figure out a way around the safeguards for yours. People do not have a right to know that their information is safe, partly because this kind of *right* would be self-defeating.
4. If what you described in your earlier post is accurate, as I replied earlier, your former employers are complicit in these credit card frauds. I suggest you report them.
5. On your comment "especially if you allow your operators to having writing instruments at their workstations, as opposed to having them record everything on their computers where it can be monitored." I, for one, do not think that simply allowing operator to have pens, etc., makes the managers complicit in credit card fraud by the operators.
First, think, for a moment, of how difficult it would be, realistically, to keep pens, etc. *out* of workstations. They cannot keep inmates in U.S. Federal penitentiaries from making weapons, dealing drugs and brewing alcohol. These inmates have no privacy rights at all, and are scutinized constantly. They have cameras everywhere. If you can cheat on an exam, another rep can sneak in a pen on the sly. Second: who needs pens? I am sure that you can remember a string of 12 numbers. If you can do that, long enough to go to the bathroom, you can steal credit information.
Please keep in mind that not every call center in the industry, in Mexico and elsewhere, is staffed by criminals. Ethics in the call center industry vary just as they do in politics, banking, the stock market and used car sales. Individuals should be judged by their own track records, and not their associations-- that's my two cents.
WP |