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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #419

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 7 Sep 2004 02:41:00 EDT    Volume 23 : Issue 419

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    UK: Net Calls Get Their Own Area Code (Jack Decker - VOIP News)
    Congress Hangs Up on VoIP for 2004 (Jack Decker - VOIP News)
    Florida Town Rises From Hurricane Wreckage With VOIP (Decker-VOIP News)
    Re: Spam Makes Up Half of All Emails in China - Expert (SELLCOM Tech)
    Re: Spam Makes Up Half of All Emails in China - Expert (Geoffrey Welsh)
    Re: How to Call Blocked Canadian 800 Numbers From U.S. (Mark)
    Re: DTMF Over Modem (Julian Thomas)
    Re: One Alternative, Peaceful Perspective (John McHarry)
    Re: The Soft Invasion (Gary Breuckman)
    Re: Book Review: The Sinking of the Eastland (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: China Threatens Internet Porn Merchants with Life (Dave Close)
    HDTV Forum a Big Hit (Monty Solomon)

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 are 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.  

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

From: Jack Decker <VOIP News>
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 15:06:13 -0400
Subject: UK: Net Calls Get Their Own Area Code
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


Two articles on this topic:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3630888.stm

In the UK, the telephone area code for cyberspace will be 056. 

Government regulator Ofcom has picked the prefix for customers who
sign up to make calls via the internet. Users can also opt for
geographic numbers.

The decision on numbers comes as Ofcom reveals how it plans to
regulate services that use the net rather than the old fashioned
telephone network.

Ofcom says it will use a light touch when regulating voice over net
services to help the new market flourish.

Call charges

"Broadband voice services are a new and emerging market," said Stephen
Carter, Ofcom Chief Executive. "Our first task as regulator is to keep
out of the way."
 
Full story at:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3630888.stm 

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/0,39020330,39165620,00.htm

Ofcom cheers industry with VoIP number ruling 

Graeme Wearden
ZDNet UK
 
The UK communications watchdog says it want to help build a successful
VoIP market in Britain, but one tough decision still has to be taken

Ofcom has begun to lay out the future for commercial voice over IP
(VoIP) services in the UK.
  
The communications regulator announced on Monday that Internet
telephony service providers will be able to offer both geographic and
non-geographic numbers to their customers.

Geographic numbers will begin with 01 or 02, like today's existing
fixed-line telephone numbers. This will allow consumers to shift onto
a VoIP service but retain their existing number, or choose another
that indicates where they are located.

Non-geographic numbers for VoIP will begin with 056. These will be
suitable for people who want to use their Internet telephony service
from a number of locations. For example, they could install the
necessary software on their laptop and be contactable anywhere over a
GPRS or 3G link.
 
Full story at:


http://news.zdnet.co.uk/0,39020330,39165620,00.htm

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

From: Jack Decker <VOIP News>
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 15:33:27 -0400
Subject: Congress Hangs Up on VoIP for 2004
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://www.internetnews.com/infra/article.php/3403911

By Roy Mark 

Federal legislation to exempt Internet telephony from state
regulations and tariffs has all but failed in the 108th Congress,
ending an ambitious effort to carve out and protect Internet-related
issues from looming, and highly uncertain, telecom reform.

The idea was simple enough. Because IP-enabled networks are inherently
interstate in nature, they should fall solely under the jurisdiction
of the federal government and its appointed agent, the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). No matter what telecom reform might
bring, the distinction in the meanwhile would allow the emerging Voice
over IP (define) technology to compete free of state regulations and
tariffs for the next few years.

For good measure, the FCC would be prohibited from delegating any
authority to regulate IP traffic to the states, a position supported
by the majority of the five-member FCC that is conducting its own VoIP
investigation under the constraints of the 1996 Telecommunications
Act.

Full story at:

http://www.internetnews.com/infra/article.php/3403911

How to Distribute VoIP Throughout a Home:
http://michigantelephone.mi.org/distribute.html

If you live in Michigan, subscribe to the MI-Telecom group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MI-Telecom/

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

From: Jack Decker <VOIP News>
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 15:50:11 -0400
Subject: Florida Town Rises from Hurricane Wreckage with VOIP
Reply-To: VoIPnews@yahoogroups.com


http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/zd/20040905/tc_zd/134768

Florida Town Rises from Hurricane Wreckage with VOIP Triple-Play

Ellen Muraskin - eWEEK 

Homestead, Fla., made news on Aug. 24, 1992, as the community
hardest hit by Hurricane Andrew. Just south of Miami, its residents
certainly hope to stay out of the spotlight this week, as Frances
hits.

Some IP infrastructure players, however, would like to direct our
attention precisely there, because this city of 32,000 directed a good
chunk of its Andrew recovery money to the infrastructure that supports
a novel kind of triple-play IP service. This is to be telephone, video
and data service over really broad broadband 100M-bps optical fiber to
the home.

Homestead is not the first U.S. city to get into the VOIP (voice over
IP) business. Several have taken advantage of their rights to dig up
their own streets and lay down fiber, becoming CLECs (Competitive
Local Exchange Carriers). Homestead's case, however, is groundbreaking
on several different levels, and bears watching.

In the first place, Hurricane Andrew presented Homestead with the
worst kind of "greenfield" opportunity, simply because it destroyed 80
percent of the town. It destroyed 5,000 homes completely, demolished
its Air Force base, and destroyed or damaged 85,000 businesses.

Where no legacy wiring exists, IP's cost of deployment compares more
favorably with traditional copper. And so, among the up to 15,000
homes that are due to go up in Homestead by 2010, Ethernet-carrying
fiber-optic cable is being built right in, at a cost of roughly $1,000
per home. This will support a triple-play service of flat-fee IP
voice, hundreds of channels of IP-TV and HD-TV, movies-on-demand,
videoconferencing, and high-speed data. The first homes are due to
deploy by year's end.

The service is integrated with television in a way I've not seen
before: In the home, via set-top box and remote control, it will allow
subscribers to control their phones and calling features through the
TV screen. In practical terms, this means that if your mother-in-law
calls during "The West Wing," you will see her caller ID from a
picture-within-a picture, if you like, and you will be able to send
her to voice mail from the comfort of your couch-potato seat.

Full story at:
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/zd/20040905/tc_zd/134768

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

From: SELLCOM Tech support <support@sellcom.com>
Subject: Re: Spam Makes Up Half of All Emails in China - Expert
Organization: www.sellcom.com
Reply-To: support@sellcom.com
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 20:02:45 GMT


Lisa Minter <lisa_minter2001@yahoo.com>  posted on that vast internet
thingie:

> Experts say businesses and governments around the world will spend $36
> billion this year to defend their computer systems against electronic
> spam, named for a brand of processed luncheon meat made from ground
> pork and ham.

> "Half of the e-mails in your inbox could be messages you never wanted
> to see," Jean-Jacques Sahel, director of international communications
> at Britain's Department of Trade and Industry, told a technology
> seminar in the Chinese capital.

You know why spam is such a problem?  It is really very simple.  The
US ISPs who are enabling foreign spam sites with connectivity are not
being held responsible for what they enable.  If they would handle
foreign spam sites the way domestic spam sites are handled the problem
would be greatly reduced.

ISPs like level3.net knowingly enable foreign spam and spam sites in
spite of repeated notice.  If the FTC would get the guts to deal with
just level3.net things would get better fast.

Steve at SELLCOM


http://www.sellcom.com
Discount multihandset cordless phones by Siemens, AT&T, Panasonic, Motorola
Vtech 5.8Ghz; TMC ET4000 4line Epic phone, OnHoldPlus, Beamer, Watchguard!
Brick wall "non MOV" surge protection. Uniden 2line 5.8GHz cordless
If you sit at a desk www.ergochair.biz you owe it to yourself.

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

From: Geoffrey Welsh <reply@newsgroup.please>
Subject: Re: Spam Makes Up Half of All Emails in China - Expert
Date: Mon, 6 Sep 2004 18:43:53 -0400


Lisa Minter wrote:

> Some experts blame China, which cracks down on political dissent and
> pornography on the Internet, for being a haven for "spammers" due to
> neglect. Last year, the government blocked dozens of computer servers
> believed to be sending spam.

You don't have to be an expert to blame China for being a part of the
spam problem; analysis of the spam that I receive personally and the
spam reported to me by employees at work show that the majority -- I'd
estimate two thirds to three quarters -- of the URLs advertised point
to China.  I'd guess that others share the experience to some degree.
I can only guess that the government is acting on spam sent within (or
into) China and ignoring the (coincidentally, of course,
revenue-generating) hosting of spammers' web sites.

> The term spam originally comes from "spiced ham" made by U.S. canned
> food giant Hormel Foods Corp.

Well, that really explains the connection well.

Geoffrey Welsh <Geoffrey [dot] Welsh [at] bigfoot [dot] com>
If anything worth doing is worth doing right, then surely anything not worth 
doing right is not worth doing at all. 

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

From: xx-google@telefog.com (Mark)
Subject: Re: How to Call Blocked Canadian 800 Numbers From U.S.
Date: 6 Sep 2004 14:00:12 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I made a mistake in the original post.  Under method 1, I referred to
a "call like the one I described in method 1 above", which is
obviously wrong.  Here's the teleconferencing technique that I meant
to include:

  You, as the moderator, are able to dial out to
  bring in an additional teleconference participant,
  but when you dial out, you can spend as long as you
  want talking to the new "participant" in a side
  conversation.  That new "participant" can be CIC
  or CRA or ExpressVu or any other Canadian entity
  that blocks toll-free calls from the U.S., because
  the outbound call originates from Ontario.

And way below I address this subthread initiated by the moderator:

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think most 800 numbers simply 
>> get translated into a 'regular' number; if you dial via  that
>> 'regular' number you call will go through.... (1) [H]ave you tried 
>> dialing the untranslated or 'regular' number of the places you want
>> to call...?

> Pat,

> Even though many toll free numbers translate to POTS lines there are
> just as many that do not. This is especially true with large call
> volume toll free numbers like the original poster was talking about.

> Many times these lines come in on a T-1 directly from the IEC and
> therefore don't have a POTS line associated with them in any way.
 
> John P. Dearing

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What you say is true, but even if the
> 800 lines terminated on a T-1 and were not themselves directly
> dialable (as a 'regular' 7-D number), all the places he mentioned such
> as Revenue Department, Immigration Department, etc would have
> directory listed 7-D 'administrative numbers' he could use and ask to
> be transferred as needed to the proper department.  PAT]

My original target was CIC, which sometime in the last year
deactivated all three of its public 7-digit call center access numbers
(one each in Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal) and converted to a sole
number, 888-242-2100, which is inaccessible from the entire U.S., as
far I can tell.  (The 7-digit numbers are still listed on some stale
CIC web pages.)  And CIC doesn't make its administrative numbers
public.  I did once call the minister's office in Ottawa for a hand,
but they referred me to the 888 number.  ExpressVu customer service
was reachable by calling the main EV switchboard during Toronto
business hours and asking to be connected, but they may have killed
this back door.  

My original target for the technique that I laid out is CIC's, which
is essentially unreachable by a mere non-hacking U.S.  mortal such as
me unless I find a way to dial out on a Canadian dial tone (or spoof
ANI, but, again, I'm a non-hacker).  So the first number I list as a
primary target for my technique, and the other seven I list mainly to
provide additional examples of Can. toll-free numbers blocked from the
U.S. (for your testing pleasure); CRA probably has non-toll-free
numbers and ExpressVu's switchboard may still connect callers to
customer service on request.

  888-242-2100  Citizenship & Immigration Canada (CIC)
  800-665-0354  Canada Revenue Agency
  800-959-1956  Canada Revenue Agency
  800-959-8281  Canada Revenue Agency
  800-339-6908  ExpressVu
  866-801-9995  ExpressVu
  888-759-3473  ExpressVu
  800-255-4541  Canada Revenue Agency?

**********
1366294709

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

From: Julian Thomas <jt@munged.com>
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 18:25:50 -0400
Subject: Re: DTMF Over Modem


[PAT - please mung my from address in the posting - thanks - jt]

action@xmission.com (Prospecting Sucks) wrote about Play DTMF Tones 
Over a Modem on 5 Sep 2004 18:10:12 -0700:

> I use a voiceblast system which allows me to keep up to date with
> customers and clients

<snip>

> Does anyone know of a program where I can point it to a TEXT file and
> have it play the telephone numbers over the modem? Basically just read
> the numbers using DTMF tones over the modem line?

Should be a fairly simple script to write if you have a real modem that
understands the AT command set.

You need to read the file line by line, send the number and then send the
final "1".

I can't find my AT command set guide at the moment, so can't be more
specific right now.

Julian Thomas:   jt at jt-mj dot net    http://jt-mj.net
In the beautiful Finger Lakes Wine Country of New York State!
Boardmember of POSSI.org - Phoenix OS/2 Society, Inc  http://www.possi.org

There is no such thing as luck. 'Luck' is nothing but an absence of bad
luck.

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

From: John McHarry <mcharryj@bellsouth.net>
Subject: Re: One Alternative, Peaceful Perspective
Date: Tue, 07 Sep 2004 00:00:31 GMT
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net


Badnarik For President Committee <badnarik.org> wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This message has been supplied to
> the Internet by Badnarik for President, 2004. Since neither Bush
> nor Kerry will allow him to particpate in their debates and
> discussions, many Internet news groups will try to help him.  PAT]

It is your newsgroup, and we all appreciate all the effort you have
put into it for lo these many years, but that is really off topic.

Since none of the minor party candidates have any chance of getting
any electoral votes, it would seem a waste of insufficient debate air
time to include them. Not that I think much of the electoral
college. It denies equal voice to those who live in "safe" states.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Which came first, the lack of electoral
votes or the lack of time for a debate?  I suggest the Demopublican
and the Republicratic candidates tend to 'gang up on' alternative
voices to insure they won't be heard from. And there is no law
against electors giving their vote to the candidate of their choice;
if an overwhelming majority of the popular vote in some state went to
Ralph Nader or Badnarik for example, then the electors should cast
their vote that way also. Badnarik (and I think Nader for that matter)
were entitled to be present at the debates because they represent
legitimate political parties and did have candidates in some of the
state primaries. 

But one person -- Ms. Brown of the National Presidential Debate
Commission -- took it upon herself to exclude them as participants, no
doubt at the beheast of Bush, who stands to lose the most votes if
other voices are heard from. Ms. Brown caught much hell for her
arbitrary decision on television Sunday morning when she was
interviewed and took telephone calls and email from viewers, but she
stuck to her guns on the issue. No outsiders to be heard from when the
debates are broadcast, just the two we have chosen. for you.  But the
commission may get sued on that point, to force them to allow truely
open debates between the legitimate candidates.  Ms. Brown also
expressed her dismay at the debate last week between Badnaric and
Nader and others; (a) that they went ahead with the debate 'without
clearing it with us' and that it was televised Monday on C-SPAN-2.
PAT]

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

From: Gary Breuckman <puma@catbox.com>
Subject: Re:  The Soft Invasion
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2004 19:31:16 -0500
Organization: Puma's Lair - catbox.com


In article <telecom23.416.7@telecom-digest.org>, "Dan Lanciani"
<ddl@danlan.com> wrote:

>> By WALTER S. MOSSBERG

>> WHAT IF A private company could legally break into your house and rig
>> your television so that it would always start up on a special station
>> the company had created that showed deceptive ads every minute, all
>> day? And what if, when you tried to change the station, you could
>> choose only among obscure and dubious channels selected by the invading
>> company?

> Why exactly is it any more legal for companies to install unauthorized
> software on my machine than it is for a virus writer to do so? 

Usually, because they ask!

Ever visited a web site, and had a window pop up with something like
"would you like to install our super-duper-find-anything search bar?"
What most of these programs do is monitor what web sites you visit,
and then pop up ads that relate to those sites.

Of course some sites don't ask, or they bundle it with some other item
that you are installing.  

What makes it 'more legal' is that YOU went THERE and got it.  Also
many don't report any data back, they just annoy you locally with
related ads.

Microsoft needs to make it easier to monitor and remove all the
Internet Explorer add-ons.  Many are really hard to get rid of.

-- Gary Breuckman

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com (Lisa Hancock)
Subject: Re: Book Review: The Sinking of the Eastland
Date: 6 Sep 2004 17:57:45 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.csail.mit.edu> wrote 

> survivors of the July 24, 1915 accident which claimed the lives of
> more than 800 workers at the Western Electric Hawthorne Works plant
> in Cicero, Illinois. The book reconstructs the tragic event of that
> Saturday morning in great detail. 

It is important that such tragedies be remembered.

I don't know why some are remembered over others.  I believe in that
time frame an excursion boat out of New York City had a bad accident
with a high loss of life as well.

I know a lot of people have gripes about our present day economic
situation.  But on this Labor Day, we can look back and see how far
society overall has come in terms of working conditions and standard
of living.  I've heard enough stories from my parents and grandparents
about how hard and dangerous working life was back in those days.

We also have to come to terms with our future, for better or worse.

The former Bell System after the Depression was noted for job
security.  You didn't get rich working for the phone company and some
jobs were terribly montonous, but the job security was important for
many people.  There was also a career path.  In the 1950s working for
the telephone company, especially in a smaller city or in the plant
dept was a pretty good job (though not the best paying one).  When
functions were automated, the business was growing fast enough to find
other jobs for people.

With divesture, that job security is utterly gone.  Both AT&T and
the baby Bells have let go people with over 20 years of service 
as departments get realigned.

Are the workers better off without the Bell System?  Many once
big and solid American companies are shrinking and abandoning
no-layoff policies or their once high regard for their people.
IBM is vastly different.  Banks used to be very stable, but no more.

FWIW, a history of MCI describes many boom and bust cycles.  Then MCI
had a very nasty bankruptcy of questionable accounting.  Are we better
off with a business world like that?

It was stylish in the 1960s to knock the big corporations (especially
the Bell System).  But in hindsight many of the companies treated
their workers much better than workers are treated today in "lean and
mean" organizations when allowing for differences in the times.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In 1915 at the time of the Eastland
disaster, there were no labor unions either. People working for 
Western Electric were typical in working 10 hours per day, five or
six days per week. 'Closed on Saturdays' had not yet been started
either. On that particular weekend, having Saturday as an 'extra day
off from work' had been granted by management to some two thousand of
the workers so they could attend the event (provided they had
purchased a ticket [75 cents for each adult, 50 cents for children]
in advance.) Much of the machinery there was very large and dangerous;
accidents were not uncommon. Not only did workers not have any unions,
they did not have any hospital insurance either. On Sunday, the day
following the disaster, Western Electric management sent out a memo
to everyone announcing that the next morning, Monday, the plant would
open at the usual 7 AM starting time, even though in some cases, 
entire families had been killed in the event and there was not a
single department which did not lose at least two or three workers;
in a couple cases, every single worker in a department had been
killed. The only thing that even slightly resembled it in more modern
times was the brokerage company on an upper floor of the World Trade
Center which lost several hundred employees on September 11, 2001.
Western Electric was *that* decimated by the Eastland disaster in
1915. 

The entire book "Sinking of the Eastland" was a terribly sad and
very depressing look at an event now largely forgotten in America. I
hope everyone will read it.  PAT]

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

From: dave@compata.com (Dave Close)
Subject: Re: China Threatens Internet Porn Merchants with Life
Date: 6 Sep 2004 20:47:32 -0700
Organization: Compata, Costa Mesa, California


Lisa Minter quotes Reuters:

> "Depending on the seriousness of the cases, the sentences range from
> living under compulsory surveillance, detainmen t, taking into custody
> by the police, to various terms of imprisonment and life
> imprisonment," Xinhua said.

Makes the "Internet death penalty" seem mild ... I note they are not
applying those rules to spam.


Dave Close, Compata, Costa Mesa CA  "If I seem unduly clear to you,
dave@compata.com, +1 714 434 7359    you must have misunderstood
dhclose@alumni.caltech.edu           what I said." -- Alan Greenspan

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

Date: Mon, 6 Sep 2004 15:02:23 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: HDTV Forum a Big Hit


By Ultimate AV Staff

September 06, 2004 - Overshadowed by the Athens Olympic Games and the
start of the Republican National Convention, the second annual HDTV
Forum 2004 was a resounding success. Held the last week of August at
the Westin Century Plaza in Los Angeles, the event was completely sold
out, according to organizing companies DisplaySearch of Austin, TX and
Insight Media of Norwalk, CT.

The three-day event hosted 338 attendees from 12 different countries
and featured 11 corporate sponsors, 14 exhibitors, 10 media sponsors,
two audio/visual sponsors, and 15 media organizations-a diverse group
from across the TV food chain, including representatives from TV and
cable networks, content creators, government agencies, satellite and
cable providers, retailers, distributors, TV brands, TV OEMs,
panel/tube/engine manufacturers, and IC manufacturers.

The HDTV format has made great strides in the past year, participants
agreed, although noted that consumers need more education about the
format and all involved in delivering it-manufacturers, cable and
satellite providers, retailers, TV networks, local broadcasters, and
independent production companies-need to pull together to really make
HDTV succeed.

The driving force for this success is and will be HD sports, according
to the first day's keynote speaker, Bryan Burns, vice president of
strategic business planning and development for ESPN HD.  Among key
drivers for the growing demand of HDTV will be ESPN HD's 6000 hours of
HD programming in 2004, Burns told attendees.

http://www.guidetohometheater.com/news/090604hdtvforum/

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #419
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