Call Centres: The Great Data Theft - Channel 4's Dispatches
DesiGirl
'Good morning ma'am, my name is Vandana Narayanan, could I please speak to Ms. so&so please.....' If I had a penny for every time a Vandana or an Anil or a Kumar called me from a call centre, I would be a very rich woman. There is no escaping these call centres, they have got us covered. Morning, noon, night - they are there to rouse you out of bed, interrupt your tea, crash in on your family dinners, time after time. That was all they were to me, a nuisance.
Sue Turton has changed all that. On Thursday night's episode of 'Dispatches: The Data Theft Scandal', she brought to the fore what we all fear deep down - some faceless person getting their grubby hands on our personal and financial data and using it to their own means. To find out more about this, Sue visits various places and people across the UK and in India. And what she finds out is fascinating - and more than a little scary.
Then onto Calcutta, where enterprising Mr Chandak goes one step further and proves the authenticity of his 'leads' by playing the voice files of actual telephone conversation between his call centre agent and the unsuspecting caller. All this info for just £8!
In the UK, she talks to a convicted felon who tells how difficult it is to get the data from the call centres. Furthermore, he tells of the number of people who join these call centres with the aim of getting their hands on such data and making money out of them. While in the UK, one has to go via the underworld to get such info, in India, it seems much more easier to lay one's hands on extremely confidential data.
There are brokers whose 'job' is to play the role of middlemen, between the call centres and the buyers, who pay tens of thousands to get hold of these 'hot leads'. What's even more shocking is the role played by the technicians, who come into such places to maintain the hardware and walk away with millions of data stored in the pen drives. 'You wink and it is done', boasts one such middle man.
Then there are these high-class brokers in Hyderabad, who charge upwards of $50 per lead - why? 'Cos theirs is fresh and unused!
Sue Turton, over the course of a year, has managed to open a massive can of worms. The repercussions of this investigation will be manifold. Here in the UK, there's going to be a great deal of panic amongst the public and this would undoubedly be fanned by the media and others disgruntled by the shifting of operations to countries like India and China. Indian government is also going to be under some pressure to put the foreign investors' minds at rest and assure them of data protection. The great boom in the Indian economy owes a great deal to the call centres, BPOs and other associated industries - which could come down like a house of cards if these companies decide to up sticks and move out, en masse.
Will our government step-up? Will we see a marked decrease in call centre-related crimes? We'll know soon! Until then, keep safe!
Call Centres: The Great Data Theft - Channel 4's Dispatches
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temporal
URL
October 6, 2006
12:04 PM
DG:
wasn't there a movie or documentary recently over this?
DG
URL
October 6, 2006
12:52 PM
t:
dunno abt a movie but Channel 4 telecast this documentary last night. Chilling, to say the least, esp in light of the callous way our so-called confidential data is bought and sold around the world.
I am really intrigued to see what the documentary's repercussions are gonna be like.
null
URL
October 6, 2006
09:02 PM
I swear I read bits and pieces of this post in various newspapers. Must say you are a very smart girl to change vital words and make some changes in the sentence to make it look as if you drafted it.
Posing as a businesswoman who is interested in getting the financial details of UK customers, she soon makes contact with a Mr Arora. He turned out to be a fount of information, this Arora, as he shows her page after page of data 'leads', detailing a caller's name, bank account number, bank sort code, credit card number, the CVV security number etc. Turton tries to disguise her shock by enquiring if this isn't illegal but Arora flatly states 'not at all'!
This is picked up directly from TOI and a few changes have been made.
DesiGirl
URL
October 7, 2006
05:07 AM
Hey,
This is serious man! Can you send me the URL for the article pls? I am trying to find it but so far no luck.
And please, before making allegations, can you first get your facts checked? How do you know it was I who copied the TOI article word for word? Why can't it be the other way round?
sensei
URL
October 7, 2006
08:01 AM
[SPAM]
Coachcyrus
URL
October 8, 2006
04:08 PM
this is an example of double standards of the west- recently the head of HP had to leave and english football is being investigated for corruption. compared to those crimes we are losing sleep over a few isolated incidents.
how can someone in the west, which has been shaken by board level crime (Enron, Worldcom, apple, hp, xerox etc etcs) act so saintly about their systems and procedures
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