When Spam Hits Your Cell Phone
With a boom in sending cell-phone text messages more than 1 billion a month in the U.S.--spammers are targeting your mobile phone. "Not only do you have to wade through all of it, but you have to pay for it when it's on your phone," says David Chamberlain, research director for Probe Research in Cedar Knolls, N.J. Increasingly, cellular-service providers are offering a limited number of free text messages per month, but additional messages can cost from 10¢ to 25¢ each. According to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991--amended in June to include the highly publicized National Do Not Call Registry covers unsolicited cell-phone traffic, with a $500 fine for abusers. Says the FCC's Dan Rumelt: "Consumers should file complaints with us." In addition, consumer advocates and the FCC recommend that you ask your cell-phone service how it deals with text-message spam under your plan.
Top Stories on Time.com
Most Popular
-
Most Read
- Why Obama Wants Hillary for His 'Team of Rivals'
- Looking Ahead: A Bad Recession or Something Worse?
- The Global Economy's Big Fear Becomes Real: Deflation
- Rebooting the Right
- BlackBerry Storm: The Novelty Wears Off Fast
- The Pros and Cons of Keeping Robert Gates
- Plastic Surgery Below the Belt
- Congress Sends Detroit Execs Back With Homework
- Will Holder's Role in Lewinsky Probe Get Scrutiny?
- Zawahiri's Attack on Obama: Who Cares?
-
Most Emailed
- The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Schools
- America's Health Checkup - The Year in Medicine 2008 - TIME
- Looking Ahead: A Bad Recession or Something Worse?
- BlackBerry Storm: The Novelty Wears Off Fast
- Will Citigroup Survive? Four Possible Scenarios
- Why Obama Wants Hillary for His 'Team of Rivals'
- Plastic Surgery Below the Belt
- Geithner at Treasury: An Insider to the Rescue?
- A Psychologist Looks at the Bankers' Dilemma
- The Global Economy's Big Fear Becomes Real: Deflation
Mixx





RSS