The following information if from www.snopes.com
Free 411 Directory Assistance
Claim: The phone number 1-800-FREE-411 offers free directory
assistance service.
Status: True.
Origins: One of the many changes that has taken place in the
telephone industry in the last few decades is that while phone companies once
generally provided their local customers with free directory assistance (via
the 411 phone number), in most cases telephone customers are now charged a fee
(typically $1.00 or more) for each directory assistance call. Despite the
charges, U.S. consumers continue to avail themselves of the 411 directory
assistance service, placing about 6 billion such calls per year.
Now, however, an outfit called Jingle Networks is providing an alternative
directory assistance service — and it's free. Users who call the toll-free
number 1-800-FREE411
(or 1-800-373-3411) can navigate a nifty automated voice recognition system
that asks for a location (city and state), type of listing (business,
government, or residential), and name. Once the service has located an entry
for the requested number, it reads the information aloud and offers the caller
the option of connecting to the number by pressing a single number on his
telephone keypad.
How can Free-411 afford to offer free directory assistance service? It works
sort of like commercial radio or television — businesses pay to sponsor it in
exchange for presenting their advertisements to customers. The funding of Free-411
is typically explained thusly:
The service is made possible by thousands of national and
local businesses who sponsor this service with brief valuable audio
advertisements that are played to callers who request businesses in their
yellow pages category. This advertising model allows businesses to acquire new
customers over the phone, cost effectively, with little or no risk. Meanwhile
callers get free directory assistance, potentially saving each of them thousand
of dollars per year.
The way it works in practice is that a caller who requests
a business number is first presented with a short (about 12 seconds) audio
advertisement for a sponsor who operates a competing business in that area; the
caller is then given the option of being connected to either that competitor or
the business he originally requested. If no sponsor operates a local competing
business, then the caller hears no advertisement at all. (In the latter case,
if the caller accepts the option to connect to the desired number, the business
receiving the call hears a short message at the beginning advising them that
the call was placed via Free-411, and a Free-411 salesman may follow up with
them a few days later to solicit them as a potential advertiser.)
(Cell phone users concerned that taking advantage of the free directory
assistance service will entail potentially giving out their cell phone numbers
to telemarketers should note that federal law already prohibits certain types
of telemarketing calls from being placed to cell phones, and all
phone users can block telemarketing calls by listing their numbers with the
national Do Not Call registry.)
We made three separate trial calls to 1-800-FREE411 asking for information on
different local businesses, and in each case the voice recognition system
smoothly processed all our spoken information and correctly identified the
businesses of interest. In only one trial out of the three were we presented
with an audio advertisement.
Free-411 also offers directory assistance information via a free web
site.
Additional Information:
1-800-FREE-411 demo (Demo.com)