Insurance Company Cold-Calling Minor Child Repeatedly
Allstate repeatedly called a minor using 16 different phone numbers, evading blocks. This illustrates a broader problem of insurance companies conducting unsolicited outreach using number rotation to bypass consumer protections.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyAllstate office making persistent unwanted sales calls despite opt-out requests
A consumer reports receiving 148 unwanted calls from an Allstate office over four years despite repeated requests to stop. Individual consumer harassment complaint with no software-addressable solution.
Allstate makes unsolicited calls after opt-out requests
A consumer reports persistent unwanted calls from Allstate Insurance after requesting removal from their contact list. A consumer complaint about regulatory non-compliance, not a software problem.
Insurance Telemarketers Systematically Ignore Do-Not-Call Registrations
Insurance companies use overseas call centers to place repeated unsolicited calls to consumers on the national DNC list, with agents trained to hang up rather than honor opt-out requests. Consumers receive multiple calls per day from the same company with no effective way to stop them. The overseas vendor arrangement creates deliberate accountability gaps that bypass regulatory enforcement.
Telecom Debt Collectors Contact Minor Children Despite Opt-Out Requests
AT&T debt collection called a minor child during school hours despite being explicitly told the number belonged to a minor. Serious ethical concern about collection practices.
Home Services Platforms Sell User Contact Data to Third-Party Callers
Users who request quotes on home service platforms are bombarded by unsolicited insurance and sales calls from third parties. Contact data entered for service estimates is monetized without user awareness. This data-resale practice undermines user trust and consent norms.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.