By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
CIPP/US – Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) – Robocalls & Text Messages
The TCPA (47?U.S.C. §§?227?and?227b) is a federal statute that restricts telemarketing calls, prerecorded messages, and automated text messages sent to U.S. consumers. It requires prior express written consent for most outbound calls/texts and gives consumers the right to block calls via the National Do?Not?Call Registry.
Real?world scenario: A U.S. retailer launches a “Flash Sale” campaign and uploads a list of 200,000 phone numbers to an autodialer to deliver a prerecorded promotional message. Because the retailer never obtained written consent from those consumers, the FCC and FTC can impose statutory damages of up to $1,500 per illegal call—potentially a multi?million?dollar exposure.
Scenario: A health?clinic sends appointment reminders via SMS to patients who have provided their mobile numbers during registration. No marketing language is included. Answer: Permissible – The messages are purely informational; no prior express written consent is required under the TCPA.
Scenario: A political campaign uses a predictive dialer to deliver a prerecorded “Vote for Candidate X” message to 10,000 phone numbers. No consent was obtained. Answer: Violation – Even political calls must not use an autodialer to deliver a prerecorded message without prior express consent; each call could incur $500–$1,500 in damages.
Scenario: A retailer sends a promotional text (“20% off today!”) to a list of numbers that were previously opted?in for email newsletters but never signed a consent form for SMS. Answer: Violation – Prior express written consent for SMS is missing; the retailer is liable for statutory damages per text sent.
Keep this sheet handy on exam day—each bullet is a potential multiple?choice stem!
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