in reply to joshie ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆ

@joshie ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆ They have no procedure for keeping track of people who have contacted them so the only thing that stops the letters is a TV licence. Or possibly a harassment lawsuit. Dunno if anyone has tried that.
in reply to Sarah Brown

What strikes me is the text circled below the snip line:
"Visit undertaken by our Enforcement Division.
Please ask for identification."
This yank wonders if that indemnifies the glorious tvlicensing should you get attacked by an imposter.
Sadly, I am sure there are cretins that will take advantage of the notices to engage in predatory behavior.
Misery loves company, plenty of dickish corporate behavior in the States.
in reply to Ryan Frame

@Ryan Frame the thing is, everything in that letter is a lie. They send them to all properties without a licence, but they imply that they have powers that they donโ€™t have, and they pretty much never follow up.

If they ever actually send anyone, you just tell them to go away.

But the letters can frighten vulnerable people.

โ‡ง