Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
“YOUR CALL WILL BE RECORDED FOR TRAINING PURPOSES”
Do you ever feel
that the machines and monsters are taking over?
Without being
paranoid, I often get this feeling when I have to tussle with recorded messages
on Answerphones.
In New Zealand,
we have one major difficulty whenever we ring customer services related to
telecommunications or the running of computers. Our queries will be re-routed
to a Help Desk, which will probably be located somewhere like Manila. We then
often have to contend with people who have English as a second language and who
sometimes have impenetrable accents. I say “sometimes” advisedly because I
have, of course, sometimes spoken to Filipenas in such circumstances, who speak
English better than you or I do.
But before we
get to speak with a real, live human voice, we have to go through the implicit
threat that is embedded in so many recorded messages. It is the one that says “Your call will be recorded for training
purposes.”
Now what is this
recording really saying?
It is really
telling us that if we get annoyed or frustrated at the long wait we are often
put through; or if we are given useless advice; or if we are required to
explain for a fourth or a fifth time, and in exactly the same words, what the
trouble is; then we are not allowed to blow our stacks or the company in
question will have something to hold over us.
“Your call will be recorded for training
purposes” really means “You are at
our mercy and don’t you forget it. Don’t think of shouting ‘Your customer
service is ****ing useless’. Don’t think of using forthright or angry language
– because we’ve got this little recording of you which we can play back should
you choose to challenge our incompetence through the law courts.”
Naturally this
sort of blackmail is only one problem with recorded messages. My most recent
tussle with a recorded message was when I rang an Auckland picture theatre. I
am not so technologically incompetent that I do not know how to book film
tickets on line. I had been doing just that when a glitch in the system told me
that my payment could not go through and I would have to ring the theatre to
confirm my booking. I duly rang the theatre. An answer machine told me that
staff were busy and I would have to ring back in a quarter of an hour. I did
so. Same message – ring back in quarter of an hour. Again, I did so. And so on
through four different calls before I finally got an answer from an unrecorded
human voice.
In this case,
the problem was that the picture theatre had a standardised message, which did
not really tell the truth. And it might have been more useful if it had
instructed me to ring back in an hour.
I sometimes long
for the days where answerphones did not exist and calls were answered by human
beings rather than by robots. Remember those old photos of rows of women
plugging pegs into switchboards? How often scenes set in such telephone
exchanges used to appear in Hollywood movies. But alas, those days are gone,
and we now have to talk to machines and recordings.
And they are threatening us.
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