paul34 said:
since when you actually sign up for prepaid, they ask you far, far too many questions requiring personal information!)
I worked in the help desk assisting activation call center reps. I can understand the complaint, but you also have to understand that a lot of fraud/crime happens through pre-paid cellular accounts. When prepaid accounts first started rolling out, most people's account was filled with default info (such as John/Jane Doe for name, company's hq address in the address field, all 9's for phone number, SSN, etc.)
I would say that 95% of people never had a problem with giving their info, especially since they never received a bill nor was their info used for solicitation purposes. The people who were adamant about not giving their info were always a holes and/or shady characters. As time went on, we started asking for their personal info but it wasn't mandatory. You could make up a fake identity and no one would know nor did carrier even care, but it made it easier to identify your account if you called in. How are we supposed to know and verify if a prepaid account is yours when a majority is filled with default info we inputted?
Around the time AT&T Wireless launched their GSM network, a new policy was implemented for prepaid activations in order to meet some kind of federal mandate. In order to activate prepaid accounts, there was an identification process the customer must pass. ATTWS had to pay for a 3rd party company to provide web software to loosely identify the validity of the customer activating. This was all happening around the same time where all the fiasco was going on with GSM activations and line number porting. Even during this period of crisis, ATTWS still managed to add about 300,000 customers that Xmas season while for the first time, a cell phone carrier actually lost customers during the busy holiday season. Guess who that carrier was? Cingular.
ATTWS never recovered from that mess, not because it couldn't but mainly because we had a CEO who just wanted to unload the problem on someone else, especially since he was getting a $22 million bonus anyway. As a carrier, ATTWS was neck and neck with Verizon but what did us in was Siebel's software. It was sad to see the demise of a promising, independent company due mainly to another company's product.
Anyway, now that you have a brief history of prepaid and AT&T Wireless, I hope you can understand why the carriers require this info, as personal as it may seem to you. Before I left Cingular, they were still not requiring SSN, just your basic info. If someone were using prepaid accounts to do something malicious (such as planning a bomb attack), I'd rather have that customer's basic info than have them show up in the system as John Doe.