Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Are you also a victim of MSPs?

Following an insight report last week Namini Wijedasa delves further into the scam where it's a win-win for everyone but the inveigled mobile phone subscriber

-

Igot a text message to my mobile phone on September 11, stating: “Your auto-renewal is due in one day”. It was from an applicatio­n called DZone which I had not subscribed to. This was not the first instance such a text had been received, followed by a notificati­on that the renewal had automatica­lly--and explicitly without request--been carried out. A call to the mobile company revealed that via the DZone applicatio­n, I had been subscribed to a value-added service I had never heard of, called, ‘South Beauties’.

The mobile service provider (MSP) took the complaint, unsubscrib­ed me and refunded the money. It should have ended there. But it did not. On September 19, a second text message was received: “You have been subscribed to the South Beauties service. You will be charged LKR 35+tax weekly”. Once again, a service I had never knowingly or willingly asked for. At least the charges were specified this time.

A complaint was lodged. MSP apologised, delved into the matter and blackliste­d my number from the service. It should have ended there. But it did not. On September 21, a third text message was received: “You have been subscribed to the South Beauties service. You will be charged LKR 35+tax weekly. You are already subscribed to the service”.

By now, I was feeling positively trolled. The previous week, I had writ- ten an article on “cramming” which is defined by the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU) as the practice of placing unauthoris­ed, misleading, or deceptive charges on the telephone bill, fraud, privacy infringeme­nt, lack of customer security and false and misleading advertisem­ent. I was beginning to think those South Beauties were looking for the last laugh.

The MSP reassured me this was not the case. A spokesman said they were also stumped (which, admittedly, is the opposite of reassuring). The company momentaril­y suspended its download services countrywid­e and kicked off a proper investigat­ion. It transpired that the third-party website with which it had partnered was afflicted by a bug that made it obsessivel­y sign me up for South Beauties. With the necessary debugging done, the company promised me there would be no repeat.

My problem was solved. But who else is this happening to? How many others are falling victim to this scam and how long has it been going on for? MSPs are partnered with third parties who use their platforms to hawk services to mobile phone users. Some enrol willingly. Many more mistakenly join subscripti­on services by simply clicking on an advertisem­ent or web link.

Registrati­on takes place without the knowledge of the subscriber. Charges are automatica­lly slapped on the bill, whether post or prepaid. And if customers do not inquire about the added fees, the MSPs continue levying them by default. The third parties collect their bounty via phone bills and the MSPs receive a share. It’s a win-win for everyone but the inveigled mobile phone subscriber.

According to the 2015 Central Bank Annual report, mobile phone penetratio­n is now a towering 116 percent. There are more mobile phones in Sri Lanka than there are people. A significan­t number of these are traditiona­l instrument­s and not smart phones that enable internet access. But by the MSPs’ own admission, the percentage of complaints about third-party billing has risen dramatical­ly. Many mobile companies are aggressive­ly promoting the sale of smart phones to increase internet penetratio­n which, in turn, enables them to earn more on data.

After my article, I was sent more complaints from angry customers. Chathura Dissanayak­e said he had been signed on to the ‘Games Club’ service for Rs 20+tax daily without even sending a text message or clicking on any popup window. Asanka Sandaruwan said he was subscribed to ‘Games Club’ and a mobile television app despite not asking for them. Amee Jayasinghe said he was signed up for ‘Coolclub’ for Rs 30+tax daily. “I paid for this **** like 6 months,” he revealed.

Amal Fernando was subscribed to ‘ErosNowWee­kly’ and ‘TZEros’. It was Rs 35+tax in the first month, and Rs 70+tax the second. Another said he was charged Rs. 89.30 a month for ‘IdeaBiz’. All mobile phone companies in Sri Lanka were doing it, in varying degrees. The one that foresees “The Future Today”, however, was the worst offender.

The US Federal Communicat­ions Commission says research suggests only one in 20 consumers affected by cramming are aware of the problem. There are no such studies done in Sri Lanka. Anecdotal evidence points to some third-party billing going back to at least 2011. MSPs claim they discovered it only this year which, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, is a likely story.

Meanwhile, the Telecommun­ications Regulatory Commission of Sri Lanka (TRC) does seem to have stumbled upon this scam only this year. Its response was, at best, tepid. A former official claimed he had not received reports of cramming during his tenure. Sunil S Sirisena, the incumbent DirectorGe­neral, said he had, “A few, no major complaints.”

“When we get them, we inform the telcos to stop but they have their own explanatio­n for these things,” he said. “We must summon them and then-andthere sort out the problem. Sending letters is useless.” There will be a meeting on September 27 at which this issue will be raised.

Mr Sirisena also revealed the TRC had no laws under which it could penalise the offenders. “I have already gone through this,” he elaborated. “We have no provisions. We are amending the Act at the moment. It would be possible to take legal action after amending.” He even wondered whether it would be possible to totally stop some of the complaints.

“They (MSPs) will have to have a system whereby, if you don’t want the facility, you can stop it,” Mr Sirisena said. Notwithsta­nding the non-availabili­ty of legal provisions, the TRC is empowered to issue directives. Even that has not been done. Neither has the public been advised to be vigilant. The regulator has completely failed in halting, slowing down or even identifyin­g this fraudulent activity by MSPs. In short, it has not been regulating.

A leading private MSP said it was now in the process of self-regulating. It will introduce mechanisms by which double-clicks will be required to subscribe to these services. The Government-owned MSP was sent a list of questions about cramming but said it needed a week to reply. It is not known what measures they have planned, if any at all.

There are also serious questions about how effective self-regulation will be. The MSPs profited all these years from a patently unethical and fraudulent practice. They did not inform their customers about it and did not take any action until the complaints became too numerous to ignore. Telling their subscriber­s to now trust them to self-regulate is like asking a child to sit in front of a starving lion with the confidence that it will not devour it.

And what of the money these companies have earned up to now from cramming? Does it not make sense to push for a mass refund for those who did pay and not use these value-added services? (Please see also Editorial on Page 14)

 ??  ?? Pic by Nissanka Meegoda
Pic by Nissanka Meegoda
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka