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Tout

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Person who solicits business or employment in a persistent and annoying manner
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For other uses, seeTout (disambiguation).

Atout is any person who solicits business or employment in a persistent and annoying manner (generally equivalent to asolicitor orbarker inAmerican English, or aspruiker inAustralian English).

An example would be a person who frequents heavily touristed areas and presents himself as a tour guide (particularly towards those who do not speak the local language) but operates on behalf of local bars, restaurants, or hotels, being paid to direct tourists towards certain establishments.

Types

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In London, the term "taxi touts" refers to a kind ofillegal taxicab operation which involves taxi drivers (or their operator) attracting potential passengers by illegal means—for instance, calling out travellers, or fetching them and their luggage, while parked in an area where taxi drivers must wait in their vehicle. They may charge exorbitant fees upon arrival, possibly using threats to ensure payment.[1][2]

"Ticket tout" is a British term for ascalper, someone who engages inticket resale for more than theface value of the ticket. In recent years some British ticket touts have moved intoInternet ticket fraud.[3]

In the sports betting world, a tout is someone who sells picks of winners against the spread and the over/under. Most touts are scam artists and most don't have a long term winning record.[citation needed]

A "shop tout" is someone who is engaged by a shop to loiter outside their office, sometimes outside the building, or outside their competitors' shop. The tout then promotes the services to a passer-by and then escorts the person back to the shop, where they are paid a commission for each person that is brought back. The practice of touts working on the street to attract customers to night clubs and bars is very common in the entertainment tourist areas ofJapan (particularly those ofRoppongi andKabukicho),Hungary,[4]Turkey,Serbia,[5] andSpain.

Informants

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InIreland, a tout is aninformant, a term which includessupergrass.[6][7][8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Taxis in London". Retrieved2009-11-10.Taxi Touts: These are completely illegal and are bad news, avoid them like the plague. They wait for unsuspecting tourists who do not know any better, usually in places such as London airports and railway stations. They will appear to be friendly and helpful, carrying your bag from the train station outside to the car. Remember that mini cabs cannot pick you up on the street, so if it looks like a private car, not a big black taxi, then you should refuse to get in. Take your bags and leave. There have been cases whereby tourists have been taken only a few blocks and then charged £60 or more. If you refuse to pay you could really be in trouble as they tend to have some very big friends that could land you in hospital.
  2. ^Illegal Minicabs & Illegal parking in London. onYouTube At 3 min 19 s: "It is happening every night by the same drivers on either side of the road. They are not waiting in their vehicles. They are standing around and I see them stopping people and asking "Taxi? Taxi?", which is illegal and it's touting."
  3. ^Jamie Doward: "How boom in rogue ticket websites fleeces Britons". The Observer, Sunday March 9, 2008.
  4. ^"Scams to avoid in Budapest - Ultimate Budapest".
  5. ^"Belgrade Airport seeks solution to unlicensed taxis". 20 April 2023.
  6. ^The murky world of informers,BBC News, 4 April 2006, retrieved 29 October 2009
  7. ^Henry McDonald (11 November 2001)."Murder probe 'blocked to protect police informer'".The Guardian. Retrieved20 August 2010.
  8. ^Suzanne Breen (14 September 2008)."The Informers".Sunday Tribune. Archived fromthe original on 31 October 2010. Retrieved20 August 2010.
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