I read an itneresing article on the do not call list the other day. Good reading.
http://www.fortune.com/fortune/valuedri ... 48,00.html
Just incase you don't have time to read the hole thing, this is the part I found really interesting:
"Even more remarkable is what happened next. Within hours of the registry's opening in June, Americans rushed to their phones and computers and put their home numbers on the list (business numbers aren't allowed) at the incredible rate of 158 phone numbers per second. In the first three days we put 13.6 million phone numbers on the registry. Within nine weeks, by the Aug. 31 deadline to be on board for the Oct. 1 prohibition, there were 48 million numbers.
Based on Federal Trade Commission data, we can estimate that this represents more than 40 million people who took action to get telemarketers out of their lives. Let's put that number in perspective. The IRS couldn't even get 1.9 million people to collect their 1999 tax refunds by the April 15, 2003, deadline—free money, but it was too much trouble. After weeks of promotion, about 15 million people watched Whoopi, NBC's new top-rated sitcom, and all they had to do was push a button on the remote. Only 25 million Americans have done any aerobic exercise in the past year—but heck, that's just a matter of life and health. For that matter, only 39 million of us went to a bar or nightclub in the past 12 months. "