Australian telco fined $39M for exploiting Indigenous folk
By ROD McGUIRKMay 13, 2021 GMT
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) Australia’s largest telecommunications company Telstra was fined 50 million Australian dollars ($39 million) on Thursday for unconscionable conduct in selling remote Indigenous customers mobile phone contracts that they did not understand and could not afford.
The fine ordered by a Federal Court judge is the second largest ever imposed under Australian consumer law.
Telstra admitted the offenses in signing up 108 Indigenous customers, some of whom spoke English as a second or third language, to mobile phone accounts.
Staff sometimes manipulated credit assessments to say unemployed customers had jobs. They also failed to properly explain the potential costs and falsely represented products as free of cost.
The fine ordered by a Federal Court judge is the second-largest ever imposed under Australian consumer law
Australia s largest telecommunications company Telstra was fined $39 million on Thursday for unconscionable conduct in selling remote indigenous customers mobile phone contracts that they did not understand and could not afford.
The fine ordered by a Federal Court judge is the second-largest ever imposed under Australian consumer law.
Telstra admitted the offenses in signing up 108 indigenous customers, some of whom spoke English as a second or third language, to mobile phone accounts.
Staff sometimes manipulated credit assessments to say unemployed customers had jobs. They also failed to properly explain the potential costs and falsely represented products as free of cost.
May 14, 2021
CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA (AP) Australia’s largest telecommunications company Telstra was fined USD39 million yesterday for unconscionable conduct in selling remote indigenous customers mobile phone contracts that they did not understand and could not afford.
The fine ordered by a Federal Court judge is the second largest ever imposed under Australian consumer law.
Telstra admitted the offences in signing up 108 Indigenous customers, some of whom spoke English as a second or third language, to mobile phone accounts.
Staff sometimes manipulated credit assessments to say unemployed customers had jobs. They also failed to properly explain the potential costs and falsely represented products as free of cost. Justice Debra Mortimer said Telstra staff took advantage of an Indigenous cultural propensity to express agreement as a way of avoiding conflict.