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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #103

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 4 Mar 2004 02:40:00 EST    Volume 23 : Issue 103

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    First Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (Walker)
    SBC to Sell Rural Lines to Fund Cingular Deal (Wesrock@aol.com)
    FCC Needs To Learn From Court Decision (Eric Friedebach)
    Vonage with Modem and Fax (Alex)
    EFFector 17.7 (Monty Solomon)
    Scientific-Atlanta Mulling Video Game Set-Top Box (Monty Solomon)
    Latest Phishing Scam Most "Devious" Ever (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Unauthorized Phone Charges Appearing on Local Phone Bill (dold)
    Re: Unauthorized Phone Charges Appearing on Local Phone Bill (Joseph)
    Re: A Quick Technical Question (Phil McKerracher)
    Re: Missouri Bell (Al Gillis)
    Re: Memories: Enterprise -vs- Zenith Numbers (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Re: Phone Cos. to Counterattack Cable TV (Steven J Sobol)
    (Claims to Be) Cellular-Phone Dealer in Nigeria (Carl Moore)
    The Porn-Worm Explained Further (Patrick Townson)

All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the
individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other
journals or newsgroups, provided the writer's name and the Digest are
included in the fair use quote.  By using -any name or email address-
included herein for -any- reason other than responding to an article
herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the
email.

               ===========================

Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
sold or given away without explicit written consent.  Chain letters,
viruses, porn, spam, and miscellaneous junk is definitely unwelcome.

We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we
are naive enough to believe that we will ever stamp it out, but because
we do not want the kind of world that results when no one stands
against crime.   Geoffrey Welsh

               ===========================

See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 16:22:01 -0800
From: Alex Walker <alex@usenix.org>
Subject: First Symposium on Networked Systems Design & Implementation (NSDI)


March 29-31, 2004
San Francisco, CA, USA
http://www.usenix.org/nsdi04/progb
Sponsored by the USENIX Association in cooperation with ACM SIGCOMM and
ACM SIGOPS

Dear Colleague:

We are writing to remind you that the pre-registration deadline for
NSDI is approaching: if you register by March 8th you'll save
$150. Visit http://www.usenix.org/events/nsdi04/progb to register
today.

NSDI '04 is a new conference focused on the design principles of
large-scale distributed and networked systems. Our goal is to bring
together researchers from across the system and networking communities
to foster a cross-disciplinary approach to addressing common research
challenges.

We received 118 technical submissions, and from these the program
committee selected 27 papers for inclusion in the conference. The
resulting program includes a diverse collection of creative and
well-developed papers in areas including sensor systems, network
routing, peer-to-peer networks, storage systems, and security. In
addition, NSDI '04 will feature a poster session where attendees can
interact with researchers describing their current work in its
formative stages and learn more about the leading edge of networked
systems design. Finally, NSDI is pleased to feature a keynote address
by Richard Lawrence, Director of Development Technology at Sony Online
Entertainment, who will describe the unique systems challenges faced
by builders of multiplayer online games.

Please join us for this exciting new conference presenting the best of
current networked systems research and practice. We look forward to
seeing you there.

Sincerely,

Robert Morris, MIT
Stefan Savage, University of California, San Diego
NSDI '04 Program Chairs

SAVE THE DATE!
First Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (NSDI '04)
March 29-31, 2004
San Francisco, CA, USA
http://www.usenix.org/nsdi04/progb
Sponsored by the USENIX Association in cooperation with ACM SIGCOMM and
ACM SIGOPS

------------------------------

From: Wesrock@aol.com
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 20:10:12 EST
Subject: SBC to Sell Rural Lines to Fund Cingular Deal


Pat:

I don't remember seeing this in the digest, and if it hasn't appeared
it may be of interest.

      Verizon is not the only one selling things off. 


Wes Leatherock
wesrock@aol.com

NEW YORK -- SBC Communications Inc. (NYSE:SBC - News) is selling off
about 650,000 telephone lines in rural Michigan and Texas, which could
fetch about $1.5 billion, as it raises money to fund Cingular
Wireless's planned acquisition of AT&T Wireless Services
Inc. (NYSE:AWE - News) , people familiar with the matter told Monday's
Wall Street Journal.

SBC jointly owns Cingular Wireless with BellSouth Corp. (NYSE:BLS -
News), and SBC needs to fund its share of the $41 billion in cash
pledged by Cingular to buy AT&T Wireless.

The lines are concentrated in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and East
Texas.  Potential buyers include a range of rural phone companies,
such as CenturyTel Inc. (NYSE:CTL - News) , Monroe, La.; Alltel Corp.
(NYSE:AT - News) , Little Rock, Ark.; or Commonwealth Telephone
Enterprises Inc.  (NasdaqNM:CTCO - News) , Dallas, Pa., the people
familiar with the matter say.

Wall Street Journal Staff Reporters Dennis K. Berman and Jesse Drucker
contributed to this report.

------------------------------

From: friedebach@yahoo.com (Eric Friedebach)
Subject: FCC Needs To Learn From Court Decision
Date: 3 Mar 2004 11:38:44 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Aude Lagorce, 03.03.04, Forbes.com

NEW YORK - If the U.S. Federal Communications Commission learns
anything from yesterday's court ruling, it should be this: It's time
to be a leader, not a follower. The regulatory agency has gone for
years without providing the strong guidance and clear-cut decisions
the telecom industry needs for investment to pick up and the pace of
recovery to accelerate. In the breach, the courts have stepped in to
make the FCC's decisions for it.

In the latest illustration of this gradual shift in leadership,
yesterday a federal appeals court handed a huge victory to the four
regional Bell telephone companies--Verizon Communications, BellSouth,
Qwest Communications and SBC Communications--by striking down
regulation that required them to lease part of their local networks to
rival companies like AT&T or Sprint at prices determined by state
commissions.

http://www.forbes.com/networks/2004/03/03/cx_al_0303fcc.html

Eric Friedebach
/No Dirty Words On The Whiteboard/

------------------------------

From: alex@totallynerd.com (Alex)
Subject: Vonage with Modem and Fax
Date: 3 Mar 2004 14:23:22 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hi all,

I'm looking at maybe switching to Vonage for a second home line, and
if it works out, switching my primary line to it as well (to have two
lines).  Problem is I need one line to be a modem line because I dial
into my home network from work from time to time.  Can anyone give
comments on the quality of this?  My cablemodem is Time Warner, which
is 2-3 Megs down and 384K up, so this should be more then enough
bandwidth.

Thanks for any suggestions.


Alex.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I am assuming you already have a line 
with a modem attached for the occassions when you wish to do dial up
sometimes. So do I. Vonage works on your cable modem line. Your other
modem (used as a dialup on the phone line is a separate matter
entirely.  It rarely suits me to use dialup these days, but I can if
I want to. From the keyboard I just turn on one or the other. You
won't really have much luck using *two* Vonage lines on the same
cable. It just stretches the limit a bit too far, IMO.  But if you 
decide to try Vonage, you just attach the box to your cable modem
right in between the cable modem and the computer. If you need to have
both devices (Vonage and your dialup modem) in the line at the same
time, there should be no trouble. Vonage works via the cable and your
modem works via the phone line. If you decide to try TWO Vonage lines 
and your cable can handle it AND your computer is fast enough and
sturdy enough, it still should have no affect on your dialup modem
which is a separate thing entirely. One common mistake people often
times make is in calling the 'cable modem' a modem. It really isn't
a 'modem' in the sense a dialup thing attached to your phone line is.
PAT]

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 21:51:04 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: EFFector 17.7


EFFector    Vol. 17, No. 7    March 2, 2004          donna@eff.org

A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation  ISSN 1062-9424
In the 279th Issue of EFFector:

  * Court Overturns Ban on Posting DVD Descrambling Code, Finds 
    Free-Speech Violation
  * EFF Speaks on Privacy Perils of RFIDs in Libraries
  * Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT - Section 207
  * 321 Studios Counts Down for Fair Use Rights 
  * Record Companies Pay Millions for CD Price-Fixing - Send It to 
    EFF! 
  * Deep Links (17): Copyright Reform Goes Mainstream
  * Staff Calendar: 03.04.04 - Gwen Hinze speaks at Digital Divide: 
    New Currents in Digital Downloading, Davis, CA; Kevin Bankston 
    speaks at the Southeast Cybercrime Summit, Kennesaw, GA; Lee 
    Tien speaks at RFID Forum, San Francisco Public Library, San 
    Francisco, CA; 03.05.04 - Wendy  Seltzer speaks at the NEA
    conference, Seattle, WA 
  * Administrivia

http://www.eff.org/effector/17/7.php 

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:47:43 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Scientific-Atlanta Mulling Video Game Set-Top Box


NEW YORK, March 3 (Reuters) - Scientific-Atlanta (NYSE:SFA) on
Wednesday said it is planning to develop television set-top
boxes with high-performance video games capabilities, which
could compete with game consoles such as Nintendo's GameCube
and Sony's PlayStation 2.

Scientific-Atlanta chief executive James McDonald, speaking
at an investor conference in Dana Point, California, said
developers are already building games for its Explorer series
of set-top boxes. But he gave no timetable for when such a
device might be available.

     - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=40747712

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 23:44:19 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Latest Phishing Scam Most "Devious" Ever


By Andrew Colley, ZDNet Australia

A prominent anti-virus vendor has described the latest e-mail fraud 
scheme targeted at Westpac bank customers as the most "devious" the 
company has ever encountered.

The e-mail, distributed en-masse to Westpac customers, represents the 
latest example of "phishing scams," designed to catch the unwary and 
fool them into divulging their online banking security details.

The architects of the latest scam also adopted a more insidious Web 
re-direction technique to bamboozle victims. Activating the link in 
the e-mail directs the victim to a fake version of the site but also 
opens an authentic copy of the site in a second browser window behind 
it.

The fake version of the site asks for the victim's account access 
details but returns an error message if he or she attempts to use it. 
The victim is then sent to the real site unaware that they've been 
duped.

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/0,2000061744,39116416,00.htm

------------------------------

From: dold@Unauthoriz.usenet.us.com
Subject: Re: Unauthorized Bogus Phone Charges Appearing on Local Phone Bill?
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 21:25:43 UTC
Organization: a2i network


Joe Donaldson <tryitoz@hotmail.com> wrote:

> Alltel told her that somehow her PC is authorizing these calls and
> someone is using her number. It does not show up on her Long Distance
> carrier bill but on her local bill only.

How does Alltel know that it is the computer authorizing the calls?
What does "authorizing these calls" mean?

Was the PC even turned on at the time that these calls were made?
Is it a separate phone line for the computer?
Are regular phones connected to this phone line?
Is there an answering machine on the line?
Are there any cordless phones in the house?
Is the access point for telco outside the house in a secure area?

Clarence A Dold - Hidden Valley (Lake County) CA USA  38.8-122.5

------------------------------

From: Joseph <JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom>
Subject: Re: Unauthorized Bogus Phone Charges Appearing on Local Phone Bill?
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 18:48:20 -0800
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com
Reply-To: JoeOfSeattle@yahoo.NONOcom


On 2 Mar 2004 15:41:16 -0800, tryitoz@hotmail.com (Joe Donaldson)
wrote:

> My girlfriend has AOL. I have installed a firewall (Sygate lite
> version), SpyBot, Ad aware, and Norton Utilities.

> Her kids know to not answer Yes/No to pop-up ads but to "X" out of
> them. However I know this could also invoke a script as well.

> I clean her PC regularly of any spyware/malware and also immunized her
> PC with Spybot and the Block list at 
> http://www.spywareguide.com/blockfile.php

> So I am doing my best.

> Her LOCAL phone company had multiple charges on it that were not
> authorized nor made by her or her children. Multiple calls on multiple
> days. This month it was to Guyana, obviously an international call.
> Previous month it was somewhere else. The company that showed up on
> her bill was "USBI" to Guyana billed on behalf of ONE CALL COMM dba
> Opticom.

> Alltel told her that somehow her PC is authorizing these calls and
> someone is using her number. It does not show up on her Long Distance
> carrier bill but on her local bill only.

> She has a modem, not a cable or DSL connection.

> I heard this can happen but see no posts in Google/Yahoo on this
> (perhaps using wrong keywords.)

> My suggestion to my girlfriend is the following:

> 1. Eliminate ability to dial international calls with Alltell. Alltel
> can block such calls.

> 2. Then use an MCI or ATT card only to make long distance or European
> calls.

> Any help appreciated.

> Thanks so very much in advance.

> The charges total $120. Alltel said they would remove the charges this
> one time but would not do it in the future. Very strange.  Alltel said
> they could make it so no international calls are made; but my
> girlfriend does need to make a few to her family and Alltel said there
> is no way to restrict the account.

This has been in the news of late and here's something I found when
referencing google:

"When Your Computer Makes A Call ... Without Your Okay

If you use the Internet, you're probably dialing a local phone number
to get online. Chances are you know exactly what you pay for that
local service. However, many consumers are surprised to find they've
been charged for calls to destinations that aren't remotely local,
simply remote. The calls were made through their modems without their
knowledge or approval.

How does it happen? According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC),
the nation's consumer protection agency, it's a scheme some Web sites
use to trick consumers into paying to access "free" Internet content."

Full reference:

http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/alerts/modmalrt.htm

Also, you may want to be sure that you use programs that clean adware
and malware from your computer such as Adaware
<http://www.lavasoftusa.com>  or Spybot Search &  Destroy
<http://www.safer-networking.org/> and get a free program such as Zone
Alarm (free version) for a software firewall <http://www.zonelabs.com>

           remove NONO from .NONOcom to reply

------------------------------

From: Phil McKerracher <phil@mckerracher.org>
Subject: Re: A Quick Technical Question
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 22:11:57 GMT
Organization: blueyonder (post doesn't reflect views of blueyonder)


Eli <elitra@rock.com> wrote in message
news:telecom23.102.16@telecom-digest.org:

> VoIP sounds to have settled already a stable framework. A question
> sparkled into my mind regarding video-stream transfer:

> Is there or will there be blue-prints for "Video over IP" framework? I
> mean in terms of networking protocol and compression algorithms.

They already exist. I guess VoIP is a misleading name; it should be
"multimedia over IP" or something similar.

The webcam facility in MSN Messenger is an example.


Phil McKerracher
www.mckerracher.org

------------------------------

From: Al Gillis <alg@aracnet.com>
Subject: Re: Missouri Bell
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 15:50:58 -0800
Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com


Michael Chance <mchance@swbell.net> wrote in message
news:telecom23.100.8@telecom-digest.org:

           (Snip...)

> The headquarters building that Missouri Bell built in the 1890s is
> still standing at the corner of 10th and Olive in downtown St. Louis,
> and is currently being renovated into loft condos named,
> appropriately, The Bell Lofts.

Here in Northeast Portland (Oregon) there is a smallish apartment building
named "Exchange Apartments" ... It, too, was a Bell System building years
and years ago.

------------------------------

From: Michael D. Sullivan <nospam@camsul.com>
Subject: Re: Memories: Enterprise -vs- Zenith Numbers
Date: Thu, 04 Mar 2004 02:22:52 GMT


In article <telecom23.102.15@telecom-digest.org>, I shot my mouth off 
too soon and said:

> Two islands, in fact:  St. Pierre and Miquelon.  They are a Department 
> of France (equivalent of a state).  They are not part of the North 
> American Numbering Plan, use the French country code and from points in 
> North America must be dialed internationally via France, even from a few 
> miles away in Newfoundland.

In fact, as had already been posted, they have their own country code, 
508, instead of 33 (France) -- but I seem to recall that they were in 
France's code at some point.  Also, they are a "Territorial 
Collectivity," one step down from being a Department.

Thanks to John Levine for setting me straight in an email.

Michael D. Sullivan
Bethesda, MD, USA
Delete nospam from my address and it won't work.

------------------------------

From: Steven J Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net>
Subject: Re: Phone Cos. to Counterattack Cable TV
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 14:05:05 -0600


Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> wrote:

> Starting Wednesday, SBC Communications Inc. will offer DISH Network
> satellite cable service to all of its residential customers in the 13
> states where SBC is the dominant local phone provider.

Heh. That's funny. Ameritech used to offer competing cable TV services
in the Cleveland area -- in certain suburbs -- but had to divest the
cable services when SBC borg'd them.
 

JustThe.net Internet & New Media Services, Apple Valley, CA
Steven J. Sobol, Geek In Charge / 888.480.4NET (4638) / sjsobol@JustThe.net
PGP: C57E 8B25 F994 D6D0 5F6B B961 EA08 9410 E3AE 35ED

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You know, Steve, the more I read about
SBC, the happier I am I got rid of them for good in my house. They
seem to be less and less interested in providing good phone service
and much more into becoming a media conglomerate these days. I got a
piece of mail from them yesterday. Another one of their 'please,
please come back to us' mailings, with all the usual cut rate deals
they are offering for one year, only $25 dollars for this and only
three cents per minute on that, free installation, a fifty dollar gift
card, and how they have finally begun to take notice now that in their
own words, sixty thousand Kansas residents have jumped ship on them
and gone elsewhere. Trouble is, I just can't trust them. They seem to
lie so much.  I'm quite happy with Prairie Stream, thanks.  PAT]

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 16:18:47 EST
From: Carl Moore <cmoore@ARL.ARMY.MIL>
Subject: (Claims to Be) Cellular-Phone Dealer in Nigeria


I have edited some headers off.  I am not in the activity of trying to
sell cellular phones (on or off the net), and I have no way of knowing
the legitimacy of the following email (even though it gives an address
in Nigeria, it's coming off a French host).  Yes, I do see this is not
in the familiar scam categories.

 From: shopcellular <shopcellular@voila.fr>
 Reply-To: shopcellular@voila.fr
 To: shopcellular@voila.fr
 Subject: buy
 Mime-Version: 1.0
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
 Date: Wed,  3 Mar 2004 21:48:12 +0100 (CET)
 X-ARL-MailScanner: Found to be clean
 X-ARL-MailScanner-SpamCheck: not spam, SpamAssassin (score=4.054, required 5,
	BAYES_44 -0.00, RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_11_50 0.88, RAZOR2_CHECK 1.05,
	RCVD_IN_BL_SPAMCOP_NET 1.50, SUBJ_BUY 0.63, UPPERCASE_50_75 0.00)
X-ARL-MailScanner-SpamScore: ssss

                     SHOP CELLULAR COMMUNICATIONS
                     23, LADOKE STREET, OKOTA,
                     LAGOS-NIGERIA.
                     TEL: 234-8033823918.
                     E-mail: shopcellular1@yahoo.fr=20
=20
HELLO,
                     SPECIAL/CHEAPER CELLULAR PHONES OFFER.
=20
WE ARE A INTERNATIONAL DEALERS, EXPORTERS AND SUPPLIERS OF CELLULAR PHONES =
AND ACCESSORIES IN NIGERIA. WE HAVE LARGE QUANTITY OF CELLULAR PHONES FOR S=
ALE. ALL OUR CELL PHONES ARE TESTED WORKING AND FINAL PRICE COULD BE NEGOTI=
ATED ACCORDING TO YOUR ORDER QUANTITY. THE QUOTATION BELOW INCLUDE BATTERY,=
 CHARGER, MANUALS, ORIGINAL BOX. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN BUYING SOME CELLU=
LAR PHONES OR ACCESSORIES FROM US, CONTACT OUR SALES DEPARTMENT @: shopcell=
ular1@yahoo.fr
TEL: 234-8033823918.
=20
REGARDS,
MRS. KATE OBY.
=20
SHOP CELLULAR COMMUNICATIONS.
=20
=20
=20
                    VIEW OUR PRICE LIST BELOW -- ALL BRAND NEW:
=20
UNITS:
MODELS: PRICE:                                                  QUANTITY AV=
AILABLE IN STOCK:
NOKIA 2100-- US$55                                               690 pcs
NOKIA 3210-- US$25                                               980 pcs
NOKIA 3310-- US$29                                              1700 pcs
NOKIA 3330-- US$30                                               840 pcs
NOKIA 3410-- US$35                                               840 pcs
NOKIA 3510-- US$40                                               840 pcs
NOKIA 3510i-- US$45                                              750 pcs
NOKIA 3530-- US$110                                             600 pcs  =
=20
NOKIA 3650-- US$185                                             990 pcs
NOKIA 5100-- US$80                                              550 pcs
NOKIA 5210-- US$55                                               550 pcs
NOKIA 5510-- US$55                                               590 pcs
NOKIA 6090-- US$135                                             400 pcs
NOKIA 6100-- US$60                                               630 pcs
NOKIA 6210-- US$60                                               550 pcs
NOKIA 6250-- US$60                                               400 pcs
NOKIA 6510-- US$45                                               350 pcs
NOKIA 6310-- US$65                                               550 pcs
NOKIA 6310i-- US$65                                              500 pcs
NOKIA 6610-- US$65                                               555 pcs
NOKIA 6800-- US$100                                             490 pcs
NOKIA 7110-- US$60                                               300 pcs
NOKIA 7210 Turquoise-- US$100                         650 pcs
NOKIA 7250-- US$120                                             650 pcs
NOKIA 7650-- US$125                                             650 pcs
NOKIA 8310-- US$90                                              800 pcs
NOKIA 8910 Titanium-- US$95                             800 pcs
NOKIA 8850 SPECIAL EDITION-- US$105              450 pcs
NOKIA 8850 GOLD EDITION-- US$99                     400 pcs
NOKIA 8910 Black-- US$100                                   660 pcs
NOKIA 9210 Communicator-- US$195                  720 pcs
NOKIA 9210i Communicator-- US$195                 700 pcs
NOKIA 8910i-- US$190                                             600 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T200-- US$25                               450 pcs   =20
SONY ERICSSON T100-- US$30                               450 pcs
SONY ERICSSON R600-- US$35                               450 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T20e-- US$35                               450 pcs
SONY CMD-J70-- US$40                                           720 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T20s-- US$39                                300 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T28s-- US$39                                780 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T28 World-- US$45                       780 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T29s-- US$49                                700 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T600-- US$49                                500 pcs
SONY CMD-J7-- US$40                                             584 pcs=20
SONY CMD-J6-- US$40                                             250 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T300-- US$45                                400 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T68i-- US$105                               780 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T65-- US$100                               290 pcs
SONY CMD-J5-- US$30                                             350 pcs
SONY CMD-Z7-- US$35                                             350 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T310-- US$40                                350 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T39m-- US$60                              420 pcs
SONY ERICSSON T66-- US$85                                 250 pcs
SONY ERICSSON R520m-- US$100                          200 pcs
SONY CMD-Z5-- US$90                                           340 pcs =20
SONY ERICSSON R380 World-- US$90                   380 pcs
SONY ERICSSON R380s-- US$105                            340 pcs=20
SONY ERICSSON T68m-- US$110                             380 pcs=20
SONY ERICSSON T610-- US$130                              440 pcs
SONY CMD-MZ5-- US$155                                        340 pcs=20
SONY ERICSSON P800-- US$185                              750 pcs
MOTOROLA Talkabout 191-- US$25                       555 pcs
MOTOROLA C330-- US$30                                       555 pcs
MOTOROLA V66-- US$60                                         640 pcs
MOTOROLA v66i-- US$60                                         650 pcs
MOTOROLA Talkabout192-- US$45                        1000 pcs
MOTOROLA V51-- US$50                                         555 pcs
MOTOROLA V50-- US$50                                         660 pcs
MOTOROLA V70-- US$70                                         700 pcs       =
       =20
MOTOROLA V60-- US$70                                         700 pcs
MOTOROLA V60i-- US$70                                        570 pcs
MOTOROLA T720-- US$65                                        670 pcs
MOTOROLA Accompli 008-- US$49                        400 pcs
MOTOROLA Timeport 280-- US$80                        403 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-N620-- US$40                                  500 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-A800-- US$45                                  800 pcs=20
SAMSUNG SGH-A300-- US$45                                  670 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-R210-- US$45                                  500 pcs  =20
SAMSUNG SGH-N100-- US$65                                  623 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-N400-- US$69                                  650 pcs=20
SAMSUNG SGH-T100-- US$55                                  650 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-A400-- US$55                                  650 pcs=20
SAMSUNG SGH-S100-- US$55                                  447 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-A200-- US$55                                  300 pcs=20
SAMSUNG SGH-T400-- US$39                                  390 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-S300-- US$60                                  490 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-A500-- US$105                                580 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-T500 Champagne-- US$110          500 pcs
SAMSUNG SGH-V200-- US$115                                700 pcs =20
SAMSUNG SGH-T200-- US$125                                 700 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 501-- US20                             450 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 311-- US$25                           150 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 701-- US$30                           150 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 511-- US$30                           150 pcs
ALCATEL OT525-- US$39                                          450 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 512-- US$40                           686 pcs
ALCATEL One Touch 715-- US$45                           574 pcs
PANASONIC GD35-- US$20                                        589 pcs
PANASONIC GD52-- US$25                                        150 pcs
PANASONIC GD67-- US$30                                        234 pcs
PANASONIC GD92-- US$40                                        300 pcs
PANASONIC GD90-- US$40                                        350 pcs
PANASONIC GD93-- US$55                                        250 pcs
PANASONIC GD75-- US$65                                        389 pcs
PANASONIC GD55-- US$145                                      155 pcs
PANASONIC GD95-- US$69                                        450 pcs=20
PANASONIC GD87-- US$70                                        760 pcs
SIEMENS C45-- US$25                                                850 pcs
SIEMENS C55-- US$30                                                578 pcs
SIEMENS M35i-- US$35                                              345 pcs
SIEMENS M50-- US$40                                               300 pcs
SIEMENS S45i-- US$60                                               770 pcs
SIEMENS S40-- US$85                                               600 pcs =
=20
SIEMENS SL42-- US$90                                             600 pcs
SIEMENS ME45-- US$65                                             410 pcs
SIEMENS SL45-- US$45                                             440 pcs
SIEMENS SL45i-- US$45                                            250 pcs
SIEMENS S55-- US$55                                               330 pcs
SIEMENS S55 Camera-- US$55                                195 pcs
PHILIPS Fisio 120-- US$25                                        350 pcs
PHILIPS Fisio 311-- US$30                                        300 pcs
PHILIPS Fisio 620-- US$35                                        289 pcs
PHILIPS Fisio 825-- US$35                                        200 pcs
PHILIPS Oz=E9o 8@8-- US$45                                      400 pcs
PHILIPS X=E9nium-- US$45                                          400 pcs
PHILIPS Fisio 820 + Kit Blue-- US$49                       409 pcs =20
Nextel i90- $59                                                           6=
70 pcs
Nextel i95cl- $70                                                        72=
0 pcs
Nextel i60c- $40                                                         72=
0 pcs
Nextel 6510TM- $110                                                 230 pcs=
=20
=20

NOTE: ALL PHONES ARE IN FACTORY SEALED BOXES, WITH CHARGERS, ACCESSORIES, M=
ANUALS INCLUDED.
=20
SHOP CELLULAR COMMUNICATIONS.
------------------------------------------

Faites un voeu et puis Voila ! www.voila.fr=20

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I didn't even bother to edit this
trash, although that is what I am paid to do around here, I guess. Had
this come from a name I had not recognized, it would have directly in
the trash, like several of these do each day. Since Carl Moore sent it
in, I guess he wanted you all to see it. Their prices look good, but I
doubt you get anything for your money except grief. I do not think
they fill orders or respond to inquires. The last five or six copies
of this I received were all junked.  And before anyone writes to me
accusing me of hawking worthless cell phones through spam email using
a French mail drop and a Nigerian merchant, please read the final
message in this issue coming up next. Thse Nigerians have even started
a Telecom Digest beleive it or not (check Google). *They* won't cease
and desist copying from my stuff, but neither will the other imposters
and frauds. I hope *they* run porn-worm also, so their attitudes about
the 'American Satan' will be confirmed.  PAT]

------------------------------

From: Patrick Townson <editor@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Subject: The Porn Worm Explained Further
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 21:25:38 -0500


A *nice person* from the east coast wrote to me today asking that the
message be kept private and the name not be used. I will honor that
request.  

The message, in reference to the Porn Worm program of a few days ago
essentially was "why did you run that message?"   

I answered the person saying it was an editorial comment essentially
for a reader who said to me about a year ago 'the net has gotten to
be so bad, all there is left on it these days are three things, spam,
porn and the TELECOM Digest'. That (first) person was obviously
exagerating a little, but not, it would seem, very much. The net has
gotten to be pretty awful in the past year or two. I asked the (latest)
writer, "have you tried the porn worm?" "Nope", they said,"and don't
intend to."

The (latest) writer concluded their comments by saying "if you are
going to run something like that, you should really add some editorial
context to it so people do not get the wrong idea about what you are
doing to the Digest."  Well, fair enough ... so when I heard one of
another of our readers on the radio last week talking about the
generally vile condition of the net in recent times (*yes* he reads
the Digest most days, and *yes* he is a sort of big shot with the
American Family Association, and *yes* he wants to keep his personal
life and picadillos private, just like old Joe McCarthy, the
Republican from Wisconsin in the 1950's), my thought was "if its vile
you want, then vile you'll get." And Porn-Worm just hit the spot!  

I would have thought you could all see my tongue in cheek as that
message was printed, if not, then 30-45 minutes of allowing the worm
to run through the internet gathering up stuff and carefully
depositing it in a directory where you could later bash it all with
ease would have demonstrated it, five or ten thousand .jpg and .avi
files later. Literally, if you let it run for 24 hours, the porn would
be spilling out all over. The nastiest of the nasty. That's how bad
the net has gotten.  And although there were more than ten million
downloads of the worm when it was first released by AGWAC Studios
Company (and in fact I have had three hundred plus downloads of it
under its new resurrection in a couple of days) AGWAC went bankrupt
because they could not get anyone to pay $20 or whatever they asked to
'register' it. I do not know if that fact speaks favorably for the
position of the American Family Association or not. In any event, if
you did not get the joke the first time around, I hope you will now.
Personally, I don't think it confirms anything the AFA has to say 
about the net, but more about the cheapness of many of the users of
the net.  Oh, it was http://porn-worm.us.tf in case you forgot.

Now please, no more about it. Either use it or forget about it. 


Patrick Townson

------------------------------

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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #103
******************************
