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Subject: TELECOM Digest V23 #594

TELECOM Digest     Sun, 12 Dec 2004 17:44:00 EST    Volume 23 : Issue 594

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Entrenched Interests Vrs Disruptive Technology (delete 'z' for address)
    Spammer With a Toll Free Number and Really Big BALLS (Shlichter1)
    Telemarketing to Cell Phones (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Re: Western Electric and Al Capone (Jim Haynes)
    Re: Sprint, Nextel in Merger Talks (Tony P.)
    Re: FAX vs VOIP (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Radar Detectors (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Urban Legends Reference Pages: (Celling Your Soul) (Dave VanHorn)
    Re: What's VOip With Pictures Called? (Tony P.)
    Re: Calling Card Needed -- Short Interaction Sequence (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Calling Card Needed -- Short Interaction Sequence (Clark Griswold)
    Re: Cellphones Aloft: The Inevitable is Closer (John Levine)
    Re: Radar Detectors (David Clayton)
    Re: Vonage Voice Quality Getting Worse? (Pete Romfh)
    Re: EarthLink High Speed Internet Service Ranked Highest (L Smithson)
    Re: Kevin Mitnick Recalled (Danny Burstein)
    Re: Kevin Mitnick Recalled (John Levine)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet.  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: Walter Dnes (delete 'z' to get address) <wzaltdnes@waltdnes.org>
Subject: Entrenched Interests Versus Disruptive Technology
Date: 12 Dec 2004 17:04:08 GMT
Reply-To: see_my_sig_at_bottom_of_message@waltdnes.org


On Thu, 9 Dec 2004 23:38:11 -0500, Ron Chapman,
<ronchapman@wideopenwest.com> wrote:

> Books, by their very nature, are wrought from processes that distill
> the crap out and leave hard-considered facts and opinions.  But on the
> net, all it takes is one crazy to set up a "the Holocaust was a fake"
> blog -- and how does a ten year old know how to interpret that?  He
> doesn't.  But he reads it on the net ... so does he just go ahead and
> use that as "fact" to back up his assignment?

> It's all about EDITING.

>  Now, maybe if my kid's research was done online using only EDITED
>  resources, resources that have been through the same excruciating
>  processes that produce printed books, that would be fine.

100% taurine excrement.  "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" is a
published book that's been around for a century.  "Mein Kampf" is
another book that was published long before the internet came into
existance.  Would you accept them as authoritative if some kid used
them as sources for his homework assignment???

> Unedited information makes for dangerous waters.  It requires at the
> least parental coaching to help the child become a well-rounded and
> educated netizen.  One should NOT leave the child alone to use the
> naked net to finish an assignment.  My parents could leave me in the
> library by myself to do that, and I could leave my kid in the library
> today, but not on the net.  Not alone and without guidance.

When someone once complained that 90% of science fiction was crud,
Theodore Sturgeon shot back that 90% of *EVERYTHING* was crud.  This
is popularly known as "Sturgeon's Law".  He was generally right,
although some people might argue that 90% is a conservative number.
Children need to be taught critical thinking and to critically examine
*ALL* "facts", regardless of where those alleged facts are found,
regardless of whether it's on the web or in a "respected publication".

Now to get onto the topic of my subject ... when a new technology
comes out that undermines entrenched interests using old tech, the old
entrenched interests will fight tooth-and-nail to destroy the new
tech.

   - Gutenberg's invention of the printing-press undermined the
     religious establishment's authority.  Priests, often the only
     people literate in Latin, could open up an expensive parchment
     Latin Bible and tell the populace "The Holy Bible says blah blah
     blah...".  Cheap English translations via Gutenberg's printing
     press allowed the populace to respond "No, it doesn't".  The
     Church's initial reaction was to ban English Bible translations,
     and burn their authors at the stake (e.g. William Tyndale in 1536)

   - The automobile was fought tooth-and-nail by the horse-and-buggy
     industry.  Ever heard of the "Red Flag Law"?

   - Low-cost (and for that matter no-cost) Open Source software is
     threatening to undermine Microsoft's monopoly.  Microsoft's
     response is to amass software patents and spread FUD about Open
     Source software ( http://news.com.com/2100-7344-5457879.html ).
     And then there's the Darl McBride fiaSCO.

Web-publishing threatens the grip of the old-line media.  In the old
days, you needed to be a multi-millionaire, if not a billionaire, to
own the media necessary to promote your version of the truth.  Today,
anybody with a few dollars a month for an internet connection and a
webpage has the chance to have their story seen by a worldwide
audience.  And the old-line media are fighting tooth-and-nail to
discredit/outlaw/hobble the new media.  I don't deny that there will
be plenty of garbage in the new media, but then again, there's plenty
of garbage in the old media.

Walter Dnes; my email address is *ALMOST* like wzaltdnes@waltdnes.org
Delete the "z" to get my real address.  If that gets blocked, follow
the instructions at the end of the 550 message.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thank you very much for your excellent
rebuttal. Just as there is **much** -- maybe a large majority of the
stuff on the net -- which is total trash and to be certain it is *very
cheap* and easy to mass produce here; I do not feel, as you do not,
that 'cheap and easy to produce' equals trash automatically. And at 
the same time, arduous, time-consuming, relatively expensive to
produce work does not equal 'good'. Consider in the early 1980's as
Usenet and the mailing lists were first getting started, and how the
newspapers used to fight us tooth and nail. What we said here had not
appeared in the New York Times or Mrs. Graham's publications, the
Washington Post or NewsWeak, so therefore there was no currency to it.
As the web began to get underway in 1994-95, the newspapers were
ever so eager to report all the bad things they could about
us. Remember Joe Abernathy, for example, and his perfectly snotty
reports -- filled with all kinds of bald faced lies which appeared in
the print media in the early 1990's?  

Yes, the newspapers all have web sites now; they have to be in the 
loop after all, but don't think for a minute they are friends. And
remember the New York Times reporter who had the audacity to ask in
print here in this Digest "if you" (meaning me and other web
publishers) "ask for money from your readers, how do we" (meaning the
print media guys) "know you are not just charlatans collecting money
to line your pockets?"  Can you imagine that? As though newspapers
were all so pure and white as snow and honest. Most of them are good
and honest people, but then, so are many or most web publishers. And
recall the radio personality from National Public Radio who asked here
if I had been given permission to 'beg for money on the net' and I
asked him "who gave *you* permission to spend days on end doing fund
raising for NPR?" Somehow they are good, the web publishers are 
supposed to be the bad guys. I don't believe it.

And Walt, your reference to Mr. Gutenberg, and his printing press: To
the gentleman who castigated *me* in a slight of hand way because due
to a typo error I got an additional /t/ in Gutenberg's name, Walt, you
were mostly correct; Gutenberg's original intention was to 'bring
glory to God and Mother Church' by his new ability to compile all the
scriptures in a form convenient and easy for the common person. The
church had fallen into such disarray in the middle ages and many of
its teachings had become so heretical, his new invention would bring
an end to all that confusion and ignorance, which it did do, but
ultimatly the joke was on Gutenberg wasn't it? Over a space of about a
hundred years, by the late 1500's, there were printing presses all
over Europe, around a million of them, printing all kinds of
things. Gutenberg thought his invention would solidify the church's
power and make corrections as needed in its teachings. We know now
that was not the case at all. And today, the net serves as a good
check on the crud which gets printed in the established media, doesn't
it.    PAT]

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

From: shlichter1@aol.com (Shlichter1)
Date: 12 Dec 2004 18:51:18 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Subject: Spammer with a toll free number and really big BALLS


The following number and address were on a Spam that I received.

I called his number and was really surprised, I got him and his
comment was there was an optout, there was not, beside who in their
right mind would give a spammer your e-mail to let him know it was
good.  The slim even called me back, he must have real time ANI.

Let him know what you think about Spam, let your friends also know.
Give your local pay phone operator a boost in money since with all
these Cell Phones he is not making as much.


The only good spammer is a dead one!!  Have you hunted one down today?
(c) I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Company.
Apple Elite II BBS will return.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I did *not* edit this message and
remove the phone number, etc. Steve did not give us any phone number,
although I looked everywhere for it including my trash basket. PAT]

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Telemarketing to Cell Phones
Date: 12 Dec 2004 19:24:53 GMT
Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com


A thread in the local forsale newsgroup here has been debating the
legality of making telemarketing calls to cell phones (in the US).
While most people seem to believe it's NOT legal, no one has been able
to provide a specific reference.

Most people cite the TCPA, but it specifically refers to the use of
automated dialing equipment. While most telemarketing sweatshops use
autodialers, the question concerns local businesses who harvest phone
numbers from, for instance, the state Department of Motor Vehicles and
manually call the numbers on the list.

Are these calls, in fact, legal? And if not, can someone cite a
specific reference?


John Meissen                           jmeissen@aracnet.com

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

Subject: Re: Western Electric and Al Capone
Reply-To: jhaynes@alumni.uark.edu
Organization: University of Arkansas Alumni
From: haynes@alumni.uark.edu (Jim Haynes)
Date: Sun, 12 Dec 2004 02:18:59 GMT


In article <telecom23.587.10@telecom-digest.org>,Peter Brooks
<pbrooks@micromind.com> wrote:

> Small correction: the folks portrayed in "The Eudaemonic Pie", Doyne
> Farmer, Norm Packard, et. al. were not successful ultimately in
> beating roulette for purely technological reasons (some devices didn't

Yeah, I can see that I failed grossly to communicate what I meant to
say.  Where they were successful was in the concept that a roulette
wheel is, at least some of the time, susceptible to statistical
prediction.

jhhaynes at earthlink dot net

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.cox.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: Sprint, Nextel in Merger Talks
Organization: ATCC
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 22:14:18 -0500


In article <telecom23.592.6@telecom-digest.org>, pro_engineer_97
@yahoo.com says:

> I have been employed by Sprint PCS in the past, and am currently
> employed by Nextel. Nextel has excellent benefits, and has a great
> working environment. They don't just "talk the talk", they truly care
> about their employees. They will even give you $3,500 to assist with
> adopting a child.

> Sprint, on the other hand, has mediocre benefits at best, and treat
> their employees as "just another number".

> The news of this merger is a big disappointment to me, and I advise all
> Nextel employees to get ready for the "shaft".

> I reactivated my resume on all of the major job boards today. Sprint is
> not a good place to work.

What a shame. I can't stand the consolidation that is going on in the
wireless market over the past few years.

Nextel seems like it really is a progressive company. Too bad it's
going to get suppressed by Sprint.

Best of luck in your search for a new job. 

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

From: DevilsPGD <devilspgd@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: FAX vs VOIP
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 20:17:38 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


In message <telecom23.592.16@telecom-digest.org> dave@compata.com
(Dave Close) wrote:

>> My 3-year old FAX machine works fine on my Vonage service.

> Sending or receiving? Vonage, for example, provides support for
> incoming fax calls, especially if you notify them. But when I've tried
> sending, my fax generally is unable to sync with the destination
> machine.

Using *99?

I walked into a bar the other day and ordered a double.
The bartender brought out a guy who looked just like me.

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

From: DevilsPGD <devilspgd@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Radar Detectors
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 20:17:39 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


In message <telecom23.592.9@telecom-digest.org> Tim@Backhome.org wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When traveling south on Pennsylvania
> Avenue (highway 75 here) the stop/go lights are timed in such a way
> that if you make one light, and *travel at the right speed* you can
> make all the lights all the way downtown. On the other hand, miss one
> light, and you miss them all.  PAT]

What do you mean "miss them all"? -- If you miss one, you stop and
wait, then they're all green again.  You get up to speed and get
through the rest on schedule, no?


I walked into a bar the other day and ordered a double.
The bartender brought out a guy who looked just like me.

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

Reply-To: Dave VanHorn <dvanhorn@dvanhorn.org>
From: Dave VanHorn <dvanhorn@dvanhorn.org>
Subject: Re: Urban Legends Reference Pages: Politics (Celling Your Soul)
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 22:36:01 -0500


One thing I've noticed lately, is a lot of telemarketing calls from
Quebec.  Note that Canadian telemarketers are not bound by US law.

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

From: Tony P. <kd1s@nospamplease.cox.reallynospam.net>
Subject: Re: What's VOip With Pictures Called?
Organization: ATCC
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 22:22:50 -0500


In article <telecom23.592.4@telecom-digest.org>, 
RickMerrill@comTHROWcast.net says:

> My guess is that VoIP providers will move towards videophone as soon
> as feasible. What do you think? - RM

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: If any sort of universal interchange
> agreement (on handling each other's traffic) gets started, then
> I agree this 'VOIP-CAM' application will be a winner. Bell never did
> get too far along with videophone -- in terms of popular usage --  but
> I think we live in a different era now.   PAT]

While it was technically feasible it wasn't economically feasible for 
Bell to pursue widespread videophone service. 

The bandwidth needed at the time would have required them to build a
complete switching infrastructure just to handle the video. Not cheap
and that is precisely why Bell abandoned video service at the time.

Now of course there are all sorts of IP based videoconferencing
solutions. We use the Polycomm units at our office to hook up to other
agencies and it all goes out via IP.

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

From: DevilsPGD <devilspgd@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Calling Card Needed -- Short Interaction Sequence
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 21:35:20 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


In message <telecom23.593.4@telecom-digest.org> Danny Burstein
<dannyb@panix.com> wrote:

>> Even OneSuite charges 55 cents from payphone.
>> But for that 55 cents you can make multiple successive calls.

> Then their billing arrangement is broken. The FCC regs are that the
> pay phone operator gets their kickback of (usually about $0.30 [a])
> for _each_ call. If you (typically) hit the " * " button on the keypad
> to tell your phonecard service to let you make a second call without
> having to hangup and redial the whole kit and kaboodle, the FCC regs
> treat that one as, yes, a second call, with an additional $0.30.

Interesting, do you know what defines when a second call starts?

Peter: I read a book about this sort of thing once. 
Brian: Are you sure it was a book?  Are you sure it wasn't nothing?
Peter: Oh yeah.

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

From: Clark W. Griswold, Jr. <spamtrap100@comcast.net>
Subject: Re: Calling Card Needed -- Short Interaction Sequence
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 18:28:46 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


NOTvalid@surplus4actors.INFO wrote:

> Even OneSuite charges 55 cents from payphone.
> But for that 55 cents you can make multiple successive calls.

Not legally, unless One Suite is eating the cost of subsequent
calls. Several years ago the rules were changed. Any carrier that
allows multiple calls without hanging up is supposed to remit a fee to
the phone owner for each call, even if the call was initiated as a
follow on call without hanging up.

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

Date: 12 Dec 2004 01:37:47 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Cellphones Aloft: The Inevitable is Closer
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


>> The picocell linked to several antennas inside a cable that gathered
>> signals from passengers' cellphones and sent them all to a small
>> satellite dish, ...

> Hey! Maybe they could do the same thing in buildings as well, and we
> wouldn't have to worry about running over the thousands of people
> wandering around in parking lots talking on their cellphones because
> they can't get a signal inside the building :-).

Mobile carriers put tiny cells all over the place if there's likely to
be significant usage.  You find them, for example, in the tunnels
under Boston harbor so people can continue talking on their cell
phones while they drive as fast as possible to the airport.  (Boston
traffic is already so chaotic that the extra safety hazard is
negligible.)

If there's a lot of people in building and crummy cell coverage, it
might be fun to call a cell carrier or two and see if they're willing
to put in a picocell.  I would imagine that some buildings with steel
insides might be impractical to cover since the frames act like a
Faraday cage and kill any signals.


John R. Levine, IECC, POB 727, Trumansburg NY 14886 +1 607 330 5711
johnl@iecc.com, Mayor, http://johnlevine.com, 
Member, Provisional board, Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail

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

From: David Clayton <dcstar@XYZ.myrealbox.com>
Subject: Re: Radar Detectors
Date: Sun, 12 Dec 2004 13:06:31 +1100


Tim@Backhome.org contributed the following:

> hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

>> I wish the cops didn't need cameras and speed traps, but motorists
>> have only themselves to blame.

> An automatic speed timing/enforcement device that permits up to 39 in
> a 25 mph zone is hardly a speed trap.  That is a generous buffer.  I
> am presuming the 25 mph limit is justified, which it usually is in a
> residential setting.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When traveling south on Pennsylvania
> Avenue (highway 75 here) the stop/go lights are timed in such a way
> that if you make one light, and *travel at the right speed* you can
> make all the lights all the way downtown. On the other hand, miss one
> light, and you miss them all.  PAT]

A few years ago on a major road in my city, a system was trialled
where computerised signs would advise drivers what speed to travel at
to get the "green wave" of traffic lights.

Unfortunately too many people were stuck in their idiotic habit of
travelling to the next red light as quickly as they could, so when the
people who did heed the signs arrived at an intersection a little bit
later, they were confronted with traffic slowly moving from a red
light rather than already moving vehicles.

Regards,

David Clayton, e-mail: dcstar@XYZ.myrealbox.com
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
(Remove the "XYZ." to reply)

Dilbert's words of wisdom #18: Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level then beat you with experience.

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

From: Pete Romfh <spamblocked@yourISP.com>
Subject: Re: Vonage Voice Quality Getting Worse?
Date: Sun, 12 Dec 2004 09:39:44 -0600
Organization: Not Organized


John R Levine wrote:

> I've had Vonage phone service for nearly two years,
> running over the T1 in my office.  For the most part
> voice quality has been pretty good. Recently I've found
> it's often just plain lousy, distortions and dropouts bad
> enough that I switch to my cell phone which sounds better.

> It seems to be worse in the evening (eastern time).  I
> looked at some local link statistics and the local
> connection doesn't seem to be particularly congested, and
> traceroutes show a path from my ISP through Sprint to the
> peering point where Vonage connects, with no big delays,

> Have other people had voice quality problems with Vonage?

> Regards,

> John Levine johnl@iecc.com Primary Perpetrator of The
> Internet for Dummies, Information Superhighwayman wanna-
> be, http://iecc.com/johnl, Mayor "I dropped the
> toothpaste", said Tom, crestfallenly.

I haven't noticed any major change here in Houston.  Cisco-186A behind
Buffalo router over 1.2Mbps DSL.

Pete Romfh, Telecom Geek & Amateur Gourmet.
promfh at hal dash pc dot org

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

From: LSmithsonvqm@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: EarthLink High Speed Internet Service Ranked Highest
Date: 12 Dec 2004 08:32:23 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Monty Solomon wrote:

> EarthLink Garners Top Honors for Second Consecutive Year

> ATLANTA, Aug. 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- EarthLink (Nasdaq: ELNK),
> one of the nation's leading Internet service providers, today
> announced that its high-speed Internet service has been recognized by
> J.D. Power and Associates in its 2003 Internet Service Provider
> Residential Customer Satisfaction Study(SM) with the highest ranking
> in customer satisfaction for the second year in a row.

>      - http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=35139843

I see. That is why I got a call this morning with AOL and Time Warner
babbling about how great the service they provide using Earthlink
lines is. I told the leaches that I would deal with Earthlink
directly.

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: Kevin Mitnick Recalled
Date: Sun, 12 Dec 2004 00:57:23 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


In <telecom23.593.6@telecom-digest.org> Lisa Minter
<lisa_minter2001@yahoo.com> writes:

> Rummaging around through the Telecom Archives, I found two interesting
> items on Kevin Mitnick. I wonder if anyone knows what he has been
> doing since 1997 or whenever he got out of prison.

 From a recent post I made to another group:

Subject: Mitnick using his powers for Good. Demonstrates Windows probs 

"Surfing the Web has never been more risky.

"Simply connecting to the Internet -- and doing nothing else --
exposes your PC to non-stop, automated break-in attempts by intruders
looking to take control of your machine surreptitiously.

"While most break-in tries fail, an unprotected PC can get hijacked
within minutes of accessing the Internet.

   ...

"'It's a hostile environment out there,' says tech security consultant
Kevin Mitnick, who served five years in prison for breaking into
corporate computer systems in the mid-1990s. "Attackers have become
extremely indiscriminate."

[ snippety snip ]

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/hacking/2004-11-29-honeypot_x.htm

_____________________________________________________
Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
		     dannyb@panix.com 
[to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

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

Date: 12 Dec 2004 01:18:20 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Kevin Mitnick Recalled
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


In article <telecom23.593.7@telecom-digest.org> you write:

> Rummaging around through the Telecom Archives, I found two interesting
> items on Kevin Mitnick. I wonder if anyone knows what he has been
> doing since 1997 or whenever he got out of prison.

He wrote a fairly bad book about social engineering in 2002.  See the
Wikipedia article about him at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Mitnick

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

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Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

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End of TELECOM Digest V23 #594
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