This Does ^NOT Pertain to #RoboCon

Because hyperlinks are still legal in Canada, I can provide you with the following hyperlinks, and I’ll let your fertile minds go to work on what will remain unsaid. It’s important to ^NOT jump to conclusions.

RMG

In an email response, copied to the company’s lawyer, RMG claimed that the manual is proprietary company property and alleged that Postmedia News and the Ottawa Citizen had obtained it illegally.

“If you have this material and are not our employee, you are in receipt of it unlawfully,” the unidentified spokesperson wrote.

RMG at work during the election. RMG at work when not in an election.

Xentel could be described as less than popular with everyone.

Fred DeLorey, a spokesman for the Conservative Party, said the party did not approve the training manual.

“We hire call centres to make calls,” he said in an email. “We don’t train their employees.”

Democracy Beaten to Death by Phone, RoboCon

6 responses to “This Does ^NOT Pertain to #RoboCon

  1. lorraine, the call centre buys commercially available data. You know when you open an account with Bell, or Rogers, or any number of other companies, the weasel words in the agreement say that they can share information about you.If you do not read when you open an account with just about amnybody, then you will likely have way more info about yourself than you thought possible in commercially available databases. Well, this is what happens to that shared information. It is bundled into huge databases, and sold. Visa makes a whole lot of money selling information about your buying habits for example

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