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by otoburb
5260 days ago
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The criteria varies per carrier. In most cases, a trusted site is one run or owned by the carrier (e.g. carrier portal site). Getting on this list usually (from what I understand) requires a whole lot of paperwork and approvals. In terms of being made public or opt-outable, I'm not aware of any carriers that do this. I guess it depends on which 3rd party sites have negotiated agreements and obtained appropriate opt-ins from you and/or the carrier in various Terms of Agreements. For example, banking sites probably get a free pass when it comes to your mobile number because you may have entered it in to the banking application for verification purposes (just an example). |
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For instance with your banking example, yes, I may have given my number and probably have if I'm a customer. But what if I'm just browsing a banks website thinking about opening an account? Should they have my number then? (but of course banks are unlikely to abuse this for spam or anything.)
But can you see how people would think this is a grey area with potential for abuse? So basically, we just have to trust our carriers not to sell us out with no way of checking up on them?