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- BUSINESS, Page 53Business NotesTELECOMMUNICATIONSDial 0 For Robot
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- Next time a stranded friend calls collect, the familiar
- phrase "Will you accept the charges?" could have a distinctly
- different sound. Last week AT&T announced that it will replace
- as many as a third of its 18,000 long-distance operators by 1994
- with a computerized voice system. Known as voice-recognition
- technology, it will handle calls made collect or
- person-to-person as well as those billed to a third party.
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- AT&T boasts that the automated system will offer consumers
- "more choice in how they make long-distance calls." But the
- Communications Workers of America, which represents telephone
- operators, begs to differ. "This decision represents a drastic
- change in what people have come to expect in customer service,"
- says spokeswoman Gaye Williams Mack. "They need a service that
- is best provided by human beings."
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- Whatever the truth of that assertion, technological
- advances have taken a heavy toll on U.S. telephone operators
- over the years. Their number has dwindled from nearly 250,000
- to just 70,000 since AT&T introduced direct-dial long-distance
- service in the early 1950s.
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