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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #151
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From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 20 Apr 2006 23:35:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 151

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Network Neutrality (Patrick Townson)
    Westchester (NYC Suburb) and 802.11 Safety (Danny Burstein)
    Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (xx-google@telefog.com)
    Re: When Did 2L-5N Become Required in Los Angeles? (Lisa Hancock)
    EarthLink Taps Level 3 for VoIP (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Continuing to Read About the Scams (Carl Moore)

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: Patrick Townson <ptownson@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Network Neutrality
Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 21:37:33 -0500


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: 'Network Neutrality', the concept that
everyone on the net should be given equal use of network facilities
is a very interesting concept. At first glance, I would say I agree
with it, yet the telcos, notably AT&T (SBC by its other name) and
the larger ISPs (America OnLine for example) seem to be fighting it
for various reasons. The editorial comment which follows comes from
the Move On people, who, IMO were dreadfully off-base in their
comments last week (and again today as a passing comment in this
latest piece) also seem to favor network neutrality. Quite some time
ago, I suggest that (again, IMO) the ICANN people, given their
druthers, would tend to favor 'large corporations' rather than the
small, everyday internet user. I would appreciate _your_ thoughts on
this topic of Network Neutrality, as it has come to be known. First,
here are the thoughts of the Move On people, then I will print 
responses in the days to come from readers.   PAT]

      ---------  Move On Commentary follows --------

Google, Amazon, MoveOn. All these entities are fighting back as
Congress tries to pass a law giving a few corporations the power to
end the free and open Internet as we know it.

Tell Congress to preserve the free and open Internet today.

Dear MoveOn member,

Do you buy books online, use Google, or download to an Ipod? These
activities, plus MoveOn's online organizing ability, will be hurt if
Congress passes a radical law that gives giant corporations more
control over the Internet.

Internet providers like AT&T and Verizon are lobbying Congress hard to
gut Network Neutrality, the Internet's First Amendment. Net Neutrality
prevents AT&T from choosing which websites open most easily for you
based on which site pays AT&T more. Amazon doesn't have to outbid
Barnes & Noble for the right to work more properly on your computer.

If Net Neutrality is gutted, MoveOn either pays protection money to
dominant Internet providers or risks that online activism tools don't
work for members. Amazon and Google either pay protection money or
risk that their websites process slowly on your computer. That why
these high-tech pioneers are joining the fight to protect Network
Neutrality (1) -- and you can do your part today.

The free and open Internet is under seige-can you sign this petition
letting your member of Congress know you support preserving Network
Neutrality?  Click here:

http://www.civic.moveon.org/save_the_internet/?id=7356-6797352-bMWpQ7QJCHRaBOa6odHI8Q&t=4

Then, please forward this to three friends. Protecting the free and
open Internet is fundamental -- it affects everything. When you sign this
petition, you'll be kept informed of the next steps we can take to
keep the heat on Congress. Votes begin in a House committee next week.

MoveOn has already seen what happens when the Internet's gatekeepers
get too much control. Just last week, AOL blocked any email mentioning
a coalition that MoveOn is a part of, which opposes AOL's proposed
"email tax." (2) And last year, Canada's version of AT&T-Telus-blocked
their Internet customers from visiting a website sympathetic to
workers with whom Telus was negotiating. (3)

Politicians don't think we are paying attention to this issue. Many of
them take campaign checks from big telecom companies and are on the
verge of selling out to people like AT&T's CEO, who openly says, "The
internet can't be free." (4)

Together, we can let Congress know we are paying attention. We can
make sure they listen to our voices and the voices of people like Vint
Cerf, a father of the Internet and Google's "Chief Internet
Evangelist," who recently wrote this to Congress in support of
preserving Network Neutrality:

My fear is that, as written, this bill would do great damage to the
Internet as we know it. Enshrining a rule that broadly permits network
operators to discriminate in favor of certain kinds of services and to
potentially interfere with others would place broadband operators in
control of online activity ... Telephone companies cannot tell
consumers who they can call; network operators should not dictate what
people can do online.(4)

The essence of the Internet is at risk-can you sign this petition
letting your member of Congress know you support preserving Network
Neutrality?  Click here:

http://www.civic.moveon.org/save_the_internet/?id=7356-6797352-bMWpQ7QJCHRaBOa6odHI8Q&t=5

Please forward to 3 others who care about this issue. Thanks for all
you do.

-Eli Pariser, Adam Green, Noah T. Winer, and the MoveOn.org Civic Action
team

Thursday, April 20th, 2006

P.S.  If Congress abandons Network Neutrality, who will be affected?

  a.. Advocacy groups like MoveOn-Political organizing could be slowed
by a handful of dominant Internet providers who ask advocacy groups to
pay "protection money" for their websites and online features to work
correctly.

  b.. Nonprofits-A charity's website could open at snail-speed, and online
contributions could grind to a halt, if nonprofits can't pay dominant
Internet providers for access to "the fast lane" of Internet service.

  c.. Google users-Another search engine could pay dominant Internet
providers like AT&T to guarantee the competing search engine opens
faster than Google on your computer.  

  d.. Innovators with the "next big idea"-Startups and entrepreneurs
will be muscled out of the marketplace by big corporations that pay
Internet providers for dominant placing on the Web. The little guy
will be left in the "slow lane" with inferior Internet service, unable
to compete.

  e.. Ipod listeners-A company like Comcast could slow access to
iTunes, steering you to a higher-priced music service that it owned.

  f.. Online purchasers-Companies could pay Internet providers to
guarantee their online sales process faster than competitors with
lower prices-distorting your choice as a consumer.

  g.. Small businesses and tele-commuters - When Internet companies
like AT&T favor their own services, you won't be able to choose more
affordable providers for online video, teleconferencing, Internet
phone calls, and software that connects your home computer to your
office.

  h.. Parents and retirees - Your choices as a consumer could be
controlled by your Internet provider, steering you to their preferred
services for online banking, health care information, sending photos,
planning vacations, etc.

  i.. Bloggers-Costs will skyrocket to post and share video and audio
clips-silencing citizen journalists and putting more power in the
hands of a few corporate-owned media outlets.  To sign the petition to
Congress supporting "network neutrality," click here:

http://www.civic.moveon.org/save_the_internet/?id=7356-6797352-bMWpQ7QJCHRaBOa6odHI8Q&t=6

P.P.S. This excerpt from the New Yorker really sums up this issue well.

In the first decades of the twentieth century, as a national telephone
network spread across the United States, A.T. & T. adopted a policy of
"tiered access" for businesses. Companies that paid an extra fee got
better service: their customers' calls went through immediately, were
rarely disconnected, and sounded crystal-clear. Those who didn't pony
up had a harder time making calls out, and people calling them
sometimes got an "all circuits busy" response. Over time, customers
gravitated toward the higher-tier companies and away from the ones
that were more difficult to reach. In effect, A.T. & T.'s policy
turned it into a corporate kingmaker.

If you've never heard about this bit of business history, there's a
good reason: it never happened. Instead, A.T. & T. had to abide by a
"common carriage" rule: it provided the same quality of service to
all, and could not favor one customer over another. But, while "tiered
access" never influenced the spread of the telephone network, it is
becoming a major issue in the evolution of the Internet.

Until recently, companies that provided Internet access followed a
de-facto commoncarriage rule, usually called "network neutrality,"
which meant that all Web sites got equal treatment. Network neutrality
was considered so fundamental to the success of the Net that Michael
Powell, when he was chairman of the F.C.C., described it as one of the
basic rules of "Internet freedom." In the past few months, though,
companies like A.T. & T. and BellSouth have been trying to scuttle
it. 

In the future, Web sites that pay extra to providers could receive
what BellSouth recently called "special treatment," and those that
don't could end up in the slow lane. One day, BellSouth customers may
find that, say, NBC.com loads a lot faster than YouTube.com, and that
the sites BellSouth favors just seem to run more smoothly. Tiered
access will turn the providers into Internet gatekeepers.4

Sources:

1. "Telecommunication Policy Proposed by Congress Must Recognize
Internet Neutrality," Letter to Senate leaders, March 23, 2006
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1653

2. "AOL Blocks Critics' E-Mails," Los Angeles Times, April 14, 2006
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1649

3. "B.C. Civil Liberties Association Denounces Blocking of Website by
Telus," British Columbia Civil Liberties Association Statement, July
27, 2005 http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1650

4. "At SBC, It's All About 'Scale and Scope," BusinessWeek, November
7, 2002 http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1648

5. "Net Losses," New Yorker, March 20, 2006
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1646

6. "Don't undercut Internet access," San Francisco Chronicle
editorial, April 17, 2006 http://www.moveon.org/r?r=1645

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: So what are your thoughts? America
OnLine (for one) has stated they do not intend to tamper with the
existing newsgroups, etc. On this point, MoveOn was dead wrong
last week. Now, on this latest variarion on the same idea, I myself
do not know what to think. PAT]

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Westchester (NYC Suburb) and 802.11 Safety
Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 18:40:53 -0400
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


[ excerpts ]

April 20, 2006

COUNTY TO REQUIRE BUSINESSES TO SECURE WIRELESS NETWORKS
Law signed by Spano is first of its kind in the U.S.

A groundbreaking proposal requiring local businesses to secure their
wireless networks to protect their customers against identity theft
and other computer fraud has just become law.

County Executive Andy Spano signed a bill into law today that mandates
commercial businesses that offer public Internet access and/or
maintain personal information on a wireless network to take "minimum
security measures."  [1]

In addition, businesses that offer public Internet access must also
"conspicuously post a sign" advising customers to "install a firewall
or other computer security measure when accessing the Internet."

In a related effort, but taking another tack in combating computer
crime, the Department of Public Safety recently created the state's
first accredited Digital Crime and Investigation Unit. Two
investigators are now dedicated to searching the Internet for "techy
criminals" involved in identity theft, fraud (phishing), pedophilia
and cyberbullying. The unit will also recover digital evidence that
can be used by prosecutors in seeking convictions.

When the law was being proposed last fall, a team from the Department
of Information Technology showed how easy it was to find vulnerable
networks by taking a drive through downtown White Plains. Using a
laptop computer equipped with easily available software, they came
across 248 wireless hot spots in less than a half an hour. Out of
those, 120, or almost half, lacked any visible security at all...

rest:

http://www.westchestergov.com/currentnews/2006pr/Wifinew.htm

[a] closed quotation marks outside the period in original text

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

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

From: xx-google@telefog.com
Subject: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular
Date: 20 Apr 2006 10:41:44 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I haven't found answers to most of these questions:

1. Can a VoIP number be ported to cellular?

2. Can a VoIP number be ported to POTS?

3. Can a VoIP number be ported to another VoIP provider?

4. Can a cellular number be ported to POTS?

5. Can a cellular number be ported to VoIP?

6. Can a cellular number be ported to another cellular provider?  (I
think that the answer is yes.)

7. Can a POTS number be ported to cellular?  (I think that the
answer is yes.)

8. Can a POTS number be ported to VoIP?  (I think that the answer is
yes.)

Can you provide answers?

Can you direct me to the answers on the Internet?

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: When Did 2L-5N Become Required in Los Angeles?
Date: 20 Apr 2006 10:54:17 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Wesrock@aol.com wrote:

> Many small towns required only four- or five-digit dialing locally
> long after the "conversion" took place.  By "long," I mean 10 or 15
> years or more.

A friend of mine reported is update NY state town worked like that.
But once they went to ESS it no longer worked.

I wonder if this still applies to sparsely populated places in say
Wyoming and the Dakotas where there is little population growth.

The step-by-step selectors ignored "absorbed" the front end digits if
they were dialed.

I worked for an organization that had Centrex, but apparently under a
step-by-step switch.  I noticed all numbers were 3xxx, so I tried
dialing something without the front end "3".  That is, for ext 3212 I
dialed only 212.  It worked.  My co-workers were impressed.  Of course,
if the ext was 3371, you still had to dial the leading 3.  I don't
recall if there were 39xx or 38xx since 8 and 9 were used for tie lines
and outside lines.

Also, for suburban message unit calls we were ONI -- we had to give
our phone number to an operator.  Nobody told me whether I should give
my own extension or the main number (3000) so I gave the main number.

The operator's switchboard was a cord board, a 552 I believe.  I
thought Centrex always had consoles.

In the early days of Centrex the operator had to handle transfers.  (I
think Centrex II allowed the user to dial it himself). Transfer
requests (flashing) for a directly dialed calls came up to the
operator as an attendant request.  Transfer requests for an operator
connected call resulted in the supv signal on the cord pair
automatically flashing until serviced.

Centrex could be supplied under either step by step or crossbar, but
not panel.  I didn't think there was step in the city but apparently
there was.

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

Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 14:29:33 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: EarthLink Taps Level 3 for VoIP


USTelecom dailyLead
April 20, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dulofDtutcxIiBLwNo

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* EarthLink taps Level 3 for VoIP
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Lucent wins big IPTV deal with Telefonica
* Sprint Nextel buys affiliate
* Cisco looks to college students for broadband content ideas
* Amazon, InPhonic team to sell mobile phones, service plans
* EarthLink, BellSouth, Nokia report earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Shopping for or selling telecom equipment?
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Study:  Web access via mobile devices becoming commonplace
* NBCU, affiliates to launch broadband venture
* Motorola touts wireless mesh
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Pennsylvania looks to catch up in E911

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dulofDtutcxIiBLwNo

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

Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 15:09:21 EDT
From: Carl Moore <cmoore@ARL.ARMY.MIL>
Subject: Continuing to Read About Scams


I am going along with advice that I *NOT* send *ANY* reply to scam
mail -- not even, say, "remove me from your list", because even
"remove me from your list" notifies the scammers of the existence of
your active email box.

Yes, one of the things the scammers might do is to send you a check
and get you to send some money back by an irreversible method, say by
wire.  The check would eventually be found to be counterfeit, and the
scammers will have made money (which is the same as the money you sent
by wire).

A supposed notice of a win in a foreign lottery will turn out to be
just another advance-fee fraud.  Just before I left for a trip to
Indiana in June 2004, I received an inquiry about 2 telephone number
strings, one starting with 0031 and the other starting with 001413215,
and besides answering the question about the telephone numbers (and
doing a futile web search for the firm name mentioned), I warned the
sender to make sure this was legitimate (I myself have received some
email which claimed to be from Netherlands and to be about a lottery).


 ----- Forwarded message # 1:

 From: Rick Merrill <RickMerrill@comTHROW.net>
 Subject: Re: Last Laugh! Purely Spam! MY PRESENTATION TO YOU
 Organization: Comcast Online
 Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 00:56:21 GMT

HENRY CASTLE wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Of the 126 times in the past two days
> I have been selected by some bogus Solicitor in Nigeria somewhere to
> serve as the executor of some poor deceased devils estate (always
> numbering in the millions-billions of dollars) I have never once
> answered them. I am wondering what would happen if I did. I've had
> many folks say these charlatans would try to pick me clean, getting
> my bank deposit account numbers, my social security number, etc. And
> some have suggested they (the charlatans) would send you a bogus
> draft for several thousand million billion dollars to be deposited
> in my bank account, which, surprise!, would turn out to be
> counterfiet after I had endorsed/negotiated it and remitted proceeds
> back to the Solicitor, etc.

> Has anyone on the net ever played their game back at them?

Yes. I've seen some of the back and forth of this effort. It is
fruitless and potentially dangerous and is not advised. There are just
too many of 'them.' - RM

 ----- End of forwarded messages

And if you hear of the slave trade, etc., and the Nigerian scammers'
view of it, you might be interested in the following:

 ----- Forwarded message # 1:

 Date:     Fri, 22 Apr 2005 16:22:05 EDT
 From:     Carl Moore  <cmoore@arl.army.mil>
 To:     419.fcd@usss.treas.gov
 Subject:  that rare talk of revenge...

Remember the OCCASIONAL remark that 419 scammers are taking revenge
for the centuries of disruption caused by slave trade etc.?  I will
NOT take it on myself to offer any comment (other than to you
investigators) about that, but I do wish to communicate something
interesting I found (not dealing with the scams, but having to do with
a possible way for Christians to regard Jews w/r to the crucifixion of
Jesus): it (the crucifixion of Jesus) should not be attributed to all
Jews of that time or to the Jews of today.

 ----- End of forwarded messages

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

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*************************************************************************
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              ************************

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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #151
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Apr 21 14:24:34 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 34F0A150C5; Fri, 21 Apr 2006 14:24:33 -0400 (EDT)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #152
Message-Id: <20060421182433.34F0A150C5@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 14:24:33 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.0.4 (2005-06-05) on massis.lcs.mit.edu
X-Spam-Level: 
X-Spam-Status: No, score=-3.8 required=2.0 tests=ALL_TRUSTED,AWL,BAYES_00 
	autolearn=unavailable version=3.0.4
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 21 Apr 2006 14:27:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 152

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Are Major Banking Sites Insecure? (Robert McMillan)
    Podcasting Not For Most People (Andrew Kantor)
    Cellular-News for Friday 21st April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - April 21, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (John Levine)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Re: Westchester (NYC Suburb) and 802.11 Safety (William Warren)
    Re: When Did 2L-5N Become Required in Los Angeles? (The Chief Instigator)
    Re: Network Neutrality (Steven Lichter)
    Re: Network Neutrality (Waitman Gobble)
    Re: Network Neutrality (Larry Farmer)
    Last Laugh! Walmart Customer Smashes Computer Screen (Evan Schuman)

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: Robert McMillan <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure?
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 10:25:23 -0500


Robert McMillan, IDG News Service

Online bank customers may want to pay a little more attention to their
browsers the next time they log in, because many of the most popular
banking sites in the U.S. may be needlessly placing their customers at
risk to online thieves, a noted security researcher warned this week.

At issue are the user login areas that can be found on banking sites
such as Chase.com and Americanexpress.com, which ask users to submit
their user ID and password information. Although these forms may be
encrypted, they do not use authentication technology to prove they are
genuine, according to Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at the
SANS Institute.

A more secure approach would be to force users to log in on a HTTPS
(HyperText Transport Protocol Secure) Web page. HTTPS pages use the
SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) security protocol, which not only encrypts
the information on the page but also provides digital certificates to
give assurance that the Web site in question is genuine.

"If the login form is not HTTPS, you don't know if it's the real
thing," Ullrich said.

Web pages that do not use this type of secure connection are
vulnerable to a type of attack known as DNS (Domain Name System)
spoofing, where attackers attempt to trick Web browsers into visiting
bogus Web sites.

This type of attack is technically challenging, however, and hackers
generally find it far easier to trick users into giving up their user
names and passwords using phishing techniques, Ullrich said.

SSL for Security

Still, there's no good reason for banks to allow users to log in on
pages that do not use SSL, Ullrich said. The SANS researcher has
compiled a list of banks that includes information on their use of SSL
authentication.

Banks that require SSL authentication include Capital One Bank,
Citigroup, and Wells Fargo.

Often banks include SSL login pages as an option, but they can be hard
to find, Ullrich said. One trick for finding these pages, which will
prompt Firefox and Internet Explorer to display a yellow lock icon on
the bottom of the screen, is to submit a bad password on the home
page. Often bank sites will redirect users to the SSL login page after
this happens, he said.

Though he admits to logging in to pages that do not use SSL encryption
himself, security consultant Richard Smith agreed that it would be
safer for banks to direct their users to an HTTPS page for account
logins. "It's only one extra step," he said. "The banks could do it,
but I guess they feel that one extra step is too hard for people."

One of the banks that does not use SSL sign-in on its front page
defended its practices. "It is more convenient for our customers and
it is secure," said Bank of America spokeswoman Betty Riess.

Though Bank of America allows customers to enter their online IDs on
the home page, they cannot submit passwords. The bank sends them to an
HTTPS page and uses a technology called SiteKey to confirm to
customers that they are at the legitimate Bank of America site before
they enter their passwords.

"We're committed to safeguarding customer information online and we
wouldn't do anything to compromise that security," Riess said.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Andrew Kantor <usatoday@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Podcasting Not For Most People
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 10:34:21 -0500


Andrew Kantor, USA TODAY

I wrote about podcasting last May, and some recent news tells me it's
time to get back to the subject.

First, a brief refresher. It's necessary; "podcasting" is an
incredibly misused word.

Podcasting means putting audio files on a website regularly, using a
technology called RSS -- Really Simple Syndication. People using the
right software can automatically download each new program posted to
the site.

The automatic part is important. Podcasting is not simply putting
audio files on your site and letting people download them. That's
known as "putting audio files on your site and letting people download
them." To be a podcast, it has to be automated.

No RSS, no syndication, no podcast.

The original idea was that people would download (or buy) podcasting
software, then set it to retrieve their favorite shows overnight. 
They'd automatically be put on their MP3 players. Those shows -- those
podcasts -- would be created by hundreds or thousands of people all
over the Internet, and on every subject imaginable.

The end result would be that listeners could create a custom "radio"
network of sorts with only their favorite content, and that anyone
could become a syndicated radio host.

And now the news.

The next big thing?

The good folks at Forrester took a survey, and found that only "one
percent of online households in North America regularly download and
listen to podcasts."

What makes the Forrester report interesting is that it seems to go
against the expectations of so many people -- including me. We've
gotten used to Internet-based technologies taking off and, to some
extent, shaping the media agenda.

The rise of MP3s changed the music industry. Blogs changed how we look
at and read the news. Viral-video sites such as YouTube mean never
missing another funny moment. Sites like Flickr have taken over from
the coffee-table album as the way we share our photos.

After all that, we thought podcasting was going to change radio.

Let's face it: Most radio today sucks. With limited space on the dial
and so many stations owned by soulless suits, it feel like you get the
same payola-funded, corporate-sponsored drek on all but a few indepen-
dent stations. That's because of that limited bandwidth. Getting a
space on the dial is expensive, so the majority of what you hear comes
through companies big enough to afford it.

But what if there was unlimited space, and the cost to run a "radio" station
was virtually nil?

One the one hand, you'd see a wider selection and encounter more
things out of the mainstream -- a chance to expand horizons you don't
get on the AM or FM dials.

But there's another hand, and it illustrates what I think is one of
the three big problems preventing podcasting from taking off.

Roadblocks

There's already an example of what happens when something gets so
inexpensive that what was once limited to corporations and
professionals becomes possible for anyone: spam.

When direct marketing cost money -- for paper, mailing, phone calls,
etc. -- you didn't see all that much. But e-mail is all but free, so
the quality of the advertising content dropped, as a friend of mine
would say, like a rock tied to a rock.

I'm not saying that podcasts are like spam. What I am saying is that
there's a downside to "everyone's a publisher": The quality of the
medium goes down.

Because economics don't act as a quality-control agent, there are a
lot of great podcasts, but there are a lot more bad ones. The tradeoff
for more choice is more junk to sort through to get the good stuff.

That's roadblock number one. Number two is the technology.

Radios are simple to use: Turn the dial. Podcast software, while
usually well designed, is vastly more complex because the process
itself is vastly more complex. You have to search the Net for shows,
subscribe to the ones you like, and decide how to handle the audio
files -- do you want them downloaded automatically or put on your MP3
player, or would you prefer just to be alerted?

None of this is difficult with good software, but compared to turning
on a radio and spinning the dial, it's rocket science.

The last major roadblock to podcasts taking off is an unfortunate
thing, but one that's real nonetheless: the tyranny of choice.

"Given the indisputable fact that choice is good for human well-being,
it seems only logical that if some choice is good, more choice is
better," wrote Barry Schwartz, a professor of psychology at Swarthmore
College.  "Logically true, yes. Psychologically true, no. My
colleagues and I, along with other researchers, have begun amassing
evidence -- both in the laboratory and in the field -- that increased
choice can lead to decreased well-being."

Let's say you get some podcast software and set it up to sync to your
iPod.  Now what? You have to find shows you're interested in either by
searching a directory like Podcast.net, by hearing of it via word of
mouth, or by stumbling upon it. You can't just turn the dial.

You're presented with a huge array of choices -- as I write this,
Podcast.net has 26651 feeds listed. Choice like that is great if
you're looking for something big like a car or a house, where it's not
a throwaway, need-it-now decision. But when you just want to listen to
something or choose a candidate for a political office, it's
frustrating.

That isn't to say that podcasting isn't a great idea. Lots of people
are taking the time to find and download them, and to set the software
up to do it automatically. And they're the better for it, getting to
listen to a wider variety of programming than those of us stuck with
radio.

But until the process makes it to the next generation and some of the
chaff disappears on its own -- or some shows achieve widespread
prominence thanks to the right person (or site) promoting them --
podcasting is, unfortunately, going to remain a niche.

Andrew Kantor is a technology writer, pundit, and know-it-all who
covers technology for the Roanoke Times. He's also a former editor for
PC Magazine and Internet World. Read more of his work at
kantor.com. His column appears Fridays on USATODAY.com.

Copyright 2006 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news reports from USA Today, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News for Friday 21st April 2006
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 07:30:55 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

Algeria Becomes the Arab World's WiMAX pioneer.
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17069.php

WiMAX is commercially available in Algeria, while several operators in
many Arab countries have started testing the service. Smart Link
Communication (SLC) has deployed WiMAX to provide broadband wireless
services in Algeria. SLC's goal is to build a...

[[ Financial ]]

China Mobile Denies Bid For Nasdaq-Listed Millicom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17050.php

Neither China Mobile (Hong Kong) Ltd. nor its Chinese parent, China
Mobile Communications Corp., is involved in the bidding for Millicom
International Cellular, a spokeswoman for the Hong Kong company said
Thursday. ...

China Mobile 1Q Net Profit CNY14.36 Billion Vs CNY11.25 Billion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17051.php

China Mobile (Hong Kong) Ltd. said Thursday its first-quarter net
profit rose 28% as its subscriber base continued to grow rapidly. ...

EBRD's committee OKs $250 mln 8-year loan to Russia's MTS
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17052.php

A credit committee of the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) has approved a U.S. $250 million 8-year loan to be
provided to Russia?s largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS),
the bank said Thursday. ...

Sprint Nextel Buys Affiliate UbiquiTel For $1.3 Billion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17053.php

Sprint Nextel scooped up another one of its affiliates after agreeing
Thursday to pay $1.3 billion in cash to acquire UbiquiTel. ...

Vodafone Lured To Silicon Valley To Energize VC Arm
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17054.php

Vodafone Group is focusing on a traditional high-technology hotbed
after placing the head of its venture-capital arm near Silicon
Valley. ...

FOCUS: VimpelCom may reignite investor interest in Russian mobiles
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17055.php

Following the uninspiring financial results posted earlier by Russia's
largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS), Russia's second
largest mobile operator VimpelCom impressed investors with strong
fourth quarter and full-year 2005 financials. S...

Nokia Reports Rising Profits and Sales
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17065.php

Nokia reported sales and profits for the first quarter of this year
which were higher than expectations. The company reported a net profit
of US$1.29 billion on sales of US$11.7 billion. Nokia's first quarter
2006 operating margin was 14.4%, which wa...

MTC Offers Econet Option on Vmobile Purchase Bid
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17067.php

The Pan-African operator, Econet says that it has been granted the
right of refusal over the offer made to buy a 65% controlling stake in
Nigeria's Vee Mobile made by MTC of Kuwait. Spokesman Sure Kamhunga
confirmed that documents had been delivered ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Comtech Providing Designs for Vodafone 3G Handsets
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17062.php

China's Comtech has announced its first major design win from Huawei
for customized 3G cell phone modules. Comtech will provide customized
module designs for use in Huawei's new Vodafone-branded 3G phone. It
is anticipated that Huawei will commence m...

Global Mobile Phone Shipments Will Reach 1 Billion Units in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17063.php

Global mobile phone shipments grew an impressive 31 percent
year-over-year, to reach 229 million units during Q1 2006, according
to the latest research from Strategy Analytics. Following this strong
performance, Strategy Analytics has upgraded its gl...

Mobile Handsets Generated $117 Billion in Revenue in 2005
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17070.php

Worldwide, mobile wireless handsets generated over US$117 billion in
revenue in 2005, says a report released by Telecom Trends
International,. The report says the 2005 revenue represented an
increase of 14.9% over the revenue generated in 2004, and i...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Mobile Streams Buys European Content Firm
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17066.php

The mobile content distributor, Mobile Streams says that it is buying
the German mobile content company, Cyoshi Mobile for US$3.7
million. The acquisition will strengthen Mobile Streams' footprint
across mainland Europe and provide them with direct a...

[[ Network Operators ]]

ANALYSIS: Smartcom's future lies in innovative services
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17058.php

Chilean mobile operator Smartcom is scheduled to launch GSM services
in May or June this year, marking a transition from the CDMA network
it has relied upon to date. ...

New GSM Network Launched in Guinea
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17064.php

Investcom says that it has launched commercial mobile
telecommunications services in the Republic of Guinea, under the brand
name Areeba. Services will initially be concentrated in the capital
city, Conakry, with national coverage following soon afte...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Kazakh PM urges to cut LD, mobile, Internet tariffs in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17056.php

Kazakh Prime Minister Danial Akhmetov called for cutting the
long-distance tariffs of fixed-line operator Kazakhtelecom, as well as
all companies' tariffs for mobile and Internet services, Aliakpar
Matishev, chairman of the competition committee at t...

Analyst: CPP regulations to bring social benefits
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17057.php

The upcoming expansion of Mexico's calling party pays billing system
to cover long distance calls to mobile users will benefit isolated
segments of the population in particular, telecommunications analyst
Ernesto Piedras told BNamericas. ...

TSTT questions arbiters over Digicel interconnection dispute
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17059.php

Trinidad & Tobago's incumbent telephone company TSTT has filed a
judicial review of an arbitration panel set up by telecoms regulator
TATT last week to determine interconnection rates between TSTT and
incoming mobile operator Digicel, The Trinidad Gu...

Mauritania To Offer New Mobile Licenses
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17068.php

We had this tender sent to us, and publish it for interested
parties. Following its telecommunications sector liberalization
policy, the Mauritanian Authority of Regulation has decided to launch
a call for competition related to the allocation of one...

[[ Statistics ]]

Mobile penetration expected to grow 20-50% this year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17060.php

Mobile telephony penetration in Peru is almost universally expected to
increase during 2006, but at widely diverging rates depending on the
source of the figures. ...

[[ Technology ]]

Five Key Factors to Consider When Choosing a Bluetooth Software Vendor
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17061.php

As the Bluetooth market for silicon goes from strength to strength,
the Bluetooth software market is undergoing a subtle change in
direction. As more and more manufacturers embrace Bluetooth, they must
balance their needs against vendor offerings in ...

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

Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 11:32:50 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, April 21, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 21, 2006
********************************

Ericsson Profits Flat, Below Expectations
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17616?11228

     STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- Wireless equipment maker LM Ericsson on
     Friday said sales grew in the first quarter but the takeover of
     money-losing Marconi cut into profits that came in flat, below
     expectations.  Ericsson shares fell nearly 3 percent after the
     quarterly report was released.  Net profit in the January-March
     period was 4.61 billion...

Alltel to Allow Free Calls to 10 Numbers
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17614?11228

     LITTLE ROCK, Ark. --Alltel Corp. will allow its wireless
     customers to make free, unlimited calls to 10 telephone numbers
     of their choice, even those belonging to other wireless
     providers.  Alltel, the country's fifth largest wireless carrier,
     will offer its 'My Circle' program beginning Monday to any
     customer who has a monthly rate...

Sprint Scoops Up UbiquiTel
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17612?11228

     That's the game plan of Sprint Nextel Corp., which has bought up
     another one of its affiliates. On Thursday, the company announced
     that it has paid $1.3 billion for UbiquiTel Inc.  a wireless
     affiliate based in the thriving metropolis of Conshohocken, Pa.
     UbiquiTel is one...

Qualcomm Posts Another Record Quarter
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17605?11228

     Shares in Qualcomm were down slightly today, even though the
     company yesterday reported its third consecutive quarter of
     record revenues and chip shipments.  In its second fiscal
     quarter, the company raked in net income of $593 million, up 11
     percent year-over-year, and revenues of $1.83 billion, up 34
     percent year-over-year. Pro-forma...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: 21 Apr 2006 03:38:52 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular


> 1. Can a VoIP number be ported to cellular?
> 2. Can a VoIP number be ported to POTS?
> 3. Can a VoIP number be ported to another VoIP provider?
> 4. Can a cellular number be ported to POTS?
> 5. Can a cellular number be ported to VoIP?
> 6. Can a cellular number be ported to another cellular provider?  (I
> think that the answer is yes.)
> 7. Can a POTS number be ported to cellular?  (I think that the
> answer is yes.)
> 8. Can a POTS number be ported to VoIP?  (I think that the answer is
> yes.)

The answers to all of those questions should be yes, except perhaps
in a few rural areas that don't have portability yet.

For portability purposes, there's no such thing as a VoIP number.
VoIP carriers contract with CLECs for their numbers (or might be a
CLEC in AT&T's case), and CLEC numbers are POTS numbers.

I've ported a number from Vonage to Lingo, nothing special about the
process.

R's,

John

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

From: Michael D. Sullivan <userid@camsul.example.invalid>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 06:16:42 GMT


xx-google@telefog.com wrote:

> I haven't found answers to most of these questions:

> 1. Can a VoIP number be ported to cellular? 
> 2. Can a VoIP number be ported to POTS? 
> 3. Can a VoIP number be ported to another VoIP provider?
> 4. Can a cellular number be ported to POTS?
> 5. Can a cellular number be ported to VoIP?
> 6. Can a cellular number be ported to another cellular provider?  (I
> think that the answer is yes.)
> 7. Can a POTS number be ported to cellular?  (I think that the
> answer is yes.)
> 8. Can a POTS number be ported to VoIP?  (I think that the answer is
> yes.)

The answer to all of the above is "Yes, but..."

The general rule is that any telecommunications carrier must port its 
customer's number to another telecommunications carrier that has a 
presence (i.e., has telephone numbers) in the same rate center.

Now for the "buts": Telecommunications carriers include cellular/PCS
operators, ILECs, and CLECs.  Some VoIP service is offered by
telecommunications carriers, and the number portability requirements
would apply to their service.

Some VoIP service is offered by companies that are information service
providers, not telecommunications carriers, such as Vonage.  Since
they aren't telecom carriers, they generally don't interconnect
directly with the PSTN and don't get numbers directly from the
numbering administrator (or the pooling administrator).  So Vonage et
al. don't have numbers of their own in any rate centers.  Instead,
Vonage et al. buy numbers from telecom carriers, presumably CLECs, who
obtain numbers from the numbering adminstrator (or the pooling
administrator) in various rate centers.  If Vonage has a deal with a
CLEC such as Covad (just using Covad as an illustration; I don't know
whether they have such a deal) to get numbers in a particular rate
center, then numbers in that rate center would be portable to and from
Vonage via Covad; this should be true of wireline and wireless numbers
in that rate center.

Non-wireline carriers, including wireless (cellular/PCS) and VoIP 
providers, don't need to have numbers in every rate center where they 
have customers, unlike wireline carriers, because they don't need to 
have wires going from a switch in the rate center to the customer. 
Wireless carriers typically select a subset of rate centers that is big 
enough to avoid toll charges from most "local" calls to their customers. 
  For a simplified example, if rate centers A, B, C, and D all have 
wireline calls amongst them rated as "local", a wireless carrier only 
needs numbers from one of them.

What this means is that if the wireless carrier gets numbers from rate
center A, wireline customers in rate center A will be able to port to
wireless and vice versa.  Wireline customers in rate centers B, C, and
D will not be able to port to or from wireless because the wireless
carrier isn't present in their rate center.

I assume that the same is true to some extent of VoIP providers, but
given their strategy of seeking ports of wireline phone numbers, they
have good reason to get numbers (via a CLEC) in each rate center in
densely populated areas, while wireless carriers don't have a
compelling reason to do so at this stage, since they aren't actively
promoting ports of wireline phones.

There are exceptions to all rules.  Where the FCC is concerned, there
are rural exceptions to all rules, since rural telcos are never held
to the same standards as others.  If you live in a rural area, don't
hold your breath waiting to port your number from or to a wireline
phone.

> Can you direct me to the answers on the Internet?

Regarding wireless number portability:
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/NumberPortability/

Regarding number portability generally:
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/numbport.html
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/NumberPortability/checklist.html


Michael D. Sullivan
Bethesda, MD (USA)
(Replace "example.invalid" with "com" in my address.)


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Mr. Sullivan, am I correct in saying
another reason for denying portability of a number is because a
customer has a delinquent bill with the carrier he is attempting to
port _from_ or out of?  I think I saw somewhere that carriers have
that protection or recourse available to them, i.e. if you don't
pay your bill, you cannot have the number.  True or false?   PAT]

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

Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 00:59:55 -0400
From: William Warren <william_warren_nonoise@speakeasy.net>
Subject: Re: Westchester (NYC Suburb) and 802.11 Safety


Danny Burstein wrote:
> [ excerpts ]

> April 20, 2006

> COUNTY TO REQUIRE BUSINESSES TO SECURE WIRELESS NETWORKS
> Law signed by Spano is first of its kind in the U.S.

> A groundbreaking proposal requiring local businesses to secure their
> wireless networks to protect their customers against identity theft
> and other computer fraud has just become law.

> County Executive Andy Spano signed a bill into law today that mandates
> commercial businesses that offer public Internet access and/or
> maintain personal information on a wireless network to take "minimum
> security measures."  [1]

[snip]

This smells like a lobbyist-written law: the obvious beneficiaries of
reduced wireless access are the cellular, DSL, and Cable companies,
all of whom stand to lose money if wireless access points aren't
"protected".

I bet the FCC will strike it down: IANALB, not only is it an obvious
usurpation of federal proragatives, but the feds can smell a cut-rate
competitor a mile away, and county governments can be had for a
pittance compared to the license fees the feds extort from users.


William Warren

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)

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

Subject: Re: When Did 2L-5N Become Required in Los Angeles?
From: The Chief Instigator <patrick@io.com>
Date: 21 Apr 2006 00:51:34 -0500


hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes:

> Wesrock@aol.com wrote:

>> Many small towns required only four- or five-digit dialing locally
>> long after the "conversion" took place.  By "long," I mean 10 or 15
>> years or more.

> A friend of mine reported is update NY state town worked like that.
> But once they went to ESS it no longer worked.

> I wonder if this still applies to sparsely populated places in say
> Wyoming and the Dakotas where there is little population growth.

I don't know about some of South Dakota, but my wife spent her first
eighteen years in what is now 605-637 ... which has no more than about
three hundred active numbers in that CO, which leaves 9700 unused.
(My first trip up there was in 1990, and the local telco had gone to
ESS before then ... all local calls had to be dialed as seven digits.

Interestingly, there's an adjacent CO just across the state line in
North Dakota (701-634, IIRC) which is run through the 605-637 (NWEFSD)
switch and can be called by dialing 701 plus the local number (but if
you dial with 1-701, it's treated as long distance), and has even
fewer active numbers in its block of 10,000.  The Kentucky coal town I
was born in (now primarily 606-848, although 606-238 and 606-733 are
in use now) didn't go to ESS until some time after I got my degree in
the late '70s, and I was used to going up there in the summer and
being able to call anywhere in the two towns it served by dialing the
last four numbers.  (BNLYKY, if anyone's curious).  Anything outside
of that, and the neighboring CO in Cumberland, was dialed with 1+.


  Patrick "The Chief Instigator" Humphrey (patrick@io.com)  Houston, Texas
       chiefinstigator.us.tt/aeros.php  (TCI's 2005-06 Houston Aeros)
                  LAST GAME:  Houston 5, Iowa 3 (April 15)
           NEXT GAME:  Friday, April 21 vs. Peoria, 7:35 (Game 1)

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

Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
From: Steven Lichter <shlichter@sbcglobal.net>
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 13:38:52 GMT


In article telecom25.151.1@telecom-digest.org, Patrick Townson at
ptownson@cableone.net wrote on 4/20/06 19:37:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: 'Network Neutrality', the concept that
> everyone on the net should be given equal use of network facilities
> is a very interesting concept. At first glance, I would say I agree
> with it, yet the telcos, notably AT&T (SBC by its other name) and
> the larger ISPs (America OnLine for example) seem to be fighting it
> for various reasons. The editorial comment which follows comes from
> the Move On people, who, IMO were dreadfully off-base in their
> comments last week (and again today as a passing comment in this
> latest piece) also seem to favor network neutrality. Quite some time
> ago, I suggest that (again, IMO) the ICANN people, given their
> druthers, would tend to favor 'large corporations' rather than the
> small, everyday internet user. I would appreciate _your_ thoughts on
> this topic of Network Neutrality, as it has come to be known. First,
> here are the thoughts of the Move On people, then I will print
> responses in the days to come from readers.   PAT]

Though as you say Network Neutrality is a good itea, without the large
companies, the internet would still be as it was in the begining, just for
the Collages and the govenment.  The cost of building and maintaining the
inferstructure costs millions of dollars and someone has to pay for it, we
the users do so the companies that do business also should pay their fair
share.  I know the companies that pay me to build the network have to get
paid in order to pay me, without that I would not be working and would not
have the money to use the net.  This is not Nerver Land anymore, as much as
I miss the old net, this one gives more.

The only Good Spammer is a dead one!!  Have you hunted one down today?
(c) 2006 I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot in Hell Company

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

From: Waitman Gobble <avail4one@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
Date: 21 Apr 2006 08:10:07 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hello,

I'm not sure that the typical consumer would have the patience for a
broken Internet. If average Susan decides to "shop store x" and the
site isn't working properly, her patience will wear thin. If this
happens to multiple sites, It is my opinion that she won't merely be
"trained" into going to the sites approved by the government. She'd
probably just jump ship and scrap the whole notion of the Internet.
Which would mean she'd just call up her provider and disconnect
service. She has better things to do.

The bit about "tiered access" is curious, because it JUST happened to a
client of mine. He has been using DSL in his home for years without
much of any trouble. However in the past month his service has been
offline about half time, which has been extremely frustrating for him.
The problem is that a few weeks ago, it was down for a week and they
said that some tech had "accidentally unplugged 50 lines in his
neighborhood and his was included". It actually took them a week to
"plug it back in". Then after a week of uptime it went down again (for
another week) and the providers' response was "there's water in the
line". The word he received from his provider, which is the company
named in the article, was that he should upgrade his account to "their
business level service to get better service and have trouble-free
Internet". After that phone call, he called his local cable company and
ordered their Internet service. That's a true story.

We'll see what happens I suppose :)

Take care,

Waitman

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

Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 12:23:39 -0400
From: Larry Farmer <phoneyfarmer@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Network Neutrality


The fundamental issue now that internet and web have become important
to our daily lives and the economy, how do we ensure its availability
and preserve access to it?  If we draw parallels to telephony, the
internet is nearing its version of the 1934 Telecommunications Act.
The resource has become too valuable for things like spam or
peer-to-peer networks dominate the resource.  Controls will need to be
enacted.  Those controls will need to be enforced.  Government
fees/taxes/what-not will be imposed.  It's coming, it's inevitable.

The big challenge with the internet/web, with respect enforcing rules,
is time and place are largely irrelevant.  How can a rule enacted by
one government be enforced on a violator in another country?  As a
simple example, suppose I put some pictures from my summer vacation on
my personal website.  A perfectly normal, legal thing to do in the US.
Well, what if posting pictures of such scantily clad people is illegal
in some other country?  What is to be done?  Arrest me?  Fine me?
Blocking my website can be done, but how do you *find* my website so
you can block it?  And what happens when I take the pictures down, as
I probably would at some point?  How do you go back and unblock my
site?

I think Move On is totally off the mark on this one.  I haven't seen
what AT&T and Verizon are asking, specifically, but I'm not overly
worried about them "controlling" the internet.  I think market forces
will make it abundantly clear to them that "control" is not what the
market wants.  Certainly AOL's efforts are about *protecting* equal
access, not inhibiting it.  When more than 50% of email traffic can be
labeling "spam", the ability of you, me or Move On to be heard above
the noise is less likely.  Besides, reducing spam helps keep the cost
of internet access down.

phoneyfarmer

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Fifty percent of all email is spam you
say?  Hellfire, eighty to ninety percent is more like it. It has not
been 'as little as' fifty percent for several years. I have very mixed
feelings on this; the idea of having the telcos running the net -- for
a fee, of course -- is rather repulsive, but you know, I am sure, that
AT&T or MCI won't permit spam/scam to run as rampant as those things
do now. If they cannot technically get rid of it, then they can price
it out of business as AOL has suggested. Will there be some
'collateral damage' (as President Dubya's associates would phrase it
in the ill-gotten Iraq situation)? Yes, there may well be ... but if
MoveOn (or TELECOM Digest and other decent publications) cannot be
heard very well (1) above the noise level of spam/scam or (2) because
of the cost of paying 'postage', etc then what's the difference?  I
trust the spam/scam enablers are pleased with the results which are
slowly creeping up on us.  PAT]

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

From: Evan Schuman <eweek@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Last Laugh! Walmart Customer Smashes Computer Screen
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 10:28:52 -0500


Hell Hath No Fury Like a Consumer Chipped Off
<Evan Schuman - eWEEK

Joel Hansen, a 45-year-old Texan, was visiting his local Wal-Mart last
week to purchase some food at about 5:30 p.m..

After what everyone seems to agree was an unpleasant human-computer
interaction, the self-checkout terminal had a smashed-in monitor,
courtesy of the fist of the consumer.

Hansen was charged with criminal mischief by Tarrant County Sheriff
deputies in Fort Worth on April 19.

The police version of events has the machine rejecting Hansen's debit
card, but Hansen told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that that is not
what happened.

His version of events-which has a very credible and familiar ring to
it. "I had scanned a couple of items and it locked up. I tapped it and
got it unlocked. I scanned a few more items when it again locked up,"
the paper quoted Hansen as saying. "I was tapping it again to unlock
it when it shattered. It was a glitch."

The unit locked up and the customer found a physically helpful way to
unlock it. Heck, if it works, stick with it. It gives a whole new
meaning to Blue Screen of Death. In Texas, monitors should be
forewarned that it might be Blue Screen Equals Death.

Of course, it is likely going to take quite a tap for a self-checkout
machine to collapse, but it's hard to temper one's tap when those smug
superior-than-thou displays declare in their omniscient way that you
have done something wrong.

"It had locked up, and I was tapping on it when it shattered," he told
the paper. "I even got glass in my finger." OK, so the checkout
machine got a few licks in, too.

Contactless payment is another popular retail technology designed to
minimize human involvement. To read the latest about contactless,
click here.

My favorite is what happened next. Let's tally this up. The
self-checkout machine freezes-twice-and you have a hungry customer
with blood oozing out of his finger.

"When it happened, I was expecting help or for them to move me to
another checkout," Hansen said.

That last quote makes me wonder if this was his visit to a
Wal-Mart. He was expecting help? Well, he got it. Employees offered no
assistance other than asking him to wait there for the police to
arrive. He declined the generous offer.

This interesting tale of the Texas tussle wouldn't have meant much had
this column not discussed an incident a few months back when a
Winn-Dixie customer threw a Bible at a clerk trying to register
customers for a biometric payment system.

As kiosks, ATMs, self-checkout units and even drive-through automated
supermarkets start to push human employees into the backroom, the
bakery, the parking lot-anywhere but in the aisles helping
customers -- the ultimate reaction of consumers is up for debate.

When computers -- such as POS (point of sale) systems-assist retail
employees and then glitch, it's the employees who feel the frustration
and are paid to deal with it.

But the latest round of self-checkout and kiosk systems fully replace
employees, forcing consumers to deal with the machines themselves. 
It's the ultimate in frustration: Consumers drive to a public place
and likely wait in various lines, all for the privilege of seeing a
computer crash, most likely with their credit card maybe charged,
maybe not.

Security won't let you leave-unless you want to risk a shoplifting
charge-until the computer says it's satisfied with you.

The idea of kiosk in-aisle pre-sales support is great on paper, until
you realize that this is the same technology that powers most vendors'
automated tech support centers. Those usually revolve around an FAQ,
which generally consists of 10,000 answers to questions you don't want
to ask.

Every other month, some vendor calls us boasting of the creation of a
database that uses regular English. Despite their claims, it
invariably ignores the essence of the question and instead locks onto
to any word it happens to recognize.

Kiosks armed with this capability had better watch out in Texas.

Evan Schuman is retail editor for Ziff Davis Internet's Enterprise
Edit group. He has tracked high-tech issues since 1987, has been
opinionated long before that and doesn't plan to stop anytime soon. He
can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.


Copyright 2006 Ziff Davis Inc. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material the
use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. This Internet discussion group is making it available without
profit to group members who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information in their efforts to advance the
understanding of literary, educational, political, and economic
issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes only. I
believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S.  Copyright Law. If you wish
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beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright
owner, in this instance, Ziff-Davis. 

For more information go to:
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[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I personally do not know why the man
chose to go to Walmart, if there was any other grocery store in town
he could have used instead. Maybe he can sue Walmart for the injuries
done to his hand by the glass on the computer screen, and for false
arrest in calling siccing the police on him. About two years ago,
Walmart Super Center had run all the grocery stores here in
Independence out of town (Dillons, Country Mart, Safeway). For about
six months, even the dedicated Walmart-haters had to go Walmart to get
their groceries, like it or not. Then about six months after that
happened, an Oklahoma store -- Marvins -- opened up in the old Country
Mart location downtown and things got back somewhat to normal. And
despite what Walmart says, Marvin's prices are just as good and the
variety is almost as good.  PAT]

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #152
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat Apr 22 13:56:16 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 22 Apr 2006 12:55:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 153

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Telecom Update #526, April 21, 2006 (Angus TeleManagement Group)
    Telstra Competitors Propose Joint High-Speed (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Area Code - NNX (Jan Schmidt)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (John Levine)
    Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft (Vientus)
    Re: Should Consumers Tape "Customer Service" Calls? (Koos van den Hout)
    Re: Network Neutrality (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Re: Network Neutrality (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Network Neutrality (Brad Houser)

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

Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
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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: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 10:45:38 -0700
Subject: Telecom Update #526, April 21, 2006
From: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>
Reply-To: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE 
************************************************************
published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group 
http://www.angustel.ca

Number 526: April 21, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous 
financial support from: 
** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca 
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/ 
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.com/canada/telecom/
** MITEL NETWORKS: www.mitel.com/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions 
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE: 

** Wetmore to Head Bell-Aliant Income Trust 
** Dalfen Replies to Forbearance Critics 
** IBM Veteran to Head Nortel Marketing 
** UBS Showcases "Mobile TV"
** Shaw Adds 28,000 Phone Customers 
** Nortel to Restate $1.2 Billion in Revenue 
** Cablecos' Radio Requirement to Be Reduced 
** RIM Opens Halifax Tech Support Centre 
** Telus and Cisco Invest in Widevine 
** Sierra Wireless Profitable Again 
** Nokia Revenue Continues to Soar 
** UBS Revenues Slide During Restructuring 
** Dortmans' E-Column Readership Sees Rapid Growth 

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

WETMORE TO HEAD BELL-ALIANT INCOME TRUST: Stephen Wetmore will be
President and CEO of the planned Bell Aliant Regional Communications
Income Fund when it is formally established later this year (see
Telecom Update #520). Wetmore was president of Aliant until 2002, when
he moved to Bell Canada, where he is currently Group President,
Corporate Performance and National Markets.

** Jay Forbes, who has been President and CEO of Aliant since 
   2002, has announced that he will resign effective July 31.

DALFEN REPLIES TO FORBEARANCE CRITICS: The CRTC's "local forbearance"
decision has been widely criticized in the press and elsewhere. 
Earlier this week, CRTC Chairman Charles Dalfen replied to the critics
in an exclusive interview with Telecom Update editor Lis Angus. The
text of the interview is available online at
http://www.angustel.ca/update/up525b.html.

IBM VETERAN TO HEAD NORTEL MARKETING: Nortel Networks has hired
26-year IBM veteran Lauren Flaherty as its Chief Marketing Officer,
replacing Clent Richardson, who resigned on March 1. Flaherty, who
previously led IBM's worldwide small/medium business marketing, is the
second IBM VP hired by Nortel this month. (See Telecom Update #525)

UBS SHOWCASES "MOBILE TV": Unique Broadband Systems and its
subsidiary, Look Communications, have launched demonstration sites in
Milton, Ontario, for its Mobile TV service, which provides live TV and
broadband data to cars and handheld devices.

SHAW ADDS 28,000 PHONE CUSTOMERS: In the quarter ended February 28,
28,000 new customers signed up for Shaw Communications' Digital Phone
service, bringing the company's total to just under 119,000.  Shaw
also added over 36,000 Internet customers in the quarter, and
increased its cable and DTH base.

** In the three- and six-month periods ended February 28, 
   Shaw's total service revenue was $611.2 million and $1.2 
   billion; net income was $45.8 million and $121.5 million 
   (up from $5.7 million and $50.4 million in the comparable 
   periods last year).

NORTEL TO RESTATE $1.2 BILLION IN REVENUE: Nortel Networks says that
the accounting restatement now under way involves a total of US$1.216
billion, not $866 million as previously stated. (See Telecom Update
#520, 524)

CABLECOS' RADIO REQUIREMENT TO BE REDUCED: The CRTC plans to eliminate
the requirement that cable TV services carry commercial radio
stations, requiring them only to distribute local community, campus,
and Native radio stations, as well as at least one French and one
English CBC station.

** The Commission will call for comments on proposed 
   amendments to the Broadcasting Distribution Regulations in 
   a later public notice.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Notices/2006/pb2006-51.htm

RIM OPENS HALIFAX TECH SUPPORT CENTRE: Research In Motion has opened a
new Halifax technical support centre in Halifax: it is expected to
employ 1,200 staff within five years. The Nova Scotia government is
contributing $19 million to the project.

TELUS AND CISCO INVEST IN WIDEVINE: Telus and Cisco have both made
"strategic investments" in Widevine Technologies, a Seattle-based
company that develops content protection systems for video-on-demand
providers.  Widevine raised a total of US$16 million in this
investment round; the amounts contributed by Telus and Cisco were not
announced.

SIERRA WIRELESS PROFITABLE AGAIN: After a year of deep losses, Sierra
Wireless returned to profitability in the first quarter, recording net
income of US$2.6 million. Revenue of $45 million was more than double
that of the same period a year ago. (See Telecom Update #514)

NOKIA REVENUE CONTINUES TO SOAR: Strong sales of third-generation
cellphones helped lift Nokia first-quarter revenue to 9.5 billion
euros ($1.47 billion), 29% higher than a year ago. Profits rose 21%,
to 1.05 billion euros. Nokia provided about a third of the estimated
229 million cellphones sold worldwide in the quarter.

UBS REVENUES SLIDE DURING RESTRUCTURING: Unique Broadband Systems,
majority owner of Look Communications, had revenues of $7.85 million
in the quarter ended February 28, 19% less than the same period a year
ago.  Reduced marketing expenses helped cut UBS's loss to $1.2
million. UBS is restructuring to develop a new "Mobile Multi Media"
business.

DORTMANS' E-COLUMN READERSHIP SEES RAPID GROWTH: Henry Dortmans' "On
the Line" column has been a popular feature of Telemanagement magazine
for over ten years. The telecom management consultant is now
distributing his articles by opt-in email: in just four months more
than 1,000 new subscribers have added their names to the distribution
list.

** To receive the past four months' issues, email 
   info@angusdortmans.ca. To register for a free 
   subscription, click on "On the Line" at 
   www.angusdortmans.ca.

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

HOW TO SUBMIT ITEMS FOR TELECOM UPDATE

E-mail ianangus@angustel.ca and jriddell@angustel.ca

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

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE (OR UNSUBSCRIBE)

TELECOM UPDATE is provided in electronic form only. There are two
formats available:

1. The fully-formatted edition is posted on the 
   World Wide Web late Friday afternoon each week 
   at http://www.angustel.ca

2. The e-mail edition is distributed free of charge.
   To subscribe, send an e-mail message to:
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   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send 
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   see www.angustel.ca/update/privacy.html.

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

COPYRIGHT AND CONDITIONS OF USE: All contents copyright 2006 Angus
TeleManagement Group Inc. All rights reserved. For further information,
including permission to reprint or reproduce, please e-mail
jriddell@angustel.ca.

The information and data included has been obtained from sources which
we believe to be reliable, but Angus TeleManagement makes no
warranties or representations whatsoever regarding accuracy,
completeness, or adequacy.  Opinions expressed are based on
interpretation of available information, and are subject to change. If
expert advice on the subject matter is required, the services of a
competent professional should be obtained.

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

Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 13:41:20 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Telstra Competitors Propose Joint High-Speed


Starting today we've added "Other News" to your USTelecom dailyLead.
This new, headlines-only feature, offered in addition to the full news
summaries we present each day, showcases links to other articles that
may be of interest to you. It is designed to increase the quantity and
variety of news we offer without increasing the time it takes to
digest the news each day.  We're eager to hear your thoughts about
this addition to your daily SmartBrief. Click here to send your
comments our way.  -- The dailyLead team

USTelecom dailyLead
April 21, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/duvIfDtutczyzhMKOP


		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Telstra competitors propose joint high-speed network
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Alltel offers free, unlimited calls to 10 numbers
* Lucent, WWP in reseller pact
* Comcast invests in ad-supported 411 service
* What's the 411? Directory assistance advertising
* China Netcom taps UTStarcom for IPTV
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Everything You Need to Know About Telecom
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Mobile phones new vehicle for podcasts
* Cisco leads project to build IP network for Navajo Nation
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Skype CEO says China partner censors text messages
* Craig McCaw's Clearwire jumps into VoIP fray
* UPC expands VoIP services, claims 1M subscribers
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Florida regulators approve Verizon request
* High expectations for Wi-Fi networks despite technology's rocky history

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/duvIfDtutczyzhMKOP

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

Subject: Area Code - NNX
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 13:05:10 -0500
From: Jan Schmidt <JanS@bluebeacon.com>


Am looking for a site where one can enter the AC and NNX and find out
what city the telephone number is located in.  Do you offer that
somewhere on your web site?   

Thanks, 

Jan

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not have that feature here in
TELECOM Digest, however it is available on other web sites. Perhaps
Linc Madison or Jon or one of the guys who keeps up with area codes
these days can refer you to such a template.   PAT]

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 19:25:43 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.151.3@telecom-digest.org>,
<xx-google@telefog.com> wrote:

> I haven't found answers to most of these questions:

[[..  snip questions ..]]

Authoritative answer to all the questions:  "it depends".

You couldn't even be bothered to specify what country you were talking
about, reducing any attempt to respond to nothing more than a 'guess',
at best.

In the U.S., 'local number portability' is a fact.  With some caveats.
Only the _owner_ of the number can 'port' it to a different carrier.
Who actually 'owns' the number is not necessarily obvious.  You _do_
probably 'own' the POTS or cellular number you use.  If you have a
personal 800 number, it is likely that the company providing the
service 'owns' _that_ number, and has just 'loaned' it to you.

VOIP providers are the 'customer' to the telephone company, and, as
such 'own' the numbers they were issued by the telephone company.
They're just letting you 'use' one of their 'direct dial' extensions,
as it were.  (note: this situation has gotten a _lot_ muddier, with
the gov't ruling that VOIP providers must provide '911' under the
requirements for 'real' telephone companies.  Argument can be made
that if they're being treated as a 'real' phone company, they should
have to do all the other things 'real' telephone companies do.  Like
number portability, 911 fees, 'universal access' fees, etc.)

There are a minimum of three players in any local number 'porting',
possibly as many as _five_. (I think it's possible that one could even
get more, but I cant think of how, right now.)

At a minimum, there is the 'customer' (you), the old carrier, and the
new carrier.

'You' have to issue the authorization for the carrier change,
the new carrier has to be willing (and able!) to handle calls for that number
After those things are established, the old carrier *must* relinquish the
number to the new carrier.

Things can get messy, since portability *is* only "local" -- you
cannot 'port' a NYC number to Los Angeles, for example.

This means that the 'new' carrier must have physical equipment in the
'local' area of the original switch that serviced that number.

If the 'new' carrier doesn't have facilities in the right location,
they're "not able" to receive the number.

The 'more complicated' case: you're a 'user' who buys service from the
party (actual telephone 'customer') that 'owns' the number, and want
to take it somewhere else -- where you'd just be a 'user' of a
_different_ actual telephone 'customer'.  (e.g., going from one VOIP
provider to another VOIP provider.)  This requires:

  1) active co-operation from the current VOIP provider, to issue the
     LOA authorizing their _telephone_company_ to release the number
     to the designated carrier used by the new VOIP provider.

  2) active co-operation from the new VOIP provider, to: (a) identify
     their carrier, (b) route calls to that number to _you_, and (c)
     co-operate in relinquishing that number if/when you decide to go
     'somewhere else'.

  3) a transfer of 'ownership' of that number from the current VOIP
     provider (remember _they_ are the telephone company's customer)
     to the new VOIP provider.  This is necessary because the new VOIP
     provider doesn't use the same telephone company as the old VOIP
     provider -- thus the receiving telephone company does not
     'recognize' the current provider (who issued the LOA for the
     change) as one of _their_ customers.  And, similarly, the current
     telco doesn't recognize the new VOIP provider as one of their
     customers.  4) the telco of the new VOIP provider must have
     facilities in the right location, or they're "not able" to
     receive the number.  5) the new VOIP provider must have links to
     *that* equipment, or the telco must be willing to back-haul the
     connection from the 'destination' facility to the one where the
     VOIP provider has their connection.

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

Date: 21 Apr 2006 19:50:00 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular


> What this means is that if the wireless carrier gets numbers from rate
> center A, wireline customers in rate center A will be able to port to
> wireless and vice versa.  Wireline customers in rate centers B, C, and
> D will not be able to port to or from wireless because the wireless
> carrier isn't present in their rate center.

Really?  My tiny ILEC says our numbers are portable to wireless, but
there are no prefixes in their rate centers but theirs.

I was under the impression that you really only need to be present in
the LATA, not in the rate center, for portability to work.  You just
need to be able to provide a routing number for the portability
database and as far as I can tell the routing number need not be in
the same rate center as the original number.  There's certainly no
technical reason it has to be.

Inbound calls will still be rated as calls to the original rate
center, but cellular and VoIP carriers don't care.

R's,

John

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

From: Vientus <vientus@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft
Date: 21 Apr 2006 13:59:48 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


masonboro_island@yahoo.com wrote:

> I think this is good news.  I've been reading up about the online
> predator issue for a while now and I'm glad to see that social
> networking communities are beginning to bring in people and
> advertisements that help promote online safety.  It won't solve
> everything but its an improvement.  MySpace is now partnering with the
> National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which also happens
> to provide the cybertipline service so people can report predators.

> What does everyone else think about this issue?

I think Google should add a phone verification like
http://www.Phoneconfirm.com to the sign-up process much like eBay and other
older online communities have done. That would help solve multiple sign
ups by underage users and give the predators something to think
about ...

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

From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl>
Subject: Re: Should Consumers Tape "Customer Service" Calls?
Date: 21 Apr 2006 20:14:58 GMT
Organization: http://idefix.net/~koos/


T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net> wrote in
<telecom25.147.11@telecom-digest.org>:

[ story about dell support woes ]

> There ought to be some sort of vetting process for I.T. folks to get
> past those damned support scripts.

With Dell there is an option (at least in the Netherlands). A company
can send one (or more) of their support people on a special Dell
course (and pay for the privilege), after which those support people
will have access to second-line support at Dell. Regular freshen-up
courses are needed for new models of hardware and other changes.

A company needs to have an awful lot of Dell hardware for this to be
interesting.

Koos

Koos van den Hout,           PGP keyid DSS/1024 0xF0D7C263 via keyservers
koos@kzdoos.xs4all.nl        or RSA/1024 0xCA845CB5                        -?)
Fax +31-30-2817051              Visit the site about books with reviews    /\\
http://idefix.net/~koos/                http://www.virtualbookcase.com/   _\_V

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
Date: 21 Apr 2006 17:56:32 GMT
Organization: http://extra.newsguy.com


In article <telecom25.151.1@telecom-digest.org>, Patrick Townson
<ptownson@cableone.net> wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: 'Network Neutrality', the concept that
> everyone on the net should be given equal use of network facilities
> is a very interesting concept. At first glance, I would say I agree
> with it, yet the telcos, notably AT&T (SBC by its other name) and
> the larger ISPs (America OnLine for example) seem to be fighting it
> for various reasons. 

What's old is new again. :-/ Back in the days of dial-up Internet
access the phone companies used to complain about tying up POTS lines
for extended data sessions. I seem to remember waaay back something
about phone company rules prohibiting customers using profanity during
a phone conversation (although maybe that memory is an artifact of
college excesses). The ideas being promoted by the phone companies for
network usage would be like them charging different rates depending on
the types of phone calls you want to make ... like charging more to
place a 20-minute data call vs a 20-minute voice call.

The dial-up issues were probably justified, because the infrastructure
was designed with a completely different usage model. In the case of
data networks the capacity planning is typically based on a 95th
percentile basis, and it's entirely possible that the new web apps are
skewing the loads in ways that weren't anticipated. But with data
networks when the capacity is exceeded you don't have to completey
redesign and rebuild your infrastructure, you have to add more
capacity.  That costs money, but throughout the system the costs are
determined on the basis of capacity or load requirements. So
theoretically as a user/server contributes more to the load on the
system their costs increase proportionately and that money eventually
trickles through the system to the network providers that are carrying
the load and have to build out their capacity to support it.

Essentially we're all paying for bandwidth, at both ends. The network
bits and bytes don't care what type of data they're carrying. It works
the same regardless.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
Date: 21 Apr 2006 12:26:35 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


(quoting from the MoveOn original item):

> If you've never heard about this bit of business history, there's a
> good reason: it never happened. Instead, A.T. & T. had to abide by a
> "common carriage" rule: it provided the same quality of service to
> all, and could not favor one customer over another. But, while "tiered
> access" never influenced the spread of the telephone network, it is
> becoming a major issue in the evolution of the Internet.

It is curious Move-On cited the old style common carrier policy as a
justification for their position.

Yes, in the old days it was equal access, equal rates for all, and
common carrier.  But MCI successfully sued to throw all of that out of
the window along with the courts and Congress.  MCI claimed the right
to carry public customers at lower cost when and if it suited them.
That claim created "tiered" service.  Our telecom service has been
operating that way, for better or worse, ever since.

Most telecom services today are deregulated.  That means you pay for
what you want in a competitive marketplace.  If your provider rips you
off, too bad, it's buyer beware.

I can't help but suspect Move-On is being a little selfish here.
Their operation works on mass emails -- to their members to promote
causes, from their members to push politicians.  Cheap or free email
is necessary to do that.  Perhaps Move-On is afraid of having to pay
for what it now gets for free.

Sorry, but just because they're a non-profit doesn't mean they get a
free ride.  Another poster correctly pointed out that someone has to
pay for the Internet.  I don't want to subsidize Move-On.

Indeed, perhaps someone like myself who is a prolific Usenet poster is
getting a free ride.  Admittedly I like that deal very much, but I
must admit it's not very fair.

Another poster noted the problems of spam and abuse.  I think there are
stll some "purists" or "romantics" out there who still think of the
Internet as a pure form of like-minded people when it served only a
very select audience of researchers.  Those days are very long gone.

BTW, there's a intermediate load of mail I call "semi-spam".  It's
mail from someone you know and converse with, but stuff you're not
really interested in.  For example, say one of your friends is
religious and keeps sending you little Bible quotes and the like,
things you didn't ask for and always delete.  (Or it could be
political messages).  Organizations -- both profit and non-profit of
course do it all the time.  A lot of people do this because it's so
easy and free.  This represents a wasteful load on the network.

As to Move-On's fear that major ISP controllers will restrict access
to sites, I question that.  Undoubtedly favored sites will get top
billing, but that does not mean other sites will be degraded in
access.  TV and cable networks don't do that to favor their own shows
or channels.  They can't because consumers would raise hell if they
did.

Actually, as I consumer, I wonder if some sort of "bit tax" might be a
good idea.  My dial-up home is essentially worthless these days
because sites have some much layered overhead bloat you gotta have DSL
to do anything in a realistic amount of time.  That bloat doesn't give
one any more information, only more pizazz on the screen.  On the rare
event I find an old site my dial up works just fine and the text flows
and small graphics through quickly.  At the present rate plain DSL
will be obsolete and will have to go to industrial strength DSL or
FIOS at much higher cost to us consumers.  It is worth it to see pop
up ads blink on and off?

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

From: Brad Houser <bradDOThouser@intel.com>
Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 12:30:00 -0700
Organization: Intel Corporation
Reply-To: bradDOThouser@intel.com


On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 13:38:52 GMT, Steven Lichter wrote:

> Though as you say Network Neutrality is a good itea, without the
> large companies, the internet would still be as it was in the
> begining, just for the Collages and the govenment.  The cost of
> building and maintaining the inferstructure costs millions of
> dollars and someone has to pay for it, we the users do so the
> companies that do business also should pay their fair share.

They overbuilt it and now that there is so much competition, the free
market isn't working for them. They see more and more people going for
all you can eat connections. I say keep it free and if you don't want
to be an ISP sell to someone else. Google has to pay for all its
internet connections or Google would be too slow. Charge based on
bandwidth, or bytes, but not for what type of bytes you get or where
they come from.

Brad Houser

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

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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 22 Apr 2006 14:46:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 154

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Google Declines to Rule Out Wireless Airwave Bid (Eric Auchard)
    Microsoft Hires CEO  of Ask.com to Head its Web Unit (Reuters News Wire)
    Apple Questioned in Trade Secrets Case (Monty Solomon)
    EPIC Alert 13.08 (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Area Code - NNX (Waitman Gobble)
    Re: Area Code - NNX (Burris)
    Re: Area Code - NNX (Rich Greenberg)
    Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure? (Gordon Burditt)
    Re: Podcasting Not For Most People (Thomas A. Horsley)
    Re: Podcasting Not For Most People (Barry Margolin)
    Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce (kimi)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (John Levine)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (Raqueeb Hassan)
    Re: Network Neutrality (Steven Lichter)

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-
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herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the
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               ===========================

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: Eric Auchard <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Google Declines to Rule Out Wireless Airwave Bid
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 12:28:48 -0500


By Eric Auchard

Google Inc. on Thursday opened the door to the possibility that it
could bid on U.S. licenses for wireless radio spectrum in order to
offer Internet access services, but said no plans were imminent.

Co-founder Larry Page said the company has no wireless spectrum
acquisition plans to announce but declined to rule out speculation
that Google may be gearing up for a push far beyond wireless trials it
is working on in the San Francisco area.

"We haven't announced any plans with regard to spectrum, but we are
generally interested in improving access to the Internet," he said in
a tone mixing the excitement of a keen science student with that of a
billionaire ready to pay for the undertaking.

He was responding to a question by a Wall Street analyst over whether
the company's wireless strategy would lead the company to bid in
upcoming U.S.  airwave auctions.

"In general we are interested in anything that can provide better,
more transparent access to the Internet," said Page, who is
co-president of Google in charge of products and also the company's
biggest shareholder.

Later, in a phone interview, Chief Executive Eric Schmidt also said
Google had no current plans to bid on radio spectrum.

The Federal Communications Commission is slated to auction 90
megahertz of wireless airwaves starting June 29 and initial
applications to participate in the sale are due by May 10.

The licenses could be used for advanced wireless services like
high-speed Internet access and video.

The FCC is also expected by January 28 to start auctioning 2008
wireless airwaves that television broadcasters are giving up as they
move to digital signals. The two auctions are expected to raise
billions of dollars for the U.S. Treasury.

Google is working on a citywide wireless project with Internet access
provider EarthLink in San Francisco, and a trial project of its own in
the town of Mountain View, where its headquarters is based. It has
said it is studying how it might use advertising to offer free
municipal wireless access.

Schmidt, asked about radio spectrum, said, "We don't have a huge bid
being prepared." He joked that a random engineer might be working on a
side project without his knowledge.

"It would take some work for an engineer on 20 percent time to prepare
a billion dollar bid," Schmidt said.

Google encourages some employees to devote a portion of their work
week to so-called "20 percent time" projects to develop innovative
ideas outside their day-to-day jobs.

(Additional reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky in Washington, D.C.)


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headline news from the media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft Hires CEO  of Ask.com to Head its Web Unit
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 12:30:47 -0500


Software giant Microsoft Corp. said on Friday it hired away Steve
Berkowitz, the chief executive of rival Internet company Ask.com, to
head Microsoft's own Internet business.

Effective May 8, Berkowitz succeeds David Cole, a 20-year Microsoft
veteran, who is set to begin a one-year leave of absence, Microsoft
said in a statement. He had outlined his plans in a memo to employees
in February.

Berkowitz is credited in the industry with orchestrating the
turnaround of Ask.com, the Web search and media business acquired by
Barry Diller's conglomerate, IAC/InterActiveCorp, for $1.85 billion 13
months ago.

Under his leadership, Ask, originally known as Ask Jeeves, enjoyed a
revival in its audience and market share gains in the highly
competitive Web search business over the past year.

Berkowitz was named the senior vice president of Microsoft's recently
formed Online Business Group, which brings together the operations of
Microsoft's MSN Internet business unit with other consumer businesses
within Microsoft.

The group includes MSN.com, MSNTV and MSN Internet Access programming,
advertising sales, business development, and marketing for Live
Platforms, MSN and Windows Live, with responsibility for generating
greater advertising sales.

Microsoft's Online Business Group competes against rivals such as
Google Inc., Yahoo Inc., Time Warner Inc.'s AOL unit and Ask.com.

Berkowitz will report to Kevin Johnson, co-president of Microsoft's
platforms and services unit, Microsoft said.

He propelled Ask Jeeves into the contemporary Web search market with
the acquisition of Teoma in 2001. He led the redesign of Ask, made the
site easier to use by removing pop-up and banner ads and providing
greater context on searches.

Revenue more than doubled under his leadership.

Previously, Berkowitz was president and chief operating officer of
technology trade publisher IDG Books, where he built a hit consumer
brand by expanding the "Dummies" series of books to cover topics
ranging from the Web to pet care. He expanded IDG Books by acquiring
publishing brands such as Cliffs Notes, Frommers Travel Guides and
Betty Crocker Cookbooks.


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 23:57:53 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Apple Questioned in Trade Secrets Case


By MAY WONG AP Technology Writer

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- A case that could jeopardize the right of
journalists to protect the confidentiality of sources and give
companies more legal leeway to track down supposed leaks of trade
secrets is now in the hands of a state appeals court.

Apple Computer Inc. faced tough questions before a three-judge panel
of the 6th District Court of Appeal on Thursday as it argued its case
seeking to identify the sources who leaked confidential information
about an unreleased product to online media outlets in 2004.

Apple contended the unidentified sources _ presumed to be company
employees _ violated its trade secrets. It subpoenaed the Internet
service providers of three online journalists to turn over e-mail
records to uncover the possible sources.

A lower court last year ruled in Apple's favor but the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, whose attorneys represent the online journalists
of AppleInsider.com, PowerPage.org and MacNN.com appealed. The civil
liberties organization contended Apple's protection of trade secrets
in this case should not outweigh the journalists' First Amendment
right to confidential sources nor the privacy protections of e-mails
allowed under federal law.

The appellate panel in San Jose questioned Apple's stance, including
its claim that the published diagrams of the unreleased music-related
product code-named "Asteroid" amounted to a trade secret.

      - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57810158

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

Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 00:53:55 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: EPIC Alert 13.08


========================================================================
                           E P I C  A l e r t
========================================================================
Volume 13.08                                              April 21, 2006
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            Published by the
               Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
                            Washington, D.C.

             http://www.epic.org/alert/EPIC_Alert_13.08.html

========================================================================
Table of Contents
========================================================================
[1] ICANN Chooses Privacy for Whois
[2] Congress, Administration Push for U.S. Data Retention Laws
[3] International Privacy Commissioners Meet in Washington
[4] U.S. Archives Had Reclassification Agreements With CIA, Air Force
[5] Immigration Bill Would Require DHS Checks for All U.S. Jobs
[6] News in Brief
[7] EPIC Bookstore: David Lyon's "Surveillance as Social Sorting"
[8] Upcoming Conferences and Events

http://www.epic.org/alert/EPIC_Alert_13.08.html

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

From: Waitman Gobble <avail4one@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Area Code - NNX
Date: 21 Apr 2006 21:05:54 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hello Jan,

Here are some links for you:

http://www.quentinsagerconsulting.com/npanxx_phonecodes.htm
(i've used that one for years, there's a nice free lookup for
occasional use.)

http://www.melissadata.com/lookups/index.htm
(I usually use Melissa Data for address lookups however they also have
phone number databases.)

I've stumbled upon these

http://www.fonefinder.net/
(haven't used but looks ok.)

http://www.tndatabase.com/
(interesting click-number thingy. Make use of Control-F key combination
to search page.)


Take care

Waitman

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

Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 07:58:01 -0400
From: Burris <responder@comcast.net>
Subject: Re: Area Code - NNX


Jan Schmidt wrote:

> Am looking for a site where one can enter the AC and NNX and find out
> what city the telephone number is located in.  Do you offer that
> somewhere on your web site?   

> Thanks, 

> Jan

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not have that feature here in
> TELECOM Digest, however it is available on other web sites. Perhaps
> Linc Madison or Jon or one of the guys who keeps up with area codes
> these days can refer you to such a template.   PAT]

See if this is what you want ...

http://www.telcodata.us/telcodata/telco

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

From: richgr@panix.com (Rich Greenberg)
Subject: Re: Area Code - NNX
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 23:43:42 UTC
Organization: Organized?  Me?


In article <telecom25.153.3@telecom-digest.org>, Jan Schmidt
<JanS@bluebeacon.com> wrote:

> Am looking for a site where one can enter the AC and NNX and find out
> what city the telephone number is located in.  Do you offer that
> somewhere on your web site?   

There are probably several.  The one I usually use is:

     http://www.telcodata.us/telcodata/telco


Rich Greenberg Marietta, GA, USA richgr atsign panix.com    + 1 770 321 6507
Eastern time.  N6LRT  I speak for myself & my dogs only.   VM'er since CP-67
Canines:Val, Red & Shasta (RIP),Red, husky                   Owner:Chinook-L
Atlanta Siberian Husky Rescue. www.panix.com/~richgr/  Asst Owner:Sibernet-L

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

From: gordonb.mjj57@burditt.org (Gordon Burditt)
Subject: Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure?
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 23:10:22 -0000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


> At issue are the user login areas that can be found on banking sites
> such as Chase.com and Americanexpress.com, which ask users to submit
> their user ID and password information. Although these forms may be
> encrypted, they do not use authentication technology to prove they are
> genuine, according to Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at the
> SANS Institute.

> A more secure approach would be to force users to log in on a HTTPS
> (HyperText Transport Protocol Secure) Web page. HTTPS pages use the
> SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) security protocol, which not only encrypts
> the information on the page but also provides digital certificates to
> give assurance that the Web site in question is genuine.

SSL is an effective way of transmitting payment information securely to
the thief operating a web site in such a way that the other thieves
don't get the info first.

> "If the login form is not HTTPS, you don't know if it's the real
> thing," Ullrich said.

If it's HTTPS, and you don't look at the certificate, you still don't
know if it's the real thing.  If you don't look at the certificate,
you don't know it doesn't say: "Union of Nigerian Bank Fraud Artists,
Third Pile of Money on the Left SUCKER, Nigerian Republic of Bank
Fraud".  I suspect just about anyone can get a real certificate if
they use their real name on it, even if they are running a web site
from inside a prison and freely admit it to Verisign.  Saddam, have
you applied for a certificate yet?

If you don't pay attention to warnings about certificate authorities,
I can make a certificate that looks just like a real bank certificate,
and it will fool lots of people.  However, it's more fun to make
certificates for "Satan, Prince of Darkness", and few people will read
it anyway.  You do get a few browser warnings, however, I suspect a
lot of people would click OK without thinking to a popup:

	You are about to install the Code Red Virus.
	Only an idiot would deliberately install a virus thinking
	it was anti-virus software.  The install program will also 
	drain your checking account and take your soul and first-born
	child.  Install virus anyway?
 
> Web pages that do not use this type of secure connection are
> vulnerable to a type of attack known as DNS (Domain Name System)
> spoofing, where attackers attempt to trick Web browsers into visiting
> bogus Web sites.

And if you don't read the certificates, you won't notice that you
expected to be connected to Chased Bank and you're really connected to
Henry's House of Hashish and Aftermarket Biological Weapons.

> This type of attack is technically challenging, however, and hackers
> generally find it far easier to trick users into giving up their user
> names and passwords using phishing techniques, Ullrich said.

> Though Bank of America allows customers to enter their online IDs on
> the home page, they cannot submit passwords. The bank sends them to an
> HTTPS page and uses a technology called SiteKey to confirm to
> customers that they are at the legitimate Bank of America site before
> they enter their passwords.

> "We're committed to safeguarding customer information online and we
> wouldn't do anything to compromise that security," Riess said.

Bank of America has an interesting setup to avoid spoofing and
man-in-the-middle attacks, and it involves the user a bit more.  You
set up an image (chosen from a set of what might be a few hundred), a
caption, and some security questions and answers.  (For example, I
might select an image of a fire-breathing dragon, and caption it "my
mother-in-law".  I might also select a security question of "What is
your favorite pet?" with the answer "9/11/2001".  Of course, by
choosing such wierd answers, I'd better remember the real answers as
the question won't give much of a hint.)

1.  You go to what is supposedly the login page.
2.  You put in your ID (but not password)
3.  If your computer has the BofA cookie on it for this account, skip to step 7
4.  You are asked one of the security questions (I think an SSL page).
5.  You answer it.
6.  If your answer is correct, the web page offers to put a cookie on
    the computer you are using (but advises you not to if it's a public
    system).
7.  You get a SSL page showing your selected image and the caption
    (Together, these are the site key.).
    You are advised *NOT* to enter your password if you don't see the
    correct site key.  Enter your password.
8.  You put in the password.
9.  If it's correct, you're in, and the cookie from step 6 is added
    if requested.
10.  You get the online banking page (SSL) for your account.

If you usually log in from a small set of computers which by now have
the cookie on them, you only do steps 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, and 10, and you
should be suspicious of suddenly getting asked (for a
man-in-the-middle attack) one of the security questions.

Notes: if you refuse to accept cookies, you get asked the security
question, but it still works.  The cookie does NOT substitute for
knowing the password.

Although it's hardly foolproof, especially if the user isn't paying
attention, it's different and it involves the user a bit more, so I
think it's going to be more effective.

Gordon L. Burditt

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

Subject: Re: Podcasting Not For Most People
From: tom.horsley@att.net (Thomas A. Horsley)
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 01:45:45 GMT


> "Logically true, yes. Psychologically true, no. My
> colleagues and I, along with other researchers, have begun amassing
> evidence -- both in the laboratory and in the field -- that increased
> choice can lead to decreased well-being."

It requires researchers to amass evidence for this? They must be
getting government grants.

There are places I won't go to eat because just reading the menu takes
more time than I have for lunch -- I wouldn't think it would take vast
amounts of research to figure this sorta thing out ...

Even the fast food joints are starting to join the too many choices
trend: Do you want the grilled chicken or the fried chicken? Do you
want the Honey-Mustard-Tofu-Wheatgerm sauce or the
Banana-Nut-Bat-Guano sauce?

I wish they'd all change their scripts and have the first question
always be: Do you want that with or without choices? :-).

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Podcasting Not For Most People
Organization: Symantec
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 22:13:02 -0400


In article <telecom25.152.2@telecom-digest.org>, Andrew Kantor
<usatoday@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> Roadblocks

> There's already an example of what happens when something gets so
> inexpensive that what was once limited to corporations and
> professionals becomes possible for anyone: spam.
 ....
> That's roadblock number one. Number two is the technology.
 ....
> The last major roadblock to podcasts taking off is an unfortunate
> thing, but one that's real nonetheless: the tyranny of choice.

When I first heard about sites like eBay and craigslist, I thought
they would suffer from much the same problem.  If anyone can sell
their junk, these sites will presumably be filled mostly with junk.

I don't use these sites myself, so I still wonder how they've been so
successful despite this.

In fact, the same argument could be made about the Web as a whole.
Just because anyone can be a publisher doesn't mean everyone *should*
be a publisher.


Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***

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

From: kimi <kimi777@gmail.com>
Subject: Telecommunications Alternatives For Distributed Workforce (March 2006)
Date: 21 Apr 2006 18:03:45 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce (March 2006)
Introduction,Distributed Workforce,Virtual Organization,Field Offices
for Larger Concerns,Virtual PBX,Case Study-Centract,Knowledge Worker
Impact Quotient,Conclusions

http://www.freewebs.com/virtual-pbx/

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

Date: 21 Apr 2006 23:45:04 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular


> VOIP providers are the 'customer' to the telephone company, and, as
> such 'own' the numbers they were issued by the telephone company.
> They're just letting you 'use' one of their 'direct dial' extensions,
> as it were.

Except sometimes.  When I switched from Vonage to Lingo about a year
ago, before mandatory E-911, I ported my number the normal way and it
worked.

I have no idea whether Vonage could have prevented the port if they'd
wanted to.  In fact, what happened was that Vonage didn't even notice,
and once I got Vonage to cancel the account (I got their attention by
turning off the credit card number to which the account was charged),
they thought the number was still theirs but unassigned.  This had the
effect that anyone in the world other than Vonage customers could call
me, while Vonage customers got an out of service recording.  Since I
don't get calls from many Vonage customers, I didn't care.

Then about two months ago, Vonage assigned my old number to a new
customer, a student at a nearby college, and I got some rather
confused calls from her father who was rather bent out of shape that
he called the number that his daughter had given him and that showed
up on his caller ID box, and got me instead.  Fortunately, I had a
simple way to fix it: I happen to be acquainted with a one of the
members of Vonage's corporate board of directors, and sent him a note
which he forwarded to Vonage management, and it was all fixed within a
day.  If I hadn't had that side channel, I doubt it would ever have
been fixed.

R's,

John

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

From: Michael D. Sullivan <userid@camsul.example.invalid>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 03:35:42 GMT


John Levine wrote:

>> What this means is that if the wireless carrier gets numbers from rate
>> center A, wireline customers in rate center A will be able to port to
>> wireless and vice versa.  Wireline customers in rate centers B, C, and
>> D will not be able to port to or from wireless because the wireless
>> carrier isn't present in their rate center.

> Really?  My tiny ILEC says our numbers are portable to wireless, but
> there are no prefixes in their rate centers but theirs.

> I was under the impression that you really only need to be present in
> the LATA, not in the rate center, for portability to work.  You just
> need to be able to provide a routing number for the portability
> database and as far as I can tell the routing number need not be in
> the same rate center as the original number.  There's certainly no
> technical reason it has to be.

> Inbound calls will still be rated as calls to the original rate
> center, but cellular and VoIP carriers don't care.

John, thanks for pointing out that this issue is a bit more
complicated than I let on.  As you note, there is no technical
imperative for portability to be limited to a rate center.  A white
paper on this is located at:

http://www.fcc.gov/wcb/tapd/Nanc/rcnanc1.doc

My summary regarding rate centers and their relevance to porting was
oversimplified.  The general rule for wireline carrier number porting
to other wireline carriers is rate center dependent.  However, this is
not the case with respect to certain ports between wireline and
wireless.

A wireline carrier must port to a wireless carrier even if the
wireless carrier doesn't have numbering resources in the rate center
where the number is located.  The wireline carriers took the position
that they didn't have to do so, but the FCC ruled in November 2003
that wireline-to-wireless ports were required as long as the wireless
carrier has service covering the rate center (using Zip codes for that
determination, apparently).  It did not require wireless-to-wireline
ports where the wireline carrier doesn't have numbering resources in
the rate center where the ported number is located, however; that
issue has been put on hold pending further study.  The order is online
at http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-03-284A1.pdf

There is also an October 2003 order holding that wireless-to-wireless 
porting does not require a common rate center.  This order, is online at 
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-03-237A1.pdf


Michael D. Sullivan
Bethesda, MD (USA)
(Replace "example.invalid" with "com" in my address.)

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

From: Raqueeb Hassan <wideangle@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular
Date: 22 Apr 2006 10:27:04 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> Inbound calls will still be rated as calls to the original rate center ...

<snip>

Hello! Now, regarding the technical feasibility -- how do these
exchanges interconnected? How can you port numbers should all telcos
dialplans are not shared in a single routing device? How will these
calls be routed should all the carriers don't share their dialing plans
ahead to each other? I guess all the switches (wireline and non-
wireline carriers) should be terminated to a tandem exchage (in our
case, incumbent telco's responsibility). In a smaller country where
ILECs and CLECs (including cellular and VoIP) can be the same
carriers, how do you suggest the feasible placement of rate center(s)?

TIA

Raqueeb Hassan
Bangladesh

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

Subject: Re: Network Neutrality
From: Steven Lichter <shlichter@sbcglobal.net>
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 01:41:14 GMT


In article telecom25.153.9@telecom-digest.org, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com at
hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote on 4/21/06 12:26:

> (quoting from the MoveOn original item):

>> If you've never heard about this bit of business history, there's a
>> good reason: it never happened. Instead, A.T. & T. had to abide by a
>> "common carriage" rule: it provided the same quality of service to
>> all, and could not favor one customer over another. But, while "tiered
>> access" never influenced the spread of the telephone network, it is
>> becoming a major issue in the evolution of the Internet.

> It is curious Move-On cited the old style common carrier policy as a
> justification for their position.

> Yes, in the old days it was equal access, equal rates for all, and
> common carrier.  But MCI successfully sued to throw all of that out of
> the window along with the courts and Congress.  MCI claimed the right
> to carry public customers at lower cost when and if it suited them.
> That claim created "tiered" service.  Our telecom service has been
> operating that way, for better or worse, ever since.

And now look who owns MCI!!

> Most telecom services today are deregulated.  That means you pay for
> what you want in a competitive marketplace.  If your provider rips you
> off, too bad, it's buyer beware.

> I can't help but suspect Move-On is being a little selfish here.
> Their operation works on mass emails -- to their members to promote
> causes, from their members to push politicians.  Cheap or free email
> is necessary to do that.  Perhaps Move-On is afraid of having to pay
> for what it now gets for free.

> Sorry, but just because they're a non-profit doesn't mean they get a
> free ride.  Another poster correctly pointed out that someone has to
> pay for the Internet.  I don't want to subsidize Move-On.

> Indeed, perhaps someone like myself who is a prolific Usenet poster is
> getting a free ride.  Admittedly I like that deal very much, but I
> must admit it's not very fair.

> Another poster noted the problems of spam and abuse.  I think there are
> stll some "purists" or "romantics" out there who still think of the
> Internet as a pure form of like-minded people when it served only a
> very select audience of researchers.  Those days are very long gone.

> BTW, there's a intermediate load of mail I call "semi-spam".  It's
> mail from someone you know and converse with, but stuff you're not
> really interested in.  For example, say one of your friends is
> religious and keeps sending you little Bible quotes and the like,
> things you didn't ask for and always delete.  (Or it could be
> political messages).  Organizations -- both profit and non-profit of
> course do it all the time.  A lot of people do this because it's so
> easy and free.  This represents a wasteful load on the network.

> As to Move-On's fear that major ISP controllers will restrict access
> to sites, I question that.  Undoubtedly favored sites will get top
> billing, but that does not mean other sites will be degraded in
> access.  TV and cable networks don't do that to favor their own shows
> or channels.  They can't because consumers would raise hell if they
> did.

> Actually, as I consumer, I wonder if some sort of "bit tax" might be a
> good idea.  My dial-up home is essentially worthless these days
> because sites have some much layered overhead bloat you gotta have DSL
> to do anything in a realistic amount of time.  That bloat doesn't give
> one any more information, only more pizazz on the screen.  On the rare
> event I find an old site my dial up works just fine and the text flows
> and small graphics through quickly.  At the present rate plain DSL
> will be obsolete and will have to go to industrial strength DSL or
> FIOS at much higher cost to us consumers.  It is worth it to see pop
> up ads blink on and off?

In article telecom25.152.10@telecom-digest.org, Waitman Gobble at
avail4one@gmail.com wrote on 4/21/06 8:10:

> Hello,

> I'm not sure that the typical consumer would have the patience for a
> broken Internet. If average Susan decides to "shop store x" and the
> site isn't working properly, her patience will wear thin. If this
> happens to multiple sites, It is my opinion that she won't merely be
> "trained" into going to the sites approved by the government. She'd
> probably just jump ship and scrap the whole notion of the Internet.
> Which would mean she'd just call up her provider and disconnect
> service. She has better things to do.

The Internet is broken now and the only way to really fix it is to start
over again!!

> The bit about "tiered access" is curious, because it JUST happened to a
> client of mine. He has been using DSL in his home for years without
> much of any trouble. However in the past month his service has been
> offline about half time, which has been extremely frustrating for him.
> The problem is that a few weeks ago, it was down for a week and they
> said that some tech had "accidentally unplugged 50 lines in his
> neighborhood and his was included". It actually took them a week to
> "plug it back in". Then after a week of uptime it went down again (for
> another week) and the providers' response was "there's water in the
> line". The word he received from his provider, which is the company
> named in the article, was that he should upgrade his account to "their
> business level service to get better service and have trouble-free
> Internet". After that phone call, he called his local cable company and
> ordered their Internet service. That's a true story.

> We'll see what happens I suppose :)

> Take care,

> Waitman

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

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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 23 Apr 2006 19:00:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 155

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Pioneering WikFi City Sees Startup Woes (Travis Reed)
    Texas Community College Bans MySpace.com (Associated Press News Wire)
    Verizon UNE DS3 Question (darktiger)
    Google's China Problem (and China's Google Problem) (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure? (Steven Lichter)
    Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure? (B. Wright)
    Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed? (Charles Gowder)
    Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed? (Geoffrey Welsh)
    Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed? (Koos van den Hout)
    Re: NPA-NXX Lists (Anthony Bellanga)
    Re: NPA-NNX Lists (Mr Joseph Singer)
    Re: Podcasting Not For Most People (John Levine)
    Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular (Fred Atkinson)
    Re: New Technology Will Force TV Ad Viewing (John Stahl)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet.  All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and
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Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
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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: Travis Reed <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Pioneering WikFi City Sees Startup Woes
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 17:01:34 -0500


By TRAVIS REED, Associated Press Writer

Joe Lusardi's friends back in New York couldn't believe it when he
told them he'd have free Internet access through this city's new Wi-Fi
network. It's free all right, but residents are, to some extent,
getting what they pay for.

More than a month after St. Cloud launched what analysts say is the
country's first free citywide Wi-Fi network, Lusardi and others in
this 28,000-person Orlando suburb are still paying to use their own
Internet service providers as dead spots and weak signals keep some
residents offline and force engineers to retool the free system.

"Everybody's happy they were going to have it, but I don't know if
they're happy right now," said Lusardi, a 66-year-old retired New York
City transit worker.

The same troubles with the small town's big Internet project could be
lessons for municipalities from Philadelphia to San Francisco
considering similar networks.

St. Cloud officials are spending more than $2 million on a network
they see as a pioneering model for freeing local families, schools and
businesses from monthly Internet bills. It also promises to help the
city reduce cell-phone bills and let paramedics in an ambulance talk
by voice and video to hospital doctors.

Instead, what they have so far is a work in progress.

"All technology has its hiccups, and sometimes more than hiccups,"
St. Cloud Mayor Donna Hart said. "I think that it's going to be a
major challenge, and it'll probably be a major challenge for some time
until the technology is such that it works properly."

Wi-Fi is the same technology behind wireless Internet access in coffee
shops, airports and college campuses around the country.

Several cities have Wi-Fi hotspots, but St. Cloud's 15-square-mile
network is the first to offer free access citywide, said Seattle-based
technology writer Glenn Fleishman, who runs a Web site called Wi-Fi
Networking News.

Other cities like Tempe, Ariz., have networks over a larger area (187
square miles), but access isn't free. Planned projects in places like
Chicago and Philadelphia would also dwarf St. Cloud's network, but
also require a fee for access.

Google Inc. and EarthLink Inc. are teaming up to build a $15 million
Wi-Fi network across San Francisco, and their proposal is entering
final negotiations. EarthLink's faster offering would cost $20 per
month, while Google would provide a slower, free service financed by
advertising.

St. Cloud launched the network on a trial basis in May 2004 in a new
division of town to help give businesses an incentive to
relocate. After further exploring the benefits, officials decided to
expand it citywide.

Project supporters say increased efficiency in city government will
cover the network's $2.6 million buildout and estimated $400,000
annual operating expense.

For example, phones that use the Wi-Fi network will allow it to cut
cell-phone bills for police and city workers. The city can avoid
adding 10 more building inspectors because the network will existing
employees to enter and access data onsite instead of driving back to
the office.

The network also could keep the estimated $450 that St. Cloud
households now spend each year on high-speed access in the local
economy.

As of last week, nearly 3,500 users had registered for the network,
logging 176,189 total hours of use. St. Cloud contracted with
Hewlett-Packard Co. to build the project and provide customer support.

"HP is working with the city and its partners to optimize the solution
and install additional access points to help improve signal strength
in isolated areas of the city," the company said in a statement.

So far, there have been plenty of calls from frustrated
residents. Some can see receivers from their homes and still can't
sign on -- even on the porch.  Others have tried to connect countless
times.

Still, HP said that there were only 842 help-line calls out of more
than 50,000 user sessions in the first 45 days of service.

At first, a desktop computer in Lusardi's house could use the Wi-Fi
network with no problem, but his laptop would only work outdoors. Even
then it was too slow and unreliable, so he kept his $20 per month
Sprint DSL service.

Now the desktop doesn't even work, and he's completely abandoned the
idea of dropping his pay service and using the network.

"It's just total frustration," Lusardi said. "I'm going to stay with
the DSL and just forget it, because I don't think it's going to
work. Very few people are going to use it, and they're going to say
it's underutilized and they're going to shut it down."

Lusardi didn't shell out the money for a signal-boosting device
St. Cloud recommends for those having trouble connecting -- City Hall
sells them for $170.

Fleishman said the fact that others share Lusardi's frustration is a
crucial technical and public relations problem for the vanguard
project. He said residents should understand many won't be able to use
the free network without additional equipment to strengthen the
signal.

"It's very large and it's very ambitious, so they're going to hit some
of these problems before some of the marketing and technology is out
there," he said. "Products have to catch up to this new market."

Fleishman said other cities would likely have the same problems - in
bigger cities, even larger ones -- if they didn't fully inform the
public of necessary equipment and network limits.

Former Mayor Glenn Sangiovanni, who spearheaded the project, stressed
that kinks were still being worked out, but noted that not everyone
was having problems.

"There's a lot of variables, and that's part of it," Sangiovanni
said. "It could be the block construction you have, it could be the
tin roof you have.  There's lots of different things that could be
unique to your environment as opposed to my environment.

"We went into this with the expectation that it's really a year plan
that we're going to implement," he added. "You don't know what you're
going to get into when you take on the whole city because you can't
stress test that."

Ashley Austin, a freshman at nearby Florida Christian College, said
she likes using the network to do homework on the city's picturesque
downtown lakefront. She said it's also the only way to get online if
Internet service is down at the wireless telephone store where she
works.

"So far I haven't had any problems with the use that I've gotten out
of it," she said.

Resident Chuck Cooper, a former city commissioner, bought an antenna,
but still gets a shaky connection. Navigating from one site to another
still produces errors.

Generally, he says, it's slightly faster than dial-up access. But even
critics like him are quick to praise the endeavor in between grumbles
over early problems.

"All in all, I guess it's a good idea," Cooper said. "I equate it to
cell phones 10 to 15 years ago. You used to have a lot of dropped
calls, but now they're substantially better. Hopefully, this will get
a little better a lot quicker."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Texas Community College Bans MySpace.com
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 16:56:47 -0500


Del Mar College students now have to use computers outside the
school's system if they want to visit the popular Web site
MySpace.com.

The community college has blocked the site in response to complaints
about sluggish Internet speed on campus computers.

An investigation found that heavy traffic at MySpace.com was eating up
too much bandwidth, said August Alfonso, the school's chief of
information and technology. Forty percent of daily Internet traffic at
the college involved the site, he said.

"This was more about us being able to offer Web-based instruction, and
MySpace.com was slowing everything down," President Carlos Garcia
said.

MySpace.com -- a social networking hub with more 72 million members --
allow users to post searchable profiles that can include photos of
themselves and such details as where they live and what music they
like.

Paul Martinez, 20, is a frequent visitor to MySpace.com and finds the
site to be addictive. Restricting access to the site could be a good
idea, he said.

"The library is pretty much full with people on MySpace, and with them
banning it you won't have anything to distract you," he said.

Some though, disagree with Del Mar College's decision.

"We pay for school and the resources that are used," said Zeke Santos,
20.  "It's our choice, we're the ones paying for our classes. If we
pass or fail, it's up to us."


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headline news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: darktiger <darktiger@gmail.com>
Subject: Verizon UNE DS3 Question
Date: 22 Apr 2006 13:21:27 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hello,

We are a CLEC and have been using Verizon Wholesale for Line Shares
for DSL.

In the interest of paying off our investment in getting fiber to their
CO and the collocation space there, we are interested in running a DS3
from our rack in the VZ CO to a customer premise.

Looking at the rates, I see a DS3 loop cost of $363MRC and a $278NRC
loop provisioning fee ...

We are fine with these rates, but are wondering if anyone else has
ever ordered one of these before and what other fees are attached that
may not be in our pricing schedule. Those prices are very reasonable
and makes me wonder if I should expect a $4000 bill after the loop is
installed.


Thank you,
Scott Brown
Oregon, USA

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

Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 01:42:30 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Google's China Problem (and China's Google Problem)


By CLIVE THOMPSON
The New York Times
April 23, 2006

For many young people in China, Kai-Fu Lee is a celebrity. Not quite
on the level of a movie star like Edison Chen or the singers in the
boy band F4, but for a 44-year-old computer scientist who invariably
appears in a somber dark suit, he can really draw a crowd. When Lee,
the new head of operations for Google in China, gave a lecture at one
Chinese university about how young Chinese should compete with the
rest of the world, scalpers sold tickets for $60 apiece. At another,
an audience of 8,000 showed up; students sprawled out on the ground,
fixed on every word.

It is not hard to see why Lee has become a cult figure for China's
high-tech youth. He grew up in Taiwan, went to Columbia and
Carnegie-Mellon and is fluent in both English and Mandarin. Before
joining Google last year, he worked for Apple in California and then
for Microsoft in China; he set up Microsoft Research Asia, the
company's research-and-development lab in Beijing. In person, Lee
exudes the cheery optimism of a life coach; last year, he published
"Be Your Personal Best," a fast-selling self-help book that urged
Chinese students to adopt the risk-taking spirit of American
capitalism. When he started the Microsoft lab seven years ago, he
hired dozens of China's top graduates; he will now be doing the same
thing for Google. "The students of China are remarkable," he told me
when I met him in Beijing in February. "There is a huge desire to
learn."

Lee can sound almost evangelical when he talks about the liberating
power of technology. The Internet, he says, will level the playing
field for China's enormous rural underclass; once the country's small
villages are connected, he says, students thousands of miles from
Shanghai or Beijing will be able to access online course materials
from M.I.T. or Harvard and fully educate themselves. Lee has been with
Google since only last summer, but he wears the company's earnest,
utopian ethos on his sleeve: when he was hired away from Microsoft, he
published a gushingly emotional open letter on his personal Web site,
praising Google's mission to bring information to the masses. He
concluded with an exuberant equation that translates as "youth +
freedom + equality + bottom-up innovation + user focus + don't be evil
= The Miracle of Google."

When I visited with Lee, that miracle was being conducted out of a
collection of bland offices in downtown Beijing that looked as if they
had been hastily rented and occupied. The small rooms were full of
eager young Chinese men in hip sweatshirts clustered around enormous
flat-panel monitors, debugging code for new Google projects.  "The
ideals that we uphold here are really just so important and noble,"
Lee told me. "How to build stuff that users like, and figure out how
to make money later. And 'Don't Do Evil' " - he was referring to
Google's bold motto, "Don't Be Evil" - "all of those things. I think
I've always been an idealist in my heart."

Yet Google's conduct in China has in recent months seemed considerably
less than idealistic. In January, a few months after Lee opened the
Beijing office, the company announced it would be introducing a new
version of its search engine for the Chinese market. To obey China's
censorship laws, Google's representatives explained, the company had
agreed to purge its search results of any Web sites disapproved of by
the Chinese government, including Web sites promoting Falun Gong, a
government-banned spiritual movement; sites promoting free speech in
China; or any mention of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. If you
search for "Tibet" or "Falun Gong" most anywhere in the world on
google.com, you'll find thousands of blog entries, news items and chat
rooms on Chinese repression. Do the same search inside China on
google.cn, and most, if not all, of these links will be gone. Google
will have erased them completely.

Google's decision did not go over well in the United States. In
February, company executives were called into Congressional hearings
and compared to Nazi collaborators. The company's stock fell, and
protesters waved placards outside the company's headquarters in
Mountain View, Calif. Google wasn't the only American high-tech
company to run aground in China in recent months, nor was it the worst
offender. But Google's executives were supposed to be cut from a
different cloth. When the company went public two years ago, its
telegenic young founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, wrote in the
company's official filing for the Securities and Exchange Commission
that Google is "a company that is trustworthy and interested in the
public good." How could Google square that with making nice with a
repressive Chinese regime and the Communist Party behind it?

 ...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/magazine/23google.html?ex=1303444800&en=972002761056363f&ei=5090

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

Subject: Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure?
From: Steven Lichter <shlichter@sbcglobal.net>
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 20:24:28 GMT


In article telecom25.154.8@telecom-digest.org, Gordon Burditt at
gordonb.mjj57@burditt.org wrote on 4/21/06 16:10:

>> At issue are the user login areas that can be found on banking sites
>> such as Chase.com and Americanexpress.com, which ask users to submit
>> their user ID and password information. Although these forms may be
>> encrypted, they do not use authentication technology to prove they are
>> genuine, according to Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at the
>> SANS Institute.

>> A more secure approach would be to force users to log in on a HTTPS
>> (HyperText Transport Protocol Secure) Web page. HTTPS pages use the
>> SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) security protocol, which not only encrypts
>> the information on the page but also provides digital certificates to
>> give assurance that the Web site in question is genuine.

> SSL is an effective way of transmitting payment information securely to
> the thief operating a web site in such a way that the other thieves
> don't get the info first.

>> "If the login form is not HTTPS, you don't know if it's the real
>> thing," Ullrich said.

> If it's HTTPS, and you don't look at the certificate, you still don't
> know if it's the real thing.  If you don't look at the certificate,
> you don't know it doesn't say: "Union of Nigerian Bank Fraud Artists,
> Third Pile of Money on the Left SUCKER, Nigerian Republic of Bank
> Fraud".  I suspect just about anyone can get a real certificate if
> they use their real name on it, even if they are running a web site
> from inside a prison and freely admit it to Verisign.  Saddam, have
> you applied for a certificate yet?

> If you don't pay attention to warnings about certificate authorities,
> I can make a certificate that looks just like a real bank certificate,
> and it will fool lots of people.  However, it's more fun to make
> certificates for "Satan, Prince of Darkness", and few people will read
> it anyway.  You do get a few browser warnings, however, I suspect a
> lot of people would click OK without thinking to a popup:

> You are about to install the Code Red Virus.
> Only an idiot would deliberately install a virus thinking
> it was anti-virus software.  The install program will also
> drain your checking account and take your soul and first-born
> child.  Install virus anyway?

>> Web pages that do not use this type of secure connection are
>> vulnerable to a type of attack known as DNS (Domain Name System)
>> spoofing, where attackers attempt to trick Web browsers into visiting
>> bogus Web sites.

> And if you don't read the certificates, you won't notice that you
> expected to be connected to Chased Bank and you're really connected to
> Henry's House of Hashish and Aftermarket Biological Weapons.

>> This type of attack is technically challenging, however, and hackers
>> generally find it far easier to trick users into giving up their user
>> names and passwords using phishing techniques, Ullrich said.

>> Though Bank of America allows customers to enter their online IDs on
>> the home page, they cannot submit passwords. The bank sends them to an
>> HTTPS page and uses a technology called SiteKey to confirm to
>> customers that they are at the legitimate Bank of America site before
>> they enter their passwords.

>> "We're committed to safeguarding customer information online and we
>> wouldn't do anything to compromise that security," Riess said.

> Bank of America has an interesting setup to avoid spoofing and
> man-in-the-middle attacks, and it involves the user a bit more.  You
> set up an image (chosen from a set of what might be a few hundred), a
> caption, and some security questions and answers.  (For example, I
> might select an image of a fire-breathing dragon, and caption it "my
> mother-in-law".  I might also select a security question of "What is
> your favorite pet?" with the answer "9/11/2001".  Of course, by
> choosing such wierd answers, I'd better remember the real answers as
> the question won't give much of a hint.)

> 1.  You go to what is supposedly the login page.
> 2.  You put in your ID (but not password)
> 3.  If your computer has the BofA cookie on it for this account,
>     skip to step 7
> 4.  You are asked one of the security questions (I think an SSL page).
> 5.  You answer it.
> 6.  If your answer is correct, the web page offers to put a cookie on
>     the computer you are using (but advises you not to if it's a public
>     system).
> 7.  You get a SSL page showing your selected image and the caption
>     (Together, these are the site key.).
> You are advised *NOT* to enter your password if you don't see the
> correct site key.  Enter your password.
> 8.  You put in the password.
> 9.  If it's correct, you're in, and the cookie from step 6 is added
> if requested.
> 10.  You get the online banking page (SSL) for your account.

> If you usually log in from a small set of computers which by now have
> the cookie on them, you only do steps 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, and 10, and you
> should be suspicious of suddenly getting asked (for a
> man-in-the-middle attack) one of the security questions.

> Notes: if you refuse to accept cookies, you get asked the security
> question, but it still works.  The cookie does NOT substitute for
> knowing the password.

> Although it's hardly foolproof, especially if the user isn't paying
> attention, it's different and it involves the user a bit more, so I
> think it's going to be more effective.

> Gordon L. Burditt

Our credit union started this option a few weeks ago, surprised me
since there was no warning, I found a member newsletter that had said
they were goin to start this.  Also Walmart has it on their online
Pharmacy site to get into your account.

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

From: B. Wright <bmwright@xmission.com>
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 21:51:11 UTC
Organization:  XMission Internet http://www.xmission.com
Subject:  Re: Are Major Banking Sites Insecure?


Gordon Burditt <gordonb.mjj57@burditt.org> wrote:

>> Web pages that do not use this type of secure connection are
>> vulnerable to a type of attack known as DNS (Domain Name System)
>> spoofing, where attackers attempt to trick Web browsers into visiting
>> bogus Web sites.

> And if you don't read the certificates, you won't notice that you
> expected to be connected to Chased Bank and you're really connected to
> Henry's House of Hashish and Aftermarket Biological Weapons.

You're right, most people don't pay attention to the certificate
warnings and even if they did they wouldn't understand how to
determine if it was a legitimate concern or not.  I however, do.
American Express always has an annoying SSL cert misconfiguration of
some sort or other from time to time.  I know they have these
problems, however, still check them when they occur, however if it had
been someone like, say, my mom, I'm sure she wouldn't have a clue.

> Bank of America has an interesting setup to avoid spoofing and
> man-in-the-middle attacks, and it involves the user a bit more.

That's pretty interesting but it still doesn't do anything about any
type of keylogging software that might be on the machine.  This is one
of the reasons I now will never use public computers while traveling
or even friend's machines.  I always explain to them that it's not
that I don't trust them, I just don't trust what they may not know is
running on their computer.  So, I boot a known quantity (Knoppix
Linux) and use that to do any banking.  You would be amazed however at
the number of ignorant internet cafe owners that are 1) "Confident"
they have no viruses/trojans 2) so hard headed and ignorant they won't
allow you to boot a live Linux CD (that's the point I walk out of the
place and find somewhere else).

Citibank UK (apparently not in the US, just checked their page) has
implemented what seems to be, on the surface a good system for
keyloggers.  However, it is crap.  They pop a java "keyboard" applet
up, not only every time you enter your password to login, but EVERY
time you do any type of transactions in your accounts once you are
already logged on.  They keyboard they present to you would be very
visible to anyone standing over your shoulder and it is time
consuming/cumbersome to enter your password.  I have argued with them
over this extensively that, this in and of itself, exposes you to
someone "shoulder surfing" your password.  They could do what my
friend has told me Banco do Brasil is doing and randomize the keyboard
along with making the letters very faint so they are hard to view from
afar.  

There is another more complex attack that could probably be done
against this Citibank UK "virtual keyboard", it wouldn't be hard for
someone to map the mouse movements and determine what the password was
by taking the letters on the furthest extremes, take a guess the first
time, and if that doesn't work simply shift the mapping once or twice
(this would depend on how closely grouped the letters in your password
were, the further apart, the easier it would be to guess it quickly).
Something else which, would likely (I am not sure about this) would be
to attach a debugger to the JVM on the machine and simply grab the
password through this method, after all, if they have compromised the
machine locally they should be able to do this.  Randomizing the
keyboard would also solve, at least, the mouse movement mapping
attack.

As noted, the Citibank UK and US both do things differently for not
only their banking sites, but also their credit card sites.  The UK
banking site uses a completely different login system, the UK credit
card uses another, and the US banking/credit card system seem to use a
common one.  How is that for consistency, even with the same company?!
This is a big problem without an easy solution but maybe it could be
mitigated by having banks adhere to a standard for online
authentication processes rather than such a mixed bag.  The sum of
what could be agreed upon as secure would hopefully turn out to be
much better than any of the half assed systems they're using today and
if nothing else would only require "user training" as to what is "bad"
and "good" once, most non technical people just can't deal with too
much complexity when it comes to things like this and that is why they
always click "OK" regardless.

P.S. One thing I would love while travelling would be "revocable one
time passwords" for sites like this.  You request from a known safe
computer, say, 10 one time use passwords/tokens, then take them with
you.  If they get lost/stolen you can immediately cancel/revoke these
so they can't be used.  This would at least allow you to use,
relatively securely, an "unfriendly" computer in a situation where you
have little choice.

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

Subject: Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed?
From: Charles Gowder <cgowder@cox.net>
Organization: Your Company
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 12:49:38 GMT


af877@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Harry Dodsworth) wrote in news:telecom25.149.5
@telecom-digest.org:

Looking at those connections I'd say you are in the general middle
of the results for 56k modems.

DSL equipment is specifically designed to deliver data over copper and 
there is probably a plan to qualify your individual "loop"

Charles Gowder
cgowder@cox.net

> I'm thinking of getting DSL. It is available in my area now with a
> download speed of 3 Mb/s (to my number and neighbours).

> However the best connection speed I can get over my phone line with a
> 56k modem is 31.2 kb/s. With the same computer I was able to connect
> to freenet at 48k over long distance from Toronto.

> As my POTS line isn't the best, can I still get a good DSL connection?

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

From: Geoffrey Welsh <reply@newsgroup.please>
Subject: Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed?
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 17:18:39 -0400
Organization: UseNetServer.com


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Before you invest your money in DSL, I
> would at least look at a cable modem. Cable is typically just a wee
> bit faster, plus you get the flexibility of changing telcos if you
> find a telco you like better.   PAT]

Since the original poster is in Ottawa, I'm guessing his cable
provider is Rogers and his telco is Bell Canada.  Those two companies
have been offering practically identical speed/price packages, every
move by one matched by the other and, historically, (IMNSHO) Bell's
network has had a better reputation.  Perhaps more importantly, not
very long ago Rogers experienced a customer relations fiasco as a
result of disconnecting the alleged highest-bandwidth customers in
areas where they received performance complaints, despite protests by
some of the disconnected users that they curtailed or even discon-
tinued their internet use immediately after receiving a warning.
Disconnecting users for allegedly violating undefinable bandwidth caps
and other past faux pas earn Rogers dead last place on my list of
potential providers and a "wee bit faster" connection isn't going to
change that.

It is also worth noting that, if the original poster decides to go
DSL, he can choose from many comapnies offering different prices and
options.  For example, after paying Bell Sympatico $10/month modem
rental fee for several years I bought my own and switched to Primus
Canada, who charge about the same as Bell Sympatico minus the
$10/month modem rental fee for the same connection speed; over two
years later, I'm way ahead and satisfied with Primus.  There are
cheaper providers, and providers with more features (e.g.  fixed IP
address without paying for business-class service) if you want.

Canadians looking for internet access can use
http://www.canadianisp.com/ to find details of ISPs' offerings in
their area. (NOTE: I am not in any way affiliated with that web site.)

In theory, Canadian regulations permit you to mix and match telcos and
DSL providers (as long as both wholesale the subscriber loop or the
DSL infrastructure from Bell Canada), though I have yet to hear
stories of this happeneing smoothly.


Geoffrey Welsh <Geoffrey [dot] Welsh [at] bigfoot [dot] com>
Never leave until tomorrow what can wait until next week. 

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

From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl>
Subject: Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed?
Date: 23 Apr 2006 13:54:44 GMT
Organization: http://idefix.net/~koos/


Harry Dodsworth <af877@freenet.carleton.ca> wrote in
<telecom25.149.5@telecom-digest.org>:

> I'm thinking of getting DSL. It is available in my area now with a
> download speed of 3 Mb/s (to my number and neighbours).

> However the best connection speed I can get over my phone line with a
> 56k modem is 31.2 kb/s. With the same computer I was able to connect
> to freenet at 48k over long distance from Toronto.

> As my POTS line isn't the best, can I still get a good DSL connection?

I had the same worries when I switched from a 2-wire leased line which
had trouble staying at 33k6 after rainy days (56k requires special
digital equipment at the ISP end of the line so I was limited to 33k6
and two leased-line modems) to ADSL (named 'mxstream by kpn' in those
days).

Either I was very lucky (the ADSL service was on a different pair
which had ISDN with no bit-errors at all) or ADSL is affected in
different ways than analog modems.

I have monitored the ADSL stats for that line for years, using scripts
you can find at http://idefix.net/~koos/speedtouchgraph/ if you happen
to have a speedtouch home modem and perl. The 'maximum line rate'
reported was always very high, around 7 megabit. The used line rate
was ofcourse lower, limited to what the subscription said.

This in a Dutch city with its high population density and short
distances to exchanges.

Koos van den Hout

Camp Wireless, wireless Internet access at campsites| Koos van den Hout
http://www.camp-wireless.org/                       | http://idefix.net/~koos/
PGP keyid DSS/1024 0xF0D7C263 or RSA/1024 0xCA845CB5| Fax +31-30-2817051

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

Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 18:30:50 -0600
From: Anthony Bellanga <anthonybellanga@notchur.biz
Reply-To: no-spam@no-spam.no-spam
Subject: Re: NPA-NXX Lists


******************************
PAT:
PLEASE DO NOT display my email
address anywhere in this post!
Thnx
*****************************

Jan Schmidt asked:

> Am looking for a site where one can enter the AC and NNX and find out
> what city the telephone number is located in.

The US NPA-NXX lists, direct from Neustar NANPA (North American
Numbering Plan Administration), can be found at:

http://www.nanpa.com/reports/reports_cocodes.html

and then click on "Central Office Code Utilized Reports", and then
select the state and NPA you wish to find the NXX central office code
for. There will be information as to the city and "default" telephone
company that the NPA-NXX code is associated with. As for the telephone
company, remember that there is also "thousands-blocks"
sub-assignments, as well as portability, which isn't necessarily
reflected in these lists.

Neustar NANPA's Central Office Code data will include only United States
jurisdictions, including DC, Alaska (907), Hawaii (808), Puerto Rico
(787 and its 939 overlay), US Virgin Islands (340), Guam (671), the
Northern Mariana Islands: Saipan, Tinian, Rota (670), and American Samoa
(684).

Canadian NPA-NXX lists can be found from the SAIC CNA (Canadian Numbering
Administrtor)'s website, at:

http://www.cnac.ca/mapcodes.htm

Click on the area code region on the map of Canada, or the area code
as indicated in the list of codes just below the map, and you'll get a
larger list of all NXX central office codes and information as to the
city and "default" assigned telephone company. Again, remember that
with portability, the customer might have ported their number away
from the "default" telephone company assigned.

Those parts of the Caribbean which are a part of the NANP (North
American Numbering Plan, Country Code +1) but outside of the United
States (i.e., the Dominican Republic, and also the various "British"
islands, such as Bermuda, Bahamas, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago,
Grenada, etc) assign their own NXX codes within their NANPA assigned
NPAs. You might have to find individual websites maintained by the
various island country's numbering assignment bodies for further
details.

However, Ray Chow (of Toronto ON Canada) maintains a "Local Calling
Area" website, which can be a very useful resource for the entire NANP
region, including those Caribbean areas part of the NANP but not part
of the US:

http://members.dandy.net/~czg/lca_index.php

But also note: Ray has indicated in the Yahoo Group he created on
local calling area issues, that he might need to move his website to
another server/domain in the near future!

Hope this helps!

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

Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 11:37:48 PDT
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: NPA - NNX


On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 13:05:10 -0500 Jan Schmidt <JanS@bluebeacon.com>
wrote:

> Am looking for a site where one can enter the AC and NNX and find out
> what city the telephone number is located in.  Do you offer that
> somewhere on your web site?

One site to look at is telcodata.us <http://www.telcodata.us>  There is
also a lookup on dandy.net, but don't have that handy.  Just checked it
out if you go to http://google.com and type in the search box NXX it
will tell you where that is e.g. NXX = 508-775 will get you a result of
Hyannis, Massachusetts. NXX = 206-354 will show Seattle, Washington 
NXX = 207-549 will show North Whitefield, Maine.

Oh, and BTW NNX is likely not what you're looking for. NXX would be
the format of area codes and central office codes.  NXX means N= any
number between 2 and 9 and X= any number i.e. 0 - 9 (including 1 and
0.)

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

Date: 22 Apr 2006 19:00:07 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Podcasting Not For Most People


> When I first heard about sites like eBay and craigslist, I thought
> they would suffer from much the same problem.  If anyone can sell
> their junk, these sites will presumably be filled mostly with junk.

> I don't use these sites myself, so I still wonder how they've been so
> successful despite this.

They're very well organized.  Google is filled with junk, too, but we
don't care because we type in some search terms and we get a snapshot
of just what we wanted.  Ebay is set up the same way, with a nicely
integrated subject tree and search system that lets you zero in on the
stuff of interest quickly.  If you don't find it, with another click
or two you can tell it to rerun the search every day and send you mail
if something turns up.  (obTelecom coming up) I buy all sorts of
exotic communication cards quite cheaply because I have a standing
search for them and I'm usually the only bidder.

To return to someone else's restaurant analogy, my ideal restaurant
only has one thing on the menu, but it's exactly what I want.

R's,

John

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

From: Fred Atkinson <fatkinson@mishmash.com>
Subject: Re: Number Portability: POTS, VoIP, and Cellular 
Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 15:28:03 -0400


> Some VoIP service is offered by companies that are information service
> providers, not telecommunications carriers, such as Vonage.  Since
> they aren't telecom carriers, they generally don't interconnect
> directly with the PSTN and don't get numbers directly from the
> numbering administrator (or the pooling administrator).  So Vonage et
> al don't have numbers of their own in any rate centers.  Instead,
> Vonage et al. buy numbers from telecom carriers, presumably CLECs, who
> obtain numbers from the numbering adminstrator (or the pooling
> administrator) in various rate centers.  If Vonage has a deal with a
> CLEC such as Covad (just using Covad as an illustration; I don't know
> whether they have such a deal) to get numbers in a particular rate
> center, then numbers in that rate center would be portable to and from
> Vonage via Covad; this should be true of wireline and wireless numbers
> in that rate center.

I recently ported my Vonage SC issued number over to Carolina Net.
There was no problem with it.  It now works fine on my Carolina Net
provided router (on line 2).

On the other hand, Voicepulse is fighting my porting request for my NC
number.  They say that because their policy is that you can't port
your number away from them (unless you brought the number to them in
the first place), that they don't have to release your number.  In
addition to that, they say that if they are forced by legal means to
release your number, that their policy says that you have to pay them
a fee for that release.

I have a great deal of trouble understanding how their policy
overrules FCC number portability regulations.  I've got a complaint
filed with the FCC.  I never got a copy of the letter that the FCC
sent to Voicepulse, but I did get a copy of Voicepulse's reply.  They
are saying that their policy makes them exempt from having to re-port
my number.  I haven't heard from the FCC on that yet.  I emailed the
FCC asking about the status of my complaint a few days ago.  The reply
was that they haven't read the reply from Voicepulse as yet.

I've had problems with Voicepulse service.  They seem unwilling to
resolve them.  The problems have included quality of transmission,
some problems with my voicemail, my phone ringing one time and
stopping at some odd hour of the morning (which they admit they were
having a technical problem but it went on for quite some time before
they got it resolved), and a general lack of interest in getting these
problems fixed.  I was awakened prematurely on a number of occasions
because of this issue.

One of my students is using Voicepulse at home.  He called and left a
message on my office voicemail and I couldn't even tell it was him
because it was so garbled.  I thought it was a wrong number until he
said his name at the end of the message.  When I spoke to him in
person later, he confirmed that it was a Voicepulse call to my Verizon
phone at the office.

Basically, they are retaining customers because they won't release the
numbers.  I've got my number published in Verizon directory assistance
here in the area.  If I drop it, that number will simply be dead and
people who are trying to reach me will not be able to.  VOIP providers
don't put up a 'the number you have reached ... has been changed to
 ...' recording when you cancel.  What does that do to a business that
is using their service and becomes dis-satisfied with the service [as
I have been] and their numbers are published and their customers
wouldn't know how to reach them?  Put up with quality problems?
Sheesh.

Regards,

Fred Atkinson

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

Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 08:50:14 -0400
From: John Stahl <aljon@stny.rr.com>
Subject: Re: New Technology Will Force TV Ad Viewing


On 20 April 2006, May Wong <ap@telecom-digest.org>, contributed:

> In this era of easy ad skipping with TiVo-like video recorders, could
> television viewers one day be forced to watch commercials with a
> system that prevents channel switching?

> Yes, according to Royal Philips Electronics. A patent application with
> the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office says researchers of the
> Netherland-based consumer electronics company have created a
> technology that could let broadcasters freeze a channel during a
> commercial, so viewers wouldn't be able to avoid it....

> In this era of easy ad skipping with TiVo-like video recorders, could
> television viewers one day be forced to watch commercials with a
> system that prevents channel switching?

> Yes, according to Royal Philips Electronics. A patent application with
> the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office says researchers of the
> Netherland-based consumer electronics company have created a
> technology that could let broadcasters freeze a channel during a
> commercial, so viewers wouldn't be able to avoid it.

If all else fails to deter this newly patented "technology", one could
turn off the TV set for 3-minutes (typical duration of commercials now
days); or else, maybe do as many others do during those long
commercials, go grab a bite to eat, read a book or even go to the WC
(bathroom!)


John Stahl
Aljon Enterprises
Telecom/Data Consultant

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

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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 24 Apr 2006 12:50:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 156

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Retired Trucker Uses CB Radio to Help Others (Jason George)
    University of Texas Probes Computer Breach (Associated Press Nws Wire)
    Air Force One Subject of Internet Hoax (Ted Bridis)
    For MySpace, Making Friends Was Easy; Big Profit Is Tougher (Monty Solomon)
    Cellular-News for Monday 24th April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Telecom Direct Daily Update - April 24, 2006 (Telecom Direct Daily Update)
    Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft (masonboro_island)
    Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed? (Harry Dodsworth)
    Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer (Robert Bonomi) 
    Telecommunications Alternatives For the Distributed Workforce (kimi)
    New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA (TELECOM Digest Editor)

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From: Jason George <chi-trib@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Retired Trucker With CB Radio
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 07:05:22 -0500



http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0604230404apr23,1,3297441.story?track=rss

Retired trucker still in driver's seat
With his CB, he helps steer big rigs down the right path

By Jason George, Tribune staff reporter. 
Tribune staff reporter Dave Wischnowsky contributed to this report

April 23, 2006

He's known as Penthouse 13, the Driver in the Sky and the Angel of I-57.

Morning to night, he guides truckers around traffic accidents, road
construction and weight-restricted bridges that could buckle under
heavy freight.

"Backing up bad at 3-3-7," his husky voice cautions all on the
airwaves, referencing the highway mile marker.

The lane-jamming Dan Ryan Expressway construction project that began
this spring has made his advice to "avoid that Ryan" that much more
helpful to out-of-town drivers.

Mainstream America might have sent CB radios and eight-track copies of
"Convoy" to its curbs decades ago, but the inexpensive devices have
remained a trucking mainstay. And so, Earl Wieringa, who first crammed
his 6-foot-5 frame behind the wheel of a truck in 1946, now sits
behind the microphone on channel 19, calling out to every CB within 40
miles of Kankakee.

 From there, the 76-year-old retired truck driver uses his 13th-floor
apartment -- hence the handles Penthouse 13 and Driver in the Sky -- to
impart a lifetime of driving knowledge.

"Drive careful. Be safe. And have a good trip," he ends the countless
conversations he has during about seven hours per day in front of the
dials.

Leaning back from a large silver microphone that would've looked at
home on the desk of Edward R. Murrow, Wieringa flashes a toothy grin
before lighting up one of his Grand 100 filter cigarettes.

"I love it," he says.

So do the truckers. Wayne Reynolds, who hauls retail merchandise out
of nearby Bradley, admits that even he, a local driver, has been saved
a time or two by Penthouse 13's over-the-road omniscience.

"The guy is knowledgeable," he said, taking a rest at a Monee
truck-stop diner, mile marker 335.

"There are a lot of people that have base stations around the country
that will help you, but Penthouse is a retired trucker," Reynolds
said. "He knows it all."

Wieringa's one-bedroom apartment is sparsely decorated -- a few
seashells on top of the small television, a Hooters poster that he
swears was a gift from a niece. Back by the bay windows in his living
room, his electronics spread resembles a Radio Shack.

Connected to a suitcase-size CB unit sits his silver microphone. He has
stacks of phone books and maps to assist the wayward driver. A flashlight, a
strobe light and white Christmas lights that form a "13" in the windows all
allow him to signal to truckers that he is more than just a voice in their
cabs.

"I've got a good view up here," he said, looking north. "I can see all
the way to Mokena," about 30 miles.

Born in 1929, Wieringa grew up in Chicago Heights, where his love
affair with all things truck began. At 16, he drove his first one
professionally, hauling garbage at the Olympia Fields Country
Club. "We were making $1.10 an hour," he said. "Heck, in the '40s that
was good."

Two years later, Wieringa shipped out to the Pacific with the Army,
where he remained until 1952, driving trucks and Jeeps. "Anything that
had wheels or an engine I drove it," he said.

After returning home, Wieringa eventually left Illinois and headed
west to California, where he lived for 37 years. "In '63 everybody was
out of work so I thought, `I like driving,'" he said. "So for 16 years
I drove a bus" in metropolitan Los Angeles.

In 2000, divorced and childless, Wieringa decided to move to Kankakee
at the suggestion of his brother, Archie, who drove trucks there. 
Finally retired from decades in the driver's seat, Wieringa got a
small CB unit and a window magnet antenna so he could talk to his
brother, whose routes passed his apartment.

"If I leant out on the edge, it could go a mile or a mile-and-a-half," he
said of its weak signal.

He has since upgraded in a serious way. His CB unit is now twice as
big. And it's wired to 150 feet of coaxial cable that runs up to the
roof, where a 17-foot antenna pole makes the signal as strong as a
small radio station.

"The antenna upstairs took me six months to get the OK," he said
proudly.

Gerry Kilbride, who manages Wieringa's independent-living building for
residents 55 and older, admitted that at first the idea of the massive
antenna made him raise an eyebrow, but after repeatedly listening to
Wieringa's pleadings, it was impossible to deny the request.

"He loves talking to these truckers," Kilbride said.

Talking is about all Wieringa said he's prepared to do these days. "My
driving days are over," he said, before confessing that he recently
took a buddy's tractor-trailer for a brief spin.

"It was fun," he said. Just the same, he's now happier steering
drivers from the bar stool in his living room.

"One time it was real icy and snowy, and they couldn't stay on the
road," he recalled of an incident last winter. "The semis were sliding
all over the place, and I guided about eight or 10 of them into the
flea market parking lot" in Kankakee.

He said that he never chitchats on the airwaves, believing that CB
talk should be professional, G-rated and always as brief as possible.

"If I can help them find things or let them know there's a tie-up, I
like to help," he said. "I know what they're going to come up
against."

About 4:30 every afternoon, Wieringa drives his Crown Victoria about a
mile down the road to his girlfriend's house for an hour or two. There
she cooks him a hot meal.

"And you can't refuse that," he said, laughing.

Wieringa never strays far from his radio though. He has installed one
in his car, and put another in his girlfriend's vehicle. When asked
how she handles sharing him with the CB, Wieringa cracked a laugh that
sounded like Waylon Jennings' and just shook his head.

"She's a lovely woman," he said.

jageorge@tribune.com

Copyright 2006, Chicago Tribune

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daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
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------------------------------

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: University of Texas Probes  Computer Breach
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 07:08:18 -0500


University of Texas Probes Computer Breach

Nearly 200,000 electronic records at the University of Texas at
Austin's business school have been illegally accessed, the school said
Sunday.

It's the school's second major breach in three years.

The university said it learned late Friday that some Social Security
numbers and possibly biographical material of students, alumni,
faculty and staff might have been accessed.

The university has notified the state attorney general's office and
established a call center and Web site for those whose records might
have been breached.

"Our effort has been to help people whose information may have been
exposed," said university President William Powers Jr.

Officials discovered that some records at the McCombs School of
Business had been breached as early April 11.

"We think the problem has been limited to McCombs," Powers
said. "Since then, we've been working to make sure the entire system,
not just McCombs, is secure."

Last year, a former UT student received five years probation and was
ordered to pay $170,000 in restitution for hacking into the school's
computer system in 2003 and accessing almost 40,000 Social Security
numbers.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

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daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
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For more headline news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Ted Bridis <ap@telecom-digest.org>p 
Subject: Air Force One Subject of Internet Hoax
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 07:10:07 -0500


By TED BRIDIS, Associated Press Writer

A startling Internet video that shows someone spraying graffiti on
President Bush's jet looked so authentic that the Air Force wasn't
immediately certain whether the plane had been targeted.

It was all a hoax. No one actually sprayed the slogan "Still Free" on
the cowling of Air Force One.

The pranksters responsible for the grainy, two-minute Web video -
employed by a New York fashion company - revealed Friday how they
pulled it off: a rented 747 in California painted to look almost
exactly like Air Force One.

"I wanted to do something culturally significant, wanted to create a
real pop-culture moment," said Marc Ecko of Marc Ecko
Enterprises. "It's this completely irreverent, over-the-top thing that
could really never happen: this five-dollar can of paint putting a
pimple on this Goliath."

The video shows hooded graffiti artists climbing barbed-wire fences
and sneaking past guards with dogs to approach the jumbo jet. They
spray-paint a slogan associated with free expression.

After the video began circulating on the Web on Tuesday, the Air Force
checked to see whether the plane had been vandalized.

"We're looking at it, too," said Lt. Col. Bruce Alexander, a spokesman
for the Air Mobility Command's 89th Airlift Wing, which operates Air
Force One.  "It looks very real."

Alexander later confirmed that no such spray-painting had occurred.

Ecko acknowledged Friday that his company had rented a 747 cargo jet
at San Bernardino's airport and covertly painted one side to look like
Air Force One. Employees signed secrecy agreements and worked inside a
giant hangar until the night the video was made. Ecko declined to say
how much the stunt cost.

"It's not cheap," he said. "You have to be rich."

On the Net:

Hoax video: http://www.stillfree.com
Air Force One: http://public.andrews.amc.af.mil

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
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http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2006 21:51:25 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: For MySpace, Making Friends Was Easy; Big Profit Is Tougher


By SAUL HANSELL
The New York Times
April 23, 2006

SANTA MONICA, Calif.

ALMOST on a lark, Chris DeWolfe bought the Internet address
MySpace.com in 2002, figuring that it might be useful someday. At
first, he used the site to peddle a motorized contraption, made in
China and called an E-scooter, for $99.

Selling products online comes naturally to him. Having jumped into the
Internet business in the early days, Mr. DeWolfe had become a master
of the aggressive forms of online marketing, including e-mail messages
and pop-up advertising. After the Internet bubble burst, he even built
a site that let people download computer cursors in the form of waving
flags; the trick was that they also downloaded software that would
monitor their Internet movements and show them pop-up ads.

Very quickly, however, Mr. DeWolfe's tactics for MySpace changed. He
had noticed the popularity of Friendster, a rapidly growing Web site
that let people communicate with their friends and meet the friends
of their friends. What would happen, he wondered, if he combined this
type of social networking with the sort of personal expression
enabled by other sites for creating Web pages or online journals?

He convinced the executives of eUniverse, the company that had bought
his own marketing firm, ResponseBase, to back his plan. As soon as the
site was reintroduced, in the summer of 2003, Mr. DeWolfe saw it grow
quickly with little marketing. And although his scrappy backer was
hungry for cash, he resisted pressure to flood MySpace with
advertising and to turn all of its members into money.

"Chris came from ResponseBase, and they knew all the direct marketing
tactics to get money out of almost anything," said Brett C. Brewer,
the former president of eUniverse, which was later renamed Intermix
Media. "But I give him credit: from literally the first or second
month, he realized MySpace could be something we really need to
protect because user confidence in the site was paramount."

Now MySpace has a new owner -- Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation,
which bought MySpace and Intermix last year for $649 million -- and
the pressure on Mr. DeWolfe to find a way to make much more money from
MySpace is far greater.

But the opportunity is greater, too. More than 70 million members have
signed up -- more than twice as many as MySpace had when Mr.  Murdoch
agreed to buy it -- drawn by a simple format that lets users build
their own profile pages and link to the pages of their friends.  It
has tapped into three passions of young people: expressing themselves,
interacting with friends and consuming popular culture.

MySpace now displays more pages each month than any other Web site
except Yahoo. More pages, of course, means more room for ads. And, in
theory, those ads can be narrowly focused on each member's personal
passions, which they conveniently display on their profiles. As an
added bonus for advertisers, the music, photos and video clips that
members place on their profiles constitutes a real-time barometer of
what is hot.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/business/yourmoney/23myspace.html?ex=1303444800&en=68344369c2b006ac&ei=5090

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

Subject: Cellular-News for Monday 24th April 2006
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 07:38:10 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[Financial News]]

Ericsson Profit Flat As Marconi Deal, Margins Weigh
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17073.php

Ericsson, the world's largest supplier of mobile-phone network
equipment, reported flat profit Friday due to the recent purchase of
Marconi and receding margins. ...

ANALYSIS: TelefÃ³nica's investment in Telecom not all it seems
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17080.php

Spain's Telefonica recently announced plans to invest US$670mn in its
new property, Colombia Telecomunicaciones (Telecom). But upon closer
examination, the investment may not be all that it seems. In fact,
technically there may be no foreign fina...

Tricom plans to invest US$31mn this year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17082.php

Dominican Republic telco, Tricom plans to invest 1bn pesos (US$31mn)
on expansion and quality improvement works this year, local press
reported. ...

Vodafone Eying a Return to Landline Telecoms
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17086.php

Media reports over the weekend suggest that Vodafone is preparing to
drop its cellular-only policy and move into the landline market,
offering triple play services. The UK based Telegraph newspaper,
citing an unnamed Vodafone executive said that the ...

SFR Reports Steady Revenues Growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17090.php

The French mobile network, SFR - a subsidiary of Vivendi Universal
reported that Q1 2006 revenues grew by 3.4% (by 2.9% on a comparable
basis) to US$2.6 billion. The favorable effects of the increase in
customer base along with the growth in "voice" ...

[[Handsets News]]

Second Hand Phones for Iraq
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17092.php

The UK's Labour Union body, the TUC launched an appeal last week for
unions and their members to pass on their used mobile phones to the
Iraqi trade union movement as an act of 'second-hand solidarity'. On
of the requests from unions representing wor...

[[Legal News]]

Watchdog says MegaFon unit should abolish discriminatory tariffs
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17075.php

A branch of the Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS) in Russia's
constituent republic of Kabardino-Balkaria has ruled that
Mobicom-Kavkaz, a subsidiary of Russia?s third largest mobile operator
MegaFon, should abolish discriminatory tariffs, the FAS sa...

Russian police arrest suspect in illegal cell phone imports
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17078.php

An investigating committee of the Russian Interior Ministry has
arrested a suspect who was allegedly involved in illegal imports of
mobile handsets, the committee said in a press release Friday. ...

[[Mobile Content News]]

Vodafone Offers Mobile TV in Italy
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17091.php

The Italian TV Broadcaster, Mediaset and Vodafone Italia have signed
an agreement designed to accelerate and boost the technology and
commercial rollout of mobile terrestrial digital TV using DVB-H
(Digital Video Broadcast - Handheld) technology in I...

[[Network Operators News]]

Third Network Set To Launch in September
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17083.php

Azerbaijan's newest GSM network operator, Azerphone says that it
expects to start offering commercial services in September this
year. The Minister of Communication and Information Technologies Ali
Abbasov said that Azerphone is current building its ...

New HQ For Caribbean Digicel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17085.php

In the week of celebrating its fifth anniversary, the Caribbean based
Digicel, has recorded a growth rate of 69% and laid plans to build a
new headquarters in Kingston for its Jamaican staff base of 1,000. It
was five years ago this week that Digicel...

Slovenian Network Buys Rival
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17087.php

Mobilkom Austria Slovenian subsidiary Si.Mobil has paid US$26 million
to buy struggling rival GSM operator, Vega. Si.mobil reached an
agreement with Western Wireless International, the owner of Vega,
which is going to exit Slovenian market. Si.mobil ...

Phone Services Shut-Down in Nepal Again
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17094.php

Yet again, mobile phone services in Nepal have been cut by the
Royalist government. The mobile services in the Kathmandu valley from
Nepal Telecom (NT) and Mero Mobile, along with the CDMA limited
mobility service from United Telecom Ltd (UTL) have a...

[[Personnel News]]

Sprint Nextel To Pay Its Directors $70,000/Year Retainer Fee
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17074.php

Sprint Nextel Corp. disclosed Friday that all of its directors will
receive an annual retainer fee of $70,000. ...

[[Regulatory News]]

Sprint Nextel, Walt Disney Agree On Spectrum Relocation
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17071.php

Sprint Nextel and Walt Disney's ABC Owned Television Stations Group
agreed to relocate spectrum use, allowing Sprint to offer commercial
mobile radio services over a portion of the 2-gigahertz band. ...

Chile's Smartom Wins Telefonica Moviles Spectrum Auction
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17072.php

Chilean mobile telecommunications provider Smartcom won the auction of
mobile spectrum offered by the Chilean unit of mobile telephony
company Telefonica Moviles, a Moviles Chile spokesman said
Thursday. ...

Nextel asks govt to keep close eye on Telmex
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17076.php

Trunking service provider Nextel del Peru has asked Peru's government
to closely supervise competitor Telmex as it develops its concession
for fixed wireless local loop service in Lima and Callao, newspaper El
Peruano reported. ...

Ministry to outsource mobile service quality monitoring
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17077.php

Colombia's communications ministry plans to outsource the supervision
and monitoring of the service quality provided by the country's mobile
operators, newspaper La Republica reported. ...

Analyst: Transparency, quick decision making crucial for Cofetel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17079.php

Following a recent reshuffle at Mexico's telecoms regulator Cofetel,
it is crucial for the new officials to bring transparency and quick
decision making to the entity if the industry is to see significant
competitiveness improvements, indu! stry anal...

Govt halts WiMax auctions to review fees, bandwidth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17081.php

Colombia's communications ministry has suspended auctions of
department-level WiMax spectrum to reevaluate licensing technical
details, newspaper La Republica reported. ...

[[Reports News]]

Cellphones Cited In Car Accident Survey
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17084.php

Driver inattention is the leading factor in most crashes and
near-crashes, according to a landmark research report released today
by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the
Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI). Nea...

Smartphones Pose a Security Challenge to Enterprise Network Managers
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17089.php

Smartphones and other high-end wireless devices now enabling the
enterprise mobility revolution may pose significant security risks for
enterprise telecom and IT departments that don't take adequate
measures to protect network resources, according to...

Home and Mobile Network Convergence the 'New Frontier' for the Digital
Home http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17093.php

While much new technology for the connected home in recent years was
intended to connect consumer entertainment devices to the home
network, ABI Research believes the next frontier is the merger of the
digital home network with mobile devices. Today ...

[[Technology News]]

Nokia Teams Up With MIT
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17088.php

Nokia and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has
announced the opening of the Nokia Research Center Cambridge. The
joint research facility, a collaboration between Nokia Research Center
and MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intellige...

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

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 12:17:09 -0400
From: Telecomdirect_Daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, April 24, 2006


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 24, 2006
********************************

Newport Snares 21CN Exec
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17637?11228

     Session border controller vendor Newport Networks Ltd. scored
     something of an appointment coup this morning by announcing Alan
     Nunn, formerly the chief voice architect for BT Group plc's 21CN
     project, as its CTO.  Nunn was with BT for 19 years, and spent
     the past three to four years working alongside CTO Matt Bross on
     the voice...

Examining Customer Loyalty in Mobile
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17636?11228

     Can improved customer loyalty efforts increase revenue for mobile
     operators? For the small independents and new MVNOs, the answer
     absolutely is "yes." For large mobile operators, though, managing
     customer information and call volume is challenge enough, making
     personalized care a nice idea but difficult to achieve. Whether
     this will...

Meshing Things Up
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17634?11228

     The emergence of wireless mesh technologies as a potential
     low-cost alternative to more traditional, but pricier wireless
     networks, and their appeal as a possible component of the
     quadruple play of video, voice, data and wireless services, is
     driving a host of new players--from cable operators and equipment
     manufacturers to municipal...

Transistor Laser Research Moves Forward
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17631?11228

     Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign say
     they are closer to commercializing the room temperature
     transistor laser they unveiled last year. The team recently
     coaxed the device to reveal its fundamental properties, helping
     them to better understand its functionality and potential uses.
     When they announced their...

Netherlands: Versatel, Tele2 to Review Merger Details
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17630?11228

     Dutch alternative telco Versatel has announced a review of the
     original merger conditions with pan-European alternative telco
     Tele2, after minority shareholders won a court ruling last month
     against plans to give them a proportionate stake in the merged
     company. Tele2 bought over 80% of Versatel last July and planned
     to gain 100% control...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: masonboro_island@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft
Date: 23 Apr 2006 15:11:02 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


That's an interesting idea.  Wouldn't people just give fake numbers
though?  I went to the website but I'm not completely sure how it
works.  When you sign up the site calls the number you provided?

I'm at least happy that social networking sites are acknowledging the
problem and that places like NCMEC are providing services where people
can report child exploitation.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Another site where child exploitation
is dealt with in an unusual -- almost vigilate way -- is
http://perverted-justice.com   PAT]

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

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 04:03:50 GMT
From: af877@freenet.carleton.ca (Harry Dodsworth)
Subject: Re: Does DSL Speed Correlate With POTS Speed?
Organization: National Capital Freenet, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada


Many thanks to those who answered my question, which was essentially,

> Will I get a good DSL connection when I only connect at 31.2kb on POTS".

The consensus of the answers was "Probably!"

As Geoffrey Walsh wrote about the financial side, I will comment on that.

I'm not anxious to get cable service from Rogers. Partly because I
still remember their negative option billing fiasco (they increased
rates for supplying extra TV channels unless you opted out). Partly
because of local dissatisfaction with their unilateral bandwidth
capping and the dropping of newsgroups. Mainly because I don't have
cable TV, so I either have to add that or pay a surcharge for cable
internet without TV.

However I am a Bell Canada customer. Apparently all DSL service in
Ottawa is provided by Bell Nexxia. This is wholesaled off to various
ISPs who sell it as part of various plans. Bell Sympatico, the ISP
branch of Bell, include 24/7 help desk, MSN, and various features and
rent modems.  Freenet, a non-profit community ISP, sells DSL at a
lower markup but with fewer features. Troubleshooting is done by
volunteers or through online discussion groups (I've lived with that
for 12 years on dialup).  Static IP service is available for a small
surcharge.  Users may supply their own DSL modems. However Freenet
sell the Speedtouch 516 (for single port ethernet) or Speedtouch 585
(4 ports + wireless). The advantage of these is that they are supplied
configured for Freenet, and the volunteers are familiar with them if
there are problems.

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer
Date: Apr 18, 2006  7:43 PM
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.131.12@telecom-digest.org>, Mike
<mike@smirtware.com> wrote:

> Spammer strikes again...

> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: mgriffinb@you-have-won.net < <mailto:mgriffinb@you-have-won.net>
> mgriffinb@you-have-won.net>
> Date: Apr 6, 2006 8:47 AM
> Subject: XXXX XXXXX, please call

> Mike,

> Please call us at 1-866-677-4100.  We previously tried to contact you
> at 1-248-XXX-XXXX, but were unable to reach you.  This is reference to
> an entry form you filled out, either on-line or at a major mall or
> movie theater.

> We actually have some decent news in regards to the Grand Getaways and
> Ford Explorer contest.  We have an address, claim number, and further
> details for you.  Since all prizes are well over $500, we will need a
> few moments of your time to cover all related lottery-type information
> from procuring your prizes due to any tax issues on them.

> Sincere congratulations!

> Verification Center

> P.S. For your convenience, we are available 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM Central
> Standard Time, Monday to Friday

> 68.61.169.153  <http://68.61.169.153> Jan 30 2006 12:45PM

> Please follow url below to stop further emails
> http://www.you-have-won.net/cgi-bin/frame1.cgi?email=XXXXXXXXXXXXX.com

> Sender:
> Verification Center
> 105 South River Rd
> North Aurora, IL, 60542

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I can only presume that Mr. Bonomi (the
> author of the note before this last one) places _me_ and this Digest
> in the same category as the 'Verification Center' above since _these_
> are the sort of things which AOL would require to pay their own way. 
> PAT]

Ah, but the real question is: *WHO*decides* whether you are, or are
not, in the same category?  And what the 'definition' of that category
is.

I'm quite sure that if that 'verification center' was making the
determinations, that they *would* put themselves in the "wouldn't
have to pay" class, while it is unpredictable how they would classify
Telecom Digest.

It is also an undeniable fact that some of the mailings originating
from the Digest moderator are *indistinguishable* from what the 'evil
spammers' send out.  If AOL, for example, looked at one or more of
those instances where the esteemed moderator decided to 'share the
wealth' of his incoming spam, by sending it on to *all* the Digest
subscriber mailboxes, it _would_ be very reasonable to classify the
sender as a 'spammer'.  *NOBODY* signed up to the Digest with the
expectation that the moderator would _deliberately_
_and_intentionally_ send them 'lotto', 'Nigeria 419', bank/ebay
'phishing', and other scam messages -- but he =does=.

Note, given that neither the original line-item ("E-mail, should the
sender pay?"), nor our esteemed moderator's impassionedly affirmative
'answer' to that question made any reference to AOL or its policies --
*nor* did my query regarding his answer -- it is hard to imagine how
any rational person would/ could conclude that I was using AOL's
categorization rules as the basis for my query.

BTW, I *DO* have issues with the concept of "sender pays the receiving
ISP to bypass all spam-filtering, regardless of the user's wishes".
Some are of a practical nature, some are philosophical.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The answer to your question is that the
the present-day 'authorities' (who intend to make the decision on 
pay to send mail or not) are the AOL people; they have said that when
_taken in context_ over a long period of time (_NOT_ message by
message but the entire contents of a Digest -- several individual
'messages') this Digest and other established Usenet-style publications
do not qualify as and will not be counted as 'spam'. Context is the
all-important factor; not any one single message out of the thousands
which go out. If YOU honestly believe that taken in context over the
quarter-century this Digest has been published that it amounts to 'spam'
and is no different than the tons of crap which come out daily on no
set publishing schedule, etc, then God Bless You. I guess I will qualify
as spam in your estimation. Yes, there could be a change in the
authorities; yes, the new authorities could take a different approach
to what is what; we will have to deal with it when that time comes, if
it ever does. Furthermore, you read this Digest in one of two ways
only: Either you subscribe and ask to read it (and I can document your
'asking' to receive it if you are a subscriber) or you read it via a
public mailbox (Usenet) in the same way. You do _not_ recieve this
Digest in some sort of shady way, where it just shows up in your mailbox
each day with no documentation. 

That (documentation of your desire to receive it) and/or the overall
context of the publication demonstrates it is not spam/scam. For
everyone that is, except very possibly you, and what I can do for you
if you wish, (and I may anyway for the hell of it) is dummy up my
Usenet headers to always say 'seen-by' r-bonomi.com so Usenet will
never give it to you again (!smile) and purge my mailing lists of any
reference to your name and domain. That should resolve any issues you
may have, or might possibly arise in your decision-making processes
about how to detirmine spam/scam (or not).  PAT]

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

From: kimi <kimi777@gmail.com>
Subject: Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce
Date: 24 Apr 2006 07:07:24 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce (March 2006)
Introduction,Distributed Workforce,Virtual Organization,Field Offices
for Larger Concerns,Virtual PBX,Case Study-Centract,Knowledge Worker
Impact Quotient,Conclusions

http://www.freewebs.com/virtual-pbx/

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

Subject: New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 09:42:51 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


A new sponsor for the Digest are the people who provide _free_
directory assistance in exchange for you listening to one or more ten
second audio commercial messages. I say 'one or more' since you get
one commercial message played to you in exchange for a free directory
assistance listing. After hearing the message, and receiving the
requested number, if you stay on the line and listen to a _second_
message of equal length (another ten-second blurb) then the call is
completed for you at no additional charge. At the present time, there
is no limit on teh length of the call, which means you first dial in
on their toll-free 800 number, listen to the message, pass the
request, receive the information, _then remain on the line_ hear a
second message, and your call is completed at no charge. I am not
positive, but I think the outgoing call is completed via VOIP; there
is no way they could give out 'more expensive' calls (via landline) in
this program.

A special promotion for readers of the Digest:

To show you how it works, and how simple it is, for the indefinite
future you can make calls _directly from this web site_.  You need to 
have either a computer audio card (i.e. Skype software installed) -or-
you need to have a landline phone nearby for your convenience. For
example, I have a phone and a headset right here on my desk next to
the copmputer. You go to http://telecom-digest.org and look in the far
right-hand column where the advertisers/sponsors are listed. Look at
the item marked 'no cost 411' and you will see two 'hot links' as part
of the message, one marked 'more information', the other marked to
'make a call'.

Click on 'make a call' and a pop-up window will appear asking you to
fill in the phone number you wish to be called back on. Fill it in,
and hit the 'GO' button. Your nearby phone (or VOIP phone attached to
the computer) will ring instantly. Pick it up or turn it on. You will
hear chimes and the 'free 411 metro' announcement. Respond to the
robot as requested ('business or personal listing?';'what city and state?' 
and 'what listing?')You may be asked to 'hold for an operator' if the
robot does not know what to do. After the human operator (or the 'bot)
gives the desired number and exits the line, just stay put ... in two
or three seconds (after a pause to see if you are going to hang up or
not) another ten second advertising message is played out, and the
number you were calling begins to ring. Talk as long as you wish, hang
up when you are finished with the call. No charge!  

The first part of this (give your phone number, get a call back and
such) is only needed because you are using a 'direct line' (i.e. java
script) connection to infreeda.com. You can leave that part out if 
you dial direct from your own phone 1-800-411-METRO. If you press the
second button (more information) or the 'Thinking Voice' logo at the
botton of the first button then you will get information on how to
install one of these 'direct connect' buttons for your own web site.
As it is configured, the 'direct connect' button rings back to the
number you gave it and you are speaking to http://infreeda.com . 

Here is the script used to implement all this:
(everything between the XMP (example) and /XMP (/example) marks)

<xmp>
  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
  <html>
  <head>
  <title>Untitled Document</title>
  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
  </head>

  <body>
  <img src="GIF/TELECOM-banner.jpg" width="150" height="117" border="0"
  usemap="#Map"> 
  <map name="Map">
  <area shape="rect" coords="1,91,74,116"
  href="http://call.thinkingvoice.com/callback/default.aspx?cardID=63d1f7b0a7c0423789e7f40f60381942"
  target="_new">
  <area shape="rect" coords="73,91,149,116"
  href="http://www.411metro.com" target="_blank">
  </map>
  </body>
   
</xmp>

Now if you want to have a 'phone booth' sort of thing for your web
site users, just copy the above. You will need to copy the
'TELECOM-banner.jpg' over to your own directory somewhere where your
script can find it. 

Of course, do not let this fancy 'call from a web page' thing keep you
 from programming your own phone dialer with 1-800-411-METRO (6387) or
getting one of the intercept devices Mike Sandman sells through his
catalog http://www.sandman.com especially if you have a large number
of users calling '411' on your money.  (Hook Mike's interceptor
devices at the head of your PBX, etc so they will catch all the outbound
traffic to 411. 

Enjoy!

Patrick Townson

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums.  It is
also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup
'comp.dcom.telecom'.

TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
                        Post Office Box 50
                        Independence, KS 67301
                        Phone: 620-402-0134
                        Fax 1: 775-255-9970
                        Fax 2: 530-309-7234
                        Fax 3: 208-692-5145         
                        Email: editor@telecom-digest.org

Subscribe:  telecom-subscribe@telecom-digest.org
Unsubscribe:telecom-unsubscribe@telecom-digest.org

This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm-
unications on the Internet, having been founded in August, 1981 and
published continuously since then.  Our archives are available for
your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list
on the internet in any category!

URL information:        http://telecom-digest.org

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  (or use our mirror site: ftp.epix.net/pub/telecom-archives)

RSS Syndication of TELECOM Digest: http://telecom-digest.org/rss.html
  For syndication examples see http://www.feedrollpro.com/syndicate.php?id=308
    and also http://feeds.feedburner.com/TelecomDigest

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
*   Judith Oppenheimer, President of ICB Inc. and purveyor of accurate  *
*   800 & Dot Com News, Intelligence, Analysis, and Consulting.         *
*   http://ICBTollFree.com, http://1800TheExpert.com                    *
*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
*   views of Judith Oppenheimer or ICB Inc.                             *
*************************************************************************

ICB Toll Free News.  Contact information is not sold, rented or leased.

One click a day feeds a person a meal.  Go to http://www.thehungersite.com

Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

              ************************

DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE JUST 65 CENTS ONE OR TWO INQUIRIES CHARGED TO
YOUR CREDIT CARD!  REAL TIME, UP TO DATE! SPONSORED BY TELECOM DIGEST
AND EASY411.COM   SIGN UP AT http://www.easy411.com/telecomdigest !

              ************************


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

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.
Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
your name to the mailing list. 

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only
and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #156
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue Apr 25 13:21:31 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #157
Message-Id: <20060425172130.8030C15AFC@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 13:21:30 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.0.4 (2005-06-05) on massis.lcs.mit.edu
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Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 25 Apr 2006 13:25:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 157

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    'Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act of 2006' (Monty Solomon)
    Amazon.com Subsidiary to Sell TV DVDs (Monty Solomon)
    PBS/Sony High Definition Production Pilot Program (Monty Solomon)
    Annapolis Wireless Launches Free Public WiFi in Annapolis (Monty Solomon)
    Major Networks Select CustomFlix for DVD Distribution on (Monty Solomon)
    Amazon.com and CustomFlix Launch the Media Gateway Program; (Monty Solomon)
    CustomFlix to Support HD-DVD, Blu-Ray and WMV HD (Monty Solomon)
    Verizon's Aggressive New Spam Filter Causing Problems (Monty Solomon)
    5- vrs. 7-digit Dialing (Neal McLain)
    Telecom Direct Daily News - April 25, 2006 (Telecom Direct Daily News)    
    Blackstone to Buy 4.5% of Deutsche Telekom (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News for Tuesday 25th April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Re: Texas Community College Bans MySpace.com (Charles Newman)
    Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer (Robert Bonomi)
    Response Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer (TELECOM Digest Editor)

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.  

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

Subject: New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 09:42:51 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


A new sponsor for the Digest are the people who provide _free_
directory assistance in exchange for you listening to one or more ten
second audio commercial messages. I say 'one or more' since you get
one commercial message played to you in exchange for a free directory
assistance listing. After hearing the message, and receiving the
requested number, if you stay on the line and listen to a _second_
message of equal length (another ten-second blurb) then the call is
completed for you at no additional charge. At the present time, there
is no limit on teh length of the call, which means you first dial in
on their toll-free 800 number, listen to the message, pass the
request, receive the information, _then remain on the line_ hear a
second message, and your call is completed at no charge. I am not
positive, but I think the outgoing call is completed via VOIP; there
is no way they could give out 'more expensive' calls (via landline) in
this program.

A special promotion for readers of the Digest:

To show you how it works, and how simple it is, for the indefinite
future you can make calls _directly from this web site_.  You need to
have either a computer audio card (i.e. Skype software installed) -or-
you need to have a landline phone nearby for your convenience. For
example, I have a phone and a headset right here on my desk next to
the copmputer. You go to http://telecom-digest.org and look in the far
right-hand column where the advertisers/sponsors are listed. Look at
the item marked 'no cost 411' and you will see two 'hot links' as part
of the message, one marked 'more information', the other marked to
'make a call'.

Click on 'make a call' and a pop-up window will appear asking you to
fill in the phone number you wish to be called back on. Fill it in,
and hit the 'GO' button. Your nearby phone (or VOIP phone attached to
the computer) will ring instantly. Pick it up or turn it on. You will
hear chimes and the 'free 411 metro' announcement. Respond to the
robot as requested ('business or personal listing?';'what city and
state?'  and 'what listing?')You may be asked to 'hold for an
operator' if the robot does not know what to do. After the human
operator (or the 'bot) gives the desired number and exits the line,
just stay put ... in two or three seconds (after a pause to see if you
are going to hang up or not) another ten second advertising message is
played out, and the number you were calling begins to ring. Talk as
long as you wish, hang up when you are finished with the call. No
charge!

The first part of this (give your phone number, get a call back and
such) is only needed because you are using a 'direct line' (i.e. java
script) connection to infreeda.com. You can leave that part out if you
dial direct from your own phone 1-800-411-METRO. If you press the
second button (more information) or the 'Thinking Voice' logo at the
botton of the first button then you will get information on how to
install one of these 'direct connect' buttons for your own web site.
As it is configured, the 'direct connect' button rings back to the
number you gave it and you are speaking to http://infreeda.com .

Here is the script used to implement all this:
(everything between the XMP (example) and /XMP (/example) marks)

<xmp>
  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
  <html>
  <head>
  <title>Untitled Document</title>
  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
  </head>

  <body>
  <img src="GIF/TELECOM-banner.jpg" width="150" height="117" border="0"
  usemap="#Map"> 
  <map name="Map">
  <area shape="rect" coords="1,91,74,116"
  href="http://call.thinkingvoice.com/callback/default.aspx?cardID=63d1f7b0a7c0423789e7f40f60381942"
  target="_new">
  <area shape="rect" coords="73,91,149,116"
  href="http://www.411metro.com" target="_blank">
  </map>
  </body>
   

</xmp>

Now if you want to have a 'phone booth' sort of thing for your web
site users, just copy the above. You will need to copy the
'TELECOM-banner.jpg' over to your own directory somewhere where your
script can find it. 

Of course, do not let this fancy 'call from a web page' thing keep you
 from programming your own phone dialer with 1-800-411-METRO (6387) or
getting one of the intercept devices Mike Sandman sells through his
catalog http://www.sandman.com especially if you have a large number
of users calling '411' on your money.  (Hook Mike's interceptor
devices at the head of your PBX, etc so they will catch all the outbound
traffic to 411. 

Enjoy!

Patrick Townson
   
------------------------------

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 23:43:03 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: 'Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act of 2006'


     Passed out of Committee Unopposed
     - Apr 24, 2006 09:39 PM (BusinessWire)

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 24, 2006--Today, the Assembly
Utilities and Commerce Committee held a policy hearing in Sacramento
on Assembly Bill AB2987, "The Digital Infrastructure and Video
Competition Act of 2006." The bill was passed out of committee
unopposed and will now move to the Assembly Appropriations Committee
for review. Authored by Speaker of the Assembly Fabian Nunez, (D - Los
Angeles), and co-authored by Assembly Utilities and Commerce Committee
Chair Lloyd Levine, (D - Van Nuys), AB2987 seeks to modernize an
outdated regulatory process which serves as a barrier to video
competition in California and replace it with a new, state-issued
authorization. The goals of the new legislation are to encourage
investment and new jobs in the state, and speed the availability of
innovative video technologies and new choices for consumers.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57903726

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

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 23:44:54 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Amazon.com Subsidiary to Sell TV DVDs


SEATTLE (AP) -- Amazon.com Inc. said Monday that its subsidiary, 
CustomFlix Labs Inc., has signed deals with television networks 
including NBC Universal that could let them sell DVDs of television 
shows soon after they air.

The deals mark yet another offering for people looking to watch TV
shows when they want rather than when they are televised.

They initially call for CustomFlix to sell DVDs of archived shows with
a niche audience, such as NBC's "Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show" and
"Antiques Roadshow" from PBS.

  - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57902827

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

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 23:52:22 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: PBS/Sony High Definition Production Pilot Program


     Three New Stations Sign on to PBS/Sony High Definition Production
     Pilot Program
     - Apr 24, 2006 04:14 PM (PR Newswire)

'The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer' to Become PBS' First Daily Series in HD
WETA in Washington, D.C.; WQED in Pittsburgh and WYCC in Chicago are
Latest to Make Transition to High Definition Production with Sony
Broadcast Technology

LAS VEGAS, April  24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- NAB Booth  SU107 -- The
PBS/Sony High  Definition Production Pilot is moving  forward as three
PBS member stations have confirmed  plans for their transition to high
definition  program production.   The cooperative  program,  which was
created  by  Sony  and  PBS to  cultivate  high-definition  television
production by public television  stations, will greatly enhance the HD
services provided by public  television -- including the production
of "The  NewsHour with  Jim Lehrer"  in HD and  the construction  of a
state-of-the art educational facility in Chicago.


Three stations -- WETA in Washington, D.C.; WQED in Pittsburgh and
WYCC in Chicago have recently confirmed that they are moving forward
with their projects; KQED San Francisco contracted with Sony in
December 2005 and is almost finished with their facility upgrade for
high definition production.  Each station is installing a range of
Sony high-definition broadcast and production technology, including
multi-format cameras, switchers, VTRs and displays.

In addition to being a PBS member station, WETA is also the production
home of the highly acclaimed series "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer."
For that program, WETA will be implementing Sony's new XDCAM(TM) HD
system of optical camcorders to acquire material. For its full
line-up of programming, WETA is installing several Sony products,
including the HDC-1000 studio camera, which can handle both 1080i and
720P signals, an MVS-8000A multi-format production switcher and
professional LCD and CRT displays.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57892956
     
------------------------------

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 23:55:25 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Annapolis Wireless Launches Free Public WiFi in Annapolis


Annapolis to become first Maryland city offering free Internet access
for everyone, using Nortel wireless mesh solution

ANNAPOLIS, MD, April 24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ - Annapolis is about to
go wireless with a free public WiFi hotspot powered by
Nortel(x)(NYSE/TSX: NT) wireless mesh technology. Local company
Annapolis Wireless will hold its official wire cutting to mark the
launch of WiFi service available to everyone on April 29, 2:30 pm in a
public ceremony on City Dock at the Market House.

The wire cutting ceremony is hosted by the Anne Arundel Tech Council,
a non-profit membership organization for technology companies in the
Anne Arundel County area. Nortel, which is working with Annapolis
Wireless, is an event sponsor and wireless mesh technology provider
for the system. SECU Credit Union, Maryland's largest credit union, is
also an event sponsor.  Maryland Governor Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr.,
Mayor Ellen Moyer and county officials will be on hand to celebrate
the WiFi launch.

The creation of a city-wide WiFi system marks Annapolis' entree into a
technologically sophisticated group of cities. Cities such as
Philadelphia, Houston and New Orleans also provide free WiFi
access. But Annapolis' WiFi carries a distinct difference -- many other
cities provide the access using taxpayer funds. Annapolis Wireless, by
offering sponsorships and advertising to area businesses on its splash
page, is able to provide WiFi access to the public without using
taxpayer dollars.

      - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57888317

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 00:03:57 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Major Networks Select CustomFlix for DVD Distribution 


     Major Networks Select CustomFlix for DVD Distribution on
     Amazon.com; Programming from NBC Universal, A&E Home Video and
     PBS Now Available
     - Apr 24, 2006 09:00 AM (BusinessWire)

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 24, 2006--CustomFlix Labs, Inc., a
wholly owned subsidiary of leading online retailer Amazon.com, Inc.
(NASDAQ:AMZN), today announced it has agreements with major television
and cable networks, NBC Universal, A&E Home Video, and the PBS (Public
Broadcasting Service), to distribute popular broadcast content via DVD
on Demand on the Amazon.com website. These agreements will make
thousands of previously unavailable DVDs accessible to millions of
Amazon customers.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57870249

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 00:05:56 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Amazon.com and CustomFlix Launch the Media Gateway Program;


     Program Digitizes and Unlocks the World's Video Media
     - Apr 24, 2006 09:00 AM (BusinessWire)

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 24, 2006--Leading online retailer
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) and CustomFlix Labs, Inc., a wholly
owned subsidiary of Amazon.com, Inc., today announced the introduction
of the Media Gateway program, a worldwide initiative to digitize and
sell previously unavailable video content on Amazon.com.  At the heart
of the Media Gateway program is the CustomFlix Future-Proof
Archive(TM) service, a secure storage and reformatting platform
designed to provide content owners the flexibility to repurpose
content into multiple future digital formats. The Future-Proof Archive
service currently supports DVD-Video, with additional formats to be
announced.

The Media Gateway program enables content owners to unlock the
hundreds of thousands of hours of content trapped in analog tape
formats making it immediately available for sale as physical DVDs, and
enabling the content for future inventory-free digital formats. For a
limited time, CustomFlix will offer digitization and DVD authoring of
qualified content with no up-front investment by the content provider.
Amazon.com will then make this content available for sale to tens of
millions of Amazon customers and CustomFlix will manufacture DVDs on
demand as customers place orders.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57870024

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 00:08:08 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: CustomFlix to Support HD-DVD, Blu-Ray and WMV HD


     CustomFlix Announces On-Demand Solution to the High Definition
     DVD Format Wars; Amazon.com Subsidiary to Support HD-DVD, Blu-Ray
     and WMV HD
     - Apr 24, 2006 09:00 AM (BusinessWire)

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 24, 2006--CustomFlix Labs, Inc., a
wholly owned subsidiary of leading online retailer Amazon.com, Inc.
(NASDAQ:AMZN), today announced upcoming support for all three of the
industry's major high definition formats: HD-DVD, Blu-ray, and Windows
Media Video High Definition DVD (WMV-HD DVD). This multi-format
support is enabled by the CustomFlix Future-Proof Archive(TM) service,
a proprietary storage and repurposing platform designed to allow
deployment of digitized files in future formats, giving content
providers the flexibility and convenience of distributing content in a
format the customers choose. CustomFlix also announced that it has
teamed up with HDNet to offer a wide range of programs in multiple HD
formats on Amazon.com.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57870221

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 08:08:57 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon's Aggressive New Spam Filter Causing Problems


Verizon's Aggressive New Spam Filter Causing Problems
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday April 24, @12:02PM
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/24/1538205

aviancarrier writes "Verizon DSL has turned on a very aggressive spam
filter that is blocking lots of long-time legitimate emails. Emails
get bounced with an error: 'XX@verizon.net: host
relay.verizon.net[206.46.232.11] said: 550 Email from your Email
Service Provider is currently blocked by Verizon Online's anti-spam
system. The email "sender" or Email Service Provider may visit
http://www.verizon.net/whitelist and request removal of the block.'

That whitelist web page lets you request one address at a time to be
whitelisted with no guarantee for their response time to process it.
I have tested multiple email sources and only one got through. As a VZ
customer, I just spent 28 minutes on a call to tech support,
eventually got a supervisor who knows nothing about the new spam
feature, and would only agree to email a manager who doesn't work
weekends about it. I warned her that VZ has a public relations problem
but she was too clueless to understand." Many users have submitted
this problem so it seems to be a pretty far reaching problem. There is
also a discussion going on over at Google about this problem.

http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/24/1538205

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 05:17:41 -0500
From: Neal McLain <nmclain@annsgarden.com>
Subject: 5- v. 7-digit Dialing


Wesrock@aol.com wrote:

> Many small towns required only four- or five-digit dialing locally
> long after the "conversion" took place.  By "long," I mean 10 or 15
> years or more.

hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com responded:

> A friend of mine reported is update NY state town worked like that.
> But once they went to ESS it no longer worked.

> I wonder if this still applies to sparsely populated places in say
> Wyoming and the Dakotas where there is little population growth.

You keep asking this same question, and I keep giving you the same 
answer: mandatory 7-, 10-, or 11-digit dialing applies to almost every 
ESS office in every state.  (I say "almost" because there's probably an 
exception out there somewhere; I've just never heard of one.)

You've stated that an ESS switch can accommodate 5-digit dialing, and I 
agree.  However, as I've noted previously on this list, doing so makes 
it difficult to devise dialing plans to interconnect two or more 
switches without running into conflicts between local 5-digit numbers 
and nearby 7-digit numbers.  Furthermore, it makes it extremely 
difficult, if not impossible, to add more NNXs as the community grows.

Here are links to my previous posts on this subject:

CARBONDALE, ILLINOIS, 1971 -- http://tinyurl.com/nd4m4

Carbondale is (or was) a simple situation -- it avoided conflicts by 
segregating functions on separate levels:
- Levels 3, 7, and 9: local 5-digit numbers
- Levels 4 and 5: repeatedly-absorbed ("AR") digits.
- Levels 6 and 8: NNXs in nearby communities.
- Level 2: unused.
There were no absorbed-once ("A") digits.

ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN -- http://tinyurl.com/jtg3f

Prior to about 1953, Ann Arbor presented a similar situation -- it 
avoided conflicts by segregating functions on separate levels:
- Levels 2, 3, and 5: local 5-digit numbers
- Levels 6, 7, 8, and 9: local 4-digit numbers
- Level 4: NNXs in nearby communities.
There were no absorbed ("A" or "AR") digits.

Around 1953, "AR" and "A" digits were added, and the situation became:
- Levels 2, 3, and 5: local 5-digit numbers.
- Level 6: repeatedly-absorbed ("AR") digit.
- Level 8: absorbed-once ("A") digit -- see note below.
- Level 4: NNXs to nearby communities.
- Levels 7 and 9: unused.

Note how the "A" digit 8 was used to resolve conflicts:
- 668 (or just 8) followed by 6, 7, 8, or 9 was a local 5-digit number.
- 668 (or just 8) followed by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 0 was absorbed and ignored.

CENTERVILLE, IOWA, 1975 -- http://tinyurl.com/8axyn

Centerville was an even more complicated situation:
- Level 6: absorbed-once ("A") digit -- see note below.
- Levels 5 and 8: repeatedly-absorbed ("AR") initial digits.
- Level 4: NNXs to nearby communities (plus one located in Centerville 
itself).
- Levels 2, 3, 7 and 9: unused.

Note how the "A" digit 6 was used to resolve conflicts:
- 856 (or just 6) followed by 2,3,6,8, or 9 was a local 5-digit number.
- 856 (or just 6) followed by 5 was 658-XXXX in Cincinnati.
- 856 (or just 6) followed by 1,4,7, or 0 was absorbed and ignored.

So, you might ask, why didn't the telco just segregate all Centerville 
numbers on separate levels, like GTE did in Carbondale?

  - Because every dialing plan has to avoid conflicts
    between local 4- or 5-digit numbers and NNX codes in
    nearby communities reached by 7-digit dialing.

  - Because every dialing plan has to consider how the
    local dialing plans in nearby communities avoid
    conflicts between *their* local (4- or 5-digit) numbers
    and the NNX codes used by *their* nearby communities.

  - Because every NNX in an area code has to be unique.
    A telco can't pick an NNX just because it's convenient
    for the local dialing plan if it's already in use
    somewhere else in the area code.

And ultimately, because all dialing plans within an area code form a 
continuous web of inter-community 7-digit dialing, each one of which has 
to avoid local conflicts.

Have you followed all this?  Or are your eyes glazed over by now?  If 
you haven't followed it because it's too complicated, that's my point: 
it is complicated!  It's amazing that traffic engineers back in the 50s 
and 60s were able to figure it all out.

Even more amazing is the fact that they were able to implement it with 
electromechanical devices: Strowger switches and relays.

The key to it all was the development of "A" and "AR" levels on the 
first selectors:

    A = The selector absorbs the specified digit once only; on
        the next digit, it "trunks on all levels."  This digit
        must be dialed once (and only once) in order to reach
        certain specified second digits.  However, it is absorbed
        (ignored) for any other second digit.

   AR = The selector absorbs the specified digit repeatedly
        unless a digit has been absorbed previously on a level
        designated "A".

All this is discussed in detail in "Notes on Distance Dialing,"
Section 4, "Typical Trunking Diagrams for Step-by-Step Offices,"
published by AT&T Engineering and Network Services Department, Systems
Planning Section, 1975.  A PDF of Appendix A1 (the trunking diagram of
a hypothetical SxS switch) is posted at
http://annsgarden.com/Appendix_A1.pdf .

Now fast forward a couple of decades, and replace all those old
electromechanical switches with ESS switches.  Can you program an ESS
to emulate "A" and "AR" first selector levels in order to resolve the
old conflicts?  Sure.

But what about new conflicts created by new NXXs (no longer called
NNXs) that have appeared during those two decades?  How do you resolve
them?

How, for example, would you add 895 to Centerville?  If you follow the
existing numbering plan, you would have to add it *after* the "A" and
"AR" digits (similar to the way 437 was added).  But doing that would
create a conflict with existing numbers in the form 856-895X.  The
only way to avoid this conflict is to implement 7-digit dialing for
856 numbers.

I trust this explains why 7-digit (if not 10- or 11-) dialing is now 
mandatory everywhere.

Neal McLain

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 12:22:03 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Tuesday, April 25, 2006


********************************

PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 25, 2006

********************************

New Holes in Buckets: Operators Add Services, Revenue Leaks
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17654?11228

     WITH THE DISAPPEARANCE of UNE-P and the movement to wireless and
     VoIP, many smaller carriers and resellers are switching to new
     product lines and technologies, and entering a growth phase. This
     presents challenges to those responsible for revenue assurance as
     the expansion means more customers, more partners and more
     complexity in the...

XO Unveils Broadband Wireless Strategy
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/17652?11228

     Alternative service provider XO Communications has announced the
     launch of Nextlink, its new wireless broadband
     subsidiary. Nextlink has already launched commercially in Dallas,
     Los Angeles, Miami, San Diego, Tampa and Washington D.C., and
     plans to expand the presence of its network to over 70 major
     U.S. markets over the next two years....

VSNL to Invest US$300 mil. in Undersea Cable between India, Europe
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/17649?11228

     India's top international telecoms provider, VSNL, is planning to
     invest more than US$300 million to roll out an undersea cable
     between India and Europe, the Press Trust of India reported
     yesterday (24 April), citing senior executives at the
     company. The report said that VSNL was implementing the project
     as it expects rising demand for...

Cesky Telecom Earmarks US$6.6 mil. for Broadband Development in 2006
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17646?11228

     Czech fixed-line incumbent Cesky Telecom has earmarked 150
     million koruna for the roll-out of its ADSL broadband services
     this year.  Cesky's investment will be directed into building new
     interconnecting components in the network, so-called DSLAMs
     (which enable high-speed data transfer over traditional copper
     networks)....

TeliaSonera's Net Profit Rises in 1st Quarter
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17643?11228

     STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- TeliaSonera Corp., the Nordic region's
     largest telecommunications operator, reported a 20 percent rise
     in first-quarter net profit Tuesday driven by strong mobile and
     broadband growth.  Net profit increased to 4.27 billion kronor
     (US$566 million) in the three-month period ending March 31,
     compared with 3.56...

AT&T Earnings Rose 63.3 percent on AT&T-SBC Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17642?11228

     NEW YORK -- AT&T Inc., on track to become the largest U.S.
     telephone company, Tuesday said its earnings rose 63.3 percent in
     the first quarter, the first period it reported combined results
     after SBC Communications Inc.'s acquisition of AT&T Corp.  Net
     income was $1.445 billion, or 37 cents a share, for the
     January-March...

The Perfect Cellular/VoWLAN Demand Storm
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17641?11228

     A classic "pull" strategy is unfolding around enterprise
     cellular/voice over wireless LAN (VoWLAN) solutions, according to
     a new mobile-communications study issued by TelecomWeb's sister
     division InfoTech.  Half of the U.S. enterprise decision-makers
     recently interviewed by InfoTech for its "Dual-Mode
     Cellular/VoWLAN Solutions:...

Poll: Merging Is Surging
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17640?11228

     Building up is the way to go, readers say.  The latest Light
     Reading poll asked readers to pick the most profitable way to
     build a dominant telecom equipment company. Half of the 152
     respondents so far believe one should buy a number of smaller,
     targeted companies.  About one-fourth say that merging with a
     rival is the way to go. Read...

DSLAM Market Has Reached Maturity
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17639?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- With Internet users needing faster
     connections for multimedia applications, the global market for
     DSLAMs will grow to 89.1 million ports by the end of 2010, up
     from 76 million in 2005, reports In-Stat. A combination of
     dial-up users moving to broadband and broadband users moving to
     higher-speed lines continues...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 13:18:17 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustatelcom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Blackstone to buy 4.5% of Deutsche Telekom


USTelecom dailyLead
April 24, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvesfDtutcBfgxYodj

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Blackstone to buy 4.5% of Deutsche Telekom
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Networks bypass portals to offer Web video
* AT&T works with Illinois town to offer high-speed services
* Mobile video space about to get more crowded
* XO to offer fixed-wireless service
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* NEW! IP-Based Services for Carriers and Suppliers
HOT TOPICS
* Level 3 snaps up ICG
* Verizon launches FiOS in Plano, Texas
* Motorola could go after Siemens' telecom business
* A bandwidth glut no more
* EarthLink taps Level 3 for VoIP
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Next-gen Wi-Fi equipment announced
* Report: Video phones not being used for video
* 3G Phoebus lets computer users connect to high-speed mobile networks
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Rural telecoms, Time Warner Cable clash over VoIP

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvesfDtutcBfgxYodj

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

Subject: Cellular-News for Tuesday 25th April 2006
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 07:34:49 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ Financial ]]

Russia's MTS gets $1.33 billion syndicated loan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17096.php

Russia's largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) has
concluded an agreement with a number of banks to take out a syndicated
loan of up to U.S. $1.33 billion, MTS said Monday. ...

Tiscali Denies It Is In Talks For UK Unit Sale
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17097.php

A spokeswoman for Italian Internet service provider Tiscali denied
"categorically" Monday the company "is in talks with Vodafone Group or
any other company for the sale of its U.K. unit." ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Return of the Payphone: Ultra Low Cost Handsets Getting Down to Business
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17101.php

The GSM Association recently announced that its Emerging Markets
Handset program is exceeding expectations: mobile operators in
Bangladesh, China, India, and Russia have already purchased 12 million
of its Ultra Low Cost Handsets (ULCH). But will the...

BenQ Mobile Forging Ahead with Realignment of Model Range
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17102.php

To accompany the publication of its figures for the first quarter of
2006, the Taiwanese BenQ Group is announcing a strategic handset
initiative. Following the launch of 12 new mobile phones under the
BenQ-Siemens brand since January, the company say...

[[ Legal ]]

IPOC Fund: Court Stops Alfa From Selling MegaFon Stake
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17095.php

Bermuda-based IPOC International Growth Fund said Monday it has
obtained an injunction from a St Petersburg court preventing Russian
Alfa Group from selling its 25.1% stake in MegaFon. ...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Mobile Video: Who's Watching? Who's Going to Watch? And Why?
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17104.php

Watching video on mobile devices has a long way to go before it
becomes a ubiquitous practice among mobile phone users, according to a
new report published by The NPD Group. According to the report, while
28% of all mobile phones in use in February 2...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Huawei Wins Turnkey GSM Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17099.php

Oasis, the Congolese operation of Millicom International, has awarded
Huawei a turnkey contract to provide a brand new GSM network. Under
the first phase of the contract, Huawei will supply and install its
Huawei EnerG GSM technical platform and depl...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Improved Roaming for Asia-Pacific
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17100.php

Seven Asia-Pacific operators are forming an alliance to offer joint
roaming and marketing services to customers. FET (Taiwan), Hutchison
Essar (India), Hutchison Telecommunications (Hong Kong and Macau), KT
Freetel (South Korea), DoCoMo (Japan), Indo...

Vodafone Japan moves HQ
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17103.php

Vodafone K.K. says that it will move its headquarters from Atago in
Minato Ward, Tokyo to Higashi-shimbashi, also in Minato Ward, to start
operations at the new location progressively from 1 May 2006....

[[ Regulatory ]]

Chechnya's deputy PM wants competition on mobile mkt
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17098.php

The government of Russia's constituent republic of Chechnya wants to
see competition between mobile operators in the republic, Ziyad
Sabsabi, deputy prime minister of the republic, told a round table
meeting on Monday. ...

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

From: Charles Newman <charlesnewman1@attbi.com>
Subject: Re: Texas Community College Bans MySpace.com
Date: 24 Apr 2006 15:30:26 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Associated Press News Wire wrote:

> Del Mar College students now have to use computers outside the
> school's system if they want to visit the popular Web site
> MySpace.com.

> The community college has blocked the site in response to complaints
> about sluggish Internet speed on campus computers.

> An investigation found that heavy traffic at MySpace.com was eating up
> too much bandwidth, said August Alfonso, the school's chief of
> information and technology. Forty percent of daily Internet traffic at
> the college involved the site, he said.

> "This was more about us being able to offer Web-based instruction, and
> MySpace.com was slowing everything down," President Carlos Garcia
> said.

> MySpace.com -- a social networking hub with more 72 million members --
> allow users to post searchable profiles that can include photos of
> themselves and such details as where they live and what music they
> like.

> Paul Martinez, 20, is a frequent visitor to MySpace.com and finds the
> site to be addictive. Restricting access to the site could be a good
> idea, he said.

> "The library is pretty much full with people on MySpace, and with them
> banning it you won't have anything to distract you," he said.

> Some though, disagree with Del Mar College's decision.

> "We pay for school and the resources that are used," said Zeke Santos,
> 20.  "It's our choice, we're the ones paying for our classes. If we
> pass or fail, it's up to us."

> Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

And that can be circumvented using a proxy server outside the
college. Just use an open proxy outside the college network and access
MySpace that way. They will know that you went to the proxy, but where
you went BEYOND that proxy, they will not know about.

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 22:19:28 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.156.9@telecom-digest.org>,
Robert Bonomi <bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote:

> In article <telecom25.131.12@telecom-digest.org>, Mike
> <mike@smirtware.com> wrote:

>> Spammer strikes again...

>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: mgriffinb@you-have-won.net < <mailto:mgriffinb@you-have-won.net>
>> mgriffinb@you-have-won.net>
>> Date: Apr 6, 2006 8:47 AM
>> Subject: XXXX XXXXX, please call

>> Mike,

>> Please call us at 1-866-677-4100.  We previously tried to contact you
>> at 1-248-XXX-XXXX, but were unable to reach you.  This is reference to
>> an entry form you filled out, either on-line or at a major mall or
>> movie theater.

>> We actually have some decent news in regards to the Grand Getaways and
>> Ford Explorer contest.  We have an address, claim number, and further
>> details for you.  Since all prizes are well over $500, we will need a
>> few moments of your time to cover all related lottery-type information
>> from procuring your prizes due to any tax issues on them.

>> Sincere congratulations!

>> Verification Center

>> P.S. For your convenience, we are available 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM Central
>> Standard Time, Monday to Friday

>> 68.61.169.153  <http://68.61.169.153> Jan 30 2006 12:45PM

>> Please follow url below to stop further emails
>> http://www.you-have-won.net/cgi-bin/frame1.cgi?email=XXXXXXXXXXXXX.com

>> Sender:
>> Verification Center
>> 105 South River Rd
>> North Aurora, IL, 60542

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I can only presume that Mr. Bonomi (the
>> author of the note before this last one) places _me_ and this Digest
>> in the same category as the 'Verification Center' above since _these_
>> are the sort of things which AOL would require to pay their own way. 
>> PAT]

> Ah, but the real question is: *WHO*decides* whether you are, or are
> not, in the same category?  And what the 'definition' of that category
> is.

> I'm quite sure that if that 'verification center' was making the
> determinations, that they *would* put themselves in the "wouldn't
> have to pay" class, while it is unpredictable how they would classify
> Telecom Digest.

> It is also an undeniable fact that some of the mailings originating
> from the Digest moderator are *indistinguishable* from what the 'evil
> spammers' send out.  If AOL, for example, looked at one or more of
> those instances where the esteemed moderator decided to 'share the
> wealth' of his incoming spam, by sending it on to *all* the Digest
> subscriber mailboxes, it _would_ be very reasonable to classify the
> sender as a 'spammer'.  *NOBODY* signed up to the Digest with the
> expectation that the moderator would _deliberately_
> _and_intentionally_ send them 'lotto', 'Nigeria 419', bank/ebay
> 'phishing', and other scam messages -- but he =does=.

> Note, given that neither the original line-item ("E-mail, should the
> sender pay?"), nor our esteemed moderator's impassionedly affirmative
> 'answer' to that question made any reference to AOL or its policies --
> *nor* did my query regarding his answer -- it is hard to imagine how
> any rational person would/ could conclude that I was using AOL's
> categorization rules as the basis for my query.

> BTW, I *DO* have issues with the concept of "sender pays the receiving
> ISP to bypass all spam-filtering, regardless of the user's wishes".
> Some are of a practical nature, some are philosophical.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The answer to your question is that the
> the present-day 'authorities' (who intend to make the decision on 
> pay to send mail or not) are the AOL people;

Which means it affects *only*  AOL's customers.  The TLA BFD applies.

And the nice thing about it is it works _both_ways_.

If AOL starts mucking with mail that AOL's customers _want_, and that
mail gets delayed -- or even worse misrouted to a spam folder or
deleted -- AOL's customers have the option of going to another
provider.

And it doesn't take much to make that happen.

I consulted at a shop that did a paid-subscription electronic
newsletter.  "Something" about that newsletter, on occasion, caused
AOL's mail-handling system to do strange things with it.  Not every
mailing, just 'once in a while'.  Of course, _we_ got the calls, when
the newsletter showed up 'unreadable'.  The only answer we had, was
"it's a problem in AOL's system, to eliminate it, we recommend you get
an account at a different provider."  Since the price of (and thus the
'value', to the subscriber) the newsletter was several times greater
than the cost of the AOL subscription, this advice was usually taken.

I'm pretty sure it wasn't 'spam filters' that were causing the problem,
the mailings were going to a maximum of about 2 dozen AOL addresses at any
time.

> they have said that when _taken in context_ over a long period of
> time (_NOT_ message by message but the entire contents of a Digest
> -- several individual 'messages') this Digest and other established
> Usenet-style publications do not qualify as and will not be counted
> as 'spam'. Context is the all-important factor; not any one single
> message out of the thousands which go out. If YOU honestly believe
> that taken in context over the quarter-century this Digest has been
> published that it amounts to 'spam'

No, _I_ don't believe that the Digest, "taken as a whole" is spam,
however, it is also a fact that the single largest source of
advance-fee scams, make-money-fast scams, outright money-begging
scams, etc. that _reaches_me_ is "telecom-digest.org", accounting for
more than 40% of the total volume of such pollution that I encounter.
If the esteemed moderator of the Digest just exercised a little more
restraint, on behalf of those who _trust_ him, my spam load would
decrease nearly in half.  And thousands of other people would see a
reduction -- although probably not to the same degree -- as well.

> set publishing schedule, etc, then God Bless You. I guess I will qualify
> as spam in your estimation. Yes, there could be a change in the
> authorities; yes, the new authorities could take a different approach
> to what is what; we will have to deal with it when that time comes, if
> it ever does. Furthermore, you read this Digest in one of two ways
> only: Either you subscribe and ask to read it (and I can document your
> 'asking' to receive it if you are a subscriber)

And just _where_ was it explained that this subscription included
anatomy enlargement/enhancement solicitions requests for assistance
in smuggling large amounts of money across international borders, 
phony international order-processing and money-laundering schemes,
etc.?

You hate them when they show up in your inbox coming from strangers.
Have you ever thought about peoples reaction when that cr*p shows up
_from_somebody_they_trust_??

The Digest subscribers trusted you to select _legitimate_ message
traffic, and what do you do, when your frustration level runs over?
You cr*p in the mailboxes of people who trusted you.  It seems that
you have as little respect for _their_ mailboxes, as spammers have for
yours.

> 'asking' to receive it if you are a subscriber) or you read it via a
> public mailbox (Usenet) in the same way. You do _not_ recieve this
> Digest in some sort of shady way, where it just shows up in your mailbox
> each day with no documentation. 

Absolutely correct.  People, myself included, *TRUSTED*YOU* to "do the
right thing" and send _what_you_said_you_would_.  When a 'trusted
neighbor' cr*ps in your yard it is more offensive than finding a turd
left by a stranger.

The 'betrayal of trust' is a bigger problem, and has far
more-long-lasting consequences.

> That (documentation of your desire to receive it) and/or the overall
> context of the publication demonstrates it is not spam/scam. For
> everyone that is, except very possibly you,

For people who have the time to do the 'research', that is.

For someone who doesn't have the luxury of time, and has to make what
amounts to a 'snap judgment',based on an 'unfortunate' and small
sample of our esteemed moderator's selections -- they *can* draw an
adverse conclusion.  And, if you look at *only* what they had to work
with, their decision is not indefensible.  Given the 'right' sub-set
of data, the hypothetical 'reasonable person' *could* come to that
conclusion.

Do I think they "should" do so?  H*ll, no.

Do I think such a conclusion is justified, or appropriate?  H*ll, no.

Do I think such a result is 'within the realm of possibility'?  H*ll yes.

Do I think the esteemed moderator could eliminate that possibility, by
  exercising a little more moderation?  H*ll, yes!

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

Subject: Response Re: Today's Last Loser: Another Spammer
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 22:55:00 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


Message greatly truncated to save reading time, etc.

	>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I can only presume that
	>> Mr. Bonomi (the author of the note before this last one)
	>> places _me_ and this Digest in the same category as the
	>> 'Verification Center' above since _these_ are the sort of
	>> things which AOL would require to pay their own way.  PAT]

	> Ah, but the real question is: *WHO*decides* whether you
	> are, or are >not, in the same category?  And what the
	> 'definition' of that category >is.  > >I'm quite sure that
	> if that 'verification center' was making the
	> determinations, that they *would* put themselves in the
	> "wouldn't >have to pay" class, while it is unpredictable
 	> how they would classify >Telecom Digest.

And this is where my questions/comments begin:

	> It is also an undeniable fact that some of the mailings originating
	> from the Digest moderator are *indistinguishable* from what the 'evil
	> spammers' send out.  If AOL, for example, looked at one or more of
	> those instances where the esteemed moderator decided to 'share the
	> wealth' of his incoming spam, by sending it on to *all* the Digest
	> subscriber mailboxes, it _would_ be very reasonable to classify the
	> sender as a 'spammer'.  *NOBODY* signed up to the Digest with the
	> expectation that the moderator would _deliberately_
	> _and_intentionally_ send them 'lotto', 'Nigeria 419', bank/ebay
	> 'phishing', and other scam messages -- but he =does=.

Anything resembling SPAM which is sent out from here is sent out only
as illustration; I have never sent any 'stand alone on its own merits'
spam for no other reason except to spam people. 

If you are receiving any lotto, Nigeria, bank/ebay, phishing' etc as a
stand alone piece of email, regardless of who it says it is from, it
is NOT from me. Is this the kind of spam you claim I am sending?

Any illustrative spam sent under my name (and really is me) will come
under the subject headers 'last laugh!' 'what a loser' or similar and
will be intended to mock and castigate the true sender, whoever it is.
There will be social commentary in the form of Editor's Notes will all
of it. Is this the kind of spam you claim I am sending, or is it the
first kind, stand alone, sent by someone who decided to pick up the
indicia from a bonafide Digest and use it?

	> Note, given that neither the original line-item ("E-mail,
	> should the sender pay?"), nor our esteemed moderator's
	> impassionedly affirmative 'answer' to that question made any
	> reference to AOL or its policies -- *nor* did my query
	> regarding his answer -- it is hard to imagine how any
	> rational person would/ could conclude that I was using AOL's
	> categorization rules as the basis for my query.

Because a rational person, _taking in context_ the original message a
couple days earlier where AOL stated their intentions for handling
mail and the replies which had followed it the next day (but still
before your Epistle showed up would have probably concluded that the
discussion was based on AOL's plans.

	> BTW, I *DO* have issues with the concept of "sender pays the
	> receiving ISP to bypass all spam-filtering, regardless of
	> the user's wishes".  Some are of a practical nature, some
	> are philosophical.

	> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The answer to your question
	> is that the the present-day 'authorities' (who intend to
	> make the decision on pay to send mail or not) are the AOL
	> people;

	Which means it affects *only*  AOL's customers.  The TLA BFD applies.

And also, people who send email to AOL customers. 

	And the nice thing about it is it works _both_ways_.

	If AOL starts mucking with mail that AOL's customers _want_,
	and that mail gets delayed -- or even worse misrouted to a
	spam folder or deleted -- AOL's customers have the option of
	going to another provider.

Certainly they do, but what I am hearing (only me) is that the vast
majority of AOL customers are quite pleased with the blessed relief
given them in recent months since AOL started pushing so hard on the
spam/scam.

	And it doesn't take much to make that happen.

	I consulted at a shop that did a paid-subscription electronic
	newsletter.  "Something" about that newsletter, on occasion,
	caused AOL's mail-handling system to do strange things with
	it.  Not every mailing, just 'once in a while'.  Of course,
	_we_ got the calls, when the newsletter showed up
	'unreadable'.  The only answer we had, was "it's a problem in
	AOL's system, to eliminate it, we recommend you get an account
	at a different provider."  Since the price of (and thus the
	'value', to the subscriber) the newsletter was several times
	greater than the cost of the AOL subscription, this advice was
	usually taken.

That is a big difference between what you were sending to AOL and what
I send to AOL. The price/value of TELECOM Digest is practically zilch
particularly when someone does not recieve it and writes me asking to
please re-issue a certain copy to them; I just remail the missing copy.

	I'm pretty sure it wasn't 'spam filters' that were causing the
	problem, the mailings were going to a maximum of about 2 dozen
	AOL addresses at any time.

	> they have said that when __taken in context_ over a long
	> period of time (_NOT_ message by message but the entire
	> contents of a Digest -- several individual >'messages') this
	> Digest and other established Usenet-style publications do
	> not qualify as and will not be counted as 'spam'. Context is
	> the all-important factor; not any one single message out of
	> the thousands which go out. If YOU honestly believe that
	> taken in context over the quarter-century this Digest has
	> been published that it amounts to 'spam'

	No, _I_ don't believe that the Digest, "taken as a whole" is
	spam, however, it is also a fact that the single largest
	source of advance-fee scams, make-money-fast scams, outright
	money-begging scams, etc. that _reaches_me_ is
	"telecom-digest.org", accounting for more than 40% of the
	total volume of such pollution that I encounter.  

Then I will suggest that my name 'telecom-digest.org' is being forged
by spammers/scammers; that is, assuming you are discussing stand-alone
spams/scams and _not_ commentaries by myself using illustrative spam
examples. And oh, yes, I know there are tons of that going around,
even viruses being sent under the name telecom-digest.org. What do you
really expect _me_ to do about it?


        If the esteemed moderator of the Digest just exercised a
	little more restraint, on behalf of those who _trust_ him, my
	spam load would decrease nearly in half.  And thousands of
	other people would see a reduction -- although probably not to
	the same degree -- as well.

Considering that maybe once every two weeks or so I see some
individual item of spam/scam which is so ridiculous, so outrageous I
feel compelled to comment on it -- and that is the ONLY spam/scam I
will take any credit for at all -- what I have defined as
'illustrative spam/scam' then you must indeed have a very low volume
of it if what I editorially send you amounts to 'nearly half' of what
you recieve. (And YOU said that statistic earlier!)

	> set publishing schedule, etc, then God Bless You. I guess I
	> will qualify as spam in your estimation. Yes, there could be
	> a change in the authorities; yes, the new authorities could
	> take a different approach to what is what; we will have to
	> deal with it when that time comes, if it ever
	> does. Furthermore, you read this Digest in one of two ways
	> only: Either you subscribe and ask to read it (and I can
	> document your 'asking' to receive it if you are a subscriber)

	And just _where_ was it explained that this subscription
	included anatomy enlargement/enhancement solicitions requests
	for assistance in smuggling large amounts of money across
	international borders, phony international order-processing
	and money-laundering schemes, etc.?

You see, right from this assertion of yours I can safely say that you
are getting a lot of crap sent by whoever _using telecom-digest.org_
as the sender. Now you are subscribed to a social commentary
newsletter in which some of those topics get discussed _very rarely_
and when they are used as _ilustrations_ of what comes through the
phone numbers and email addresses are time and again 'exxed out' and
made illegible. Or, occassionally toll free numbers are left intact
for readers to 'play with'.  I _NEVER_ print messages like this on
their own merits. Never!  Someone else must be sending them. 

	You hate them when they show up in your inbox coming from strangers.
	Have you ever thought about peoples reaction when that cr*p shows up
	_from_somebody_they_trust_??  

I assume that when penis enlargements, bank frauds, job scams, etc
show up from someone I trust that the person I trust is not expecting
me to place an order for same; that what they are really doing is
trying to demonstrate what a _hell-hole_  internet has become in recent
years, particularly now that the Enablers have essentially turned
their back on the tactics used by these nefarious residents of our net.

	The Digest subscribers trusted you to select _legitimate_
	message traffic, and what do you do, when your frustration
	level runs over?  You cr*p in the mailboxes of people who
	trusted you.  It seems that you have as little respect for
	_their_ mailboxes, as spammers have for yours.

Oh, I hardly think that would be the case. When is the last time YOU
received a TELECOM Digest with 150-200 spams/scams on a stand alone
basis in an issue. I mean, I do not need an excuse, if that is what
you are claiming.

	> 'asking' to receive it if you are a subscriber) or you read
	> it via a public mailbox (Usenet) in the same way. You do
	> _not_ recieve this Digest in some sort of shady way, where it
	> just shows up in your mailbox each day with no documentation.

	Absolutely correct.  People, myself included, *TRUSTED*YOU* to
        "do the right thing" and send _what_you_said_you_would_.

I send a social commentary newsletter dealing in large part with tele-
communications matters. And that is what you get _from me_, a small
part of which deals some days with the loads of crap send through by
people I have never heard of, never wish to meet, and even wish they
did not exist.

        When a 'trusted neighbor' cr*ps in your yard it is more
        offensive than finding a turd left by a stranger.

This is true, but did your 'trusted neighbor' crap in your yard or
did he merely point out the mounds of shit left by persons unknown 
and in effect point his finger at the Enablers in town who helped to
make it possible?

	The 'betrayal of trust' is a bigger problem, and has far
	more-long-lasting consequences.

Again, WHO did the crap versus WHO occassionally pointed out the crap
in the hopes of maybe shaming the Enablers into helping to clean up
the mess?  


	> That (documentation of your desire to receive it) and/or the overall
	> context of the publication demonstrates it is not spam/scam. For
	> everyone that is, except very possibly you,

	For people who have the time to do the 'research', that is.

	For someone who doesn't have the luxury of time, and has to
	make what amounts to a 'snap judgement',based on an
	'unfortunate' and small sample of our esteemed moderator's
	selections -- they *can* draw an adverse conclusion.  And, if
	you look at *only* what they had to work with, their decision
	is not indefensible.  Given the 'right' sub-set of data, the
	hypothetical 'reasonable person' *could* come to that
	conclusion.

	Do I think they "should" do so?  H*ll, no.

	Do I think such a conclusion is justified, or appropriate?
	H*ll, no.

	Do I think such a result is 'within the realm of possibility'?
	H*ll yes.

	Do I think the esteemed moderator could eliminate that
	possibility, by exercising a little more moderation?  H*ll,
	yes!

You have not yet begun to see the huge, horrenendous piles of garbage
which accumulate here each day. In the thirty minutes or so I have
spent considering and composing this reply to you, I can tell you
another 40-50 items have accumulated. With luck, they all fell into
the spam bucket, but in real practice they fell partially into the
real messages area, scattered far and wide, with subject titles so
tricky many of them will have to receieve at least a cursory glance
before being _manually_ eliminated. Are you suggesting that _I_ should
have time to work on all that even though you do not?

So, its a lack of moderation you want to see, is it? I have noticed
a few things in common about Enablers: so many of you fuss and quarrel
among yourselves as the 'correct' approach to take. Each of you feel
that _your way_ is best; that the others know nothing or very little,
and certainly simple-minded lay people like myself know absolutely
nothing at all. None of these problems we face will ever get solved
by one single solution. Many solutions and approaches will be needed.

Most Enablers have a very high-and-mighty approach, and because most
Enablers are relatively intelligent people -- but selfish -- they
think of a variety of approaches which will mostly work for themselves
and a few others, while leaving the majority of netters out in the
cold entirely. Some Enablers go so far as to threaten punishment --
not for the insects they should be abateing, but for other netters
who do not 'go along with them'. I have become convinced in recent
months that it is not the fault of the spammers/scammers; they are 
just insects out to suck blood and get their food. The fault really
lies with the Enablers who could make some changes on the net if they
would only get off their high horses and work with others. 

Let's twist things around a bit just as you have attempted to do with
me, your Esteemed Moderator. I could say if some of you Enablers
gave a Good God Damn one way or the other about your Esteemed
Moderator(s) -- I am sure there is more than just one -- then you
would be working your asses off make our jobs at least a wee bit
easier. And I don't think you do give a shit -- or an iota of a shit
for that matter what happens to the people who try to organize the
messages and maintain some semblance of order in these newsgroups. 
Because, to give a shit, it would behoove you to work along on
other's suggestions on eliminating spam/scam. That would require
getting off your high horse and listening and working with others.

If you were talking about stand alone, stand on its own merits (or
lack thereof) spam/scam then the answer would be to rebuild the
net for the essence of un-spoofable (or mostly so) 'caller ID'.
In any event, do not blame that on me. 

If you were talking about my commentaries on same, and the fact that
you sometimes wind up getting your nose rubbed in a mess not of your
own making, when it begins to happen less and less, I will talk about
it less and less, and if one message every two weeks or so causes your
spam count to go up 40 percent, then you really do have some virgin
eyes.


PAT

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #157
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed Apr 26 00:37:43 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 26 Apr 2006 00:40:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 158

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    60 Billion Emails Sent Daily (Louis Charbonneau)
    Prison Break Headed For Cell Phones (Natalie Finn)
    Television Stations Urged to Break a Few Rules (Stuart Elliott)
    Would You Trust This Man to Sell Superbowl Tickets on Internet (M Solomon)
    TiVo Dual Tuner TiVo Series2 DT DVR (Monty Solomon)
    Report: Fixed-Mobile Revenues to Reach $28b (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Joshua Putnam)
    Re: 5- v. 7-digit Dialing (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: 866-849-3243 (Harold Cade)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (John Doe)

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: Louis Charbobbeau <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: 60 Billion Emails Sent Daily
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 20:20:17 -0500


By Louis Charbonneau

Internet users around the world send an estimated 60 billion emails
every day and 80-85 percent of these are spam or scam attempts,
business leaders said on Tuesday.

Deutsche Telekom Chief Executive Kai-Uwe Ricke said cyber criminals
were growing more active and sophisticated, and the vast email traffic
meant industry, government and Internet users had to be vigilant and
work together.

"This figure was new for me as well -- worldwide there are around 60
billion emails sent every day," Telekom Chief Executive Kai-Uwe Ricke
told an Internet security conference.

"A large percent of it -- 80 or 85 percent is spam or fraud; it has
been as high as 90 percent in the USA, but not pesently," Microsoft
CEO Steve Ballmer added.

German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned of the recent
growth in "phishing" -- fishing for passwords, often via fake emails
that especially target online banking.

"In 2005, the attempts at phishing (globally) dramatically increased,
by 300 percent compared with the previous year," he said. "According
to international estimates, phishing is successful with up to 5
percent of all Internet users."

He said this success rate caused inestimable economic damage worldwide.
Internet security firm Symantec Corp registered some 8 million
phishing attempts last year.

Germany's BKA federal crime office said this month it had shut a
"phishing" ring of Germans and Lithuanians, sparing online banking
customers millions of euros of potential losses.

The BKA said the phishing ring obtained online banking customers' user
names and passwords and other sensitive data from their victims'
computers by means of a "Trojan horse," a self-circulating, virus-like
program that spreads by email and sends data from the infiltrated
computer back to the "phisher."

Schaeuble said many Germans used no form of Internet protection,
exposing themselves needlessly to phishing and other criminal attempts
to infiltrate their computers.

"One out of every four Germans is without anti-virus protection and
more than half had no firewalls," he said.

Ballmer said this situation was probably worse in the United States,
but there were signs Internet users were becoming better educated
about protecting themselves from cyber criminals.

He said it was important for software developers like Microsoft to
make their products as secure as possible. But he warned that improved
security would require the combined efforts of authorities, the
industry and users themselves.

"The hackers out there are really are smart and getting smarter. We
all have to run in front of them," Ballmer said, "basically, email 
is almost a totally useless tool these days because of the huge 
amount of fraud and spam circulating."

To improve U.S. cyber security, Ballmer said Microsoft would launch an
initiative next month in the United States modeled on a German
program, "Germany Safe on the Net," set up a year ago by Telekom,
Microsoft, the government and Internet-related firms to improve
Internet safety.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 
redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior
written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or
delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
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Other news headlines of interest are at:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Natalie Finn <eonline@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Prison Break Headed For Cell Phones
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 20:22:10 -0500


"Prison Break" Heads to Cells
By Natalie Finn

Calling all cars, calling all cars -- Prison Break is making a run for
your cell phones.

Fox announced Monday that it will produce a series of two-minute
mobisodes -- teeny TV episodes for mobile phones -- that complement
the plot of the hit save-my-brother-or-bust drama Prison Break.

The 26-installment serial, Prison Break: Proof of Innocence,
introduces the character Amber McCall, who works feverishly to clear
her friend L.J. -- son of the wrongly convicted Lincoln Burrows
(Dominic Pursell) -- after L.J. is framed for murder. Webisode
producers were allowed complete access to the show's location, filming
many of the exterior shots at the deserted Illinois prison that stands
in for Prison Break's Fox River State Penitentiary.

Proof of Innocence will be available for free exclusively to Sprint
customers for viewing on SprintTV's Fox station starting this week. In
two weeks they will be available on http://Toyota.com.

While this is not the first time Fox has answered the mobile phone
call, having already given action fans their weekly dose of pocketsize
drama with the first-ever scripted mobisode series, 24: Conspiracy,
the upcoming Prison Break spinoff is the first of its kind to be
supported by advertising.

Toyota will air 10-second messages at the beginning of each mobisode
and each segment will prominently feature Toyota vehicles, according
to a joint statement made by the car manufacturer and Fox. The deal
also hands Toyota the reins to create a Prison Break "microsite" on
Fox's Website featuring behind-the-scenes video and Prison Break info
and, of course, an extensive Toyota ad campaign.

Although the financial specifics involved in the partnership weren't
made public, media analysts are estimating the deal is worth around
$10 million, according to the Wall Street Journal.

"We're pleased by the overwhelming success of our mobisodes as a new
way to engage and entertain consumers," said Mitch Feinman, VP of
digital content for Fox Mobile Entertainment.

"This is a prime example of how Fox can come together in a rich, cross
platform campaign and reach the most desirable demographics in unique
and custom ways," said John Trimble, senior VP of advertising sales
for Fox Interactive Media.

24: Conspiracy's producer, Eric Young, will also oversee the new series.

Complaints that the Conspiracy mobisodes were too short and that their
lesser production values negatively affected 24's overall image --
although it was nominated for a special Emmy for portable programming
 -- led Fox to tweak the procedure for Prison Break. They doubled the
installments' length, from one minute to two, and the TV show's
producers have the final say over any plot twist in Proof of Innocence
to avoid irritating any of the show's 9.3 million weekly devotees.

Fox's news comes just as the National Association of Broadcasters
announced that TV networks and local affiliates should share revenue
from content shown on the new programming frontier -- iPods, laptops
and cell phones.

Additionally, three Hollywood unions announced today that they've
reached a deal with Touchstone Television so that they can get rolling
on making Lost Video Diaries, the mobisode offshoot of ABC's island
mystery Lost.

Copyright 2006 E! Online, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
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http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

Other news headlines and stories can be seen at:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: Stuart Elliott <nytimes@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Television Stations Urged to Break a Few Rules
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 20:23:56 -0500


By STUART ELLOTT

THE expression "think outside the box" has been overused enough to
become jargon. But for a few hours yesterday it was appropriate, as
local television stations were urged to diversify beyond their boxes,
i.e., TV sets, to remain relevant -- and profitable -- in the new
digital age.

"Conventional wisdom, it's an enemy at a time like this," said Beth
Comstock, president for digital media and market development at NBC
Universal, part of General Electric. "In media today, I don't think
there is a single rule that can't -- and frankly, probably shouldn't
 -- be broken.

"This isn't just about driving growth," she added. "It's about staying
in business."

Her call to action came at the annual marketing conference sponsored
by the Television Bureau of Advertising, an organization that promotes
broadcast TV as a medium. For the fifth year in a row, the conference
was held during the New York International Auto Show at the Jacob
K. Javits Convention Center, reflecting the status of automakers atop
the list of America's largest marketers.

For the first time, the conference was devoted to a single topic: the
importance of the "multiplatform" -- that is, offering content and
advertising not only on local broadcast stations but also online, on
cellphones and other wireless devices, through video on demand and on
video iPods.

The sole topic was intended to underscore that "advertisers and their
agencies are increasingly asking for -- make that demanding -- a
multiplatform strategy from all their media partners," said
Christopher Rohrs, president of the bureau, in a speech he gave to
almost 1,200 attendees to begin the conference.

To address that, Mr. Rohrs said, the bureau has selected a dozen
members to serve on a committee devoted to multiple-media platforms,
which plans to hold its first meeting today. The committee members
include executives from ABC, CBS, Gannett Broadcasting, Meredith
Broadcasting, NBC, the New York Times Company Broadcast Media Group
and Pappas Telecasting.

There are two principal reasons that TV stations are seeking to
broaden their horizons. One is "consumers will increasingly choose
what they want to see, when they want to see it, on whatever device
they want to see it," said Alan Frank, president and chief executive
at the Post-Newsweek Stations division of the Washington Post Company.

The other reason was offered by David Rehr, president and chief
executive at the National Association of Broadcasters: "Every new
stream of programming is potentially a new source of revenue. Most
distribution channels will create more value for our content."

Those prospects were the subject of a panel discussion led by Gordon
Borrell, president and chief executive at Borrell Associates, a
consulting company specializing in the local online advertising
market.

Mr. Borrell discussed a new report from his company showing that local
television stations more than doubled their Internet ad revenue last
year compared with 2004, to $283 million from $119 million. And, he
predicted, the figure would climb to $410 million by the end of 2006.

But ad revenue last year for Web sites operated by local newspapers
totaled $2 billion, according to the report, or more than nine times
what the Web sites of the local TV stations took in.

Local television "has the power to significantly drive traffic to the
Internet" by cross-promoting with the contents of station broadcasts,
Mr.  Borrell said, "yet it hasn't in many cases."

"You have a tremendous opportunity in front of you," he added. "All
media are in flux, and flux is a great time to institute change."

As an example, Mr. Borrell cited the Web site operated by WRAL-TV, the
CBS affiliate in Raleigh, N.C., that is owned by the Capitol
Broadcasting Company. The ad revenue for the site (www.wral.com)
exceeds the ad revenue for www.newsobserver.com, the Web site operated
by the leading local newspaper, The News and Observer, published by
the McClatchy Company.

When it comes to capitalizing on additional methods of delivering
content and ads, Mr. Borrell said, "we are where television was in the
late 1950's."

That outlook was echoed by the announcement yesterday of the final
figures for Internet ad revenue last year, released by the Interactive
Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. The results set a
record at $12.5 billion, up 30.2 percent from $9.6 billion in 2004.

"We must be like Google, in a constant beta state," said Christine
M. Di Stadio, senior vice president for marketing and new media at the
New York Times Broadcast Media Group. Her reference was to the myriad
test products and services offered on the Google Web site.

Local stations ought to offer opportunities for social networking on
their Web sites, Ms. Di Stadio suggested, to compete with popular
services like MySpace; streaming video, to compete with Web sites like
YouTube; and mobile marketing.

As an example, Ms. Di Stadio described a "mobile physician finder" she
is developing, listing doctors and their telephone numbers. Cellphone
users will be able to "click on the phone number and dial, using
click-to-call technology," she said.

"Guys, we needed all these screens to come along to make us exciting
and vibrant again," Ms. Di Stadio said, laughing.

Brian Wheelis, vice president and group media director on the giant
AT&T account at GSD&M in Austin, Tex., part of the Omnicom Group,
cautioned the attendees against worrying that they will be competing
against themselves.

"If you think about the Web as cannibalizing, you've already given up
and you're not ready for it," Mr. Wheelis said. He praised the Web
site of KXAN, the NBC affiliate in Austin, owned by LIN TV, which
offers blogs, podcasts, streaming video and other new media at
www.kxan.com.

Another member of Mr. Borrell's panel, David Buonfiglio, advised local
TV stations to take part in the nascent trend known as user-generated
or consumer-created content, which is meant to build emotional
connections between customers and brands.

Mr. Buonfiglio, vice president for local sales at Internet
Broadcasting Systems, cited a contest sponsored by the Web site of
WPTZ, an NBC affiliate owned by Hearst-Argyle Television that
broadcasts to Burlington, Vt., and Plattsburgh, N.Y. The contest on
the site (www.thechamplainchannel.com) "invited viewers to write the
next commercial" for a local car dealer, Mr.  Buonfiglio said, and
drew twice as many entries as had been forecast.

Mr. Buonfiglio also offered some advice in a humorous vein. "You
really should go out and tell agencies what you can do," he said. "Get
a capabilities presentation. If you don't have capabilities, get some
of them first."

Correction: April 25, 2006

The Advertising column in Business Day on Friday, about efforts by
local television stations to expand into new media like the Internet,
omitted the source of a comparison of advertising revenue for
wral.com, the Web site of staton WRAL in Raleigh, N.C., and the Web
site for The News & Observer. The information came from the trade
publication Mediaweek -- not from Gordon Borrell, who spoke at the
conference about the traffic for the two sites but not about their
revenue.


Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
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http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
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For more news and headlines from New York Times with no registration
nor login requirements; dozens of free articles daily, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 00:15:24 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Would You Trust This Man to Sell Super Bowl Tickets on Internet?


Would you trust this man to sell you Super Bowl tickets on the
Internet?  Enough people did. That's why Michael Deppe is facing
charges that he bilked them and others out of $370,000.

By Connie Paige, Globe Correspondent  |  April 23, 2006

The New England Patriots were three days away from the Super Bowl.

But, for about 10 fans, the suspense was not at the stadium in
Jacksonville but at the airport in Orlando.

They each had shelled out about $7,500 for a pair of seats to last
year's game through a dealer they found on the Internet. The tickets,
they say, were supposed to have been sent to their homes but never
arrived. So, they flew in on faith, relying on assurances from the
young ticket-seller that he would have the tickets at the airport.

Now, at a Hertz counter, they had cornered the 20-year-old man just 
in from Boston who had their cash and, they hoped, their tickets.

When the seller tried to put them off, one of the buyers called the
police on a cellphone. An officer arrived but refused to make an
arrest, saying the seller had until the start of the game to deliver
the tickets.

Then, in a twist that stunned the angry crowd, the young man turned 
to the officer and asked for protection. She shooed away the buyers, 
and the man drove off in his rental car.

Another close call for Michael R. Deppe.

Tomorrow, the resident, at various times, of Stow, Shrewsbury,
Marlborough, and Hudson is scheduled to go on trial in US District
Court in Worcester. He is accused of failing to deliver to 68 people
goods worth $370,000 in Internet-related transactions. Among the
witnesses may be a woman who was among those left standing at the
Hertz counter 14 months ago.

Deppe faces six charges of fraud stemming from the Super Bowl
incident. He has pleaded guilty to 10 other federal charges involving
merchandise sold over the Internet. Neither he nor his lawyer, Steven
Rappaport of Lowell, would talk about the case for this story.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/04/23/would_you_trust_this_man_to_sell_you_super_bowl_tickets_on_the_internet/

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 22:18:26 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: TiVo Dual Tuner TiVo Series2 DT DVR


     - Apr 25, 2006 04:00 PM (PR Newswire)

Record Two Shows At Once, Built-In Ethernet for Easy Networking and
                   Refreshed Upscale Look

ALVISO, Calif., April 25 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- TiVo, the creator
of and a leader in television services for digital video recorders
(DVRs), announced today the launch of the TiVo(R) Series2(TM) DT DVR.
Available at retail beginning May 1, the TiVo Series2 DT is the first
standalone dual tuner DVR with the award-winning TiVo(R) service and
features.

The TiVo Series2 DT DVR is optimized for cable households, allowing
you to record two shows at once, so now you never have to miss any of
your favorite shows -- even if they're on at the same time.  The TiVo
Series2 DT DVR also incorporates built-in Ethernet and USB ports,
making it easier than ever to add the TiVo box to the home network.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=57934851

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 13:16:06 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Fixed-Mobile Revenues to Reach $28b


USTelecom dailyLead
April 25, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvpkfDtutdaGbRkBWm

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Report: Fixed-mobile revenues to reach $28b by 2011
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon broadens reach of digital media platform
* Viacom snaps up gaming company
* Citigroup: Telecom TV to boost cable-network owners
* AT&T, Lucent report earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Integrate WiMAX into Your 3G Network
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Annapolis plans free, ad-supported wireless
* Enterprise customers look to 3G
* U.K.'s H2O Networks strings fiber through sewer pipes
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Supreme Court may review AT&T-Microsoft patent dispute
* Debate over franchise rules in Golden State heats up
* How China controls Internet use

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvpkfDtutdaGbRkBWm

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

From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
Subject: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 15:52:03 -0700


For most of a week now, I've been getting hang-up calls on my cell
phone, showing a caller ID of 888-695-9405.  If I call that number
back, I get a recording thanking me for calling the DNC Hotline, and
asking me to leave my number after the beep.  I was reluctant at
first, but after enough of these calls I did try leaving my number,
but the calls keep coming.

I've tried all the reverse lookup sites I could think of, none show
that number.  A Google search only turns up me asking, over in
misc.consumers, if anyone knew who that number belonged to.

After asking in misc.consumers, though, I have received email from
other people who have received the same nuisance calls from the same
number.

* How do I find out who that number belongs to?  

* How do I know that's really the number calling me?

* How, other than logging all these calls at www.donotcall.gov, do I 
get the calls to stop? 

Unfortunately, the cell phone they're calling is with Cingular, so
customer service isn't the greatest.

josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/>
Braze your own bicycle frames.  See
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html>

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: 5- v. 7-digit Dialing
Date: 25 Apr 2006 11:37:22 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Neal McLain wrote:

> You keep asking this same question, and I keep giving you the same
> answer: mandatory 7-, 10-, or 11-digit dialing applies to almost every
> ESS office in every state.  (I say "almost" because there's probably an
> exception out there somewhere; I've just never heard of one.)

Thanks for the detailed explanation.  The areas I wondered about were
the sparse areas with no population growth, areas where no exchanges
would get added.  In other words, plenty of "room" so there was no
conflict.  I'm not sure such areas exist anymore, although I
understand some western states are zero or even negative population
growth.

>   - Because every dialing plan has to avoid conflicts
>     between local 4- or 5-digit numbers and NNX codes in
>     nearby communities reached by 7-digit dialing.

Back in the 1970s I saw small town phone books.  Dialing instructions
for between towns could be rather complex, with a variety of odd
access codes required depending on the town.  I don't think this was
uncommon.

Further, in some places the dialable area was quite narrow, anywhere
required the operator.  Anyway, all of this would simplify the switch
level design.

In the 1970s, when the Bell System introduced dialed direct toll
savings, they prominently stated that they applied to areas that
didn't have DDD.

> Have you followed all this?  Or are your eyes glazed over by now?  If
> you haven't followed it because it's too complicated, that's my point:
> it is complicated!  It's amazing that traffic engineers back in the 50s
> and 60s were able to figure it all out.
> Even more amazing is the fact that they were able to implement it with
> electromechanical devices: Strowger switches and relays.

All very true.  Dialing outward could be controlled by special access
codes, as mentioned or simply not even provided for.

But inward dialing was still needed to these little points and
everyone needed a 7 digit unique number within the area code.  Some
towns had all toll service passed through a larger next down, that
probably was an SxS too, but doing double duty as a tandem to relay
calls through.

Many people were converted from 5d to 7d at that time, others got new
NNXs.

The Bell System Labs history Pt II switching goes into some of this,
although they don't get into the selector level detail you provided.

We take DDD for granted but as you showed, it was extremely complex.
The Bell System had a wide variety of individual exchanges and
trunking arrangements out there, and the independents had even more
variety.  In addition, the layouts were fluid as many suburban
communities were rapidly growing.  Indeed, I'm not sure how much DDD
was implemented before 1955 as the Bell System was until then
struggling to meet basic service demands.  Wholly new exchanges,
additions to existing ones, new cable plant, new commercial offices,
etc.  They had people working out of trailers due to a shortage of
office space.

> I trust this explains why 7-digit (if not 10- or 11-) dialing is now
> mandatory everywhere.

Thanks again for the information.

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

Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 15:33:36 -0700
From: Harold Cade <cade2661@comcast.net>
Subject: Re: 866-849-3243


The number belongs to xpedite.com.  This is their policy/contact info.

Do Not Call Policy
Xpedite strives to maintain the highest standards of ethical conduct and
is committed to complying with all federal and state telemarketing
legislation. No employee or agent of Xpedite shall engage in conduct
that violates the terms of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of
1991, applicable rules, or state telemarketing regulations. Our
personnel are trained to comply with this policy. At your request,
Xpedite will be happy to place your telephone numbers on our Do Not Call
List. We will note your request immediately, but it may take up to 30
days to remove your information from active lists. You can make your
request by calling 866-849-3243, or by writing to us at: 100 Tormee
Drive, Tinton Falls, NJ 07712. When you make a request be sure to
include your name, address and all telephone numbers (phone and fax
numbers, if applicable) you want to be included on our list. You'll
remain on our "Do Not Call" List for 10 years, unless you ask to be
removed. If your information changes, please notify us of the new name,
address, and telephone number(s) in order to remain on the Do Not Call
List. If you would like us to remove you from our Do Not Call List so
you may receive telephone solicitations by Xpedite or its customers,
notify us by contacting Customer Service at the number indicated above.
You may also send us correspondence by mail at the address indicated
above. If your name, address or telephone number ever changes, you must
give us your new information for your "Do Not Call" status to remain in
effect.

Corporate Privacy Officer

To contact our Corporate Privacy Officer when indicated by this Policy
or to address questions regarding Xpedite's privacy practices, please
e-mail privacy@xpedite.com or call 1-800-966-3297.

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

From: John Doe <john.doe@acme.com>
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 04:15:57 +0200
Organization: Guest of ProXad - France


On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:38:16 +0300, henry999@eircom.net (Henry) wrote:

> And to respond to DLR's concern about the line getting 'answered by
> the wrong machine', the point is that the _box_ answers the call and
> routes it appropriately. 'Distinctive ringing' from the telephone
> company isn't required at all.

Sorry for jumping in, but how do those boxes work? Does the box pick
up the line, waits for a few seconds, and ...

- if it gets a FAX tone, it will direct the call to the fax plug
- if it gets nothing, it will forward it to the phone plug?

But if it's a voice call, will users just get silence for several
seconds, or does the box simultaneously listens to the incoming call
to tell if it's fax or voice, and also play a ring tone so, in case
it's a human calling, the caller thinks the phone is still ringing?

Thank you.

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

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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:55:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 159

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    What Type of Wireless Should I Use? (Ghazan Haider)
    Cellular-News for Wednesday 26th April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, April 26, 2006 (telecomdirect)
    AT&T Eyes New Markets for IPTV, Rolls Out Faster (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (John Levine)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (Carl Navarro)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (Joshua Putnam)
    Re: 5- v. 7-digit Dialing (Neal McLain)
    Re: Telecommunications Alternatives For Distributed Workforce (Wm Warren)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Robert Weller)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Ghazan  Haider <ghazan.haider@gmail.com>
Subject: What Type of Wireless Should I Use?
Date: 25 Apr 2006 21:41:41 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


My company has two locations, 0.92km apart as per Google earth. There
is a direct line of sight.

There are about equal number of computers in each site. Instead of
using replication, we intend to keep everything on one server and link
the sites together fast enough to become just a single LAN.

Currently theres a 15mbit connection that is always saturated and can
be troublesome ... from wavewireless. I suspect its just a power
boosted 802.11b. I'm hoping for a gigabit connection using directional
antennaes.

I've looked into Wimax and D-link's 802.11n products. Dlink does not
provide directional antennaes for 802.11n yet, and provides no data at
all on range and throughput at that range. Havent seen off-the-shelf
wimax products out there. Bell Canada wont give us fiber optic lines,
just twisted pairs. However Cisco's LRE (long reach ethernet) products
max out at 15mbit.

I'd accept 2x 500mbit or even 4x 1gbit connections since we can use
etherchannel, but the connections should not encroach on each others'
channels the way say 802.11b does (bandwidth of two channels is less
than the sum of bandwidth of each channel).

Of course it should work in harsh weather. Any suggestions? Can I have
1Gbps at less than 1km?

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

Subject: Cellular-News for Wednesday 26th April 2006
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 07:39:27 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ 3G ]]

Georgia to auction 3rd generation mobile licenses on May 23
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17118.php

Georgia's National Communications Commission plans to auction licenses
for third generation (3G) mobile services on May 23, the commission
said Tuesday. ...

3G Licenses for Macau
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17125.php

The Macau government plans to license three 3G licenses this coming
October. In a press conference, Tou Veng Keong, coordinator of the
Telecommunications and Information Technology Development Office
launched the tender document and set a six month d...

[[ Financial ]]

Elisa 1Q Pretax Profit EUR39 Million Vs EUR39 Million
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17105.php

STOCKHOLM (Dow Jones) Elisa Oyj, the finnish telecommunications
operator, Tuesday reported net profit easing to EUR30 million in the
first quarter from EUR33 million a year ago. . The group's earnings
per share amounted to EUR0.18, down from EUR0.23 ...

TeliaSonera 1Q Net Up, Unveils Extra Dividend
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17106.php

TeliaSonera, the Nordic region's largest telecommunications operator,
Tuesday reported a 16% increase in first-quarter net profit and
pledged an annual additional dividend payment. ...

Japan's KDDI Jan-Mar Group Net Profit Y32.6 Billion Vs Y46.5 Billion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17107.php

Japanese telecom carrier KDDI Corp. said Tuesday its net profit for
the quarter ended March fell 30% on year, hurt by higher sales
promotion costs and a special loss from writing down assets. ...

New AT&T Boosts Earnings By 63%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17110.php

AT&T Inc., formerly known as SBC Communications, posted a 63% increase
in first-quarter profit Tuesday, helped by the acquisition of the old
Ma Bell as well as strong growth in wireless and broadband
services. ...

AMX in talks to buy Entel from Almendral
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17113.php

Latin America's largest mobile operator America Mvil is
in talks to buy Chile's second largest telco Entel from the Almendral
holding group, Signals Consulting president Jose Otero told
BNamericas. ...

VimpelCom says plans to borrow $700 mln in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17119.php

Russia's second largest mobile operator VimpelCom plans to borrow
about U.S. $700 million in 2006, the company said in a statement
Tuesday. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Russian police destroy 50,000 Motorola handsets
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17111.php

The Russian Interior Ministry started Tuesday destroying 50,000
Motorola C115 mobile handsets that were earlier seized from Russia's
largest mobile handset retailer Euroset, Irina Zubarev, a spokeswoman
with the ministry's K department, said Tuesday,...

Three New Phones Multimedia Computers from Nokia
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17121.php

Nokia has unveiled a new range of Nokia N-series phones, which the
company insists on referring to as "multimedia computers and
experiences". The Nokia Nseries range is an example of the fastest
growing product category in the mobile space: converged...

Asia-Pacific Region Overtakes EMEA in Smartphone Shipments
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17124.php

The latest market estimates from Canalys show some major changes
happening in the worldwide market for smart mobile devices (handhelds,
wireless handhelds and smart phones), with new names appearing in the
global top five. Despite a sequential fall i...

[[ Legal ]]

Siget probes operators over stolen cell phone activation claims
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17115.php

El Salvador's telecommunications regulator Siget is investigating
allegations that one of the country's five mobile operators is
allowing customers to activate stolen cell phones, local daily La
Prensa reported. ...

[[ Messaging ]]

China, Expecting 'BlackBerry,' Already Has 'Redberry'
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17117.php

NEW YORK (AP)--The BlackBerry e-mail device is coming to China in the
next few months. By then, thousands of Chinese may already be checking
their e-mail on the new 'Redberry.' ...

UK Text Messaging Reaches Record Levels
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17120.php

March 2006 goes on record as the month with the highest ever number of
SMS's sent throughout the UK. Figures for March have topped the
previous highest monthly total of 3.11 billion in December 2005, to
deliver an extraordinary 3.19 billion messages ...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Unions Agree Mobile TV Royalty Payments
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17126.php

Three Hollywood unions say that they have jointly secured an agreement
regarding payments to actors who appear in video clips sent to mobile
phones. The Directors Guild of America (DGA), Writers Guild of
America, west (WGAw) and the Screen Actors Gui...

[[ Network Operators ]]

VimpelCom CEO Wants To Tempt Russians To 'Phone More
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17109.php

Russia's second-largest mobile phone operator Vimpel Communications
plans to increase revenue by encouraging customers to use the
telephone more, Chief Executive Alexander Izosimov said Tuesday. ...

CTI plans US$262mn investment
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17114.php

Argentine mobile operator CTI Mvil, a unit of Mexico's America Mvil,
plans to invest US$262mn in 2006, local newspaper La Nacion
quoted the company's regional CEO Carlos Zenteno as saying. ...

[[ Personnel ]]

Deputy telecoms minister fired amid accusations of corruption
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17116.php

Bolivia's President Evo Morales has fired deputy telecoms minister
Jorge Estrella Ayala following accusations that Estrella demanded a
US$100,000 bribe from mobile operator Startel, according to local
press reports. ...

Phone Employees Killed in Iraq
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17122.php

Six employees of the Iraqi mobile phone network, MTC Atheer were shot
dead yesterday, at Nakhib, 300 km west of the Shiite holy city of
Karbala, reported Major Mahdi Saleh of Karbala's crime department. No
further details have been provided. A total ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

OFCOM Provisionally Awards Spectrum Licences
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17108.php

The U.K. Office of Communications, or OFCOM, said Tuesday that 12
companies have been provisionally awarded Wireless Telegraphy Licences
for the 1781.7-1785MHz paired with 1876.7-1880MHz bands. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Distribution  The Path to Success for Mobile Platform Suppliers
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17123.php

The future business models for Service Platform Environments will be
based on revenue sharing licence sales is history says
Strand Consults. The market for Service Platform Environments is still
in its infancy, but due to increasing competition thi...

[[ Statistics ]]

Statistics agency says Ukraine's mobile users up 10% in Jan-Mar
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17112.php

The subscriber base of Ukrainian mobile operators amounted to 33.034
million people as of April 1, up 10.1% compared with December 31,
2005, Ukraine's State Statistics Committee said in a statement
Tuesday. ...

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

Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 11:09:49 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 26, 2006
********************************

Vonage, The Cloud to Roll Out VoIP over Wi-Fi
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17679?11228

     VoIP operator Vonage has linked up with U.K. Wi-Fi hotspot
     operator The Cloud to launch a mobile/Wi-Fi service. The service
     will be available to Vonage subscribers who have specially
     enabled Wi-Fi mobile handsets, and then make cheap VoIP calls
     from any Cloud hotspots in the country. The service is restricted
     to these hotspots; customers...

Skype Announces Music Ringtones Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17672?11228

     NEW YORK -- Skype, eBay Inc.'s Internet telephone subsidiary,
     announced a deal Tuesday with music publishers that will make
     audio clips from artists like Madonna, Green Day and Red Hot
     Chili Peppers available to its users as ringtones.  Clips from
     Madonna songs -- including 'Like A Virgin' and 'Vogue' -- will
     be...

China Gives BlackBerry Maker, and Free Markets, a Raspberry
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17669?11228

     NEW YORK -- The BlackBerry e-mail device is coming to China in
     the next few months. By then, thousands of Chinese may already be
     checking their e-mail on the new 'Redberry.'  The Redberry is not
     a new version of the BlackBerry that's been designed by Research
     in Motion Ltd. for the Chinese market. It's the name being used
     by two...

Sprint Nextel Reports 11 Percent Drop in 1st-Quarter Profits
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17667?11228

     RESTON, Virginia -- Sprint Nextel Corp. on Wednesday said
     first-quarter profits declined 11 percent as merger costs
     outweighed higher sales for the cell-phone carrier.  For the
     three months ended March 31, the company reported earnings of
     $419 million, or 14 cents per share, compared with $472 million,
     or 31 cents per share, during...

Sprint Unveils Text to Landline Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17666?11228

     Recognizing the popularity of text messaging, Sprint Nextel
     introduced its new Text to Landline service, which enables
     customers to text messages to wired phones.  The service is
     designed to send text messages converted to voicemail messages on
     a landline phone. The Text to Landline service is being offered
     to customers who own 2-way...

Cisco Speaks Enterprise
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/17665?11228

     Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO - message board), the No. 1
     enterprise wireless LAN vendor in the world, is attempting to
     extend its dominance in the market through wireless VOIP
     technology partnerships that should help to improve the quality
     of voice-over-WiFi services for enterprise users.  The networking
     giant has teamed up with...

Alcatel, Lucent Face 3G Decision
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17663?11228

     Among the complicated decisions facing Alcatel (NYSE: ALA -
     message board; and Lucent Technologies Inc. is what to do with
     their disparate wideband CDMA (W-CDMA) plans.  Alcatel already
     claims Orange SA as a W-CDMA customer, and Lucent has signed up
     Cingular...

A VoIP, GPS PDA for Business Travelers
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17660?11228

     The bloom is off the rose for PDAs, which are increasingly being
     overshadowed by smartphones. But business travelers, interested
     in lowering their cellular costs by using a low-cost voice over
     Internet protocol (VoIP) service, will want to check out the
     Pharos Traveler GPS 525, a PDA with GPS and VoIP capabilities.
     Manufactured...

Boingo Expands Wi-Fi Reach
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17657?11228

     Boingo Wireless has forged two new deals that will add 1,200
     international hot spots to its Boingo Roaming System.  The
     company announced a roaming partnership with French mobile phone
     operator SFR that will add more than 300 hot spots in France to
     the Boingo Roaming System.  The SFR network consists of the
     Toulouse and Bale-Mulhouse...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 13:07:00 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: AT&T Eyes New Markets for IPTV, Rolls Out Faster DSL


USTelecom dailyLead
April 26, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvzEfDtutdboaJYJZb

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* AT&T eyes new markets for IPTV, rolls out faster DSL
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* In wake of telecom mergers, gear makers feel squeeze
* Vonage, The Cloud link up in VoIP/Wi-Fi deal
* Report: Consumers love the bundle
* Nokia launches more multimedia phones
* Sprint Nextel's Q1 earnings down
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Telecom Crash Course -- The must-have book for telecom professionals
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* "Redberry" emerges on China scene
* New Microsoft browser emphasizes safety
* Updated TiVo DVR lets users record two shows simultaneously
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* USTelecom's McCormick says telecoms won't threaten network neutrality
* Bush will nominate FCC chief to new term
* Franchise law unlikely this year, House aide says

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dvzEfDtutdboaJYJZb

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

Date: 26 Apr 2006 04:42:23 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?


> Sorry for jumping in, but how do those boxes work? Does the box pick
> up the line, waits for a few seconds, and ...

> -- if it gets a FAX tone, it will direct the call to the fax plug
> -- if it gets nothing, it will forward it to the phone plug?

You got it.

> But if it's a voice call, will users just get silence for several
> seconds, or does the box simultaneously listens to the incoming call
> to tell if it's fax or voice, and also play a ring tone so, in case
> it's a human calling, the caller thinks the phone is still ringing?

Depending on the box it might play a fake ring tone, or it might start
the answering machine message.  Either way, it's pretty putrid.

My suggestion is to order distinctive ringing, a second number that
rings on the same line with a different pattern.  Then get a fax
machine that understands distinctive ringing (a lot of them do, check
the manual) and will only answer if it hears the ring-ring pattern for
the second number.  That works great, fax and voice have separate
numbers and there's no question who's supposed to answer what call.

R's,

John

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

From: Carl Navarro <cnavarro@wcnet.org>
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 11:44:26 -0400


On Wed, 26 Apr 2006 04:15:57 +0200, John Doe <john.doe@acme.com>
wrote:

> On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:38:16 +0300, henry999@eircom.net (Henry) wrote:

>> And to respond to DLR's concern about the line getting 'answered by
>> the wrong machine', the point is that the _box_ answers the call and
>> routes it appropriately. 'Distinctive ringing' from the telephone
>> company isn't required at all.

> Sorry for jumping in, but how do those boxes work? Does the box pick
> up the line, waits for a few seconds, and ...

> - if it gets a FAX tone, it will direct the call to the fax plug
> - if it gets nothing, it will forward it to the phone plug?

Yes.

> But if it's a voice call, will users just get silence for several
> seconds, or does the box simultaneously listens to the incoming call
> to tell if it's fax or voice, and also play a ring tone so, in case
> it's a human calling, the caller thinks the phone is still ringing?

Yes.

Probably one of the most industry standard boxes over here is the
Command CS-5500.  It runs about $55.00.  Oh, check this out;  I
can't do that on my laptop :-)

Here's the link to the command comm website operating instructions for
the CS550:


http://www.commandcommunications.com/technicalsupport_3.html


Carl Navarro

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

From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 09:08:18 -0700


In article <telecom25.158.10@telecom-digest.org>, john.doe@acme.com 
says:

> Sorry for jumping in, but how do those boxes work? Does the box pick
> up the line, waits for a few seconds, and ...

> - if it gets a FAX tone, it will direct the call to the fax plug
> - if it gets nothing, it will forward it to the phone plug?

> But if it's a voice call, will users just get silence for several
> seconds, or does the box simultaneously listens to the incoming call
> to tell if it's fax or voice, and also play a ring tone so, in case
> it's a human calling, the caller thinks the phone is still ringing?

The one I use does keep the ring tone going while it listens for a fax
tone.

Unfortunately, these boxes don't work for at least two types of
incoming faxes:

1. Some computer-generated faxes don't start generating a fax tone
until after the line is answered and the ring tone stops.  That was
much more of an issue when I started using the box back in the late
80s, very few of those machines seem to be around by now.

2. Some humans send all their faxes manually, and don't hit the
"start" button until they hear the receiving fax answer and start
squawking at them.  So they try again and again, and leave hangup
voicemail instead of sending the fax.  Sometimes they can be convinced
to change their ways, sometimes they can't.  One client in particular
has been sending faxes this way since they got their first machine in
the 1970s, and they've trained the entire office to always send faxes
on manual dial, so I get to talk to them more often than I otherwise
would!


josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/>
Braze your own bicycle frames.  See
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html>

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

Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 10:40:44 -0500
From: Neal McLain <nmclain@annsgarden.com>
Subject: Re: 5- v. 7-digit Dialing


Lisa Hancock wrote:

> The areas I wondered about were the sparse areas with no
> population growth, areas where no exchanges would get
> added. In other words, plenty of "room" so there was no
> conflict. I'm not sure such areas exist anymore, although
> I understand some western states are zero or even
> negative population growth.

But even if the population remains static, telephone-number demand
rises because of pagers, cellphones, second lines, PBX-to-Centrex
conversions, CLECs etc.  And when demand rises in SxS communities,
even ILECs may need new NNXs just to avoid dialing-plan conflicts.

Centerville, Iowa illustrates both of these points.

According to Mark Roberts' original post (ca April 2003), an ESS
switch was added for 437 in the late 70s while 856 was still in
service.  But at the time, 856 was still an SxS switch, and only half
of its capacity was used for subscriber numbers (856-2XXX, 856-3XXX,
856-6XXX, 856-8XXX, 856-9XXX).  The other half was unavailable due to
dialing-plan conflicts. http://tinyurl.com/8axyn .

Of course, when 856 was converted to ESS, dialing-plan conflicts
disappeared and its entire capacity became available.

Mark also notes that Centerville's population had been "around 6,000
for about the last forty years."  According to the 2000 Census, it was
8,292 for "Zip Code Tabulation Area 52544."  Whether or not a zip code
is a good proxy for a telco exchange territory is debatable, but it's
the only data available at the moment.  Using that data, Centerville's
population rose about 37% between "sometime in the 1970s" and 2000.

During that same period, Centerville went from 0.5 NNX (half of 856)
to four NXXs (436, 437, 856, 895).  Bottom line: between early 1970s
and 2000, Centerville's population rose by about 37% but its
telephone-numbering capacity rose by 700%.

Taking this analysis in the opposite direction (Ann Arbor) -- before
the first ESS NXXs were introduced (761 and 764 in 1964), Ann Arbor
had 3.4 NNXs (662, 663, 665, and 40% of 668).  It now has 113 NXXs.
Ann Arbor has been growing rapidly, but I doubt that it's grown by
3,225 percent!

Neal McLain

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

Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 12:07:52 -0400
From: William Warren <william_warren_nonoise@speakeasy.net>
Subject: Re: Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce


kimi wrote:

> Telecommunications Alternatives For The Distributed Workforce (March 2006)
> Introduction,Distributed Workforce,Virtual Organization,Field Offices
> for Larger Concerns,Virtual PBX,Case Study-Centract,Knowledge Worker
> Impact Quotient,Conclusions

> http://www.freewebs.com/virtual-pbx/

Pat,

Please remind your readers that companies needing a virtual PBX may
also use Asterisk, which is open-source and available for free.


William Warren

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)

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

From: Robert Weller <rweller@h-e.com>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 08:41:05 -0700


Josh,

DNC is, presumably, the Democratic National Committee.  Did you ever
donate money to the DNC or one of its daughter PACs?  Even if you
don't have a "business relationship" with them, it is not clear to me
whether the "do not call" requirement of the Telephone Consumer
Privacy Act (TCPA) would apply to a PAC.  It would not surprise me
that the US Congress, when it wrote the TCPA, would carve out some
exemption for PACs.

According to the FCC's website, the Do-Not-Call registry does not
prevent all unwanted calls. It does not cover the following:

Calls from organizations with which you have established a business  
relationship;

Calls for which you have given prior written permission;

Calls which are not commercial or do not include unsolicited  
advertisements;

Calls by or on behalf of tax-exempt non-profit organizations.

http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/donotcall/

Good luck!

Bob Weller

On Apr 25, 2006, at 9:37 PM, TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
> Subject: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
> Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2006 15:52:03 -0700

> For most of a week now, I've been getting hang-up calls on my cell
> phone, showing a caller ID of 888-695-9405.  If I call that number
> back, I get a recording thanking me for calling the DNC Hotline, and
> asking me to leave my number after the beep.  I was reluctant at
> first, but after enough of these calls I did try leaving my number,
> but the calls keep coming.

> I've tried all the reverse lookup sites I could think of, none show
> that number.  A Google search only turns up me asking, over in
> misc.consumers, if anyone knew who that number belonged to.

> After asking in misc.consumers, though, I have received email from
> other people who have received the same nuisance calls from the same
> number.

> * How do I find out who that number belongs to?

> * How do I know that's really the number calling me?

> * How, other than logging all these calls at www.donotcall.gov, do I
> get the calls to stop?

> Unfortunately, the cell phone they're calling is with Cingular, so
> customer service isn't the greatest.

> josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
> <http://www.phred.org/~josh/>
> Braze your own bicycle frames.  See
> http://www.phred.org/~josh/build/build.html

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #159
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Apr 27 00:35:59 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #160
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Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:35:58 -0400 (EDT)
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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:35:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 160

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    AT&T to Offer Movies Over Internet (Reuters News Wire)
    Review: Webaroo Service too Good to be True (Anick Jesdanun)
    Phishers Now Use VOIP to Catch Victims (Antone Gonsalves)
    Seagate to Unveil 750 Gigabyte Hard Drives (May Wong)
    Proposed Epson Printer Class Action Settlement (Danny Burstein)
    More About HR 683's Attack on Free Speech (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (John Doe)
    Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice? (Henry)
    Re: New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA (Justa Lurker)
    Re: PBS/Sony High Definition Production Pilot Program (Justa Lurker)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Joshua Putnam)

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: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: AT&T to Offer Movies Over Internet
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:03:48 -0500


AT&T Inc. said on Wednesday it will offer its high-speed Internet
subscribers a movie delivery service in partnership with Starz
Entertainment Group, a unit of Liberty Media Corp.

Vongo, the service from Starz, will feature a co-branded AT&T and
Vongo Web site at http://www.att.vongo.com with a 14-day free trial to
AT&T high-speed Internet subscribers.

Vongo, which was unveiled earlier this year, offers subscribers
unlimited access to more than 1,500 movie and video selections as well
as live, streaming Starz TV channel for $9.99 a month.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Anick Jesdanun <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Review: Webaroo Service too Good to be True
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:05:47 -0500


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer 4 minutes ago

It sounds too good to be true: the highlights of the Web squeezed into
a data file small enough to fit on your laptop or mobile phone,
letting you browse even when you don't have a live Internet
connection. After giving Webaroo a whirl, I found that it is, indeed,
too good to be true.

Webaroo, downloadable as a free "beta" test from Webaroo Inc.,
promises to make it "simple for you to take the Web with you - and
find what you are looking for anywhere, anytime." On your PC or phone,
it stores the Web sites it believes will be most useful for finding
nuggets of information.

You customize Webaroo by downloading "Web packs," ranging from 64
megabytes for world news to 6 gigabytes for the online encyclopedia
Wikipedia. There are packs targeted for several cities around the
world, each as large as 256 megabytes. There's also one for soccer,
and others are in the works.

You also can direct Webaroo to download and store specific Web sites
you frequent.

Webaroo, which plans to eventually display targeted ads next to search
results, can automatically update the sites whenever you are connected
to ensure you have the latest information. Problem is, you must tell
it to do so -- and it's not apparent unless you happen to view your
preference settings.

My expectations were low and skepticism high. I knew Webaroo wouldn't
be able to handle my e-mail or instant messaging without an Internet
connection. Nor was I expecting the ability to post on message boards
or download video on demand.

But I was hoping for enough of the basics to answer reasonable
questions.

More often than not, I couldn't easily get what I wanted.

I began by requesting the Web packs for Wikipedia, world news and New
York, where I live. But Wikipedia never arrived. Only later did I
learn I didn't have enough disk space; Webaroo didn't immediately make
that clear.

I then tried to research restaurants, museums and hobbies in New York.

A search for the movie "Thank You for Smoking" got me the previous
day's showtimes from AOL City Guide, but links to that day's and the
next day's showings produced error messages. "24 Hours on Craigslist"
returned a mention in The New Yorker magazine that the documentary was
playing -- but I got no reviews or other details about it.

Being close to lunchtime, I decided to search for sushi restaurants on
New York's Upper East Side. The first three listings were instead for
Chinese, Vietnamese and Thai restaurants along with delis on the WEST
Side. The fourth result was for a general neighborhood directory, with
no information on each restaurant's cuisine or quality.

I also tried to find my cable service provider, but a search for
"cable television" got me a bed and breakfast that offers cable TV, a
computer repair shop called Cable Doctor Co. and a magazine review of
an HBO movie.  "New York cable television" returned information on the
Mets and Yankees baseball teams, not Time Warner Cable.

I managed to find the hours for the Museum of Modern Art, but nothing
on its current exhibit on Edvard Munch.

To be fair, not all searches were frustrating. After trying various
search terms, I managed to find what's currently featured at the
Guggenheim Museum.  I also immediately found airport parking
information, a subway map and the week's weather forecast.

Searches for news were acceptable. "Egypt blasts," "Nepal protests"
and "Thai elections" got me some information on current events, even
if the results weren't as extensive as those at Google Inc.'s news
aggregator.

I can empathize with Webaroo's challenge in making the most
information available in the fewest number of bytes. That means giving
high priority to directories and other sites with "high content
density." But such sites can lack depth and be poorly organized.

Webaroo says it wants to err on the side of brevity, but it may soon
offer size options -- those who want the bare-bones can get the
smallest version of the New York pack, while info-hungry consumers
like me can get it super-sized, even if it means having to delete
family photos from my hard drive to make room.

Also in the works is a "Web to go" pack -- some 40 gigabytes covering
just about any question you might have.

The closest to it for now is Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia in
which anyone can contribute, regardless of expertise. Although critics
say such openness results in inaccuracies and biases, proponents
credit its collaborative nature for a more comprehensive tome that can
reverse errors more quickly.

I tried deleting some of those family photos to make room for it, but
Webaroo still refused, even with 6.8 gigabytes free (Webaroo
recommends having at least 10 gigabytes available). Nor would it let
me use an external drive with more space (that option is coming).

I shudder to think how something that large will fit on a mobile
device.  Webaroo says you need a Windows Pocket PC device with at
least 512 megabytes of external storage -- for Wikipedia, you'd need
an 8 gigabyte compact flash memory card.

The desktop version works on Windows computers only.

Webaroo does provide some of the information you might need on the go,
but unless you have plenty of storage space, I wouldn't bother. Spend
that offline time reading a book or smelling the roses; either will be
more enjoyable than trying to surf an abbreviated Web.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Antone Gonsalves <techweb@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Phishers Now Use VOIP to Catch Victims
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:07:31 -0500


By Antone Gonsalves

A security firm on Tuesday reported discovering a phishing scheme in
which the scammers used Internet telephony to copy a bank's automated
voice system in order to steal customers' passwords, account numbers
and other personal information.

In the attack that occurred last week, con artists sent spam disguised
as coming from a small bank in a large East Coast city, Cloudmark
Inc., a messaging security firm, said. The message asked the recipient
to dial a telephone number to talk with a bank representative.

The number went to an automated voice system that asked for an account
number and personal identification number, or PIN, in order to access
the caller's finances. The number was obtained through a regular
provider of voice over Internet protocol services.

There was no indication that the VoIP provider was aware of the scam,
said Cloudmark, which declined to name the company and the spoofed
bank.

The incident reflected a mutation in the tactics used by phishers to
snare victims. More traditional schemes involve spam asking the
recipient to visit their bank's Web site through a link in the
message. At the bogus site, the visitor is asked to input personal
information.

The latest scheme, however, is the first Cloudmark has seen using
Internet telephony. An investigation by the San Francisco security
firm showed that the scammers had used open-source software called
Asterisk to convert a computer into a PBX, or private branch exchange,
running an automated telephone information system. The voice system
sounds exactly like the bank's phone tree, directing the caller to
specific extensions, Adam J. O' Donnell, senior research scientist at
Cloudmark, said.

O'Donnell believes it's likely the phishers were using virus-infected
computers that had been commandeered to take calls over the Internet.

The use of VoIP is a natural mutation of phishing, since it involves
Internet technologies that crooks operating on the Web are familiar
with, O'Donnell said. In addition, obtaining a VoIP telephone number
is easy and inexpensive and calls can be directed to any IP
address. In the latest attack, the phishers used the same pitch in the
emails, but used three different telephone numbers.

"Through the economics of using VoIP, phishers reap the same benefits
of any small business," O'Donnell said.

It's not known how popular VoIP technology will become with
phishers. That would depend on how successful it is at trapping
victims

"This is very early on, and we haven't seen a spike," O'Donnell
said. "Our main purpose at this point is to tell consumers before they
fall victim."


Copyright 2006 CMP Media LLC.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: May Wong <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Seagate to Unveil 750 Gigabyte Hard Drives
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:08:58 -0500


By MAY WONG, AP Technology Writer

Seagate Technology LLC is beefing up the capacity of its hard disk
drives to a whopping 750 gigabytes, offering consumers of digital
media more storage for their computers than ever before.

The drive Seagate will introduce Wednesday, the Barracuda 7200.10, is
the first computer desktop disk drive to hit the 750-gigabyte mark and
represents a 50 percent increase from the previous industry maximum of
500 gigabytes.

Scotts Valley-based Seagate, the world's largest disk-drive maker, is
first releasing the product as an internal drive for PC makers. Next
week, it plans to introduce external hard drives -- add-ons that
consumers can use to supplement their existing computer setups -- with
a suggested retail price of $559.

After that, Seagate plans to introduce versions for other consumer
electronics, such as digital video recorders that are growing in
popularity as standalone set-top-boxes or part of cable and satellite
television receivers.

For consumers, the beefier drives mean they can store more movies,
photos, games and songs with less worry about quickly running out of
space. They also could have larger backup drives to ensure against
data loss when their drives crash. (Seagate offers a five-year
warranty on its drives.)

Analysts say a 750-gigabyte drive could hold roughly 375 hours of
standard-definition television programming, about 75 hours of
high-definition video, or more than 10,000 music CDs converted to the
MP3 digital audio format.

For the hard drive industry, the capacity milestone pegs the biggest,
fastest jump in its 50-year history.

The big leap stems from a new so-called "perpendicular recording"
technology that allows drive makers like Seagate and rival Hitachi
Global Storage Technologies to boost the density of a disk by aligning
bits of data vertically rather than horizontally. At the same time,
fewer moving components are needed in the drives.

The advances are leading to the largest, most reliable disk drives
yet, said Seagate product marketing manager Joni Clark.

Before long, consumers will have terabyte-, or 1,000-gigabyte, drives
at their disposal, Clark said.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Proposed Epson Printer Class Action Settlement
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 20:37:43 -0400
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


Summary: a small bit of money back because Epson plays/played games
with their cartridges.

 	http://epsonsettlement.com/Faq.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: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:52:14 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: More About HR 683's Attack on Free Speech


Begin forwarded message:

  From: Paul Levy <plevy@citizen.org>
  Date: April 26, 2006 5:27:36 PM EDT
  Subject: More about HR 683's attack on free speech

I have written to you before about HR 683, the "Trademark Dilution
Revision Act", which would restrict free speech by depriving those
accused of trademark infringement of explicit defenses of
noncommercial use, fair use and news reporting that are afforded by
the current statute.  We have been trying for months to draw the
trademark owner associations who are behind this bill, to put their
arguments on the public record, and we are finally making some
progress -- it is remarkable how little they have to say.

This past Saturday, Editor & Publisher posted a column by Steven Yahn
that explained the problems, which lies in a subtle change in
introductory language to the three defenses.
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/columns/shoptalk_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002384406

The E&P column has, at last, succeeded in drawing the sponsors out.
Yesterday there were two letters from lawyers (who had apparently not
read the bill closely enough), along with Yahn's reply that goes
through the statutory and bill language in detail,
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002385861

Today there is a letter fron the bill's main private sector sponsor,
the International Trademark Association, along with my response.
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002423272

Sadly absent from INTA's arguments are any reasons why trademark
owners need this particular change in the language of the Lanham Act,
what legitimate interests have been harmed or would be harmed by the
application of these defenses to infringement claims, and why INTA is
so insistent in keeping this change that it sneaked into the bill
without explaining it (at least in public).

INTA has ducked these questions so far, but if it wants to change the
law, it should tell us why.

Paul Alan Levy
Public Citizen Litigation Group
1600 - 20th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20009
(202) 588-1000
http://www.citizen.org/litigation

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

From: John Doe <john.doe@acme.com>
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:50:21 +0200
Organization: Guest of ProXad - France


(BTW, does someone know why Agent doesn't display replies in a
hierarchical tree? Are msgs in this ng sent to some kind of
mailing-list before being published to Usenet?)

On Wed, 26 Apr 2006 09:08:18 -0700, Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
wrote:

> 2. Some humans send all their faxes manually, and don't hit the
> "start" button until they hear the receiving fax answer and start
> squawking at them.  So they try again and again, and leave hangup
> voicemail instead of sending the fax.  Sometimes they can be convinced
> to change their ways, sometimes they can't.

In this case, instead of playing a fake ring tone, the box can just
display a voice message to the ilk of "If you wish to send us a fax
manually, please hit the Start button; If you wish to talk to someone,
please wait 5 seconds before we forward your call". Meanwhile, the box
listens for an incoming fax tone, and forwards the call after 5
seconds with no fax activity. What d'ya think?

> One client in particular has been sending faxes this way since they
> got their first machine in the 1970s, and they've trained the entire
> office to always send faxes on manual dial, so I get to talk to them
> more often than I otherwise would!

It's always a good thing to keep in touch with customers ;-)

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: To respond to Mr. Doe's question about
why messages and subsequent replies are not displayed in a 'tree' or
heirarchal format, it is because mail is first processed in a Digest
format, _then_ the (TELECOM) Digest output is forwarded on to Usenet
for processing in comp.dcom.telecom. PAT]

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

From: henry999@eircom.net (Henry)
Subject: Re: Sharing One Line for Fax and Voice?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 06:55:24 +0300
Organization: Elisa Internet customer


John Doe <john.doe@acme.com> wrote:

> On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:38:16 +0300, henry999@eircom.net (Henry) wrote:

>> And to respond to DLR's concern about the line getting 'answered by
>> the wrong machine', the point is that the _box_ answers the call and
>> routes it appropriately. 'Distinctive ringing' from the telephone
>> company isn't required at all.

> Sorry for jumping in, but how do those boxes work?

> ...does the box simultaneously listens [sic] to the incoming call
> to tell if it's fax or voice, and also play a ring tone so, in case
> it's a human calling, the caller thinks the phone is still ringing?

Yes. 

Moreover, the 'dummy' ring tone generated by the box is customisable.
You can set it to match the tone normally produced by your telephone
company or you can make it something different, in which case the
alert caller recognises that he is through to another level
of ... ringingness.

Cheers,

Henry

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

From: Justa Lurker <JustaLurker@att.net>
Subject: Re: New Digest Sponsor Brings FREE Phone Calls and DA
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:56:59 GMT


This 1-800-411-METRO thing sounds OK at first, but I'm wondering if
usage won't somehow increase chances of telemarketer calls, etc. based
on the notion of an established business relationship now being
existent and so forth ?

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well no, I do not think so, since what
you are dialing is in essence '411'; and that does not increase your
chances of telemarketer calls. You dial the long form (800-411-METRO)
since telco is unwilling to default _your_ 411 calls to infreeda.com
unless you buy one of the intercept boxes from Mike Sandman
http://sandman.com  which converts '411' on the spot, on your premises
to the longer format. And the ten-second advertising blurbs you listen
to in lieu of paying the buck and a quarter telco otherwise hits you
up for is just a general message; not one which takes down your name
or your caller ID, etc. Plus which, if you use the 'place a call' box
on our web site http://telecom-digest.org/index.html a check box
allows you to block your ID if you think it is important.   PAT]

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

From: Justa Lurker <JustaLurker@att.net>
Subject: Re: PBS/Sony High Definition Production Pilot Program
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 00:59:27 GMT


Monty Solomon wrote:

>      Three New Stations Sign on to PBS/Sony High Definition Production
>      Pilot Program
>      - Apr 24, 2006 04:14 PM (PR Newswire)

> 'The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer' to Become PBS' First Daily Series in HD
> WETA in Washington, D.C.; WQED in Pittsburgh and WYCC in Chicago are
> Latest to Make Transition to High Definition Production with Sony
> Broadcast Technology

Curious that little WYCC, and not the inimitable WTTW, is the 
Chicagoland PBS station involved with this.

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

From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 20:03:19 -0700


In article <telecom25.159.10@telecom-digest.org>, rweller@h-e.com 
says:

> Josh,

> DNC is, presumably, the Democratic National Committee.  Did you ever
> donate money to the DNC or one of its daughter PACs?  

No, but even if I had, I certainly wouldn't have given them my cell 
phone number as a contact.

> Even if you don't have a "business relationship" with them, it is
> not clear to me whether the "do not call" requirement of the
> Telephone Consumer Privacy Act (TCPA) would apply to a PAC.  It
> would not surprise me that the US Congress, when it wrote the TCPA,
> would carve out some exemption for PACs.

I suppose it could really be the Democratic National Committee, if 
they're trying to annoy people into voting Republican.  But it seems 
like such a shady operation (endless hang-up calls, calling cell phone 
numbers, hard-to-identify voice mail, etc.) that I find it hard to 
believe it's really that DNC.  They aren't *that* clueless, are they?


josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/>
Updated Bicycle Touring Books List:
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/tourbooks.html>

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #160
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Apr 27 16:32:47 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 27 Apr 2006 16:35:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 161

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test (Reuters News Wire)
    Trojan Freezes Computer, Demands $10.99 Ransom (Jeremy Kirk, IDG)
    Google's Clickfraud Settlement Offer is a Complete Fraud (dorothyferns)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - April 27, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    House Panel OKs National Franchise Bill (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News for Thursday 27th April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use? (darktiger)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Bob Goudreau)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Ben Schilling)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (DLR)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do Tney Keep Calling Me? (Chas Cryderman)

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: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 14:34:46 -0500


Calif. agency OKs broadband-over-power-lines test

The California Public Utilities Commission approved a plan on Thursday
allowing providers of high-speed Internet services to test the use of
electricity lines to deliver online access throughout the state.

CPUC commissioner Rachelle Chong, who drafted the plan, said broadband
over power lines, or BPL, could become a new competitor to Internet
services delivered via telephone, cable and satellites and help reduce
prices for consumers.

BPL uses existing utility lines delivering power to neighborhoods to
carry broadband signals into homes.

It has been touted by equipment makers and regulators as a possible
competitor to cable and telecommunications services, which handle
almost all of the roughly 40 million U.S. residential broadband
connections.

BPL technology also could allow utilities to develop so-called smart
grid applications to more actively monitor and manage the distribution
of electricity, said Chong, a former member of the U.S. Federal
Communications Commission.

Until recently, U.S. utilities interested in BPL have faced various
financial and technical problems, The signals that carry data over
electrical lines can cause interference with radio equipment and can
travel only a short distance before weakening, requiring repeaters in
many areas.

Nevertheless, utilities like TXU Corp., Texas's largest utility, and
Cinergy Corp. in Ohio are exploring the service with privately held
BPL provider Current Communications Group.

The regulatory commission adopted guidelines for electric utilities
and companies that wish to develop and test projects in California.

Among the guidelines, electric utility affiliates and other developers
can invest in and operate BPL systems.

Utility affiliates would have to follow CPUC rules for transactions
between a utility and a BPL affiliate to protect against
cross-subsidies, the commission said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headline news, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/tc-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Jeremy Kirk, IDG  <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Trojan Freezes Computer, Demands $10.99 Ransom
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 14:36:54 -0500



Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service

A new kind of malware circulating on the Internet freezes a computer
and then asks for a ransom paid through the Western Union Holdings
money transfer service.

A sample of the Trojan horse virus was sent to Sophos, a security
vendor, said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant. The malware,
which Sophos named Troj/Ransom-A, is one of only a few viruses so far
that have asked for a ransom in exchange for releasing control of a
computer, Cluley said.

The new Trojan falls into a class of viruses described as
"ransomware." The schemes had been seen in Russia, but the first one
appeared in English just last month.

"It is a new kind of malware with a particularly nasty payload,"
Cluley said.

It's unclear how the Trojan is being spread, although Sophos is
investigating, Cluley said. Viruses can be spread in several ways,
including through spam or a so-called drive-by download that exploits
a browser vulnerability when a user visits a malicious Web site.

PC Frozen, Files at Risk

Once run, the Trojan freezes the computer, displaying a message saying
files are being deleted every 30 minutes. It then gives instructions
on how to send $10.99 via Western Union to free the computer.

Hitting the control, alt, and delete keys will not affect the bug, the
virus writer warns. Sophos provides further details at its Web site.

The virus writer even offers tech support, Cluley said. If the method
of unlocking the computer doesn't work after the money is sent, the
virus writer promises to research the problem and includes an e-mail
address.

Last month, a Trojan emerged that encrypts a user's documents and then
leaves a file demanding $300 in exchange for the password to access
the information. Victims were instructed to send money to one of 99
accounts run by e-gold, a company that runs a money transfer site.

The password, however, was contained on the infected computer. Sophos
cracked it and publicly released it.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more tech news, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/tech-news.html

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

From: dorothyferns@xtcmail.com
Subject: Google's Clickfraud Settlement Offer is a Complete Fraud:
Date: 27 Apr 2006 04:00:16 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Google's clickfraud settlement offer is itself a complete fraud:

Snip

Basically if you accept this "deal" Google will return .05% of all
fradulent charges to you. Yes, .05% . The example given was if Google
admits you had 10,000 dollars of clickfraud, you will only receive a 5
dollar refund.  And you don't even get it in cash -- you get it in a
"credit" for future advertising you may want to do through Google-
which won't be likely since Google just admitted to defrauding you for
thousands of dollars that they won't repay.

Folks, Google has just passed the realm of "shady business operators"
and into "outright crooks."

There's not much more I can add to the article,
http://www.marketingshift.com/2006/04/google-clickfraud-settlement-issues.cfm

it speaks for itself.

http://www.fuckedgoogle.com/

Snip

Your take?

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

Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 11:46:18 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Thursday, April 27, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 27, 2006
********************************

Internet2 Network Aims to Boost Capacity
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/17699?11228

     NEW YORK (AP) - By sending data using different colors of light,
     operators of the ultrahigh-speed Internet2 network are hoping to
     boost capacity by as much as 80-fold to enable researchers to
     connect telescopes around the world and perform other
     bandwidth-intensive tasks.  The new network should be in place by
     fall 2007, said Douglas Van...

Walt Disney Co. To Launch Family-Oriented Mobile Service in Britain
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17693?11228

     LONDON (AP) - The Walt Disney Co. announced plans Thursday to
     begin operating its own family-oriented mobile service in Britain
     later this year using the O2 communications network. The service,
     to be called Disney Mobile, will offer multiple handsets within
     the same subscription and allow parents to control spending,
     Internet access and...

AT&T Forges Ahead with Faster Broadband, IP TV Roll-Out
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17690?11228

     AT&T has announced that as of 1 May 2006, new customers can
     purchase the new Elite service online for US$27.99 per month (a
     12-month subscription commitment and other charges apply). The
     service offers downlink speeds of between 3 Mbps and 6 Mbps, and
     uplink speeds of between 384 Kbps and 768 Kbps. Existing AT&T
     Yahoo!  high-speed...

France Telecom Quarterly Revenue up 10.3 percent, but Core Earnings Flat
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17688?11228

     PARIS (AP) -- France Telecom SA posted a 10.3 percent increase in
     quarterly revenue Thursday but said regulator-enforced mobile
     tariff cuts and fierce competition in fixed-line offerings hurt
     core earnings. Europe's second-largest telecommunications
     operator said revenue rose to EUR12.81 billion (US$15.92 billion)
     in January-March...

Austria: EU Gives Conditions for T-Mobile Takeover of tele.ring
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17687?11228

     The European Commission yesterday approved the takeover of
     Austrian mobile operator tele.ring by T-Mobile Austria, but
     demanded action to preserve competition in the market. The
     commission was worried that the original proposal would have
     taken out tele.ring, which had offered the best prices to
     customers in recent years. To counter the... 

Loses Share in Domestic Fixed-Line Market in Q1
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17685?11228

     Polish fixed-line incumbent TP posted a better-than-expected 2.7%
     year-on-year (y/y) increase in its first-quarter 2006 revenue to
     4.56 billion zloty (US$1.5 billion), against 4.44 billion zloty
     in the same period last year. The group's operating profit came
     in at 877 million zloty, down 10.1% y/y from 975 million a year
     earlier, and...

House Passes Call Data Piracy Bill
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17684?11228

     By a 409-0 vote on Wednesday, the House of Representatives passed
     a bill to criminalize the fraudulent obtaining, buying and
     selling of consumer call data records, with provisions that would
     carry as much as 20-year prison sentence for convicted
     felons. With similar legislation pending in the Senate, the
     measure is rapidly bringing to...

FCC Steps Toward DE Reform
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17681?11228

     WASHINGTON, D.C.-The FCC sidestepped completely overhauling
     spectrum auction bidding rules for small carriers, but still made
     a dent in some of the more questionable bidding practices that
     have pervaded recent spectrum auctions, analysts say. The agency
     issued a set of proposed modifications to bid winners' lease and
     resale of spectrum,...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 13:23:38 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: House Panel OKs National Franchise Bill


USTelecom dailyLead
April 27, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dykEfDtutdbWjVRbaW

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* House panel OKs national franchise bill
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T, Yahoo! offer VoIP
* Starz' Vongo in deal with AT&T
* More dark fiber lines begin to carry traffic
* Motorola, Cisco end dual-mode phone project
* Web giants step up local plays
* Comcast, Alcatel, Tellabs report earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Bookstore Best-Seller: VoIP Implementation and Planning Guide
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Yahoo! offers service to record TV shows
* New technology combines mobile, landline phones
* Nokia, iPass strike Wi-Fi deal for dual-mode phones
* Analysis: Carriers' support of UMA key to success of next-gen phones
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* VoIP gear may be subject to export restrictions
* FCC changes spectrum auction rules

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dykEfDtutdbWjVRbaW

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

Subject: Cellular-News for Thursday 27th April 2006
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 07:56:30 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ 3G ]]

Ukrtelecom suspends tender for 3G equipment supplies
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17139.php

Ukraine's state-owned fixed-line monopoly Ukrtelecom has suspended a
tender to supply equipment for third generation (3G) mobile services
due to amendments to legislation on government purchases, the
company's Chairman Georgy Dzekon told the sharehol...

Bell Expands EV-DO Coverage in Canada
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17143.php

Bell Canada says that it has launched new EV-DO networks in Ottawa,
Hamilton, Burlington and Oakville, along with a new roaming agreement
with Aliant for EV-DO service in Halifax. Bell Mobility currently also
offers its customers high-speed wireless ...

Ericsson Powers EMT's Launch of HSDPA in Estonia
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17144.php

Estonian mobile operator EMT has launched commercial mobile broadband
services based on HSDPA in Tallinn. This launch follows the successful
upgrade by Ericsson of EMT's 3G/WCDMA networks with HSDPA. Under the
agreement, Ericsson has delivered commer...

[[ Financial ]]

EU Oks T-Mobile Austria Buy Of Tele.Ring With Conditions
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17128.php

The European Commission Wednesday cleared Deutsche Telecom's Austrian
mobile network provider to buy rival Austrian mobile operator
Tele.Ring Service, but imposed some conditions on the purchase. ...

Poland's TPSA 1Q Net Profit +9.2%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17129.php

Telekomunikacja Polska, Poland's largest telecommunications operator,
Wednesday said its first-quarter net profit rose 9.2% on slightly
improved revenues. ...

Sprint Nextel 1Q Down; Merger Costs Outweigh Sales
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17130.php

RESTON, Va. (AP)--Sprint Nextel Corp. on Wednesday said first-quarter
profits declined as merger costs outweighed higher sales for the
cellphone carrier. ...

Sprint Executive: Marketing Costs Weighed On Wireless Margins
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17131.php

Sprint Nextel Corp. spent more on advertising and retaining customers
in the first quarter, which weighed on the carrier's wireless margins,
Chief Operating Officer Len Lauer said. ...

Sonae Could Keep Portugal Telecom Interest In Brazil Vivo
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17132.php

Portuguese conglomerate Sonae will not necessarily sell Portugal
Telecom's stake in Brazil's largest mobile telephone operator Vivo
Participacoes, if its hostile bid for the Portuguese telco is
successful, Sonae Group President Belmiro de Azevedo sai...

US Cellular 3Q Profit Up On Higher Revenue, More Customers
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17133.php

United States Cellular Corp., Chicago, saw its net income rise to
$34.6 million or 39 cents a share (40 cents basic) in the third
quarter from $27.6 million or 32 cents a share basic and diluted a
year earlier. ...

Entel denies acquisition rumors
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17134.php

Chilean holding company Almendral denies being in talks to sell its
telecoms unit Entel to Mexico's America Mvil or any other company,
Entel president Juan Hurtado told BNamericas. ...

ANALYSIS: Ola's partner search winding up
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17135.php

The deadline for committing to participate in the bidding process to
become Colombia Mvil's (Ola) partner expires this Friday, but
the number of companies that will actually come through and make a
commitment is far from certain. ...

Telenor discusses sale of Kyivstar to Russia's VimpelCom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17140.php

Representatives of Norwegian telecommunication company Telenor and
Russia's second largest mobile operator VimpelCom have held
negotiations on the possible sale of Kyivstar to VimpelCom, Telenor's
press office said Wednesday. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Camera Function Tops List of Frequently Used Features on Cellphones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17142.php

According to recent research by InfoTrends, the camera is the most
popular mobile application. Although consumers may not be purchasing
phones initially for their imaging components, it seems that once they
try the camera feature, they are pleasantly...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Huawei Wins Russian CDMA Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17146.php

Huawei has won a contract to construct a CDMA2000 network for Skylink,
the largest CDMA operator in Russia. According to the contract, Huawei
will now provide CDMA20001X/1x EV-DO network in 25 regions and cities
in the CIS, making it responsible for ...

TDMA & GSM SMS Supported by a Single Server
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17147.php

Jinny Software says it has secured a contract to provide an SMSC,
coupled with a range of VAS applications and a Real-time Charging
Gateway to a key operator in the Caribbean region. The Caribbean
operator has an existing TDMA network and is currentl...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Alegro PCS ditches administrator Swedtel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17137.php

Ecuadorian mobile operator Alegro PCS has put an end to its management
contract with Swedish telecoms services firm Swedtel, Ecuadorian daily
El Comercio reported. ...

Sprint CFO Says Co Winning Share Of Customers
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17141.php

Sprint Nextel Corp. is gaining market share in winning over customers,
according to Chief Financial Officer Paul Saleh. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Georgias Argotex gets mobile license
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17127.php

Georgia?s Argotex has paid 19.9 million lari for a mobile
telecommunication services license, the National Communications
Commission said Tuesday. ...

Subtel stresses importance of regulatory reform
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17136.php

Telecoms regulations in Chile are significantly out of date and the
authorities are keen to implement modifications as soon as conditions
allow, according to Pablo Bello, new head of telecoms watchdog
Subtel. ...

Ukraine's regulator won't issue 3 GSM licenses to Golden Telecom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17138.php

Ukraine's National Commission for Communications Regulation (NKRS)
will not provide licenses for GSM 900 frequencies in three regions to
Golden Telecom, the commission said Wednesday. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Landline Operators Driving Fixed-Mobile Convergence
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17145.php

Fixed telecoms operators will be the driving force behind fixed mobile
convergence over the next five years, according to a report from
Informa Telecoms & Media. The study predicts 92 million subscribers by
2011 generating US$28 billion in revenues a...

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

From: darktiger <darktiger@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use?
Date: 26 Apr 2006 23:30:18 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Where to start? Well ... Run your own fiber :-)

Personally, I don't think you need GigE -- 100Mbps or even 48Mbps may
suit you well ... You make no mention to how many computers you have
on each side, but the server can only handle so many connections
(limitation of a single NIC)

For a lot of money you have this option:

http://shop.wirelessguys.com/s.nl/sc.2/category.526/it.A/id.2883/.f
Gbps for 1- 4 miles...

For less money you have this option:
http://shop.wirelessguys.com/s.nl/sc.2/category.535/it.A/id.2881/.f
150Mbps ...

Or for some good, carrier grade 48Mbps MAX (Time Warner Telecom uses
these)
https://shop.invictusnetworks.com/detail.php?id=16063

I use those RAD AirMux 200 radios for our backhaul - not bad... With
the right module you can even run 4x T1 lines over it for voice
traffic or whatever...

Hope this helps ...

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

From: Bob Goudreau <BobGoudreau@notchur.biz>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 01:36:18 -0400


[Please anonymize my address as usual.  Thanks.]

Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org> wrote:

> In article <telecom25.159.10@telecom-digest.org>, rweller@h-e.com
> says:

>> Josh,

>> DNC is, presumably, the Democratic National Committee.  Did you ever
>> donate money to the DNC or one of its daughter PACs?

> No, but even if I had, I certainly wouldn't have given them my cell
> phone number as a contact.

>> Even if you don't have a "business relationship" with them, it is
>> not clear to me whether the "do not call" requirement of the
>> Telephone Consumer Privacy Act (TCPA) would apply to a PAC.  It
>> would not surprise me that the US Congress, when it wrote the TCPA,
>> would carve out some exemption for PACs.

> I suppose it could really be the Democratic National Committee, if
> they're trying to annoy people into voting Republican.  But it seems
> like such a shady operation (endless hang-up calls, calling cell phone
> numbers, hard-to-identify voice mail, etc.) that I find it hard to
> believe it's really that DNC.  They aren't *that* clueless, are they?

Err, maybe I'm the only one that picked up on this, but it seemed
clear to me from the original posts that that the "DNC Hotline" was a
"D[o] N[ot] C[all]" hotline set up by the company in question (whoever
they are), ostensibly to comply with the TCPA.  Nothing to do with
politics, in other words.

Bob Goudreau
Cary, NC

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

From: Ben Schilling <Ben.Schilling@oci.state.wi.us>
Subject: RE: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 10:40:23 -0500


Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org> wrote:

> * How, other than logging all these calls at www.donotcall.gov, do I 
> get the calls to stop? 

Interestingly enough Congress exempted political organizations from do
not call restrictions.  <Sarcasm> You'd have to be cynical to think
that they might have some interest in letting those people call you.
</Sarcasm>

Ben Schilling

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

Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 12:09:37 -0400
From: DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?


>> DNC is, presumably, the Democratic National Committee.  Did you ever
>> donate money to the DNC or one of its daughter PACs?  
>> Even if you don't have a "business relationship" with them, it is
>> not clear to me whether the "do not call" requirement of the
>> Telephone Consumer Privacy Act (TCPA) would apply to a PAC.  It
>> would not surprise me that the US Congress, when it wrote the TCPA,
>> would carve out some exemption for PACs.

> I suppose it could really be the Democratic National Committee, if 
> they're trying to annoy people into voting Republican.  But it seems 
> like such a shady operation (endless hang-up calls, calling cell phone 
> numbers, hard-to-identify voice mail, etc.) that I find it hard to 
> believe it's really that DNC.  They aren't *that* clueless, are they?

Non profits seem to be excluded from the Do Not Call lists. And as
someone who lives in a house with people registered in both parties,
yes, both parties and their candidates pester us all the time with
surveys and get out the vote calls as primaries and general elections
approach.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: 27 Apr 2006 12:35:44 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Robert Weller wrote:

> It would not surprise me
> that the US Congress, when it wrote the TCPA, would carve out some
> exemption for PACs.

I'm pretty sure it was announced that political calls are exempt from
the "no call" lists.

What I don't understand is why they called your cell phone.  I thought
cell phones, hospital rooms, and nursing homes were explicitly blocked
by law from receiving such solicitation calls.  Cell phones because
the owner must pay for received calls and obviously it's a burden for
sick people.  (Didn't stop my mother from being bothered by calls made
by auto sequential dialers in the nursing home; I had to pull the
phone out.)

The people who make such solicitation calls obviously don't give a
damn.  They know most consumers won't bother to record the necessary
information and register a complaint and even if they do, they'll get
a slap on the wrist or fight the complaint dragging it out.

I am flooded with such calls on election day.  Indeed, I called the
local Party and they shrugged it off, saying they had no control over
it.  I think both parties called but the Dems were worse.  I hated the
pre-recorded messages from prominent politicians.  BTW, when I used
1169, I got "111-111-1111" as the calling number, which apparently is a
VOIP line.

I was also flooded with union calls.  My local union denied a
connection to the calls and refused to do anything about.  They didn't
appreciate the nasty letter I wrote to the national union complaining;
the next election call volume was down.

The definition of "prior relationship" is stretched greatly by
callers.  Some callers simply lie and claim "according to our
records, about ten years ago you did business with us and we just
wanted to check how you're doing".  A company is allowed to sell your
name or share it with "affiliates" which could be just about anyone.

I was really mad at my bank for soliciting me at work to buy stock,
yet when they wrongly bounced a check of mine, they didn't bother to
call me to inquire.  (They bounced it because it "looked funny").  I
had to repeatedly complain, but they did pay the penalties the
recipient passed on to me and gave me a letter admitting their error.

P.S.

The no-call lists have significantly reduced nuisance calls at home,
and that's good.

But I must say I must no use for the scumbags who sell and program
'auto-dialers' since they obviously made no exception for nursing home
residents or cell phones.

I haven't had incoming calls to my cellphone, but then my own phone is
rarely on to receive them.  But numerous people have complained about
them.  Many people (like me) pay for minutes for incoming calls, so it
is grossly unfair to call someone.

It turned out in my area there was a boiler room of phone solicitors.
The owner whined he had to lay people off.  Sorry, but I had no
sympathy for him or his laid off employees.  The unwanted calls were
very disruptive to myself and my family; thank goodness we at least
have this new law.

Can anyone justify this practice?

[public replies, please}

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

Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 15:56:52 -0400
From: Cryderman, Charles <Charles.Cryderman@globalcrossing.com>


Reader Joshua Putnam stated:

> "I suppose it could really be the Democratic National Committee, if
> they're trying to annoy people into voting Republican.  But it seems
> like such a shady operation (endless hang-up calls, calling cell phone
> numbers, hard-to-identify voice mail, etc.) that I find it hard to
> believe it's really that DNC.  They aren't *that* clueless, are they?"

Yes they are! Come-on man, didn't you see how the 2000 and 2004
elections went? Had they a clue they could have won (not that I'd bet
on it).


Chip Cryderman

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, if you recall during the last
election there were various Republicans who got in trouble (put on
trial and sent to jail actually) for jamming the phone lines of the
Democrats; was it in Connecticut?  PAT]

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

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TELECOM Digest     Fri, 28 Apr 2006 13:40:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 162

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Some NPR and Christian Broadcasters Invaded by Howard Stern (AP News Wire)
    Yahoo Cited in Jailing of China Internet Writer (Benjamin Lim)
    Vote Shows Rift over Net Neutrality (Jim Puzzanghera)
    Microsoft Not Plotting Aganst Google, Ballmer Says (Reuters News Wire)
    Uniden Phones Interference With DSL Phone Line - How to Fix (jrbdmb)
    Cellular-News: Friday 28th April 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - April 28, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Voip Updated Basic, Translating, Voip News Advanced (triblika@gmail.com)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Dave Garland)
    Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me? (Harold)
    Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test (Biteone)

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
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We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we
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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: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Some NPR and Christian Broadcasters Invaded by Howard Stern
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 11:04:30 -0500


Some commuters hoping to ease into their day with National Public
Radio or Christian broadcasts are hearing shock jock Howard Stern
instead.

Their favorite stations aren't broadcasting Stern's show, which has
moved to satellite radio provider Sirius. Instead, poorly installed or
defective satellite radio units, which act as mini-FM transmitters,
are being blamed.

"Usually they're upset, because they don't know what's going on. This
isn't what they tuned in to (hear)," Charles W. Loughery, president of
the Word FM Radio Network, a group of contemporary Christian stations
in eastern Pennsylvania, told The (Baltimore) Sun.

Some of the units use FM signals to broadcast the satellite signal to
the car's audio system, using frequencies low on the FM band such as
88.1, often reserved for noncommercial, religious or educational
stations. The signal from the satellite system can sometimes override
broadcasts from those stations for listeners in nearby cars.

Anthony Brandon, president and general manager at 88.1 WYPR, a
National Public Radio affiliate in Baltimore, said he has sent 60
complaint letters to the Federal Communications Commission, which says
it is investigating.

Neil Hever, program director for 88.1 WDIY, an NPR affiliate in
Bethlehem, Pa., said he has forwarded 38 letters to the FCC.

"Back in December, a gentleman called from Warren County, N.J.," Hever
said.  "He said, 'I'm not going to turn you in, but I take offense to
the rap music you're playing.' We said, "We don't program gangsta
rap.'"

"We're upset because we know it's aggravating our listeners, and we
know (interference with a licensed broadcaster) is against the law."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Benjamin Lim <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Yahoo Cited in Jailing of China Internet Writer
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 10:55:33 -0500


By Benjamin Kang Lim

Yahoo Inc. has been cited in a Chinese court decision to jail a
dissident Internet writer for 10 years for subversion in 2003 -- the
fourth such case to surface implicating the U.S. Internet giant.

Wang Xiaoning, born in 1951, was convicted of the charge of
"incitement to subvert state power" after e-mailing electronic
journals advocating a multi-party system, the New York-based watchdog
Human Rights in China (HRIC) said in a statement.

Wang's journals, called Democratic Reform Free Forum and Current
Political Commentary, included essays written under his real and pen
names and by others advocating democratic reform.

Evidence cited in the verdict included "information provided by Yahoo
Holdings (Hong Kong) Ltd. stating that Wang's "aaabbbccc" Yahoo Group
was set up using the mainland China-based e-mail address
bxoguh@yahoo.com.cn.," HRIC said.

Yahoo Holdings (Hong Kong) Ltd. also confirmed that the e-mail address
ahgq@yahoo.com.cn, through which Wang sent messages to his Yahoo
Group, was a China-based account, it said.

But the verdict did not indicate whether Yahoo Holdings (Hong Kong)
Ltd. or Yahoo China -- which is now operated by mainland China-based
Alibaba.com -- provided specific information regarding Wang's
identity, the watchdog said.  Pauline Wong, a spokeswoman for Yahoo
Hong Kong, said she did not have any details about Wang's case.

"The Chinese government has never approached Yahoo Hong Kong for any
information, and Yahoo Hong Kong has never given any information to
the Chinese government," Wong said.

She could not speak for Yahoo China, but said Yahoo companies
worldwide are required to comply with local law.

"Wherever law enforcement bodies request information, we would not
know the nature of the investigation," she said.

But she added: "We definitely condemn punishment of any activity
internationally recognised as freedom of expression, whether that
punishment takes place in China or anywhere else in the world."

The verdict stated that following a search of Wang's home on September
1, 2002, police found the offending essays in personal computer files
and records of his e-mail traffic, it said.

The verdict also noted that in 2001, administrators of Wang's Yahoo
Group noticed the political content of Wang's writings and did not
allow him to continue distribution, HRIC said. He then began
distributing his electronic journals by e-mail to individual e-mail
addresses, HRIC said.

The prosecution's evidence also included statements by two witnesses
who had communicated with Wang by e-mail after reading his essays in
e-mail or on Web sites, HRIC said.

The case is the latest in a string of examples that highlight the
friction between profits and principles for Internet companies doing
business in China, the world's number-two Internet market.

Web search giant Google Inc. has come under fire for saying it would
block politically sensitive terms on its new China site, bowing to
conditions set by Beijing.

In December, Microsoft Corp. shut down a blog at MSN Spaces belonging
to outspoken blogger Michael Anti under Chinese government orders.

(Additional reporting by John Ruwitch in Hong Kong)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Jim Puzzanghera <latimes@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Vote Shows Rift over Net Neutrality
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 10:57:46 -0500


http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-neutral27apr27,1,3974734.story?coll=la-headlines-business

 From the Los Angeles Times
Panel Vote Shows Rift Over `Net Neutrality'

A House committee rejects a bid to ban extra charges for faster, more
reliable delivery of data.

By Jim Puzzanghera
Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON - A fight in a House committee about online tolls offered a
preview Wednesday of the larger battle brewing over the future of the
Internet as Congress overhauls telecommunications rules for the first
time in a decade.

Despite lobbying from online giants such as Google Inc. and Yahoo
Inc., the House Energy and Commerce Committee rejected an amendment
that would prohibit the owners of Internet networks from charging
extra for preferential treatment of data.

Uncertainty over so-called Internet neutrality threatens to derail
broader efforts to update the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which
governs phones and cable television as well as Internet access. Some
changes already are strongly opposed by the cable TV industry because
they would allow phone companies to more easily offer TV services.

Opponents hope to stir up an online groundswell for strong Net
neutrality rules.

"The public is starting to awaken to this great threat," Rep. Jay
Inslee (D-Wash.) told his colleagues on the Republican-dominated
committee shortly before they voted 34-22 against the neutrality
amendment.

As more people use the Internet for data-heavy applications like video
and music, the copper wires and fiber-optic lines that whisk
information from computer to computer can get crowded. Big phone
companies led by AT&T Inc.  want to charge extra to guarantee fast and
reliable delivery.

Critics contend that would turn the Internet into a virtual toll
road. They say such preferential treatment violates the egalitarian
spirit of the Internet and threatens to stifle innovation.

All but five of the committee's Democrats supported the amendment,
along with one Republican, Rep. Heather A. Wilson (R-N.M.). The
Democratic support was heavier than in a subcommittee vote earlier
this month.

The overall telecom bill handily passed the committee 42-12, with 15
Democrats supporting it.

Opponents said they were not giving up. With House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) backing Net neutrality rules, and some
Republicans raising questions about the issue during a House Judiciary
Committee hearing this week, opponents hope to slow the bill's
momentum toward a full House vote in coming weeks.

Net neutrality could cause additional problems for telecom legislation
in the Senate. Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) is
drafting a version of the bill and has said Net neutrality is the most
contentious issue.

Supporters of the House telecom bill said it would make data
discrimination illegal and argued that no company was levying tolls
anyway. Committee Chairman Joe L. Barton (R-Texas), the main sponsor
of the Communications Opportunity, Promotion and Enhancement Act of
2006, promised to support a legislative fix if problems arose.

But leading Internet companies, including Sunnyvale, Calif.-based
Yahoo, Mountain View, Calif.-based Google, Seattle-based Amazon.com
Inc., San Jose-based Ebay Inc. and Microsoft Corp. in Redmond, Wash.,
do not want to take that chance. They have been pressing for strong
rules to guarantee neutral treatment of data over the Internet. Santa
Clara, Calif.-based Intel Corp. joined the group Tuesday.

On Monday, a variety of grass-roots organizations - including
MoveOn.org Civic Action, Common Cause, Gun Owners of America and the
Parents Television Council -- launched Savetheinternet.com to press for
Net neutrality rules.  The group said 500 blogs had linked to the site
and more than 250,000 people had signed a petition to the Energy and
Commerce Committee.

"It comes down to trust," Craigslist founder Craig Newmark, a
coalition member, told reporters in a conference call.

The telecom bill would allow companies such as AT&T and Verizon
Communications Inc. to more easily offer pay television services
similar to cable. The bill would eliminate the need for companies to
get permission from every community they want to serve by offering the
option to obtain a national franchise instead of the local franchises
that cable companies had to obtain.

That provision is part of an overall strategy by the companies to
compete with cable in offering video, voice and Internet packages to
consumers.  Barton and other supporters of the bill say that making it
easer for phone companies to compete with cable would help create
incentives to build more broadband Internet services.

AT&T and Verizon also are pushing a bill in the California Legislature
to allow for a statewide franchise.

Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft Not Plotting Aganst Google, Ballmer Says
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 11:01:50 -0500


Microsoft not hatching plan with eBay: paper

Microsoft is not plotting against Google with eBay, Microsoft's chief
executive told a German newspaper, but he said he did often talk with
his counterpart at eBay about working together.

"Of course we talk with eBay all the time," Steve Ballmer told
Germany's Die Welt in an interview published on Friday. "But we don't
get together in a secret circle and hatch plans about what we could do
together against Google."

Google posted a 79-percent jump in revenue earlier this month as it
took a greater share of the Internet search market.

Its rapid growth has spurred eBay to consider a partnership with
Microsoft or Yahoo, the world's second-biggest Internet search engine
company, as Google takes aim against Web auction company eBay with an
online classified service.

The Wall Street Journal has reported that eBay, a major buyer of Web
search keyword advertising, is talking to Yahoo and Microsoft as well
as Google about forming an alliance.

But Ballmer said: "A tie-up with the sole aim of shutting out a
competitor makes no sense. The partnership must produce something that
is useful for users and advertisers."

He added, however, that he did regularly talk to eBay's CEO Meg
Whitman, who he said was a close personal friend.

"I've known her for 22 years, and so we talk a lot about what
Microsoft and eBay could do together," he said.

Ballmer added that he had no plans to pay for Microsoft's new version
of Windows, Vista, through advertising.

"You mean, would we finance Vista more by advertising than by selling
software? Not likely," Ballmer said. "Part of the screen would then be
covered in advertisements. I'm sure most customers would rather pay
$50 or $60 more for their PC."

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines of interest please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/tde-extra/technews.html

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

From: jrbdmb@yahoo.com
Subject: Uniden Phones Interference With DSL - Why or How to Fix?
Date: 27 Apr 2006 19:35:44 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Here's a strange problem I have encounterd in the past week, and I'm
hoping that somebody has a clue on what could be happening.

My old Uniden 2.4 GHz cordless phone is on its last legs, so I have
decided to replace the phone with one of the new 5.6 GHZ models.  On
both models I tried (TRU8885 and TRU9485), when I take attempt to dial
the call using the handset or base, there is a dial tone for a
fraction of a second (almost too short to notice) and then the dial
tone goes dead.  After playing with the phone for a while I determined
that for some reason the phone is dialing a "1" by iteslf (local calls
would not go through, error message "you do not need to dial a 1 ...";
LD calls go through without having to dial a "1" myself).

Now, I disconnected all other phones from my line, verified the DSL
filter on the line in use, and the problem persists.  But if I hook
the same phone up in my "mother in law suite" on a separate line, the
phone works as expected.  Three tested units (2 8885's, 1 9485) all
exhibit the same behavior.  (Note that I have a Verizon phone line
with the 768KB DSL service, Call Waitng, Voice Mail, and a few other
services.  My mother in law's line is bare bones with no DSL or extra
services.)

So ... short of just returning all three Unidens for a different
brand, I'm hoping to identify and correct the problem myself.  Could
it be an interference issue between new Uniden phones and DSL?
Perhaps interference between the phone and some other serivce on my
line?  Are there better quality DSL filters that may resolve the
problems?  Could it be a Verizon wiring problem, even though my old
cordless phone works OK?  Or have I found a flaw in the new Uniden
cordless phones?

Thanks for any info you can provide.

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Friday 28th April 2006
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 09:30:01 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ Financial ]]

Vodafone Completes Vodafone Japan Sale, To Return GBP6 Billion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17148.php

Vodafone Group said Thursday that, further to its announcement on
March 17, it has completed the sale of its 97.68% interest in Vodafone
Japan to a wholly-owned subsidiary of SoftBank Corporation. ...

Alcatel Profit Dips 16% On Tax Charges
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17149.php

Alcatel, the French telecommunications-equipment provider that has
agreed to buy Lucent Technologies, on Thursday said its quarterly
profit fell 16% on higher tax charges. ...

Millicom's Q1 driven by 77% CentAm rev growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17150.php

European mobile holding company Millicom International Cellular
registered 77% revenue growth in Central America in the first quarter,
the company said in a statement. ...

SK Telecom Sees 2006 Wireless Data Service Revenue +20%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17154.php

SK Telecom said Thursday it expects its wireless Internet data service
business to post 20% revenue growth in 2006. ...

Cesky Telecom CEO:Merger With Eurotel To Complete July
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17158.php

Cesky Telecom will complete the merger with its mobile unit Eurotel In
July, Cesky Chief Executive Jaime Smith said Thursday. ...

Telenor says to continue talks with Altimo on VimpelCom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17159.php

Norwegian telecommunications company Telenor and Altimo, the
telecommunications arm of Russia's Alfa Group, have agreed to continue
talks on the possible acquisition of Kyivstar by VimpelCom, Telenor
said in a press release Thursday. ...

Sweden's Ericsson says 2005 sales in Russia at 4.554 bln kronor
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17160.php

The Russian sales of Sweden-based telecommunications equipment
producer and supplier Ericsson amounted to 4.554 billion Swedish
kronor in 2005, the company said in a press release Thursday. ...

Investcom Increases Yemeni & Sudan Investments
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17164.php

Investcom has announced that it has finalised the terms of its
increased ownership in its Yemen and Sudan subsidiaries. In September
2005, Investcom entered into a deed of exchange with Al Bashair
Telecom, agreeing to acquire an additional 40% stake ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Another Cellphone Health Issue Report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17167.php

The effect of electromagnetic fields from digital mobile phones (DMP)
on brain functioning is an area receiving increased attention. A study
conducted by researchers at Swinburne's Brain Sciences Institute (BSI)
in Australia compared the performance ...

[[ MVNO ]]

Walt Disney Internet Group To Launch UK Family Mobile Service
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17155.php

The Walt Disney Internet Group said Thursday that it is to create a
mobile phone service in the UK specifically designed for families. ...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Vivo: Over-subsidized handsets damage market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17151.php

Brazil's largest mobile operator Vivo has criticized rival firms that
are offering handsets at promotional rates of 1 real (US$0.47),
newspaper Estado de Sao Paulo reported. ...

Viva GSM to invest US$15mn in coverage, advertising
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17153.php

Bolivian mobile, public telephony and long-distance operator NuevaTel
(Viva GSM) plans to invest US$15mn in coverage expansion and
advertising this year, local daily El Deber reported. ...

FOCUS: New market trends force Russian mobile operators to evolve
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17156.php

While the development of Russia?s mobile telecommunications market in
recent years was characterized by soaring subscriber bases and falling
average revenue per user (ARPU), that trend now seems to be broken
with subscriber base growth decelerating a...

No more Animals from Orange
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17166.php

Orange UK is preparing to ditch its much derided "animals" campaign in
favour of a generic branding campaign. The Animals campaign, costing
around US$18 million was due to run to the end of this year, and was
based around classifying customers as a t...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Conatel to launch mobile license auction by year-end
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17152.php

Honduran telecoms regulator Conatel expects to launch a mobile license
auction by year-end, local press reported. ...

Phone Operator Study Criticizes EU Roaming Proposals
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17157.php

Mobile phone operators published a study Thursday attacking the
European Union's proposals to force them to cut the fees customers pay
while traveling abroad, so-called roaming fees. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Chinese Telecoms CAPEX Falling Slightly
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17161.php

Analysys International has reported that total capital expenditure (CAPEX) of China telecommunication carriers will reach US$25.6 billion (excluding 3G CAPEX) in 2006, representing a decrease of 1% year over year. According to the report, Chinese tel...

[[ Statistics ]]

Asia Phone Penetration to Reach 50% By 2010 - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17162.php

Asia mobile subscribers totalled 820 million in 2005, a 20.5% increase
on 2004, according to Business Monitor International's report on 14
key Asia markets. Of this figure, an estimated 59 million were 3G
mobile subscribers in 2005, representing a 57...

PDA Market Shrinks as Mobiles Take Customers
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17163.php

Following a holiday quarter in which worldwide shipments of handheld
devices topped two million units, the worldwide market for handheld
devices began 2006 with its ninth consecutive quarter of
year-over-year decline. According to IDC's Worldwide Han...

[[ Technology ]]

Doubling of Handset Filter Shipments - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17165.php

Multi-band handsets will drive demand for compact front-end modules
that simplify cellphone design, layout and assembly says Strategy
Analytics. Filters used in modules, including power amplifier, antenna
switch, low noise amplifier and transceiver m...

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

Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 12:05:40 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, April 28, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For April 28, 2006
********************************

Comcast 1Q profit more than triples
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17712?11228

     PHILADELPHIA -- Comcast Corp., the nation's largest cable TV
     operator, said Thursday its net income for the first quarter more
     than tripled, buoyed by strength across all its business lines
     including once-lagging digital voice.  The company earned $466
     million (375.38 million), or 22 cents a share, in the latest
     quarter, compared with...

Yell Buys Stake in Telefonica Unit
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/17710?11228

     LONDON -- Yell Group PLC said Friday it has agreed to buy a
     majority stake in the telephone directories arm of Spain's
     Telefonica SA and announced a 3.07 billion euros ($3.85 billion)
     takeover bid for the entire division.  The move bolsters Yell's
     plans to build its business through acquisitions following last
     year's purchase by its U.S....

Mobile TV's XXX Factor
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/17705?11228

     If mobile video is the next killer app, then erotic content is
     quickly becoming that killer app's biggest booster.
     Mobile TV industry sources say that outside the U.S. as much as
     30 percent of the video content viewed on mobile devices is
     pornography. (See Mobile TV Gets Moving.)Read...

EC OKs tele.ring Sale; Demands UMTS Divestiture
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17701?11228

     After eight months of deliberation, the European Commission has
     finally given its approval to the $1.6 billion acquisition of
     tele.ring, Alltel's Austrian business, by Deutsche Telekom
     subsidiary T-Mobile Austria GmbH -- but demanded that tele.ring
     divest its two 3G/Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
     (UMTS) frequency blocks as a...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: triblika@gmail.com
Subject: Voip Updated Basic,Translating,Voip News and Advanced
Date: 27 Apr 2006 17:42:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Voip Updated Basic,Translating,Voip News and Advanced How this is
possible, what systems are used, what is the standard, all that is
covered by this ...

http://www.freewebs.com/voipformula/VoIP-HOWTO.html

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 19:15:18 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
wrote:

> Non profits seem to be excluded from the Do Not Call lists. And as
> someone who lives in a house with people registered in both parties,
> yes, both parties and their candidates pester us all the time with
> surveys and get out the vote calls as primaries and general elections
> approach.

As one who makes some of those calls, I can give you a hint, at least
with the surveys.  Most of them are done by the various individual
campaigns, in an attempt to categorize people into three groups: those
who are gonna vote for us, those who are gonna vote against us, and
the undecided.  People who are firmly for or against don't get any
more survey calls.  (Being largely volunteer operations of varying
competence, however, screwups do happen.)  The undecided get more
sales material, maybe even a call from the candidate him or herself,
and another survey later.  As long as you're undecided, we'll keep
coming back.  The "for" people will receive get-out-the-vote calls,
the "against" people won't (we would, after all, prefer that they
forget to vote).

Multiply it all by the number of campaigns in your area. :(

We might not volunteer the name of the candidate we're calling in
behalf of, but at least in this state we have to tell you if you ask.
I suppose if it was a "real" nonpartisan survey, or one that was
contracted out to a market research company, the caller wouldn't know
who the client was (they probably don't share that info with the
minimum-wage peons who make the calls).

It was a dark and stormy night when PAT wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, if you recall during the last
> election there were various Republicans who got in trouble (put on
> trial and sent to jail actually) for jamming the phone lines of the
> Democrats; was it in Connecticut?  PAT]

New Hampshire.  Fallout from the case is still going on, the guy in
New Hampshire running the scam (James Tobin, the Republican director
for New England, who later became Bush's New England campaign chair)
made several dozen calls to a White House political affairs office
number on election day (while the jamming was going on), and the White
House is stonewalling on telling exactly whose desk that phone number
went to.  Tobin was convicted, there have been a couple of other plea
bargains, and the owner of the telemarketing firm that actually made
the hangup calls is awaiting trial.

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

From: harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com>
Subject: Re: Who is 888-695-9405, and Why do They Keep Calling Me?
Date: 28 Apr 2006 07:34:21 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The FCC rules on telemarketing are located at
http://www.hallikainen.com/FccRules/2006/64/1200/ .

Harold

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

From: Biteone <phil.schoendorff@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test
Date: 28 Apr 2006 06:35:07 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Have they fixed the problem with this service and it's possible
disturbance it could cause to broadcast radio ?

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #162
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat Apr 29 19:07:18 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 29 Apr 2006 19:10:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 163

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (Munir Kotadia)
    Mobile Phones 'Affect Brain Function' (Marcus Didius Falco)
    Dial-Up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Fee Dispute / Ruling (Monty Solomon)
    Data Storage Firm Apologizes For Loss of Railroad Data Tape (Monty Solomon)
    Telecom Update #527 April 28, 2006 (Angus TeleManagement Group)
    FTTH Deployment up 107% Since October (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing (Danny Burstein)
    Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test (Scott Dorsey)
    Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use? (Ghazan Haider)

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

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: Munir Kotadia ZDNET Australia <zdnet@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 12:53:23 -0500


Fighting Fraud by Baiting Phishers
By Munir Kotadia, ZDNet Australia

http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39347561,00.htm

RSA Security's Cyota division is helping fight phishing attacks by
giving the online fraudsters what they want: a lot of usernames,
passwords, online-banking credentials and credit card numbers.

Phishing occurs when cybercriminals set up fraudulent copies of a
genuine Web site -- usually of a financial institution -- and try to
lure customers of that organization into visiting the site and
entering their login credentials and other personal details.

Unfortunately for the phishers, one of the techniques Cyota is using
to help protect its banking customers is to pump such fraudulent Web
sites with so many fake entries that the genuine details are harder to
find, according to Naftali Bennett, senior vice president of consumer
solutions at RSA and co-founder of Cyota, which was acquired by the
security giant late last year.

"The technique is called dilution: We generate a list of bogus
credentials and feed the Web site with false usernames, passwords and
credit card numbers. The fraudster may have obtained 30 genuine
credentials out of 300 -- we are trying to make it less worthwhile and
more risky for the fraudster," Bennett told ZDNet Australia on
Thursday.

Dilution is just one of many weapons used by Cyota to help fight
against fraud.

According to Bennett, RSA Cyota runs a command center that scans about
1.5 billion e-mails a day looking for new phishing attacks. When an
attack is discovered, the company contacts the relevant ISPs to shut
the phishing site down.

"The main thing we do is shut down the Web site. It may be hosted from
12 different locations -- China, Seoul and Lithuania -- but we get a
real-time translator, contact the local ISP, and tell them we are
calling from the bank; please shut it down," he said.

Having repeated this process about 15,000 times, Bennett claims that
his company is getting rather good at it: "On average, the duration of
a phishing site is about 6.5 days. With RSA Cyota, it is 5.5 hours --
we really shorten the window of opportunity."

The information gathered by RSA Cyota will also be used by Microsoft
in IE 7, the next version of its Internet Explorer browser. IE 7 will
use Cyota's database of known phishing IP addresses to block access to
fraudulent Web sites.

"We have cut a deal with Microsoft, AOL and other ISPs. Within minutes
of discovering a phishing attack, we send Microsoft the IP address of
the spoofed Web site. If, by mistake, you click on a (phishing) link,
you will see a message telling you (that) you can't enter the Web site
because it is a fraudulent one," Bennett added.

The technology gained by RSA when it acquired Cyota is also being used
to provide banks with a risk-based authentication system that provides
an "invisible" second layer of security.

The profiling system seems to be favored by banks for their mass
market, low-value customers because it does not require relatively
expensive tokens, which have for many years been employed by large
banks to protect high-value customers and transactions.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news reports, please check out:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is an old, old trick, but still it
works pretty well. I did the same thing quite a number of years ago, 
when I was helping someone with a BBS which was absolutely a fraud-hive
(but he wanted to get rid of it all, however the hackers kept calling up
his phone line.) I helped him put a 'backdoor' thing in his code, and
pointed it to a bogus file of alleged 'credit card numbers' and
'telephone calling card numbers'. Then I took a big, giant, humongous 
core file which was labled 'mother of all cores' and stuck it in
there. (What had happened earlier was something I was working on, I
forget what, had dumped core -- a few million bytes of it -- that's
why I kept it and called it 'mother of all cores'). I gave it an
innocent looking name and buried it all inside that directory, which
I labled 'warez'. Then I put a 'secret password' on that file, and a 
real elaborate looking scheme one had to bust through to get into the
so-called 'warez' and 'credit card numbers'. 

We then went onto the 'hackers BBS' (under a phalse name) and I put up
a real tempting looking honey pot for them: "Hey, Doodz! There is a
whole load of fresh calling card numbers on the First Choice system
ANdover 3-0001."  The message I left told them 'the secret word' to
break out of the BBS program and get to the shell; (actually a quite
restricted rshell) and the password at that level to log in, and the
'file name' to look for. That night there were at least a dozen guys
over there snooping around. We sat there all evening watching them 
call in, break out to the shell, and download that hellish looking
file (which at 300-1200 baud download took them a couple hours easily.)
Then, the next morning I abolished the back door out of the BBS
program and eliminated the r-shell account entirely. That gave them
something to play around with for a few hours, all of them
enthusiastic with high hopes, I imagine.  PAT]

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

Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 22:01:52 -0400
From: Marcus Didius Falco <marcus_d_falco@yahoo.com>
Subject: Mobile Phones 'Affect Brain Function' - Yahoo! Australia & NZ


http://au.news.yahoo.com/060329/2/yenw.html
Mobile phones 'affect brain function'

Radiation emitted by mobile phones affects brain function, Australian
research suggests.

Scientists at Swinburne University of Technology's Brain Sciences Institute
in Melbourne studied the performances of 120 healthy volunteers on a series
of psychological tests during half an hour of exposure to mobile phone
emissions.

They compared the results to those collected when the same volunteers
were tested during a "sham" condition, in which the mobile phone was
not emitting radiation.

The study was designed so neither the scientists, nor the participants,
were aware when the mobile phone was turned on.

Lead researcher Con Stough said they found the subjects' reaction
times and information processing were impaired by the mobile phone
emissions.

"The study showed evidence of slower response times for participants
undertaking simple reactions and more complex reactions, such as
choosing a response when there is more than one alternative,"
Professor Stough said.

"Mobile phones do seem to affect brain function. They seem to be fairly
small effects but nevertheless, something's happening."

The research was published in this month's edition of the journal,
Neuropsychologia.

Prof Stough said research by the institute, which was yet to be
published, suggested the effects of mobile phone radiation on the
brain was cumulative.

"People, for instance, who use the mobile phone a lot seem to have
more of an impairment than people who are more naive users," he said
in an interview.

Elderly people were also apparently more sensitive to the effects than
younger users.

Nevertheless, Prof Stough is not about to give away his own mobile
phone.

"It's such a part of modern society ... and we haven't established
that there's negative health consequences. That's a different type of
study.

"We're just showing that the radiation is actually active on the brain.

"But the impairment is small. The convenience and the way that we
communicate now these days outweighs that effect."

Prof Stough said if people were concerned about the issue and they
still wanted to use a mobile phone, they should buy an ear piece.

"The further you get the phone away from the brain, the less radiation
it absorbs," he said.

As for any use of mobile phones in cars -- hands free or not -- Prof
Stough is against it.

"I think they should be banned from cars," he said.

The study was funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council.

Copyright 2006 Yahoo! Australia & NZ Pty Limited.


Direct replies are unlikely to be read. To reply use the address below:
falco(underscore)md(atsign)yahoo(dot)co(dot)uk

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For more information go to:
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------------------------------

Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 18:57:20 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Dial-up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Fee Dispute / Ruling


Dial-up provider loses Net access amid fee dispute
Ruling favoring Verizon may hike price of service

By Keith Reed, Globe Staff 

Service to thousands of dial-up Internet users in Massachusetts was
disrupted this week after a federal court ruled against a Quincy
company in a lawsuit that could have broad impact on the cost of
dial-up service.

The US Court of Appeals in Boston ruled April 11 that Verizon
Communications Inc. can charge per-minute fees for calls to local
numbers that dial-up users need to connect to the Internet -- in much
the same way that they charge for long-distance or other calls.

The ruling came after Verizon sued Global NAPs Inc., a Quincy company
that supplies local numbers to 28 Internet service providers for use
by their dial-up customers.

Verizon claims it is owed more than $65 million by Global NAPs. The
court did not rule on damages, but Verizon cut off Global NAPs's
access to its network, effectively shutting down Internet service for
customers of dial-up providers like MegaNet of Fall River, which had
to find another company to supply emergency connections for its
approximately 7,500 dial-up subscribers.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/28/dial_up_provider_loses_net_access_amid_fee_dispute/

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

Date: Sat, 29 Apr 2006 01:30:43 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Data Storage Firm Apologizes for Loss of Railroad Data Tapes


Information on as many as 17,000 workers at risk
By Chris Reidy, Globe Staff 

Iron Mountain Inc., a Boston data-storage firm, apologized yesterday
for losing personal data, including Social Security numbers, for
thousands of Long Island Rail Road employees.

The railroad is an Iron Mountain customer. The loss was discovered
April 6 by an Iron Mountain driver when backup tapes with employees'
personal data were being transferred between locations.

At risk are as many as 17,000 current or former railroad employees,
according to a report in Newsday yesterday.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/28/data_storage_firm_apologizes_for_loss_of_railroad_data_tapes/

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

Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 11:02:53 -0700
Subject: Telecom Update #527, April 28, 2006
From: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>
Reply-To: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE 
************************************************************
published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group 
http://www.angustel.ca

Number 527: April 28, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous 
financial support from: 
** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca 
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/ 
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.com/canada/telecom/
** MITEL NETWORKS: www.mitel.com/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions 
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE: 

** Rogers Cable Phone Customers Double in Three Months
** TD-Bank Chooses Bell IP Contact Centre
** CRTC to Hear Do-Not-Call Views Next Week
** Cogeco Upgrades Internet Service
** Bell Extends High-Speed Wireless
** Rogers Expands Ottawa Calling Area
** Rogers and Sprint Plan Transborder MPLS
** Bell Reports Progress in Videotron Dispute
** MTS to Receive $10 Million Subsidy Payment
** CRTC Slashes Billed Number Screening Fees
** Aliant Inside Wire Services Deregulated
** CSI Sells Fixed Wireless Business
** MTS Shareholders to Meet Tuesday
** Avaya Sales Flat
** Telehop Revenue Jumps 36%
** Ex-Nortel Exec Named Nakina Chair
** Sierra Chooses New Chairman
** Six Weeks to Telecom Summit

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

ROGERS CABLE PHONE CUSTOMERS DOUBLE IN THREE MONTHS: Rogers
Communications had 96,700 cable telephony customers by March 31, twice
the total three months earlier. The company's circuit-switched
customer base increased 22% from a year earlier, bringing its total
base of residential local telephony customers to 498,700.

** Rogers now has 14% more postpaid cellular customers than a 
   year ago. Revenue per customer is up by 5.1%, and the 
   churn rate is down to 1.47%. Data now accounts for 10.3% 
   of wireless network revenue. 

** Rogers Business Solutions, which includes the former 
   business wing of Call-Net, increased its revenue by 5.6% 
   from a year ago.

** Rogers is now primarily a telecom company: cellular alone 
   makes up 52% of its total revenue, and all telecom 
   revenues comprise 63%.

TD-BANK CHOOSES BELL IP CONTACT CENTRE: Toronto Dominion Bank has
signed a seven-year contract with Bell Canada to use Bell's hosted
contact centre service, which is based on Cisco IP telephony
technology. The incumbent contact centre provider was MTS Allstream.

CRTC TO HEAR DO-NOT-CALL VIEWS NEXT WEEK: The CRTC's public
consultation on Canadian "Do Not Call" rules runs Tuesday-Thursday of
next week (May 2-4) in Gatineau. The Commission's website sets out the
agenda, and will provide a live audio feed and transcripts of the
hearing.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/process/2006/may2.htm

COGECO UPGRADES INTERNET SERVICE: Cogeco Cable has increased the
maximum download speed of its standard Internet access service to 7
Mbps. Limits on monthly download volumes have been increased by three
to five times, depending on service plan.

BELL EXTENDS HIGH-SPEED WIRELESS: Bell Canada has launched EV-DO
wireless service, which delivers data at up to 2.4 Mbps, in Ottawa,
Hamilton, Burlington, and Oakville. Bell says it now offers the
service in 15 urban centres covering all regions of Canada.

** A network sharing agreement allows Bell and Telus to use 
   each other's EV-DO facilities.

ROGERS EXPANDS OTTAWA CALLING AREA: Beginning this weekend, Rogers
Communications will extend the free calling area for its Home Phone
service in Ottawa to cover all of Ottawa-Gatineau, as well as North
Grenville, Merrickville, Carleton Place, Lanark, Russell, and other
surrounding communities.

** For more than five years, the City of Ottawa has been asking the
   CRTC and Bell Canada to eliminate long distance charges within the
   amalgamated city. (See Telecom Update #287)

ROGERS AND SPRINT PLAN TRANSBORDER MPLS: Rogers Business Solutions and
U.S. LD Carrier Sprint have agreed to jointly offer IP networks with
MPLS (Multi-Protocol Label Switching) to business customers with
locations in Canada and the U.S.

BELL REPORTS PROGRESS IN VIDEOTRON DISPUTE: The CRTC has agreed to
Bell Canada's request that the deadline for Videotron's response to
Bell's recent complaint be extended to May 31. The telco says it is
"encouraged" by discussions with Videotron: Bell had complained that
the cableco was refusing to let its telephone customers use Bell's
high-speed Internet service. (See Telecom Update #524)

MTS TO RECEIVE $10 MILLION SUBSIDY PAYMENT: The CRTC has agreed that
MTS should receive a retroactive subsidy of $9.893 million for
providing residential service in its high-cost Band F area from
January 2002 to October 2003.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-20.htm

CRTC SLASHES BILLED NUMBER SCREENING FEES: The CRTC has ordered Bell
Canada to reduce the fee it charges carriers to make changes to its
Billed Number Screening (BNS) database, to $0.34 from $3.16 per
transaction. The Commission has also ordered Telus to show cause why
its BNS rates should not be similarly reduced.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-24.htm

ALIANT INSIDE WIRE SERVICES DEREGULATED: The CRTC has deregulated
diagnostic, repair, and maintenance services provided by Aliant for
single-line customers' inside wire, except for customers who do not
have a jack-ended demarcation device.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-21.htm

CSI SELLS FIXED WIRELESS BUSINESS: CSI Wireless of Calgary has agreed
to sell its fixed wireless business to Illinois-based Telular for
$14.8 million. CSI is also trying to sell its telematics business in
order to concentrate on global positioning system products.

MTS SHAREHOLDERS TO MEET TUESDAY: Manitoba Telecom Services will hold
its Annual Meeting of Shareholders on Tuesday, May 2, at the Fort
Garry Hotel in Winnipeg. The meeting, which begins at noon Eastern
Time, will be available as a live webcast at www.mtsallstream.com.

AVAYA SALES FLAT: Avaya reports first quarter sales of $1.24 billion,
up 1% from a year ago and down 1% from the previous quarter. Product
sales rose 9% on the year, but services revenue fell 5%. Net income of
$38 million was slightly higher than a year ago, but half the level of
the previous quarter.

TELEHOP REVENUE JUMPS 36%: LD carrier Telehop Communications reports
$20.8 million in total revenue for 2005, up from $15.3 million in
2004. Net income was $611,000, more than double last year's figure.

** Telehop has named former Bell Canada Senior VP Barry Dixon 
   as interim chair while the company's founder and chair, 
   Hersh Spiegelman, undergoes medical treatment in the U.S. 

EX-NORTEL EXEC NAMED NAKINA CHAIR: Marco Pagini, who headed Nortel's
optical division until 2004, has been appointed Chairman of Nakina
Systems, an Ottawa-based developer of network management software for
carriers.

SIERRA CHOOSES NEW CHAIRMAN: Sierra Wireless has named Charles Levine,
former President of Sprint PCS, as chairman. He replaces Peter Ciceri.

SIX WEEKS TO TELECOM SUMMIT: The 2006 Canadian Telecom Summit will be
held at the Toronto Congress Centre, June 12-14. Featured speakers
include federal Industry Minister Maxime Bernier and CRTC Chair
Charles Dalfen.  For information, and to register, go to
http://www.gstconferences.com/.

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

HOW TO SUBMIT ITEMS FOR TELECOM UPDATE

E-mail ianangus@angustel.ca and jriddell@angustel.ca

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

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE (OR UNSUBSCRIBE)

TELECOM UPDATE is provided in electronic form only. There 
are two formats available:

1. The fully-formatted edition is posted on the 
   World Wide Web late Friday afternoon each week 
   at http://www.angustel.ca

2. The e-mail edition is distributed free of charge.
   To subscribe, send an e-mail message to:
      join-telecom_update@nova.sparklist.com 
   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send 
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   see http://www.angustel.ca/update/privacy.html.

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

COPYRIGHT AND CONDITIONS OF USE: All contents copyright 2006 Angus
TeleManagement Group Inc. All rights reserved. For further information,
including permission to reprint or reproduce, please e-mail
jriddell@angustel.ca.

The information and data included has been obtained from 
sources which we believe to be reliable, but Angus 
TeleManagement makes no warranties or representations 
whatsoever regarding accuracy, completeness, or adequacy. 
Opinions expressed are based on interpretation of available 
information, and are subject to change. If expert advice on 
the subject matter is required, the services of a competent 
professional should be obtained.

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

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

Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 13:28:17 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: FTTH Deployment up 107% Since October


USTelecom dailyLead
April 28, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dywQfDtutddjiZhzhh

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* FTTH deployment up 107% since October
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon cuts off local telecom's Internet service
* Yell buys Spanish rival
* Triple play dominates tech spending by cable carriers
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Stay on top of IPTV, Network Security, IMS, Ethernet, IPv6 and more
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Report: Ethernet services revenue more than doubled
* Internet2 announces new, faster network
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Skype passes 100M users
* Vonage details IPO plans
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* California PUC eases BPL rules
* Proposal would use chunk of 700 MHz spectrum for emergency services

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dywQfDtutddjiZhzhh

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing...
Date: Sat, 29 Apr 2006 03:44:07 -0400
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


" Local hacker 'Memehacker' ('instant messaged') in with a scoop on
Alan Ralsky, the famed 'Spam King' covered by the Observer and the
Detroit News. Here's the breaking story:

" Valleywag: 'Tell me the scoop in three sentences.

" Memehacker: 'Alan Ralsky is currently being held by the feds and his
file is sealed for the next 72 hours by the DOJ. We are concerned that
he is going to narq out the entire network since they have enough on
him to send him to jail.

" 'This means hackers, spammers, anyone who has worked in spam legally
or illegally for the last 5 years at least.  The DOJ wants to do a
dragnet, they have the top dog, but they want the whole system as
well ...

http://www.valleywag.com/tech/alan-ralsky/scoop-doj-jails-spam-king-alan-ralsky-might-rat-out-a-massive-hacker-spammer-network-170385.php

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

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test
Date: 28 Apr 2006 14:09:27 -0400
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


Biteone  <phil.schoendorff@gmail.com> wrote:

> Have they fixed the problem with this service and it's possible
> disturbance it could cause to broadcast radio ?

No. There really isn't one, short of redesigning the whole power
delivery infrastructrue.

--scott
-- 
"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

From: Ghazan  Haider <ghazan.haider@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use?
Date: 28 Apr 2006 21:21:32 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> Where to start? Well ... Run your own fiber :-)

That was the first idea. Option exhausted.

> Personally, I don't think you need GigE -- 100Mbps or even 48Mbps may
> suit you well ... You make no mention to how many computers you have
> on each side, but the server can only handle so many connections
> (limitation of a single NIC)

Well we've really hit the ceiling with 15mbps now. There are all kinds
of citrix connections breaking, files can't be transferred etc. Think
30 desktop/laptops in each location with most of the servers in one
location. 15mbps doesnt cut it, and we'll quickly hit the ceiling with
50mbps since at least one site's switch will be gigabit. We have a
dual subnet setup, and with the citrix licenses it all adds to the
running costs. Not to mention the additional servers for the second
site. We'll maintain it as is if theres no feasible option, but it
never hurts to fish.

> For a lot of money you have this option:

> http://shop.wirelessguys.com/s.nl/sc.2/category.526/it.A/id.2883/.f
> Gbps for 1- 4 miles...

Someone else mentioned this to me. In Canadian dollars, including tax
etc its 75000. I'll keep this at the back of my head if the company
really grows.

> For less money you have this option:
> http://shop.wirelessguys.com/s.nl/sc.2/category.535/it.A/id.2881/.f
> 150Mbps ...

Wave wireless sells (802.11g based) 108mbps for way less. Problem is
given the protocol you cant aggregate the links properly, two 108
links or channels dont add to 216. Cant do etherchannel either. This
is the most likely way to go for us if the telcom wont even take $$$
to lay fiber.

> Or for some good, carrier grade 48Mbps MAX (Time Warner Telecom uses
> these)
> https://shop.invictusnetworks.com/detail.php?id=16063

> I use those RAD AirMux 200 radios for our backhaul - not bad... With
> the right module you can even run 4x T1 lines over it for voice
> traffic or whatever...

Dlink and now Linksys sell APs at 802.11n that can do ~100mbps and
theoretically 600mbps in time. Jack up the power and add directional
antennae and I'm golden. Just thought there might be something better
out there I haven't heard of.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
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TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #163
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun Apr 30 15:50:44 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 30 Apr 2006 15:53:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 164

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    FBI Secretly Sought Data on 3,501 - MSNBC (Marcus Didius Falco)
    Feds Drop Bomb on EFF Lawsuit (blog.wired.com/27Bstroke6)
    Rhode Island to Start Statewide Wireless Network (Richard C. Lewis)
    County Considers Wireless Network (Associated Press News Wire)
    Re: Dial-up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Fee Dispute (Barry Margolin)
    Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use? (darktiger)
    Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test (Koos van den Hout)
    Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (harold@hallikainen.com)
    Re: Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing (Robert Bonomi)
    Car and Deep Cycle Battery FAQ (Bill Darden)

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.  

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

Date: Sat, 29 Apr 2006 21:23:31 -0400
From: Marcus Didius Falco <marcus_d_falco@yahoo.com>
Subject: FBI Secretly Sought Data on 3,501 - MSNBC


* Original: FROM..... Dave Farber

Begin forwarded message:

 From: Suzanne Johnson
 Date: April 29, 2006 7:15:37 PM EDT
 Subject: FBI secretly sought data on 3,501 -MSNBC

FBI secretly sought data on 3,501 people in =E2*=9905 : Agency ramped
up use of approach that requires no court approval -MSNBC

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12536627/

The Associated Press
Updated: 6:40 p.m. ET April 28, 2006

WASHINGTON - The FBI secretly sought information last year on 3,501
U.S. citizens and legal residents from their banks and credit card,
telephone and Internet companies without a court's approval, the
Justice Department said Friday.

It was the first time the Bush administration has publicly disclosed
how often it uses the administrative subpoena known as a national
security letter, which allows the executive branch of government to
obtain records about people in terrorism and espionage investigations
without court approval.

Friday's disclosure was mandated as part of the renewal of the Patriot
Act, the administration's sweeping anti-terror law.

The FBI delivered a total of 9,254 NSLs relating to 3,501 people in
2005, according to a report submitted late Friday to Democratic and
Republican leaders in the House and Senate. In some cases, the bureau
demanded information about one person from several companies.

The department also reported it received a secret court's approval for
155 warrants to examine business records last year, under a Patriot
Act provision that includes library records. However, Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales has said the department has never used the provision
to ask for library records.

The number was a significant jump over past use of the warrant for
business records. A year ago, Gonzales told Congress there had been 35
warrants approved between November 2003 and April 2005.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
Copyright 2006 MSNBC.com

URL:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12536627/

Direct replies are unlikely to be read. To reply use the address below:
falco(underscore)md(atsign)yahoo(dot)co(dot)uk

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: blog.wired.com <blog@wired.com>
Subject: Feds Drop Bomb on EFF Lawsuit
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 13:31:17 -0500


Feds Drop Bomb on EFF Lawsuit

The federal government intends to invoke the rarely used "State
Secrets Privilege" -- the legal equivalent of a nuclear bomb -- in the
Electronic Frontier Foundation's class action lawsuit against AT&T
that alleges the telecom collaborated with the government's secret
spying on American citizens.

The State Secrets Privilege is a from vestige English common law that
lets the executive branch step into a civil lawsuit and have it
dismissed if the case might reveal information that puts national
security at risk.

Today's assertion severely darkens the prospects of the EFF's lawsuit,
which the organization had hoped would shine light on the extent of
the Bush Administration's admitted warrantless spying on Americans.

Read the complete report at http://wired.blog.com/27Bstroke6

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

From: Richard C. Lewis <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Rhode Island to Start Statewide Wireless Network
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 13:23:26 -0500


By Richard C. Lewis

America's smallest state is seeking to become its first to offer a
wireless broadband network from border to border.

Backers of Rhode Island's $20 million project say it would improve
services and make the state a testing ground for new business
technologies.

It also comes at a time when Rhode Island's capital of Providence is
stepping up efforts to lure business from Boston, about a 50-minute
drive away, in neighboring Massachusetts, where office rents are among
the nation's most expensive.

The Rhode Island Wireless Innovation Networks (RI-WINs) should be
fully in place by 2007, providing wireless connectivity throughout
state, whose land mass of about 1,045 square miles is only slightly
more than double the size of metropolitan Los Angeles.

A pilot project involving state agencies, Brown University and
businesses is to begin next month.

The Rhode Island network is a hybrid of WiMAX and WiFi technologies
that would deliver real-time connections at a minimum speed of 1
Megabit per second (Mbps), allowing users to download a typical
Hollywood-length film in about 100 minutes. The system will be
supported by 120 base antennas placed throughout the state.

A few antennas, each about 3 feet to 4 feet in height, are being
placed in Providence and Newport on the southern coast during the
initial tests.

So far, no state outside Rhode Island has sought to build a
border-to-border network, said Bob Panoff, a private consultant and
the RI-WINs project manager.

While more cities are interested in becoming wireless, "there's no
groundswell of consumer support for it," said Dave McClure, president
of the U.S. Internet Industry Association (USIIA), which represents
Internet companies.

More than 80 U.S. cities have wireless networks, according to a study
done in August 2005 by the association.

But use has been sporadic, plagued by costs and sputtering technology,
said Dave McClure, the association's president. Orlando, Florida, for
example, removed its wireless network last year due to tepid use,
McClure said.

FROM CLASSROOMS TO BEACHES

The project is being funded by public and private sources, and once
fully operational, users would pay $20 per month or a membership fee
based on annual usage, said Saul Kaplan, acting executive director of
the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation, a partner in the
project.

"We know the demand signals are there," said Kaplan.

Officials said the network would support services including business,
education, emergency, health care and port security.

During the six-month pilot phase, for example, state health inspectors
will test the system by entering data from restaurant visits into
laptops and sending the information to the health department.

Emergency workers will test sending patient information from an
ambulance while en route to a hospital.

Graduate students at Brown University, a partner in the project, will
use the wireless network when teaching public school students.

While the system is not being created for consumers, officials say it
could have everyday applications, such as retrieving real-time
information on the size of crowds at beaches or to access traffic
information while driving.

"A broadband border-to-border network would allow us to move
information to the point of need, wherever it's needed," Kaplan said.

Creators say a prime benefit of the network will be to draw businesses
looking to use Rhode Island as a laboratory to test-market new
technologies on a statewide, demographically diverse population.

A study by the Rhode Island-based Business Innovation Factory, a
private, nonprofit organization that launched RI-WINs in 2004,
estimated the annual cost to operate the network at $5 million.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more newa and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: County Considers Wireless Network
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 13:25:16 -0500


The perks of living in Suffolk County include gorgeous beaches and
beautiful people in the Hamptons. Another one could arrive next year:
free Internet access for its 1.5 million residents.

County Executive Steve Levy announced the appointment this week of a
15-member committee to develop a business plan and a timeline for
creating one of the largest government-sponsored wireless networks in
the country.

"We believe we can be a model for developing a wireless network which
will serve residents, businesses and visitors to our county," Levy
said.

The cities of Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco are also working
on plans for wireless access available within their boundaries. Only
the Chicago plan would cover more space and more people than Suffolk
County.

According to Levy, the wireless network would benefit the county in
several ways: speedy transmission of information to emergency
responders, filling in service gaps for local businesses, attracting
tourists and giving local residents more flexibility.

The county plans to issue a proposal for bidders in December, with a
selection made by spring 2007.

On the Net: http://www.co.suffolk.ny.us

Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press.

For more newss and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http:/telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Dial-up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Fee Dispute / Ruling
Organization: Symantec
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 00:19:26 -0400


In article <telecom25.163.3@telecom-digest.org>, Monty Solomon
<monty@roscom.com> wrote:

> Dial-up provider loses Net access amid fee dispute
> Ruling favoring Verizon may hike price of service

> By Keith Reed, Globe Staff 

> Service to thousands of dial-up Internet users in Massachusetts was
> disrupted this week after a federal court ruled against a Quincy
> company in a lawsuit that could have broad impact on the cost of
> dial-up service.

> The US Court of Appeals in Boston ruled April 11 that Verizon
> Communications Inc. can charge per-minute fees for calls to local
> numbers that dial-up users need to connect to the Internet -- in much
> the same way that they charge for long-distance or other calls.

> The ruling came after Verizon sued Global NAPs Inc., a Quincy company
> that supplies local numbers to 28 Internet service providers for use
> by their dial-up customers.

I don't understand this.  Aren't the fees based on the telephone 
customer's calling plan?  The unlimited calling plans in MA list the 
exchanges that you can call within your flat rate.

> Verizon claims it is owed more than $65 million by Global NAPs.

What does this have to do with how Verizon charges their customers?


Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I think Verizon believes Global NAPs
Inc. is a subscriber to their telephone service (via the dial up
numbers used by Global NAP end user customers.) Does Verizon in MA 
offer unlimited flat rate service to businesses or just to resiences?
If Verizon offers unlimited flat rate service plans to everyone, then
it should not matter. If they only offer unlimited flat rate service
plans to residential customers (i.e. the end users of Global) then it
still should not matter. I suspect Verizon is annoyed about the amount
of service being consumed by the end users.  PAT]

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

From: darktiger <darktiger@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: What Type of Wireless Should I Use?
Date: 29 Apr 2006 22:33:22 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Ghazan Haider wrote:

>> I use those RAD AirMux 200 radios for our backhaul - not bad... With
>> the right module you can even run 4x T1 lines over it for voice
>> traffic or whatever...

> Dlink and now Linksys sell APs at 802.11n that can do ~100mbps and
> theoretically 600mbps in time. Jack up the power and add directional
> antennae and I'm golden. Just thought there might be something better
> out there I haven't heard of.

I am just worried about using D-Link and Linksys gear for that type of
a project ... There are three levels:

Home User
Commercial
Carrier

Linksys and D-Link are home user (some will likely not agree with me
on that...).  Can you use them? Sure! Will they work? Sure ... For a
bit ...

We are an ISP and before I was hired they were using D-Link and Linksys
5-port switches and diffferent locations ... Once I installed some
CISCO switches our performance went up 500%+  -- just because it states
speed X does not mean it is really that fast. I checked the data sheet
for the Linksys 802.11n radio -- it only has 10/100Mbps ports ... So the
maximum wired-to-wireless speed would be 200Mbps (upload = 100Mbps -
download = 100Mbps).

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

From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl>
Subject: Re: California Okays Broadband Over Power Lines Test
Date: 30 Apr 2006 10:36:03 GMT
Organization: http://idefix.net/~koos/


Biteone <phil.schoendorff@gmail.com> wrote in
<telecom25.162.11@telecom-digest.org>:

> Have they fixed the problem with this service and it's possible
> disturbance it could cause to broadcast radio ?

That is still an ongoing concern which the American Radio Relay League
is following closely.

Their comments about the California test can be found at

http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2006/04/28/2/?nc=1

The ARRL web site has more information and background about BPL and how it
can interfere with licensed radio. Starting point:

http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/

Koos van den Hout

(not connected to the ARRL, I just did a lot of searching on BPL,
HomePlug and related information a few months ago)


The Virtual Bookcase, the site about books, book    | Koos van den Hout
news and reviews http://www.virtualbookcase.com/    | http://idefix.net/~koos/
PGP keyid DSS/1024 0xF0D7C263 or RSA/1024 0xCA845CB5| Fax +31-30-2817051

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

From: harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com>
Subject: Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Date: 30 Apr 2006 08:21:00 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I've had a similar "dilution" system on my website for years, but this
is for spammers harvesting email addresses. At the bottom of the page
at http://www.hallikainen.org is a list of randomly generated mailto
email addresses. Ideally they have harvested millions of false email
addresses off here and are wasting time sending to them.

Another nice idea is "honey pots" where spammers harvest the
addresses, then, when they send to it, they are added to block
lists. I haven't done this as yet, though.

Harold


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do the same thing on the web page for
this Digest   http://telecom-digest.org  I have a link to what is
called 'Spam Poison' near the top; clicking on that sends the spam
harvesters to a site where they get into an endless loop of garbage.
PAT]

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing...
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 15:45:54 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


Note: the valleywag.com report is *UNCONFIRMED* by any other source at this
      time.  It's been picked-up/repeated in several other places, but _all_
      the reports trace back to this single 'pseudonymous' source of unknown
      credibility.

There is some suspicion that this is all a 'mind game' by this 'local
hacker', possibly trying to scare off the competition.  The 'nym' used
by the hacker lends some credibility to that idea.  See "meme" in any
modern dictionary.

In article <telecom25.163.7@telecom-digest.org>, Danny Burstein
<dannyb@panix.com> wrote:

> " Local hacker 'Memehacker' ('instant messaged') in with a scoop on
> Alan Ralsky, the famed 'Spam King' covered by the Observer and the
> Detroit News. Here's the breaking story:

> " Valleywag: 'Tell me the scoop in three sentences.

> " Memehacker: 'Alan Ralsky is currently being held by the feds and his
> file is sealed for the next 72 hours by the DOJ. We are concerned that
> he is going to narq out the entire network since they have enough on
> him to send him to jail.

> " 'This means hackers, spammers, anyone who has worked in spam legally
> or illegally for the last 5 years at least.  The DOJ wants to do a
> dragnet, they have the top dog, but they want the whole system as
> well ...

> http://www.valleywag.com/tech/alan-ralsky/scoop-doj-jails-spam-king-alan-ralsky-might-rat-out-a-massive-hacker-spammer-network-170385.php

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

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

From: Bill Darden <info@batteryfaq.org>
Subject: Car and Deep Cycle Battery FAQ
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 21:07:49 +0200
Reply-To: info@batteryfaq.org


Hi all,

The Car and Deep Cycle Battery FAQ has been updated.  The current
version is 5.5, dated April 30, 2006 and can be found on
http://www.batteryfaq.org.  Answers to Frequently Asked Questions, tips,
manufacturer's information, references and hyperlinks are contained on
this free, consumer oriented Web site about car, motorcycle, power
sports, truck, boat, marine, recreational vehicle, solar, and other
starting and deep cycle applications.  In Section 4, I have added
Specific Gravity and Open Circuit Voltage State-of-Charge vs.
temperature tables and a downloadable spreadsheet for several
different lead-acid battery types to make temperature compensation
much easier.

The most popular sections in March were:

o  Battery Manufacturers and Brand Names List

o  FAQ Section 9  HOW DO I CHARGE (OR EQUALIZE) MY BATTERY?

o  Section 7  WHAT DO I LOOK FOR IN BUYING A NEW BATTERY?

o  Battery Information Links List

o  Section 4  HOW DO I TEST A BATTERY?

If you have time, please visit http://www.batteryfaq.org.  If not please
bookmark it for future reference.  Questions, comments and suggestions
for improvement are always welcome at info@batteryfaq.org.

Many thanks and kindest regards,

BiLL

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

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******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon May  1 14:17:02 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 1 May 2006 14:19:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 165

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Undercover Civilians Lure Online Predators (Ken Maguire)
    Re: Dial-up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Dispute / Ruling (Monty Solomon)
    Who Has Best Cell Coverage? It Depends Where You Are (Monty Solomon)
    Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices (M Solomon)
    RIAA, MPAA Alert 40 University Presidents of LAN Piracy (Spam Daily News)
    Tunisians OvercomeTaboos to Find Love on the Web (Tarak Amera)
    Cellular-News: Monday 1st May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 1, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    FCC Regulations Over Vonage 'Digital Voice' (Raqueeb Hassan)  

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: Ken Maguire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Undercover Civilians Lure Online Predators
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 23:17:22 -0500


By KEN MAGUIRE, Associated Press Writer

This was Stacey DeLuca's plan: Chat online with child predators while
pretending to be a young girl. Just a few hours.

"I'd rather have them talk to me than a real 13-year-old," the
21-year-old said.

It didn't take long before a 50-year-old California man allegedly told
DeLuca -- who was posing as 13-year-old "Jess" from Massachusetts --
that he likes "younger girls" and that she wouldn't be his first.

DeLuca called police, and stayed in character for a month, saving
transcripts of the man's lurid comments and graphic photos from the
Yahoo Inc. chat room.

The result: Lawrence I. Katz of Oceanside, in San Diego County, was
charged with attempting to send harmful matter to a minor via
electronic means. He's fighting the charges.

"I was totally surprised," said DeLuca, a Worcester resident who works
in the promotions department of a local radio station. "You get in a
chat room and you get tons and tons of instant messages. These guys
wait to talk to some little girl."

DeLuca is among a growing number of civilians across the nation who
are conducting online stings to catch potential child predators. 
Perverted Justice, an organization that's dedicated to outing online
predators, expects to double its volunteer corps, to 100, by year's
end.

Critics say it borders on vigilantism. Criminal defense attorneys
argue that it amounts to entrapment and that the nature of the charges
 -- rather than the weight of evidence -- forces people to plead guilty
to avoid publicity.

Law enforcement officials warn that sloppy civilian investigations
will push predators further underground, and that civilians may be
endangering their own safety.

"In criminal justice matters, control is key," said Gerry Leone, a
former state and federal prosecutor in Massachusetts. "Civilians who
haven't been trained lose the aspect of control."

NBC's "Dateline" program has helped popularize the practice by teaming
with Perverted Justice to lure adult men to a "meet." The men expect
to find a young sex partner, but are instead met by TV cameras, and
more recently, by police officers as well.

In the program's fourth sting, 17 men were arrested in late March when
they traveled to a home in Greenville, Ohio, where they expected to
meet an underage girl, according to the Darke County Sheriff's office.

Perverted Justice, which was paid by NBC to run its latest sting,
boasts of having contributed to more than 50 convictions nationwide,
all detailed on its Web site. The group, based in Portland, Ore.,
enlists volunteers to go undercover online.

It has inspired a rival organization, called Corrupted Justice, which
decries Perverted Justice's practices as vigilantism. Corrupted
Justice says investigations should be conducted only by law
enforcement.

The Justice Department says stopping online predators is a top
priority.  Total federal prosecutions of child pornography and abuse
cases increased nearly fivefold from 344 in fiscal 1995 to 1,576 in
fiscal 2005, a top Justice attorney told a congressional panel in
April.

And the federally funded Internet Crimes Against Children task forces'
investigations resulted in 3,423 state charges and 563 federal charges
in the first half of 2005, according to DOJ attorney William Mercer's
testimony.

Sgt. Jeff Skuza, head of investigations for the Fargo, N.D., Police
Department, said civilians can be helpful, especially because many
departments have limited manpower. Working with a Perverted Justice
volunteer in March, Fargo police arrested four men who showed up to a
meet.

"We're happy with the integrity" of the evidence, Skuza said.

Civilians inadvertently can damage a case, some police say, by scaring
off the target. A Massachusetts man burned the hard drive of his
computer in his fireplace before police searched his home two years
ago after Perverted Justice publicized the man's solicitation of a
minor. He wasn't charged.

DeLuca rejects the notion that she's taking the law into her own
hands.

"I'm just sitting in a chat room. They're the ones contacting me. I'm
not starting any of the sex talk," she said.

DeLuca, who is engaged and has no children, visited the Perverted
Justice Web site after watching a recent "Dateline" special. She
learned how to be a chat room monitor, created a fake Yahoo profile
using a photo of a child actress, and a day later was contacted by
"Paul Robinson," who allegedly turned out to be Katz.

"There was one night a week when his wife wasn't home, and he'd stay
on for hours," said DeLuca. "We'd talk until he had to leave to pick
her up."

Each day, she forwarded transcripts to police.

DeLuca, with police guidance, eventually set up a meeting. But before
they could get together, another chat room monitor who was running a
similar sting from Maryland revealed her identity to him, and he was
scared off, DeLuca said.

Nevertheless, the transcripts and Webcam images allegedly depicting
Katz involved in sexual acts while alone were enough to persuade San
Diego County authorities to charge him.

Katz, a casino dealer, did not respond to calls seeking comment. His
lawyer, Ivan Schwartz, declined to comment. Katz is free on bail, and
a status hearing is scheduled May 12.

DeLuca used another fake screen name to pose as a 12-year-old in a
sting that led to the April 2 arrest of Cory A. Renwick, 25, of
Boston, who police said is a registered sex offender in Florida and
Massachusetts, stemming from a 1998 Florida conviction on possession
of child pornography. Renwick pleaded not guilty to enticement of a
child after he allegedly arranged a meeting with DeLuca.

Renwick has no phone listing in Boston. His lawyer, Patrick Sheehan,
would only say: "He feels he's innocent. He looks forward to having it
tried in court."

Cathy Green, a defense attorney based in Manchester, N.H., said many
of the men she has defended in these types of cases were innocent.

Green said the sexual chats are "completely repulsive," but not
criminal.

"The real question is, are you dealing with a child predator or are
you dealing with someone engaged in a fantasy world who would never
act on it," she said.

An advantage for police, she added, is that an "investigation" begun
by a civilian rather than by law enforcement removes the entrapment
defense.

DeLuca says she's partly motivated by a close acquaintance who was
molested, but the perpetrator was never charged. She also says she's
ready to testify if needed in the recent cases. Though she may take a
break before her next sting, she doesn't plan to stop.

"No, I'll still do it, she said. "Who knows who these kids are that
you're saving?"

___

On the Net:

Perverted Justice: http://www.perverted-justice.com/

Corrupted Justice: http://corrupted-justice.com/

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You cannot tell who the players are
in this without a scorecard. 'Corrupted-Justice' complains that the
folks at 'Perverted-Justice' are not only vigilantes taking the law
in their own hands, but that the Perverted-Justice investigations and
actions taken are sort of sloppy and misguided. It sort of reminds me
of the disputes -- all too common -- between the various sides on the
problem of spam-scam. Corrupted-Justice would represent (in this 
instance) the netters who wring their hands and agree that 'spam is
awful' but that only the experts (like computer forensics experts)
should deal with it; the rest of us are basically incompetent or 
unable to deal with the problem 'properly'. Meanwhile, the Perverted-
Justice people keep right on doing their (various) thing(s) ignoring
the complaints of the 'experts'. Where have we heard that before?

If you are going to follow along in this dispute between the two
sides, I suggest you begin, as I did, reading through the various
pages detailing what the http://www.perverted-justice.com people are
doing. You might find their dedication and approach sort of interesting.
But then, after you have read through those pages, by all means go
over and see the answers given by http://corrupted-justice.com which
are also quite convincing. Personally, I tend to come down on the
side of Corrrupted-Justice on this, because, to hear them tell it,
the folks at Perverted-Justice just slap a lot of paint on a wall and
do not really care _where_ the paint gets splattered; nor who gets
hurt in the process. Read the two sides on this and decide who you
think is correct.   PAT] 

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

Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 21:24:03 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Re: Dial-up Provider Loses Net Access Amid Fee Dispute / Ruling


Global Naps, Inc. v. Verizon New England, Inc. (04/11/06 -  No. 05-2657)

Partial summary judgment for defendants is affirmed on different
grounds where the FCC did not expressly preempt state regulation of
intercarrier compensation for non-local ISP-bound calls, leaving a
state telecommunications agency free to impose access charges for such
calls under state law.

http://laws.lp.findlaw.com/1st/052657.html

http://laws.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/printer_friendly.pl?page=1st/052657.html

http://fsnews.findlaw.com/cases/1st/052657.html

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

Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 01:30:57 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Who Has the Best Cell Coverage? It Depends on Where You Are


By Bruce Mohl, Globe Staff  |  April 30, 2006

FRAMINGHAM -- Cingular Wireless is running ads saying it has 'the 
fewest dropped calls,' and Verizon Wireless is running ads calling 
itself 'the nation's most reliable wireless network,' but Mort 
Rosenthal says no one company has the best coverage everywhere.

Rosenthal, the chief executive of IMO, a new breed of retailer that
sells every major wireless brand, knows what he's talking about. The
Waltham company has done its own road testing and, unlike the cellular
companies, makes the test data available to customers so they can tell
town by town, or block by block, which carrier has the strongest
signal coverage.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/30/who_has_the_best_cell_coverage_it_depends_on_where_you_are/

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

Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 01:32:30 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices Count


By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist 

Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to
extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly
serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games
on the Net?

Amazon.com may have been one of the first sites, in the mid-1990s, to
allow its users to share their thoughts about a book, just below the
venerable Publishers Weekly or Booklist write-up. Now, such sites as
Blogcritics.org collect reviews written by bloggers, and Apple's
iTunes Music Store allows users to share their iMixes -- lists of
favorite songs on a particular theme, like 'NJ Best,' a selection
from Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, and other musicians with roots in
the Garden State.

"The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski, 
chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal. 
"Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer 
recommendations."

Already, consumers can sample a broader range of critical opinion on
the Internet -- some of it relevant and thoughtful, covering products
that wouldn't ordinarily be reviewed by the mainstream media, and some
of it biased or one-dimensional. ('This game rocks!' ) And marketers,
such as movie studios and book publishers, are trying to figure out
how Internet tastemakers figure into their relationship with their
customers.

This year, for instance, movie studios have chosen to forgo advance 
critics' screenings for more new movies than they did during the same 
period of last year. The supernatural thriller 'Silent Hill' wasn't 
shown to critics before it opened on April 21 -- some of the first 
reviews showed up on the website AintItCoolNews.com that morning -- 
and yet the movie was last weekend's best box office performer.

And publishers such as Boston's Beacon Press are noticing that some 
niche titles, such as a recent collection of writings about Iranian 
culture, can attract more critical attention online than off. 
Publicity director Pamela McColl says that Beacon is still trying to 
assemble lists of influential book blogs -- 'there are a lot of 
blogs out there,' she says -- but that the firm already provides 
review copies to some critics who write solely for the Net. Not 
surprisingly, McColl says that online reviews seem to be more 
influential among younger readers.

At press events where video game companies introduce products, Greg 
Kasavin has started to notice more non-journalists in the audience.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/30/everyones_always_been_a_critic____but_the_net_makes_their_voices_count/

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

From: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: RIAA, MPAA Alert 40 University Presidents of LAN Piracy
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 15:34:35 -0500


 From Spam Daily News

While the majority of illegal copying and distribution of music and
movies occurs over the public Internet on peer-to-peer (P2P)
file-sharing systems, students at colleges and universities have been
increasingly using programs like Direct Connect (DC++), MyTunes and
OurTunes to engage in such activity on campus LANs without using the
broader public Internet.

As part of the entertainment industry's efforts to address the ongoing
theft of music and movies online by college students, the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) and the Motion Picture
Association of America (MPAA) today announced a systematic program to
identify and curtail campus Local Area Network (LAN) piracy at
universities across the country.

The perceived security and privacy of these campus LANs give many
students incentive to engage in activity they have otherwise learned
is illegal and unacceptable.

"We are appreciative of our partners in the university community and
all they have done in recent years to tackle the problem of digital
piracy at campuses across the country," said RIAA President Cary
Sherman. "Despite the progress achieved by our collaborative efforts,
this remains an ever-evolving problem. We cannot ignore the growing
misuse of campus LAN systems or the toll this means of theft is taking
on our industry. As we prioritize our focus on campus LAN piracy in
the coming year, we hope administrators will take this opportunity to
fully evaluate their systems and take action to stop theft by all
means."

MPAA Chairman and CEO Dan Glickman said, "Universities are taking
action in a host of ways to address the problem of piracy on
campus. We are working to provide as much information as we can to
help make those efforts effective, and to stay on top of emerging
trends in intellectual property theft. Providing information about LAN
systems serves to raise awareness and encourage action."

In letters sent today, the RIAA and MPAA notified 40 university
presidents of information indicating campus LAN piracy problems on
their campuses. The universities receiving these letters are located
in the following 25 states: California, Connecticut, Georgia,
Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine,
Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio,
Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas,
Utah, Vermont, Washington, and Washington, DC.

The letters encourage administrators to review the use of their
computer networks and, if appropriate, take steps to stop and prevent
such theft. Blocking and filtering devices are currently available to
help administrators restrict inappropriate use of a campus network.

In April 2003, the RIAA brought lawsuits against the student operators
of four campus LAN networks at three schools. In the wake those
enforcement actions, university administrators pulled down at least a
dozen campus LAN servers where music theft had been prevalent. Since
then, in addressing university file- sharing, campus LAN piracy is
increasingly identified as a key challenge by lawmakers in Congress as
well as the Joint Committee of the Higher Education and Entertainment
Communities.

"Campus LAN piracy is not new, yet the problem has taken on new
urgency," Sherman said. "We know from past experience that bringing
this problem to light can effect real change. We are hopeful that this
new systematic program will yield even more positive results."

            April 27, 2006

            Dear President (NAME):

            As you may know, the entertainment community has become
increasingly concerned about illegal file sharing on universities'
Local Area Network (LAN) using such programs as Direct Connect (DC++),
MyTunes/OurTunes (both well-known hacks of Apple's iTunes software)
and other similar programs. Our industries have recently launched a
systematic program to identify and curtail campus Local Area Network
("LAN") piracy. We write today to inform you that we have information
indicating such a problem exists at (SCHOOL).

            Digital piracy, especially on campuses, is an
ever-evolving problem and it requires sustained and targeted
vigilance. There has been much attention paid to the illegal copying
and distribution of copyrighted movies and music on peer-to-peer
("P2P") file-sharing systems. While the majority of this illegal
activity occurs over the public Internet, students at colleges and
universities have been increasingly using campus LANs to set up
similar systems without using the broader public Internet. The
perceived security and privacy of these campus LANs give many students
incentive to engage in activity they have otherwise learned is illegal
and unacceptable.

            The copyright community has been aware of the misuse of
campus LANs since 2003, when lawsuits were brought against students at
three schools. Yet the proliferation of these systems and the growing
share of the college piracy problem attributable to them have prompted
us to prioritize this aspect of campus piracy as a key focus for the
upcoming academic year.  In the wake of previous litigation,
university administrators pulled down at least a dozen campus LAN
servers where movies and music theft had been prevalent. We are
hopeful that this new systematic program will yield even more positive
results.

            Illegal activity, whether on the public Internet or a
school's local intranet, is universally troubling. In addition, these
mini-networks, while cutting down on the use of Internet bandwidth,
still use valuable university resources. Fortunately, there are steps
that administrators can take to ensure that a school's computing
network is not compromised in this way.

            While illegal file-sharing on campus LANs can be difficult
to detect for those outside the school network, such activity is
detectable by school administrators. An internal investigation would
confirm whether your school's resources are being abused in this way
and would allow you to shut down activity that, in addition to being
illegal, is undoubtedly a violation of your computer-use
policies. Blocking and filtering devices -- such as RedLambda's cGrid
and Audible Magic's CopySense -- are available to help administrators
restrict inappropriate use of a campus network.

            In addressing university file-sharing, campus LAN piracy
is increasingly identified as a key challenge by lawmakers in Congress
as well as the Joint Committee of the Higher Education and
Entertainment Communities. Public recognition of campus LAN piracy by
these leaders is further indication that this problem is moving to the
forefront of concern.

            As you are no doubt aware, these issues are critically
important to not only us, but to all communities that value the
protection of copyright and intellectual property. We look forward to
working with you as we continue to pursue a comprehensive approach to
addressing piracy on college campuses: promoting educational efforts;
working with university administrators on technological solutions and
offering legal music and movie services; and when necessary, enforcing
our rights as appropriate.

            Sincerely,

            /s/

            Cary H. Sherman
            President
            Recording Industry Association of America

            /s/

            Dan Glickman
            Chairman and CEO
            Motion Picture Association of America

      SOURCE:

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

From: Tarek Amara & Sonia Quissi  
Subject: Tunisians OvercomeTaboos to Find Love on the Web
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 23:15:11 -0500


By Tarek Amara and Sonia Ounissi

Tunisian technician Momo Battar says he has dated many women but that,
without the Internet, he would never have found the woman of his
dreams.

"She has her own particular enchantment and has found the way to my
heart," the 32-year-old says. "We will set up home and start a family
soon."

Battar's story is no longer a rare exception in Tunisian society,
where love was once considered taboo among the young, and picking
husbands and wives was the privilege of parents.

Improvements in living standards, advances in women's rights and the
influence of Western culture have prompted many young Tunisians to
look beyond their immediate environment for fulfillment.

Thousands have taken to the Internet to strike up relationships with
people in the next village or on another continent.

Some say it is cheaper than meeting in a cafe, others that the
anonymity of the Internet allows them to overcome shyness.

For 27-year-old barman Adnen, it offered him a ticket to Belgium,
where his new e-girlfriend awaits as he prepares the immigration
papers.

FOUR HOURS A DAY

When Tunisia hosted an international conference on the Internet last
November, it pledged to create a cybercafe in each village and an
e-mail address for each person by 2009.

According to official figures, a tenth of Tunisia's 10 million people
are already Internet subscribers and 30 percent of citizens have an
electronic address.

About a quarter of the 20,000 users of popular French language chat
room www.amour.fr are Tunisians, according to data on the site.

"I spend four hours daily chatting. It's not shameful to get to know
other people and form a relationship through the Internet," said Imen,
a university student.

"Technology was made to benefit from and that's what we're doing," she
says.

Mimi, 28, said the Internet had removed borders and smoothed over
cultural and religious differences, giving her a wider choice in her
search for the ideal man.

"Tunisia's young are so open to different cultures with various norms
that relationships through the Net have become a fact of life," said
Mehdi Mabrouk, a sociologist at Tunisia's Universite Des Sciences
Humaines de 9 Avril.

He said some young people seek love on the Internet as they don't want
to unveil the hidden parts of their personalities.

"We must not forget that the Internet is a kind of mask, which
encourages a fair number of youths and adults to have such experiences
(of love) without fear of the results."

STIFLING DEBATE

But even as love blossoms in cyberspace, critics of the government say
the authorities are muzzling other forms of Internet debate as never
before.

U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said last year that Tunisia has been
restricting access to parts of the Web and jailing citizens for
expressing their opinions on the Internet.

The government dismissed the report. "The access to the Internet is
free in the country. About 1 million users benefit from the services
of the World Wide Web," an official said.

Researchers from the group and the university-based Open Net
initiative tested access to 1,947 sites from around the world last
September and found that 182 of them were blocked to readers in
Tunisia.

One cybercafe owner, who asked not to be named, said state repression
had played a part in the rise of dating chat rooms because the forced
closure of many news and information sites means love is one of the
few topics that can still be discussed.

In a sign the government had stepped up monitoring of the Web, six
people from the eastern town of Jerjis were jailed in late 2004 for
using the Internet for "terrorist" crimes. They were freed in February
under an amnesty for 1,600 detainees.

One year ago, a Tunisian court imprisoned lawyer Mohamed Abbou for
3-1/2 years for publishing controversial articles on the Internet,
according to lawyers and human right activists.

The government said Abbou was jailed for inciting the population to
break the law and violence against a female lawyer.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines and stories from Reuters, please go to:
http://teleccom-digest.org/td-extra/news-today.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Monday 1st May 2006
Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 09:31:48 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[3G News]]

Smart Expands 3G Services
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17186.php

The Philippines based, Smart Communications has unveiled new and
expanded 3G service offerings and announced the commercial rates for
its 3G cellular service which is now supported by an extensive
nationwide network ready for HSDPA technology. Starti...

[[Financial News]]

Cantv Q1 net income down 37%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17173.php

Venezuelan telco Cantv saw its first quarter profit fall 37% to 184bn
bolvares (US$73.6mn) compared to 1Q05 due to higher taxes and
operating costs related to cellular phone sales, the company said in a
statement. ...

Ubiquitel Holder Deephaven Will Vote Against Sprint Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17175.php

UbiquiTel Inc. responded Friday to a letter from one of its largest
shareholders, Deephaven Capital Management LLC, that asserted that
Sprint Nextel Corp.'s US$974 million buyout offer was too low. ...

[[Legal News]]

Russian company may sue Motorola for patent violation
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17170.php

Russian company Rimko-XXI may file a lawsuit against US mobile handset
producer Motorola for violating patent rights, Rimko-XXI?s General
Director Sergei Mosiyenko said, Vedomosti business daily reported
Friday. ...

Russia's lower house committee rejects bills curbing cell phone thefts
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17174.php

The energy, transportation and communications committee of the State
Duma has rejected two bills aimed at fighting mobile handset thefts,
the committee's Deputy Chairman Vladimir Gorbachyov said, Biznes daily
reported Friday. ...

Cellphone Bugging Rises
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17180.php

Germany's Federal Network Agency has published the number of
authorised phone bugging requests carried out under the Code of
Criminal Procedure. According to these statistics German courts last
year ordered 35,015 intercepts of telecommunications as ...

Nokia Settles Patent Dispute
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17181.php

Nokia and InterDigital have resolved their contract dispute over the
patent license agreement originally signed in 1999. The parties had a
dispute regarding the impact to Nokia of InterDigital's licenses with
Ericsson and Sony-Ericsson. The settlemen...

[[Mobile Content News]]

Watch Mount Everest Climb on Mobile Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17184.php

The British Army is going to use mobile phones in part of its current
recruitment drive. The army is conducting a PR based expedition to the
summit of Mount Everest via The West Ridge. FORscene is being employed
to publish the latest videos of the ex...

[[Network Contracts News]]

Ericsson Wins Caribbean GSM Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17185.php

The pan-Caribbean operator, Digicel says that it has chosen Ericsson
as its exclusive infrastructure provider for establishing a GSM mobile
network in Turks & Caicos. Digicel was awarded a license to operate in
Turks & Caicos on April 3. Since Digice...

[[Network Operators News]]

Vodafone Germany Might Decide On Fixed Line Operations Late May
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17168.php

Vodafone Germany might decide on the future of its fixed line unit
Arcor as soon as late May, Chief Executive Friedrich Joussen told Dow
Jones Newswires Thursday. ...

India Bharti Chairman: This Fiscal Year Capex Likely $1.8 Billion-$2 Billion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17169.php

India's Bharti Tele-Ventures is likely to spend US$1.8 billion to US$2
billion in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2007 to expand its
networks in the country, its chairman and managing director said. ...

Oi to launch aggressive campaigns ahead of Mother's Day
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17172.php

Brazilian mobile operator Oi plans to launch aggressive promotional
campaigns ahead of Mother's Day (May 14), Oi said in a statement. ...

Indoor Cellular Coverage for New Airport
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17179.php

Ericsson says that it has completed the turnkey project of designing
and integrating a multi-operator In-Building Solution (IBS) at the
Suvarnabhumi Airport, Thailand's new international airport. The IBS
system incorporates six different technologies...

Vodafone Romania Rebrands
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17182.php

Romania's Connex Vodafone has rebranded as Vodafone Romania, finally
dropping the Connex brandname. The Vodafone brand will be introduced
in Romania through the "Make the most of now"/"Traieste fiecare clipa"
campaign, a communication platform based ...

Green Electricity for Sprint Nextel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17183.php

Sprint Nextel is switching to Green Electricity following an agreement
to be a significant customer for Kansas City Power & Light's
Spearville Wind Energy Facility. Sprint Nextel will purchase
renewable, emission-free wind-generated electricity, repr...

[[Personnel News]]

Siemens Cuts 1,000 More Jobs At Com Unit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17171.php

Siemens, Friday said it will cut 1,000 more jobs at its struggling
telecommunications equipment unit Com, as it scrambles to meet an
ambitious profit target for the business in 2007. ...

[[Regulatory News]]

Digicel Expands Netherlands Antilles License
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17178.php

Digicel Group has confirmed it has acquired a GSM license in Bonaire
in its continued expansion of a pan Caribbean GSM network. Digicel
acquired a majority shareholding in Antilliano Por N.V., the entity
which holds a business license to operate tele...

[[Statistics News]]

Russia's VimpelCom reports 1.4 mln users in Rostov Region Apr 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17176.php

The subscriber base of Russia's second largest mobile operator
VimpelCom in the Rostov Region amounted to 1.432 million people as of
April 1, Irina Anisimova, commercial director of VimpelCom's regional
branch, told reporters Friday. ...

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

Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 11:27:52 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 1, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  1, 2006
********************************

Least Cost Terminating Traffic: Automation Is Key
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17734?11228

     In a wireless environment, the costs of terminating traffic vary
     greatly depending on how and where it is terminated. In most
     cases, the most cost-effective ways to terminate traffic are
     available within the low-cost facilities of a
     carrier's MTA (major trading area), where calls incur
     local charges. The cost of calls terminated...

Network Magic Promises Pain-Free Home Network Management
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/17731?11228

     Until recently, network management was a headache reserved for
     technology professionals. But as more ordinary people
     interconnect their home computers, peripherals, telecom and media
     gear via wired and wireless technologies, network management is
     rapidly becoming everybody's problem.  Windows' built-in
     network management...

Mobile Operators Up in Arms Over EU's Roaming Charge Cuts
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/17729?11228

     The GSM Association has published a study attacking the European
     Union (EU)'s proposals to force mobile operators to slash
     international roaming charges for subscribers travelling within
     the region. The study, produced by the CRA consultants for the
     GSM expressed concern that the regulation could make operators
     offer roaming services at...

TPS, France Telecom Launch World's First High Definition IP TV
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17726?11228

     France Telecom has teamed up with TPS to launch the first high
     definition IP TV service in the world. Both parties have
     announced plans to roll out the service on France Telecom's
     Malign TV starting from 1 June 2006, in time for the football
     World Cup. The service will offer subscribers of Malign TV HD
     option TV channel TF1, M6 and TPS...

Wi-Fi Net Sought For 900-Sq.-Mi. NY County
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17724?11228

     A county government in New York has begun considering a plan that
     would allow companies to bid on building and operating a huge
     Wi-Fi network -- one that would cover a 900-sq.-- mi. area and
     that would offer free Internet access to potentially hundreds of
     thousands of users.  Suffolk County on Long Island, with
     approximately 1.5 million...

Vonage Targets $500M From IPO
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17720?11228

     VOIP services specialist Vonage Holdings Corp. plans to net
     nearly $500 million from an IPO on the NYSE that would value it
     at around $2.65 billion, according to documents filed on
     Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) .
     The documents show that Vonage, which has been skirting around
     the IPO process for months,...

Nokia Agrees to Pay InterDigital
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17719?11228

     InterDigital Communications Corporation's stock soared following
     news that the company reached a favorable settlement in its
     royalty dispute with Nokia. Nokia agreed to pay the company $253
     million.  The settlement involves a dispute surrounding Nokia's
     royalty obligations for its sales of 2G TDMA-based products. The
     agreement settles...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: Raqueeb Hassan <wideangle@gmail.com>
Subject: FCC Regulations Over Vonage "DigitalVoice" and Other VoIP Providers
Date: 1 May 2006 10:17:43 -0700


Hello,

I was reading some of the FCC regulations on Vonage, where
"DigitalVoice" were exempted from traditional state public utility
regulation and this service cannot be branded as regular telephone
service. The FCC has already exempted another company (I guess,
Pulver) from state regulations because of the fact that free calls are
routed entirely over the Internet and never interconnect with the
PSTN. With a broadband connection, the service's members talk with
each other computer-to-computer.

As I was browsing through older Google cache, the then "DigitalVoice"
service could connect PSTN. Now, does that mean people still can
connect to regular phone lines from Vonage's DigitalVoice or other
packages? Even if their calls traverse to PSTN from Vonage's VoIP
network, are not they certified as regular Telephone Company or not
requiring the telephone licensing?

I went over to the Vonage site, but they don't seem like offering
"DigitalVoice" anymore, did they change their branded package to some
newer names? What are the biggest challenges Vonage expect after that
Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC) order?

TIA

Raqueeb Hassan
Bangladesh

-snip-

   ------------------- FCC News ---------------- November 9, 2004

"Commission Clears Way for Increased Investment In VoIP Services Like
Vonages"

Washington, D.C. The Federal Communications Commission declared today
that a type of Internet telephony service offered by Vonage Holdings
Corp. called DigitalVoice is not subject to traditional state public
utility regulation.

-snip-

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

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and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #165
******************************

    
    
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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 2 May 2006 00:21:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 166

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Canadian Census Going Online (Stefanie Kranjec)
    Google Concerned About Microsoft Browser (Allison Linn)
    Level 3 Snaps up TelCove (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - Net Makes Voices Count (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: RIAA, MPAA Alert 40 University Presidents of LAN Piracy (maskedkoalap)
    Re: Who Has the Best Cell Coverage? It Depends on Where (TechNoRati)
    Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (Barry Margolin)

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: Stefanie Kranjec <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Canadian Census Going Online
Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 22:20:23 -0500


By Stefanie Kranjec

Canada is joining a small club of countries that is bringing the
census into the Internet age, and aims to have 20 percent of
respondents fill out their surveys online this year.

Paper census forms that try to track the habits, backgrounds and
movements of Canada's 32 million people will arrive at households in
the mail this week, and with them will be a special Internet access
code.

"What (the code) allows you to do is go to the Web site where the
system checks if your computer has the necessary security
requirements," Canadian census director general Anil Arora said on
Monday.

"It's possible that with some older browsers, a machine may not have
the level of security that we would like," he said. "The level of
priority we place on confidentiality, on security, is pretty high,
pretty impressive."

The Internet initiative puts Canada in a small group of countries that
have attempted to conduct a national census online. Among them, New
Zealand and Switzerland have been successful, with about 30 percent of
the Swiss population opting to fill in the questionnaire on the
Internet.

Statistics Canada, the government agency that conducts a national
census every five years, says that its census Web site is "10 times
more secure than the average Internet banking site."

Anne-Marie Hayden, spokeswoman for the Privacy Commissioner of Canada,
said the system meets her agency's standards. "We didn't come across
anything that would pose a threat to privacy."

The online census will be backed up by three call centers, as well as
about 27,000 enumerators, who scour the country to make sure as many
people as possible respond.

Canada's Statistics Act prohibits anyone from refusing to take part in
the census. Those who do not comply may be charged C$500 ($450) or
face up to three months in jail.


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/news-today.html

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

From: Allison Linn <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Google Concerned About Microoft Browser
Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 22:22:27 -0500


Google Concerned About Microsoft Browser
By ALLISON LINN, AP Business Writer

Google Inc. is hoping to pressure Microsoft Corp. into changing a new
Internet Explorer browser feature that could direct more people to
Microsoft's online search engine instead of Google's far more popular
offering.

Google has informally complained to U.S. and European antitrust
regulators about what it says are biased settings on Microsoft's
latest Web browser, marking the latest spat between two companies
whose business models are increasingly bumping up against one another.

Mountain View, Calif.-based Google regards Microsoft as the biggest
threat to its continued success, and Microsoft has conceded that
Goggle is a formidable competitor as well.

The next version of Internet Explorer, available now in test form,
includes a box in the corner that lets people perform an Internet
search without going to a separate Web page, much like what's
available from Google's downloadable "toolbar."

Users who download IE 7 will be assigned a search engine preference
based on the AutoSearch function from the previous version of IE,
which is likely to be MSN Search. Google says it's concerned that
Microsoft's own search engine is getting favored treatment, and said
research it has sponsored shows that it's difficult to change the
settings in the new browser to a rival search engine.

"The market favors open choice for search, and companies should
compete for users based on their quality of search services," Marissa
Mayer, Google's vice president of search products and user experience,
said Monday.

Gary Schare, director of product management for Internet Explorer,
said Redmond-based Microsoft's goal is to let users choose the search
engine they want. He also said Microsoft's feedback has shown that
it's not difficult to change to a different search engine.

"MSN has a certain amount of (market) share. This is not designed to
change this," Schare said. "This is designed to essentially keep the
status quo."

Internet Explorer's main competitors, Firefox and Opera, both include
similar boxes with the default search engine set to Google, although
users can change to another provider.

Google said it has talked about the browser feature with the
U.S. Department of Justice and European Union regulators, although it
has not filed any formal complaints.

Microsoft fought a long-running antitrust case with the Justice
Department, and is awaiting a ruling on its appeal of an EU antitrust
ruling against it.  In both cases, competitors claimed that the
company was using the dominance of its Windows operating system to
wield influence over other markets, squelching competition. IE 7 will
ship with the next version of Microsoft's Windows operating system,
and also will be available for free download.

Analyst Rob Enderle said he thinks Google's complaints signal that the
company is getting more aggressive in its competition against
Microsoft, although he doesn't think the search box poses any serious
threat to Google's business.

He added that Google's move was interesting in that, while Microsoft
dominates the computer operating system market, Google is the dominant
search engine provider. Nielsen/Net Ratings reported that Google had
49 percent of the U.S. search market share in March, compared with
nearly 11 percent for Microsoft's MSN Search.

"Once you start raising unfairness questions, and you're the dominant
player, then it would be very easy for somebody to use those arguments
against you," Enderle said.


AP Business Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this
report.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines of interest from Associated Press, please
go to:   http://telecom-digest.og/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 13:10:27 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Level 3 Snaps up TelCove


USTelecom dailyLead
May 1, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzeQfDtutdeuehShnT

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Level 3 snaps up TelCove
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Alcatel, Lucent respond to security concerns
* U.S. wireless market may see further consolidation
* Siemens commits to SOA
* Napster is free again, thanks to ads
* Nortel reports earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Selecting the Best SoftSwitch
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* YouTube's viral videos attract users, marketers
* Wired magazine's guide to online video
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Rhode Island forges ahead with statewide wireless broadband network
* U.S. seeks dismissal of lawsuit over surveillance program

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzeQfDtutdeuehShnT

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices Count
Date: 1 May 2006 14:43:06 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Monty Solomon wrote:

> By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist

> Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to
> extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly
> serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games
> on the Net?

> "The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski,
> chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal.
> "Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer
> recommendations."

I don't hold much credence to it.  It has about as much influence as
traditional "word of mouth" has (although word of mount could be
pretty powerful).

For years the on-line gurus have been telling us how the old BBBs would
revolutionize human interaction and eliminate the middlemen.  After
BBSs it was the different pieces of the Internet itself.  Political
advocates predicted glory from bypassing the gatekeepers, so did a lot
of other advocates.  They said the same thing about community access
cable TV.

Wrong!

The 'net has been an evolutionary influence, but by no means
revolutionary.  Certainly there's a lot of opinions published out
there (like the one you're reading right now).  But in the grand
scheme of things, a heck of a lot more people will be reading
traditional media (newspaper or TV).

We must remember that those who participate in online endeavors are
not necessarily representative of the public at large, and therein
lies the big fallacy of the "power of the internet".

The reality is that true everyday people are busy and don't have time
to scurry through every individual's post on whatever forum it is.
Internet advocates, including computer geeks, don't understand that
the rest of the world does not follow technology or the 'net as they
do.

This is not to say the 'net has no influence, it does have some.  It
just isn't this big revolution.

Sure, some people are meeting romantic partners through Internet
dating, just as some people met partners through the "computer dating"
of the 1960s and 1970s.  But plenty of people meet through traditional
means as well; they certainly haven't gone away.

While there is lots and lots of political discourse on the 'net,
plenty of people still stick with traditional TV, radio, or mass media
sites.  Frankly, many people don't follow politics much at all.

The Internet advocates greatly dislike the traditional "gatekeepers"
of communication, ie news editors, entertainment distributors.  But
like them or not, they are necessary to filter out the tremendous
volume of stuff that comes through.  People simply do not have the
time or interest to watch every possible self made movie, every
possible garage band, or every piece of "news".

Further, the social advocates quickly grabbed on this stuff early on,
and have turned it into very partisan soapboxes, which has tuned out
others who aren't as passionate.  For example, there's a railroad
newsgroup that doesn't spend too much time talking about railroad
stuff.  Rather, it is mostly flame wars between advocates of passenger
trains and those who hate trains altogether.  The haters seem to be
very well organized and respond to almost every post.  (see
misc.transport.rail.americas and go through some of the threads).

Another group, alt.prisons, is all social advocacy, nothing about
prisons.

These groups are proof ot the need of a moderator to sift things out.
Pat has said, as have other monitors, of the incredible high volume of
junk submitted for publication that is plain garbage and takes much
time to sift out.

The world of journalism and entertainment gatekeepers isn't perfect.
But the alternative is pure chaos.  Been there done that, don't like
it.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It is not just the 'high volume of junk
submitted for publication' although that is quite a bit of it. It is
also the high volume of pure spam; stuff you would not consider for
publication under any circumstances. I wish it was like in the old
days, where there was a high degree of _usable_ material as long as it
was cleaned up a little, had to be made grammatically correct, etc. 
PAT]

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

From: maskedkoalaprincess@gmail.com
Subject: Re: RIAA, MPAA Alert 40 University Presidents of LAN Piracy
Date: 1 May 2006 15:32:32 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Back when I was in school, they took this stuff very very seriously
and I think the consequences for illegal downloading are only becoming
more and more grave ... nothing sucks worse than getting kicked out of
school, going to court, probably getting fined or jail time and not
being able to transfer anywhere because you were too poor/lazy to buy
a copy of a movie or cd ...

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

From: TechNoRati <maskedkoalaprincess@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Who Has the Best Cell Coverage? It Depends on Where You Are
Date: 1 May 2006 15:35:45 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Great article. thanks for passing it along! So true.

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Organization: Symantec
Date: Mon, 01 May 2006 20:15:16 -0400


In article <telecom25.164.8@telecom-digest.org>,
 harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com> wrote:

> I've had a similar "dilution" system on my website for years, but this
> is for spammers harvesting email addresses. At the bottom of the page
> at http://www.hallikainen.org is a list of randomly generated mailto
> email addresses. Ideally they have harvested millions of false email
> addresses off here and are wasting time sending to them.

I doubt this bothers them very much.  Even without your dilution, I'll
bet most spam address lists have an enormous number of invalid
addresses.  But they have lots of zombies in their botnets, so they
don't care about all the failed mail.

These days, one theory is that spammers are relying less on harvesting
addresses and more on generating them.  They use "alphabet spam",
where they simply generate sequences of names like aaa@<domain>,
aab@<domain>, and so on.  Also, if they've harvested <user>@<domain1>,
they add <user>@<domain2>, <user>@<domain3>, and so on.  The reason we
think techniques are in use is because there are many cases where
someone will activate a new email address and immediately start
getting spam, before they've ever published the address anywhere; the
most obvious explanation is that the spammers generated the address
themselves (another possibility is that they picked an address that
was previously used by another customer).


Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, but just imagine, if every
legitimate netizen out there would make the effort to add five or
ten minutes of extra work to the load of their favorite spammer. You
are correct, Barry, no one single effort is ever going to rid the net
of all the vermin out there these days. As I see it, the only thing
which will/might work is to make life as difficult as possible for as
many spammer-scammers as possible. Distribution of spam-scam should
not be the _easy_ job it is now; it should become a very difficult 
task. If one cannot easily distribute spam-scam because distribution
scheme A (employed by a large number of netters) makes it impossible;
scheme B will not work either; a large number of netters use that;
and so forth with schemes C, D, and E. Their mailing lists and
messege queues should be difficult to handle as they are for the rest
of us. If it became as difficult to make money peddling spam lists
and scam schemes as it is to run a decent mailing list, that would
make me happy.  In other words, your (on the internet) spam-scam 
projects should wind up netting you as little profit as those of us
who maintain decent, worthwhile mailing lists (on the same net). That
would make me happy.  PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
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TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
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*************************************************************************
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*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
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              ************************

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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.
Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
your name to the mailing list. 

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only
and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #166
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue May  2 22:23:11 2006
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #167
Message-Id: <20060503022310.D598615276@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Tue,  2 May 2006 22:23:10 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 2 May 2006 22:27:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 167

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    My Space Faces Call to Crackdown on Predators (Jason Szep)
    Web Crooks Getting More Experienced, Faster (Brian Acohido)
    Microsoft to Delay Windows Vista Again -- Gardner (Reuters News Wire)
    Microsoft Settles California AntiTrust Suit (Associated Press News Wire)
    Should I Switch to Vonage? (Healthy Stealthy)
    Cellular-News: Tuesday 2nd May 2006 (cellular-news)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 2, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Senate Committee Unveils Draft of Telecom Bill (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Eavesdropping and Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Stars Review (ctaylor)
    New Hosted VoIP PBX Service (quirk@syntac.net)
    Re: Canadian Census Going Online (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - Net Makes Voices Count (Wesrock)
    Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (jmeissen@aracnet.com)

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: Jason Szep <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: My Space Faces Call to Crackdown on Predators
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 19:32:13 -0500


By Jason Szep

Massachusetts on Tuesday called on popular teen social networking Web
site MySpace.com to strengthen protection of children against sexual
predators, including raising the minimum age for users to 18 from 14.

The arrest on Tuesday of a 27-year-old man in Connecticut on charges
of illegal sexual contact with a 13-year-old girl he met through
MySpace underlines the risks of the fast-growing Internet site that
boasts about 60 million members.

"MySpace has not taken sufficient steps to ensure that the MySpace Web
site is a safe place for minors," Massachusetts Attorney General Tom
Reilly said in a letter to MySpace.

He said a three-month investigation found that potential child
predators were surfing MySpace seeking chats with potential victims
and violent images or content were being posted to bully children.

"An adult can register as a minor member and use that profile to seek
access to the profiles of countless underage members," he said in a
statement.

MySpace allows teenagers and young adults to find friends and express
themselves by posting profiles and blogs, or Web journals covering
everything from their favorite singers to schoolwork and intimate
personal details.

It generated a blizzard of headlines in national media this year that
have raised alarm with parents and school authorities -- from "Man
arrested in MySpace.com teen-sex case" to "Sex predators are stalking
MySpace; is your teenager a target?"

Connecticut authorities said in March that two men -- one age 22 and
the other 39 -- were arrested on allegations they had sexual contact
with minors they met through MySpace. Another man was arrested early
on Tuesday at a Connecticut hotel after a mother reported her daughter
missing.

'HAPPENING MORE AND MORE'

In February, California police arrested a 26-year-old for felony child
molestation after he met a 14-year-old on MySpace.

"It's happening more and more all the time, both through MySpace and
through chatrooms and other blogging sites," said Christina Slenk, a
director of Web Wise Kids, a nonprofit Internet safety organization
based in California.

Reilly, a Democrat running for governor, said his staff raised the
state's concerns in a March meeting with officials at MySpace, which
media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. bought for $580 million last
year.

MySpace authorities were not immediately available to comment but its
chief executive, Chris DeWolfe, told Reuters in March that it had
several measures in place to prevent abuse.

He said the site prohibits children under age 14 from using it and
restricts access to the profiles of 14- and 15-year-olds, allowing
them to be contacted only by users that they add to their buddy lists.

MySpace also uses software to identify minors, flagging profiles with
terms likely to be used by children under age 14. But DeWolfe said
there was no fool-proof way to verify the age of all users.

Reilly said his investigation found that the safeguards failed. He
asked MySpace to install an age and identity verification system,
equip Web pages with a "Report Inappropriate Content" link, respond to
all reports of inappropriate content within 24 hours and significantly
raise the number of staff who review images and content.

He also wants filters to block sexually explicit or violent images,
deletion of profiles of people who have abused the site, removal of
all advertisements deemed inappropriate for children and free software
that allows parents to block MySpace.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Brian Acohido <usatoday@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Web Crooks Getting More Experienced, Faster
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 19:33:47 -0500


By Byron Acohido, USA TODAY

Two cybersecurity surveys released Monday underscore an ominous shift
in Web intrusions: They are becoming more stealthy and targeted -- and
honed to make a quick buck.

Profit-minded intruders are increasingly carrying out "zero-day"
attacks that exploit new security vulnerabilities on the same day such
flaws become generally known, weeks before patches are available,
according to The SANS Institute security training center.

Security experts say there is no protection against such
intrusions. "A zero-day attack takes you through the M&M shell you
have around your computer into the soft chewy center," says Scott
Carpenter, security lab director at Secure Elements. "It bypasses all
the security you've put in place."

The pattern breaks from the hacker tradition of swamping the Internet
with nuisance viruses mainly for bragging rights. "We're losing the
tsunami effect and instead getting wave after wave of smaller, more
intense attacks to get on your machine and steal useful information,"
says Vincent Weafer, senior director of Symantec Security Response.

Meanwhile, identity data held by corporations and government agencies
is being widely exposed on the Web by unsuspecting insiders, according
to a survey of 100 organizations by security firm Reconnex. "For the
most part, it's good people doing bad things unintentionally," says
Reconnex CEO John Peters. "If the data does get into the wrong hands,
it could be damaging."

Among key survey findings:

 . Insider exposure. An estimated 78% of companies expose Social
Security numbers in a way that the data can be leaked, while 40% of
companies expose credit card numbers, Reconnex says.

 . Applications targeted. Attackers have begun probing software
programs, such as Apple QuickTime/iTunes, Windows Media Player and
Macromedia Flash Player for security holes. They've also targeted
database-storage applications, such as Oracle and Veritas Backup, SANS
says.

 . Browsers under siege. In recent months, Apple, long thought immune
to intruders, has issued two patches to quell attacks of its Safari
Web browser; Microsoft has had to scramble to patch three Internet
Explorer zero-day attacks; and Firefox has been patched 11 times, SANS
says.

Copyright 2006 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from USA Today, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft to Delay Windows Vista Again -- Gartner
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 19:35:18 -0500


Microsoft Corp.'s long- awaited release of the upgrade to its flagship
Windows operating system will likely be delayed again by at least
three months, research group Gartner Inc. said on Tuesday.

The research note, released to clients on Monday, said the new Windows
Vista operating system is too complex to be able to meet Microsoft's
targeted November release for volume license customers and January
launch for retail consumers.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said the company disagreed with the Gartner
report and it was still on track to meet its launch dates.

Vista is the first major overhaul of its operating system, which sits
on 90 percent of the world's computers and accounts for nearly a third
of Microsoft's total revenue, since Microsoft rolled out Windows XP
nearly five years ago.

Microsoft originally targeted a 2005 launch for the new Windows, then
pushed the release out to 2006 before announcing in March that Vista
would again be delayed to improve the product's quality.

Gartner targets a Windows Vista release in the April-June quarter of
2007, nine to 12 months after Microsoft conducts a second major test,
or "beta," release for Vista during the current quarter.

"Microsoft still wants to get it out as soon as possible, but slipping
from January to March is nowhere near as bad as slipping from shipping
before the holidays to after the holidays," a group of Gartner
analysts wrote in the report.

Gartner said Windows XP took five months to go from a second test
release to the start of production, but the magnitude of technological
improvement in Vista is closer to Windows 2000, which took 16 months
between the second test and production.

Once production starts, it usually takes between six- to eight-weeks
for PC manufacturers to load the operating system onto new computers,
Gartner said.

Microsoft shares were down 22 cents at $24.07 in afternoon trading on
Nasdaq.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

More news of interest and radio news at:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/Fednews.html   (also)
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/TDNewsradio.html

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft Settles California AntiTrust Suit
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 19:36:42 -0500


Microsoft Corp. will pay $70 million to thousands of California
government agencies in the latest legal settlement spurred by
price-gouging allegations against the world's largest computer
software maker.

The proposed truce covers a wide range of taxpayer-backed agencies --
 from local school districts to regional transportation systems -- that
bought Microsoft products dating back to 1995.

If the settlement gains court approval later this year, Microsoft will
divide the $70 million among the eligible government agencies as they
buy computers, printers and software, including brands that compete
against Microsoft.

The proposed payments are similar to a $1.1 billion pool that
Microsoft set up for California consumers and businesses in 2004 after
settling a lawsuit alleging the software maker had abused its power in
the computing industry to inflate prices.

Although Microsoft has consistently defended its prices as fair and
reasonable, government regulators, customers and business rivals have
long insisted that the software maker leveraged its Windows operating
system -- the brains of most personal computers -- to build an unfair
market advantage.

The backlash unleashed a tidal wave of lawsuits, including a closely
watched antitrust case filed by the U.S. Justice Department. That
showdown culminated in a 2002 settlement.

Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft spent billions resolving other suits
brought by rivals like AOL Time Warner Inc. and Sun Microsystems Inc.,
as well as other government entities.

Led by the cities of San Francisco and Los Angeles, the California
government agencies filed their suit in 2004. The counties of Santa
Clara, San Mateo, Los Angeles and Contra Costa also joined in the
action.

In a statement Tuesday, Microsoft denied it did anything wrong. "We
value our relationship with these cities and counties and are pleased
to reach a settlement that allows us all to focus on the future," said
Tom Burt, Microsoft's deputy general counsel.

San Francisco lawyer Richard Grossman, who represented the government
agencies, said his clients were "delighted" with the settlement.

The agreement still requires the approval of U.S. District Judge J.
Frederick Motz in Baltimore. The California agencies originally sued
in San Francisco Superior Court, but the case was transferred to
Maryland, where Motz is overseeing several other similar suits against
Microsoft.


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Healthy Stealthy <healthystealthy@gmail.com>
Subject: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: 2 May 2006 13:01:16 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
it a mistake to switch to them? Any details? 

Thanks.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Vonage is certainly a better deal, and
much less expensive than Verizon. I have Vonage service here as well,
although in fairness I should mention I also still have landline
service as well. Some readers here would suggest that there are other
VOIP companies better than Vonage, and that may be true, but I think
you are inquiring about the _concept_ of VOIP instead of landline, am
I correct?  I am unwilling to totally abandon my landline service for
VOIP.  PAT]

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Tuesday 2nd May 2006
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 07:06:46 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com


[[ Financial ]]

Nextel LatAm Q1 profit jumps 44% to US$65mn
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17190.php

Latin American digital trunking holding company NII Holdings posted
net profits of US$65mn in the first quarter, up 44% compared to 1Q05,
the company said in a statement. ...

DJ UK PRESS:Rivals Aim To Replace Goldman As Vodafone Broker
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17193.php

Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch are preparing
pitches to displace Goldman Sachs as broker to Vodafone Group, said a
report in the Sunday Telegraph. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Huawei making headway in handset market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17189.php

Chinese telephony equipment manufacturer Huawei is making serious
headway in Venezuela's handset market, a source close to Venezuela's
largest telco Cantv told BNamericas. ...

[[ Personnel ]]

UK PRESS: Vodafone Chairman Gets Consultancy Role
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17192.php

Vodafone PLC is proposing to pay Chairman Ian MacLaurin GBP125,000 a
year for a consultancy role following his departure from the company
in July, The Observer reports Sunday citing a consultation letter to
shareholders. ...

Telecoms Engineer Executed in Afghanistan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17195.php

A telecoms engineer working for the Afghani GSM network, Roshan has
been found executed following his kidnapping at the
weekend. K. Suryanarayana, 41 from Hyderabad, India was found beheaded
in southern Afghanistan on Sunday. The Taliban militia has ...

Plane Carrying Telecoms Kit Crashes
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17196.php

The UN has reported that a cargo plane carrying telecoms equipment has
crashed in eastern Congo, killing up to eight passengers and crew. The
plane carrying telecom gear from Kisangani to Goma, near the border
with Rwanda, went down late Thursday. Ev...

[[ Regulatory ]]

New Zealand Watchdog Fails To Make Mobile Fee Rules Case - Telecom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17187.php

Telecom Corp. of New Zealand Ltd. Monday criticized the Commerce
Commission's recommendation to regulate mobile phone termination
rates, saying the watchdog has failed to prove its case. ...

ANALYSIS: Is Cofetel prepared for WiMax?
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17188.php

The decision by Mexican authorities to open up frequency bands for
wireless technologies without the need for a concession license is a
welcome development that should help define future WiMax spectrum use
parameters, analysts say. ...

TDLC rejects request to annul Movistar spectrum sale
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17191.php

Chile's antimonopoly regulator TDLC has rejected a request from triple
play provider VTR to annul the decision by mobile operator Movistar
Chile to sell 25Mhz of spectrum to rival operator Smartcom, local
press reported. ...

Verizon, JetBlue OK'd To Bid in May Spectrum Auction
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17194.php

Verizon Airfone Inc. and a JetBlue Airways Corp. unit are among nine
companies approved to bid for licenses to provide high-capacity,
in-flight Internet service, the Federal Communications Commission
announced on Monday. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Low Cost Cellphones Drive Semiconductors Sales
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17197.php

Worldwide sales of semiconductors of US$19.22 billion in February were
6.8% higher than February of 2005, reports the Semiconductor Industry
Association (SIA). February sales reflected a 2.2% sequential decline
from the US$19.65 billion reported in J...

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

Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 12:19:18 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Tuesday, May 2, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com



********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  2, 2006
********************************

AT&T to Launch Lightspeed Next Month
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/17760?11228

     AT&T Inc. will launch its fiber-based Project Lightspeed services
     in San Antonio, Texas next month, the company told Light Reading
     Monday.  AT&T has been trialing the services with a limited
     number of subscribers -- many of whom are AT&T employees
     -- in the city, but now will take the next...

The New Dual Mode
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17754?11228

     Cellular networks and Wi-Fi have sometimes been seen as
     competitors, primarily in the wireless data market. But wireless
     carriers increasingly are seeing Wi-Fi as a complement or even a
     way of enhancing in-building coverage for voice.  Handset
     manufacturers already have seen the opportunity. There are more
     than a dozen handsets...

SK Telecom-Earthlink MVNO Launches in U.S.
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17752?11228

     Helio, the new joint venture between Earthlink and SK Telecom,
     has launched commercial operations. The new service, which is
     provisioned over Sprint Nextel's network, is targeted at young
     people who like to use data services such as web surfing and
     picture messaging. Helio is currently available on two handsets:
     Pantech's the Hero, which...

Level 3 Buys Again
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17743?11228

     Level 3 Communications announced its second acquisition in as
     many weeks. This time, the company is snapping up TelCove for
     $1.08 billion to gain access to wireless airwaves licenses as
     well as expand its landline network.  The $1.08 billion deal
     encompasses a cash payment of $455 million and $637 million in
     Level 3 common stock, as well...

RIM Hit With Another Patent Lawsuit
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17738?11228

     With one successful patent-infringement lawsuit under its
     corporate belt, Redwood Shores, Calif.-based Visto Corporation
     now plans to take on Research in Motion (RIM).  Following a
     long-running intellectual property lawsuit between Visto and
     Seven Networks, the company says a jury found that Seven's mobile
     e-mail service infringes on the...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 13:02:53 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Senate Committee Unveils Draft of Telecom Bill


USTelecom dailyLead
May 2, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzpIfDtutdfCfNdaEs

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Senate committee unveils draft of telecom bill
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AOL needs to score big in surging tech sector
* Visto sues RIM
* EarthLink updates broadband services for SMBs
* Analysis: Combined Alcatel-Lucent looks weak in cable
* Comcast completes buy of Susquehanna Communications
* Verizon reports earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Steven Shepard's Latest Release: IMS Crash Course
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Verizon offers faster FiOS in Tri-State area
* Cisco revamps 7200-series routers
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Verizon, JetBlue get approval to bid on airwaves

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzpIfDtutdfCfNdaEs

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

From: ctaylor@pinpoint-productions.com
Subject: Eavesdropping and Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Stars Review
Date: 2 May 2006 07:47:35 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The newspapers and journals are full of information about warrantless
wiretapping and eavesdropping.  What many people do not realize is
that the type of eavesdropping occurring for national security
purposes is vastly different than the real world of eavesdropping and
wiretapping utilized for industrial espionage, law enforcement and by
your local private investigator or tech-guy that has crossed the line
into illegal eavesdropping.

Now, the realistic world of eavesdropping has been thoroughly exposed
in the new two-hour video called "The Red Balloon".  Already
recognized as the best Issue Awareness Video in 2005 at the
international Aurora Awards and given a 5 Stars review in the March
issue of Security Management, The Red Balloon presents the government
and industry statistics about industrial espionage and eavesdropping,
and how big this problem really is.  It also reveals the different
types of eavesdropping devices used with illegal wiretapping and
eavesdropping and the novel techniques utilized by both professional
and amateur eavesdroppers.

If you are curious about the eavesdropping industry then you simply
must see the powerful informational video presented by one of the
world's most recognized experts in the field.  To learn more you can
go to http://www.tscmvideo.com

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

From: quirk@syntac.net
Subject: New Hosted VoIP PBX Service
Date: 2 May 2006 09:25:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


May 1, 2006

Haagenti  Group launches  "telekommunisten," a  next-generation hosted
telephone exchange service.

http://www.telekommunisten.net

Just in time for May Day, the activists and voice over IP specialists
at the Haagenti Group have launched a next generation hosted VoIP
telephone exchange service.

This innovative system brings to Voice over IP what has been
traditionally the domain of expensive hardware PBX systems, delivering
features like an automated attendant, extensions for users and groups
of users, voice mail and super cheap long distance rates to VoIP
users.

telekommunisten is motivated by more than just delivering a ground
breaking new product.  Those who sign-up for this service have the
added bonus of knowing they are supporting the international
development and aid work frequently undertaken by the Haagenti Group's
founders, including most recently helping co-ordinate relief and
communications projects in Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans.

May 1st, the traditional day to commemorate the Anarchist Martyrs of
Chicago's Hay Market riot, seems an appropriate time to launch a
company that is worker-owned and operated, and whose founders promote
the ideal of workers owning their own means of production.

The Haagenti Group is based in Montreal and Berlin.

Contact:

        +1 514 667 7675
        +49 30 896 779 913
        info@haagenti.com

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Canadian Census Going Online
Date: 2 May 2006 12:00:10 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Stefanie Kranjec wrote:

> By Stefanie Kranjec

> Canada is joining a small club of countries that is bringing the
> census into the Internet age, and aims to have 20 percent of
> respondents fill out their surveys online this year.

Modern data processing got its start with the U.S. Census.

Because the 1880 census took so long to tabulate, the Census Bureau
sought a way to improve it.  Herman Hollerith developed a punched card
system that proved to be far faster.  He started a business that
evolved into IBM.

Many information system people today forget the basic premise of
Hollerith's system, which was that information should only be keyed in
once, then used multiple times.  Once a data record (a punched card)
was created in the Hollerith system, it could be sorted and tabulated
in many different ways to produce subtotals and totals organized by a
variety of means.

People also forget today the importance of good categorization and
coding of data and often try to shove a "one size fits all" solution.

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

From: Wesrock@aol.com
Date: Tue, 2 May 2006 16:41:59 EDT
Subject: Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices Count


In a message dated 1 May 2006 14:43:06 -0700, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes:

> Monty Solomon wrote:

>> By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist

>> Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to
>> extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly
>> serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games
>> on the Net?

>> "The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski,
>> chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal.
>> "Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer
>> recommendations."

> I don't hold much credence to it.  It has about as much influence as
> traditional "word of mouth" has (although word of mount could be
> pretty powerful).

Specifically with respect to motion pictures, it is clear that
critics do not and never did "drive culture."  Many, many pictures
lauded by the critics failed miserably at the box office, while some
that the critics considered either trash or beneath serious notice
brought in lots of the public.

> Further, the social advocates quickly grabbed on this stuff early on,
> and have turned it into very partisan soapboxes, which has tuned out
> others who aren't as passionate.  For example, there's a railroad
> newsgroup that doesn't spend too much time talking about railroad
> stuff.  Rather, it is mostly flame wars between advocates of passenger
> trains and those who hate trains altogether.  The haters seem to be
> very well organized and respond to almost every post.  (see
> misc.transport.rail.americas and go through some of the threads).

I am interested in railroads and railroading and for several years I
participated in that particular newsgroup.  It became more and more
merely flame posts between passionate advocates of these two
positions.  I finally dropped out because, as you say, little about
railroads was included in the posts and there was nothing but an
endless iteration of the same arguments by the same people on both
sides.

However, I would suggest that the "anti-" faction did not hate trains 
altogether -- just passenger trains.

There are well over 100 lists -- some have counted more than 200 -- on
various railroad topics, some of them very tightly focused.  Some of
them have hundreds of participants and engage in rational (and usually
civil) discourse.


Wes Leatherock
wesrock@aol.com

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Date: 2 May 2006 21:45:07 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


In article <telecom25.166.7@telecom-digest.org>, Digest Editor wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, but just imagine, if every
> legitimate netizen out there would make the effort to add five or
> ten minutes of extra work to the load of their favorite spammer. 

Then you end up with a distributed denial of service attack on the
mail servers of the world.

<sigh>

The spammers don't care. If they were running their own servers they
would. But they aren't, they're running bot-nets with thousands of
infected home computers to distribute the load across. All your approach
does is increase the load that the various mailservers have to deal with
when trying to detect and reject the spam as the number of fake
addresses and corresponding connection attempts increases accordingly.
Unless you can guarantee that the domains used in your fake emails don't
and never will exist.


John Meissen    jmeissen@aracnet.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well hey, if the spammers don't care,
then why should anyone else? Let's bring the whole thing to a screaming
halt. Someone should write a little sript to make up domain names on
the fly. Something like: "Ima-Enabler@_the_(number_of_minutes)_delay_in_this_piece_of_email_getting_from_(your_name)_to_(recipient's_name)_is_compliments_of_(spammer1_spammer2_spammer3_who_between_them_sent_out_(number_of_spam_emails_and_scams_)_in_the_past_hour_or_(percentage)_of_all_email.com"    

Then have that little script calculate and fill in (number of minutes)
as an estimate and (spammer1, spammer2, spammer3) and (number of
spams-scams) based on traffic patterns seen around the net from one
minute to the next and (percentage) as an estimate. And be sure to
thank the spammers by name in so far as their names are known for
their participation and help in making it possible. In other words,
shut it down, rub their noses in the mess, and make it seem like the
most natural thing in the world that a piece of email takes 9-10 hours
to travel from Point A to Point B and then -- even then -- falls into
a spam bucket somewhere along the way. Use gorilla warfare (or do you
say 'guerilla'?) to bring those jerks to their knees. If we cannot
have email to work the way it was intended, then let's not have it at
all ... as the Esteemed William ('punch the buttons, yank the crank')
Burroughs once noted in his book 'Naked Lunch' when he was addressing
a pet monkey, "either shape up and shit right, or you won't be in a 
position to shit at all ... "  PAT]

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

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*************************************************************************
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #167
******************************

    
    
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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 3 May 2006 14:18:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 168

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    FTC Whacks Integrated Credit Solutions/Lighthouse Gang (Mark Crispin)
    FTC Sues Companies For Selling Phone Records (Reuters News Wire)
    Should You Get Fired for Using Internet at Work? (Freeman Klopott)
    Spam Filters Gone Wild (Monty Solomon)
    An Ipv6 Chart (hemeng2@gmail.com)
    Cellular-News: Wednesday 3rd May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 3, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Virgin Mobile Warning (NOTvalid@Queensbridge.us)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Lena)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (SD)
    Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (nospam4me@mytrashmail.com)
    Re: Eavesdropping and Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Stars Review (D Garland)

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: Mark Crispin <mrc@CAC.Washington.EDU>
Subject: FTC Whacks Integrated Credit Solutions/Lighthouse Gang!
Date:  Wed, 3 May 2006 10:56:44 -0700
Organization: University of Washington


The wheels of justice turn slowly, but they do turn.

The Federal Trade Commission has announced a $2.4 million settlement
with the Integrated Credit Solutions, Flagship Capital Services,
Lighthouse Credit Foundation, Mary H. Mecher, J. Steven Mcwhorter, and
Jeffrey E.  Poorman; and proceedings continue against Daniel
M. Melgar.  This gang made prerecorded phone calls to practically
everybody in the country (including my cell phone!) advertising their
"credit counseling services".

The FTC didn't mince words: not only did they make illegal calls, but
they didn't provide the promised interest rate deductions, nor lowered
interest rates within the promised time, nor provided any financial
counseling, nor was their stiff "administrative fee" tax deductable in
spite of their claims.

http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2006/05/lighthouse.htm

One of their lies (repeated in multiple threatening letters from their
lawyer) was that telemarketer Integrated Credit Solutions (run by
Mcworter) and "non-profit credit counseler" Lighthouse Credit
Foundation (run by Melcer) were independent entities.  It turned out
that Mcworter and Melcer go back quite a ways.

McWorter ran Flagship Mortgage Services, the home equity unit of
Republic Bank of St. Petersburg; it marketed home equity loans
nationwide as a way for high-risk borrowers to escape credit card
dept.  Flagship went belly-up in late 1998, and Republic Bank was
forced to lay off 340 employees and take a $7.5 million loss.  Melcer
was Republic Bank's senior VP of mortgage banking.  [Source:
St. Petersburg Times]

Not surprisingly, these two lovebirds had to find new work.  They took
the name Flagship with them, and tried various things until by late
2000 when they had the Flagship/ICS/Lighthouse axis set up, and then
they set about harassing people throughout their country with their
telemarketing calls starting in 2001.

Melcer tries to portray herself about being all sweetness and honesty,
supporting Girl Scouts, etc.  What she doesn't say is that she had no
previous experience with credit counseling or managing non-profits;
nor that she invested in Flagship; or that she worked with Flagship to
set up the "independent" Lighthouse; or that Flagship paid Lighthouse
$65K to get it started.  [Source: Massachusetts Attorney General]

-- Mark --

http://panda.com/mrc
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: FTC Sues Companies For Selling Phone Records
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 11:55:08 -0500


U.S. authorities said on Wednesday they had filed suit against five
online companies, charging they had illegally sold confidential phone
records.

The Federal Trade Commission said it is asking a court to bar the sale
of the phone records and force the companies to give up the money they
made with their operations.

"Trafficking in consumers' confidential telephone records is
outrageous," FTC consumer protection chief Lydia Parnes said in a
statement. "It robs consumers of their privacy and exposes them to
everything from snoops to stalkers."

The FTC lawsuits come amid a wave of concerns about Web sites that
offer to get consumers' phone records. Investigations are also under
way by the Federal Communications Commission and states' attorneys
general.

In addition, lawmakers in Congress are considering measures to impose
tougher penalties on the practice.

In the lawsuits announced on Wednesday, the FTC charged the companies
used "false pretenses, fraudulent statements, fraudulent or stolen
documents or other misrepresentations, including posing as a customer
of a telecommunications carrier" to get the phone records.

The companies advertised on their Web sites that they could get the
confidential phone records of any individual and make them available
for a fee, the agency said.

One of the companies, Integrity Security & Investigations Services
Inc., based in Yorktown, Virginia, also sold consumers' financial
records, including credit-card information, the FTC said.

Other companies and their principals named in the FTC suits were: 77
Investigations Inc., and Reginald Kimbro, based in Upland, California;
AccuSearch Inc., doing business as Abika.com, and Jay Patel, based in
Cheyenne, Wyoming; CEO Group Inc., doing business as Check Em Out, and
Scott Joseph, based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; and Information
Search Inc., and David Kacala, based in Baltimore, Maryland.

CEO Group President Scott Joseph told Reuters he had not yet had time
to review the suit and could not comment.

Information Search's David Kacala disputed that he had illegally sold
such records, saying the dispute was over information on his company's
Web site.  "Basically it's charging me with advertising," he told
Reuters.

Attempts to contact Integrity Security, 77 Investigations, AccuSearch,
Kimbro and Patel were not immediately successful.


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Freeman Klopott <medill@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Should You Get Fired for Using Internet at Work?
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 11:57:08 -0500


Freeman Klopott, Medill News Service

WASHINGTON -- BlackBerry devices. Cell phones. Pagers. Wireless
Internet access. Broadband at home.

The growing list of communications technologies that links workers to
the workplace 24/7 increasingly is blurring the lines between work and
home.

Employees surf the Web at work, checking the weather, making travel
plans, and shopping. At home, many send e-mail, continue their work
chores on the Internet, and otherwise stay connected with their
professional lives.

While employers rarely discourage the extra work done at home, many
want employees' attention focused on work while at the office.

In a recent decision, a New York City administrative law judge adds
another angle to the debate between employers and employees over
personal use of the Internet in the workplace. Ruling in the case of
an employee who allegedly used the Internet for personal reasons
during work hours, the judge, John B.  Spooner, compared Internet use
at work to reading a newspaper or making a telephone call. (Go here
for more on the increased use of the Internet as a news source.)

Permeable Boundary

"It should be observed," Spooner wrote, "that the Internet has become
the modern equivalent of a telephone or a daily newspaper, providing a
combination of communication and information that most employees use
as frequently in their personal lives as for their work."

Spooner recommended that Toquir Choudhri, a 14-year veteran of the
city Department of Education, receive the slightest reprimand for
insubordination, even though supervisors wanted him fired for using
the Internet for personal matters after he was told not to.

Lee Rainie of the Pew Internet and American Life Project says it
"sounds like the judge was recognizing a reality for lots of workers."

Rainie says the "boundary between work and leisure, work and home, is
becoming more permeable."

The New York administrative court's rulings serve as recommendations
to city department heads who make a final decision. In fiscal year
2005, 99 percent of department heads agreed with the findings and
altogether rejected just 16 percent of the recommendations.

Loss of Money?

Despite the mixing of work and personal time, employers fear the loss
of salaried time from workers who are not devoting all their workplace
time to, well, work.

A recent survey by http://Salary.com claims employers waste $759
billion per year paying for employees who are online for personal
reasons. But Rainie calls this and other reports like it "junk pieces
of research" because they don't account for work at home.

And a December 2002 survey conducted by the University of Maryland
supports Rainie. The survey finds that workers with Internet access at
home and at work used an average of 3.7 hours per week of work time
for personal Internet use. But they spend more time, 5.9 hours per
week, surfing for work outside office hours. (Go here for some
background on the issue.)

The Case

Existing case law, Rainie says, gives employers the right to dictate
how their computers are used, but generally such rules "get to
different aspects of the same question: How do people spend their
time? What are they supposed to be doing when they're on the job? What
do they actually do on their job?"

For Choudhri, the veteran of New York City's Department of Education
who could possibly still lose his job despite this initial ruling in
his favor, the answer to these questions is pretty clear. Much like
fellow employees, Choudhri used the Internet during down time.

In one instance, Choudhri was reprimanded for checking the weather on
the Internet while eating his lunch, Spooner writes in the decision.

Martin Druyan, Choudhri's lawyer says, "If everyone in the office has
no work and everyone is on the Internet, unless management gives them
work or forbids them from doing it, then people are going to use the
Internet."

Not the End

"This saga is not over," Druyan says. "We're midstream here, something
is gonna happen."

Since the March 9 ruling, the embattled employee has spent 30 days
suspended without pay. He is back on the payroll, the department says,
but he is not at work.

The Department of Education says Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein is
expected to make a final decision sometime during the week of April
30.


Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news of interest on tech topics, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/tech-news.html 

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

Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 01:02:58 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Spam Filters Gone Wild


Spam Filters Gone Wild; Spate of Incidents at Verizon,
AOL Point to Growing Problem Of Blocking Legitimate Email

By JESSICA E. VASCELLARO
May 3, 2006

Internet companies are taking more aggressive steps to stop the flow
of unwanted email. In a significant number of cases, though, consumers
complain that the efforts increasingly are blocking the good along
with the bad.

Possibly millions of AOL members were temporarily unable to receive
some mail from Google Inc.'s Gmail users last week after AOL held up
messages from some new Gmail servers over concerns it might be spam.
An AOL software update recently resulted in a stoppage of mail that
mentioned at least 60 Internet addresses. An update of Verizon
Communication Inc.'s spam filters recently sparked widespread
complaints from consumers who were unable to receive and send
messages.

The companies blamed the problems on software glitches or
communication failures and often fixed them within hours. Tight
precautions are necessary, the companies say, since spam can threaten
online security and safety -- a more serious problem than the nuisance
of a few missed messages. But others say the incidents are a troubling
sign that new antispam measures may be going to far, contributing to
everything from lost real-estate deals and blocked banking
transactions to bruised relationships caused by unreturned emails that
never got through to friends in the first place.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114661393481042025.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: As I discuseed in this column
yesterday, the _real villains_ -- the spammer-scammers -- do not care
either way, and the people who lean toward caring are busy squabbling
with each other over which methods to use. If one has to choose between 
'online safety and security' (the viewpoint of many companies) and
'a few missed messages' (which netizens seem to care about) I would 
choose to try and insure that no _legitimate_ messages were lost. But
there is a third choice, which some netizens -- I call them 'enablers'
refuse to consider: severe punishment of spammers; they opt instead to
continually try to refine their 'spam filters', not worrying all that
much about 'a few messages'.  The enablers have one excuse after 
another why nothing will work except for their filtering schemes, and
as we see in this message and others, even that does not work all that
well.  Maybe they can learn by extremes: I suggested yesterday that if
lots of mail servers were constantly jammed with trash domain names 
(for our pretection; valid email addresses in the text area of email)
and a notation that spammer-scammers 1, 2, 3, 4 had made these efforts
necessary (let's all give a warm greeting to them!) they might
possibly begin to take the hint; then again, sadly, maybe not.  PAT] 

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

From: hemeng2@gmail.com
Subject: An Ipv6 Chart
Date: 2 May 2006 21:31:44 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


An Ipv6 chart at http://www.o2chart.com/echart/ipv6header.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Wednesday 3rd May 2006
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 07:24:56 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ Financial ]]

MTN Group Agrees Terms For $5.53 Billion Investcom Buy
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17203.php

In one of the largest takeover deals ever entered into by a South
African group, mobile phone company MTN Group said Tuesday it has
agreed terms that may lead to a $5.53 billion offer for Investcom,
which has mobile phone operations in Africa and the...

Verizon CEO Says Still Wants Vodafone Stake
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17204.php

Verizon Communications Chief Executive Ivan Seidenberg said he remains
interested in buying Vodafone Group's 45% stake in Verizon Wireless,
but no actions have been taken on either side. ...

[[ Legal ]]

Research In Motion Comments On Visto Patent Complaint
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17198.php

Research In Motion Ltd. (RIMM) said Visto Corp., which has filed a
complaint alleging patent infringement against RIM in the U.S. Eastern
District Court of Texas, has already filed patent complaints against
several companies in the industry. ...

[[ Messaging ]]

Telenor To Provide Microsoft Mobile E-Mail In Sweden
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17200.php

Norwegian telecommunications operator Telenor, Tuesday said it will
start offering Microsoft's Windows Mobile E-mail service to its
subscribers in Sweden. ...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Gemplus USIM Cards Chosen by 3 for Mobile TV
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17211.php

Gemplus says that it has been selected as the exclusive USIM partner
of 3 Italia, for its world first Mobile TV service. Based on DVB-H
technology, the service will be launched on 3 Italia's network prior
to the FIFA World Cup in June 2006....

Consumers Bemoan Mobile Games Selection and Pricing
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17216.php

With E3 on the horizon, mobile gaming finds itself in the spotlight,
with even Paris Hilton getting into the game. But despite Hilton's
proclamation that, "mobile gaming is hot right now," the audience for
downloaded mobile games is stagnating. M:Met...

[[ MVNO ]]

Latest Niche Wireless Provider Targets Youth Market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17199.php

Helio LLC, the latest niche wireless service provider to pop up,
launched Tuesday with a set of phones and services geared towards the
affluent youth and Korean-American markets. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

China's Huawei to supply 3G equip to VimpelCom's Tajik unit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17208.php

Chinese telecommunications equipment producer Huawei Technologies has
signed a contract to supply third generation (3G) mobile equipment to
Tacom, a Tajik subsidiary of Russia's second largest mobile operator
VimpelCom, VimpelCom's press office said ...

African Operator Compresses Backhaul Traffic
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17213.php

NMS Communications has announced that the pan-African operator, Celtel
is broadening the use of NMS's AccessGate backhaul optimisation
solution to reduce operating expenses as its subscriber base continues
to flourish. AccessGate reduces backhaul tra...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Indonesia Telkom Expects 3M New CDMA Subscribers In 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17202.php

PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia expects to add three million new
subscribers to its Flexi mobile-phone service this year amid efforts
aimed at having the CDMA unit contribute a larger portion of the
company's consolidated operating revenue. ...

Source says Russian businessmen behind Kyrgyz? 2nd GSM operator
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17207.php

Two Russian businessmen are behind MegaCom, Kyrgyzstan?s second GSM
mobile network operator, a source close to the company told Prime-Tass
Tuesday. ...

All You Can Eat SMS Tariff
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17215.php

Telia Sweden is launching an "all you can eat" SMS tariff. For the
price of US$13.50 (SEK 99) per month, Telia's customers can send as
many SMS messages as they can to all mobile networks in
Sweden. Telia's Trend Survey 2006 indicated that SMS is sti...

[[ Regulatory ]]

EU Court:Regulators Should Have Studied T-Mobile-O2 Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17201.php

A top European court Tuesday said European regulators were wrong to
give antitrust exemption to a roaming agreement between Deutsche
Telekom's T-Mobile International and 02 PLC. ...

EU's Kroes Mulls Ceilings On Roaming Phone Charges
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17205.php

European Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes Tuesday said she may
consider imposing ceilings on the 'roaming' charges of mobile phone
operators but ruled out creating fixed roaming-service charges across
Europe. ...

Telecom Egypt,Telecom Italia To Bid For Mobile License
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17206.php

State-controlled Telecom Egypt, Tuesday said it would join forces with
Telecom Italia to bid for Egypt's third mobile telecommunications
license. ...

Petition to Repeal Double-Taxation of Cellphone Use
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17214.php

South Dakota, USA cell phone users declared a small victory as a
petition was submitted yesterday with enough signatures to place a
repeal of a double taxation of cell phone use on the November
ballot. The tax in question is the Gross Receipts Tax (G...

[[ Reports ]]

European Converged Device Market Shows Poor Opening Quarter
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17210.php

According to the latest market data from IDC, the Western European
mobile device market (including standalone handhelds and converged
devices) grew by 25% year on year in the opening quarter of 2006, as
total shipments reached 3.2 million units. Sign...

Growth Opportunities for Wireless Carriers in Marketing to Teens and Parents
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17212.php

JupiterResearch finds that wireless carriers can significantly grow
their subscriber base and revenues by targeting teenagers and parents
with separate marketing messages. According to a new report, 58% of
teens have cell phones, whereas 70% of adult...

[[ Statistics ]]

VimpelCom reports 100,000 subscribers to Beeline brand in Ukraine
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17209.php

The number of subscribers to VimpelCom's Beeline brand in Ukraine
amounts to 100,000 as of now, VimpelCom said in a press release
Tuesday. The brand was launched in Ukraine on April 11. ...

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

Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 12:12:10 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, May 3, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  3, 2006
********************************

OTE Aims For a Million Broadband Users by 2007
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17779?11228

     Greece incumbent telecoms operator OTE plans to double its number
     of high-speed ADSL broadband users to one million by end-2007,
     according to its chief executive Panagis Vourloumis. Reuters
     reports that Vourloumis told an industry conference organised by
     Greek telecoms regulator EETT that 'broadband is not an abstract
     concept for OTE.  It...

Draft Telecom-Reform Bill Helps, Hinders All Parties
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17769?11228

     Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who chairs the Commerce Committee,
     finally unveiled his version of the Communications Act of 2006,
     which is to be called the Communications, Consumer's Choice and
     Broadband Deployment Act of 2006. While some see this draft as
     being good for cable and telcos alike, others are worried about
     weak net-neutrality...

Building a Better VoIP Infrastructure
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/17765?11228

     POTS may be on the way out, but you have to admit one thing: it
     worked, usually reliably and flawlessly.    The same can't be
     said about voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service. VoIP is
     cheap, easy to incorporate into an array of computer and Web
     technologies and it works--but not always well and typically at
     quality levels...

Huawei Lands Another Euro Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17762?11228

     Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. has cemented its position as one of
     the most important telecom equipment vendors in the U.K. by
     landing a deal with Opal Telecom Ltd. , which plans to install
     its own broadband access equipment in up to 1,000 BT Group plc
     (NYSE: BT - message board; London: BTA) local exchanges in the
     U.K. (See Opal Uses...

Verizon Wireless Adds 1.7M Subs
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17761?11228

     Verizon Wireless ended the first quarter with 53 million
     customers, more than The Street was anticipating.  The No. 2
     U.S. wireless carrier in subscriber totals posted revenue of $8.8
     billion, a 19 percent year-over-year increase. Wireless data
     revenues, which totaled $872 million for the quarter, accounted
     for nearly 11.5 percent of...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: NOTvalid@Queensbridge.us
Subject: Virgin Mobile Warning
Date: 3 May 2006 09:52:20 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


If you have voice mail and someone calls your Virgin Mobile phone and
gets your voice mail box the caller gets charged for the call. This is
rightfully so as the caller can leave information for you.

Virgin is now instituting a new policy that if you have had voice mail
removed from your account, Virgin Mobile will send a supervisory signal
back to the CALLING TELCO that your Vrigin phone has answered. That
means, that if someone calls you from a pay phone and you do not answer,
and you do not have Virgin voice mail they will get an intercept
message that could cost the pay phone user fifty cents each time
[depending on charges in your local area].

Virgin has already started this and has stated that eventually all
their customers will have this "supervised as answered".

Perhaps they don't like lost revenue if you do not have an active
mailbox.

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

From: Lena <lenagainster@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: 3 May 2006 03:33:22 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Healthy Stealthy wrote:

> I'm thinking about switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this
> company? Is it a mistake to switch to them? Any details?

I just went through the process of looking at three VOIP companies
(Vonage, AT&T CallVantage and Verizon Voicewing) and picked
CallVantage.  Everyone's situation is different; I don't make enough
long distance calls to justify a plan with unlimited LD calling.  But I
wanted a lot of features, especially Call Filtering where I can block
callers without Caller ID as well as 20 specific numbers.  I read a lot
of reviews on the three companies, and while Vonage has the most
customers, they also seemed to have the most complaints about the
service.  Vonage has a $25 plan with unlimited LD and a $15 plan with a
per minute fee for LD.  CallVantage has a $30 plan with unlimited LD
and a $20 plan with 4 cpm LD.  Voicewing has a $35 plan with unlimited
LD (can't remember if they offer a per minute LD plan).  I chose the
$20 CallVantage plan, adding $2 for call filtering, total monthly cost
with taxes and fees $27.

Voicewing claimed that only one phone can be connected to their
telephone adapter, and if one wanted multiple phones, they would have
to purchase a multiple phone set.  CallVantage claims that one can use
the existing house wiring once the incoming landline is disconnected,
and all phones can be used.  Another reason I chose CallVantage.  I
think this has more to do with the REN number (Ring Equivalence
Number) of the phones, where an REN of 1 is the equivalent of an old
style non-powered phone with a ringer that is powered by the incoming
phone signal.  With nost cordless phones that use house power, the REN
is about one tenth of an REN, so multiple phones can easily be hooked
up to a telephone adapter without loading it down.

The only negative I have found so far with CallVantage is that the
telephone adapter is very sensitive to power glitches.  When the TA
detects a power flicker, the next outgoing call made connects to an
AT&T service that asks me to verify that the phone has not been moved
(by pressing 1).  This is done to comply with the E-911 regulations.
I have the telephone adapter connected to my computer's UPS, but the
TA still sees an occasional flicker.  Fer cryin' out loud, I couldn't
possibly move the TA to a new location in a few milliseconds.  Wish
they would have designed a full minute in to the power outage
detection circuitry before sending me to the location verifier at
AT&T.

One problem I ran into trying to transfer my home number to VOIP is
that AT&T did not have a portability agreement with the rinky-dink
phone company that I had.  Even though I was paying the small fee
every month for number portability, AT&T could not get my number.  So
I am using the phone number assigned to me by AT&T, and am in the
process of porting my number to Verizon, after which I can port my
number to AT&T.

HTH.

Lena

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

From: SD <sd@noemailspam.com>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Wed, 03 May 2006 10:36:24 -0500


On 5/2/2006 3:01 PM, Healthy Stealthy wrote:

> Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
> switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
> it a mistake to switch to them? Any details? 

> Thanks.

I have had Vonage for about 1 year now.  For the first 6 months I had
periodic problems such as dropped calls and having to reboot the
router.  The last few months have seen no problems.  Give it a shot.
No contracts.

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

From: nospam4me@mytrashmail.com
Subject: Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 16:25:42 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


jmeissen@aracnet.com wrote:

> In article <telecom25.166.7@telecom-digest.org>, TELECOM Digest
  Editor wrote:

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, but just imagine, if every
>> legitimate netizen out there would make the effort to add five or
>> ten minutes of extra work to the load of their favorite spammer. 

> Then you end up with a distributed denial of service attack on the
> mail servers of the world.

What if mail server operators set up their systems to firewall IP
addresses which attempt to send to over a certain percentage of
invalid addresses?

What if more mail-ops require valid reverse DNS as a condition of
accepting mail sessions? This would screen out most of the bot-nets.

And " wpoison " which was the first well-known harvester-polluting web
script always used invalid first-level domains to avoid the DDoS
problem.

 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
 Herb Oxley
 From: address IS Valid.

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Eavesdropping and Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Stars Review
Date: Wed, 03 May 2006 02:29:20 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when ctaylor@pinpoint-productions.com
wrote:

> If you are curious about the eavesdropping industry then you simply
> must see the powerful informational video presented by one of the
> world's most recognized experts in the field.  To learn more you can
> go to http://www.tscmvideo.com

Which is a teaser for a video they want to sell you.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums.  It is
also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup
'comp.dcom.telecom'.

TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
                        Post Office Box 50
                        Independence, KS 67301
                        Phone: 620-402-0134
                        Fax 1: 775-255-9970
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                        Email: editor@telecom-digest.org

Subscribe:  telecom-subscribe@telecom-digest.org
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This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm-
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published continuously since then.  Our archives are available for
your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list
on the internet in any category!

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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
*   Judith Oppenheimer, President of ICB Inc. and purveyor of accurate  *
*   800 & Dot Com News, Intelligence, Analysis, and Consulting.         *
*   http://ICBTollFree.com, http://1800TheExpert.com                    *
*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
*   views of Judith Oppenheimer or ICB Inc.                             *
*************************************************************************

ICB Toll Free News.  Contact information is not sold, rented or leased.

One click a day feeds a person a meal.  Go to http://www.thehungersite.com

Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

              ************************

DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE JUST 65 CENTS ONE OR TWO INQUIRIES CHARGED TO
YOUR CREDIT CARD!  REAL TIME, UP TO DATE! SPONSORED BY TELECOM DIGEST
AND EASY411.COM   SIGN UP AT http://www.easy411.com/telecomdigest !

              ************************


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

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.
Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
your name to the mailing list. 

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only
and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #168
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed May  3 23:57:13 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id C45F61566B; Wed,  3 May 2006 23:57:12 -0400 (EDT)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #169
Message-Id: <20060504035712.C45F61566B@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Wed,  3 May 2006 23:57:12 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 3 May 2006 23:59:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 169

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Skype Plans Web-Phone Conversations For Groups (Eric Auchard)
    House Panel Approves Bill to Ban Cyber-gambling (Reuters News Wire)
    Papers' Web Sites Feature Outside Blogs (Anick Jesdanun)
    Intel Launches $1B Effort to Push Web Use Worldwide (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (saurabh)
    Re: Eavesdropping/Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Star Review (Waitman Gobble)
    Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers (jmeissen@aracnet.com)

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: Eric Auchard <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Skype Plans Web-Phone Conversations For Groups
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 22:26:19 -0500


By Eric Auchard

Web phone-calling company Skype is bringing social networking to
crowds as it unveils a service for groups of up to 100 people to hold
spontaneous conversations online.

The international phone-calling service, which has signed up 100
million users is adding 200,000 new users a day, said on Tuesday it is
previewing a shared communications service called "Skypecasts" along
with an upgrade of its core Skype software.

Skypecasts are live, moderated discussions that allow groups of Skype
users anywhere in the world to discuss shared interests, from classes
to computer support to cultural or political debates. They amount to
the conversational equivalent of Web blogs, complementing the written
interactions of blogs.

"To date users have been talking one-to-one and one-to-many in private
settings," Saul Klein, Skype's head of marketing, said in an interview
of Skype's current services. "Skypecast is about starting to have
conversations in public settings."

The service is moderated by a designated host who is able to pass a
virtual microphone to participants in the group when they wish to
speak. To keep conversations on track, the software allows the
moderator to silence or eject detractors.

The social networking trend grew up out of the online dating scene
with the rise of Friendster and has evolved as the power of
collaborating with one's friends and acquaintances has been applied to
everything from music to news to Web search.

Skype takes the concept of social networking literally, based on the
recognition that buddies on the phone or in an instant message chat
are one's social network in a real sense.

Coming from a different starting point is MySpace, which began around
the same time as a music fan site, but has grown into a broad-based
media distribution platform for its owner, Rupert Murdoch's News
Corp.

"The whole idea of talking on Skype is based around actual social
networks -- one's address book of contacts," Forrester Research
analyst Charlene Li said.

The lines between Internet media sites and communications companies
such as Skype are increasing blurring as both types of companies offer
an increasingly similar set of features.

"There is this natural inclination by big communications giants to
want to be the focal point for the user experience, the starting
point, the way to search the Web, and not just an instant message or
voice communication tool," Li said.

Hosting or participating in a Skypecast is completely free. The
feature is in preview mode, said the Luxembourg-based unit of online
auctioneer eBay Inc.

Skype is working with several Web community services including Six
Apart, the San Francisco-based blogging software maker, as a way for
bloggers to create an interactive way for their audiences to hold open
conversations online. It is working with OpenVC, a European business
networking site, and Bebo.com, a dating network site popular with
British youth.

Bloggers can schedule Skypecasts and link to them from their sites, so
visitors using Skype can click to join discussions instantly, without
leaving a blog site.

Skype is also set to introduce version 2.5 of the Skype software, with
a grab bag of new features, including giving any Skype user on a
computer or phone the ability to send text messages directly to mobile
phone users, Klein said.

The new software is available for download at 1100 GMT (12:00
p.m. British time) on Wednesday. It simplifies features on Skype for
novice users, including making international dialing and paying for
calls in different currencies easier, said IDC analyst Will Stofega.

"Skype is trying to really fix a few of the things that maybe the
novice doesn't instinctively understand," he said.

On Monday, Skype had said it was furthering its push into business
market through a partnership with speakerphone maker Polycom Inc.,
which plans to offer a handheld-sized Skype speakerphone for travelers
that runs off a laptop and costs $129 (70 pounds) -- the low end of
speakerphone pricing.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headline news from the daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: House Panel Approves Bill to Ban Cyber-gambling
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 22:19:44 -0500


A House of Representatives subcommittee on Wednesday approved a bill
that would ban Internet gambling, estimated to be a $12 billion
industry.

The legislation would update and expand an existing federal law to
cover all forms of interstate gambling within the United States, and
would bar a gambling business from accepting payment in the form of
credit cards, checks, wire and Internet transfers. It would also
prohibit gambling on an estimated 2,300 Internet gambling sites.

Shares of some British-based gaming companies fell on news that the
bill had progressed another step. PartyGaming Plc and 888 Holdings
tumbled about 5 percent each on the London Stock Exchange.

The bill was approved on a voice vote by the House Judiciary
subcommittee on crime. It will go to the full committee for
consideration.

However, it remains unclear whether the legislation will reach floor
votes in the House and Senate. Congress has a relatively short
schedule this year because of the November congressional elections.

"Virtual betting parlors have attempted to avoid the application of
United States law by locating themselves offshore and out of our
jurisdictional reach," said Rep. Bob Goodlatte (news, bio, voting
record), a Virginia Republican who wrote the bill. The offshore
companies use Internet sites that are "unlicensed, untaxed and
unregulated," he said.

Under U.S. law, interstate gambling over telephone wires is illegal
and other gambling is banned unless regulated by the states.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Anick Jesdanun  <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Papers' Web Sites Feature Outside Blogs
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 22:21:15 -0500


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

The Web sites of dozens of newspapers are starting to feature outside
blog postings on travel, health and other topics in a further blurring
of the line separating traditional and new media.

The travel section of the San Francisco Chronicle's site, for
instance, had a box in the middle Wednesday with such posts as "The
Intricate Architecture of Barcelona" from the RealTravel blog. The
sports section of the Austin American-Statesman site had items on the
University of Texas teams.

The posts supplement the Web journals, or blogs, maintained by the
newspapers' own staffs and come from Pluck Corp.'s new BlogBurst
service, which collects postings from about 1,000 blogs and
distributes them to newspapers, mostly for online use.

Bloggers who participate get greater exposure for their writings - but
no money, for now. Newspapers get more coverage in areas for which
they may not have enough reporters.

Pluck charges papers largely based on traffic - and thus ad sales -
the posts help generate, and the company may one day share those
revenues with the bloggers, too.

Dave Panos, Pluck's chief executive and co-founder, said the company
is reviewing all blogs ahead of time to make sure they are topical and
aren't apt to use offensive language. However, Pluck won't vet every
post.

Newspapers concerned about quality control can opt instead for
prescreened feeds -- five to 10 a day in a given topic instead of
dozens or hundreds.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The same sort of arrangement was made
with this Digest, and a few other internet newsletters: The source of
my news wire here preselects five feeds per day specifically for
teleocm news and to appear in the Digest, then the other stuff on 
the wire goes into the 'td-extra' areas such as 'newstoday.html' and
'internet-news.html'. Its a great system, really; they all get my
feed -- those who want to use it -- and I get all their stuff.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 13:17:08 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Intel Launches $1B Effort to Push Web Use Worldwide


USTelecom dailyLead
May 3, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzAAfDtutdoObhpgUW

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Intel launches $1B effort to push Web use worldwide
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Skype debuts new software
* Nokia ships BlackBerry competitor
* Vonage adds European countries to unlimited calling list
* Verizon Wireless gets 10% of Q1 revenue from data
* Alltel, Qwest, Charter report earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Selecting the Best Softswitch
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Microsoft turns to TV, movie experts for Web pilots
* Commentary:  Wi-Fi's growing pains
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* New Zealand orders telecom to open local loop

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dzAAfDtutdoObhpgUW

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

From: saurabh <questfrnirvana@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: 3 May 2006 15:14:45 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hi dere,

I am an Indian and people here also are using Vonage ... it is working
well. Useful for anyone who is in either states or wanna have states
number.  Editor rightly said it is based on VoIP which is very
economical compared to another providers.

saurabh

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

From: Waitman Gobble <avail4one@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Eavesdropping and Wiretapping Video Receives 5 Stars Review
Date: 3 May 2006 19:25:59 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hello,

My favorite article that seems somewhat related was written a few
years ago by a PBS guy (it seems).

Shooting Ourselves in the Foot:

Grandiose Schemes for Electronic Eavesdropping May Hurt More Than They Help 
By Robert X. Cringely

http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20030710.html

Take care,

Waitman

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: Using Dilution to Fight Phishers
Date: 3 May 2006 19:06:04 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


In article <telecom25.168.11@telecom-digest.org>,
<nospam4me@mytrashmail.com> wrote:

> jmeissen@aracnet.com wrote:

>> In article <telecom25.166.7@telecom-digest.org>, TELECOM Digest
>>  Editor wrote:

>>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, but just imagine, if every
>>> legitimate netizen out there would make the effort to add five or
>>> ten minutes of extra work to the load of their favorite spammer. 

>> Then you end up with a distributed denial of service attack on the
>> mail servers of the world.

> What if mail server operators set up their systems to firewall IP
> addresses which attempt to send to over a certain percentage of
> invalid addresses?

There are hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of infected home
systems trying to deliver spam. I used to examine my mail logs to look
for patterns, but there are very few duplicate IP addresses.  And even
if one system did try to deliver enough to trigger such a filter it
would quickly be replaced by another. Eventually you would be blocking
huge portions of the 'net, one IP address at a time.  You could get
more sophisticated, and maintain a database and try to consolidate by
netblocks, but the end result is that you'll probably just block most
of the Internet.

> What if more mail-ops require valid reverse DNS as a condition of
> accepting mail sessions? This would screen out most of the bot-nets.

And a significant number of legitimate sites, too. :-/ I personally
use that approach. I don't accept email from sites without valid rDNS
unless they've been explicitly whitelisted. There have been some
important emails blocked because of it, but I say, "too bad." I've
tried to inform the site admins, but they usually ignore me. One
company has multiple mail servers, and some of them have valid rDNS
while others don't. So random emails from them bounce.

> And " wpoison " which was the first well-known harvester-polluting web
> script always used invalid first-level domains to avoid the DDoS
> problem.

Unfortunately, as the namespace becomes more crowded it becomes more
likely that previously invalid names will become valid ones. You
could, of course, make them obviously invalid, but if they're obvious
then they're easy for the harvesters to filter.


John Meissen    jmeissen@aracnet.com

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums.  It is
also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup
'comp.dcom.telecom'.

TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
                        Post Office Box 50
                        Independence, KS 67301
                        Phone: 620-402-0134
                        Fax 1: 775-255-9970
                        Fax 2: 530-309-7234
                        Fax 3: 208-692-5145         
                        Email: editor@telecom-digest.org

Subscribe:  telecom-subscribe@telecom-digest.org
Unsubscribe:telecom-unsubscribe@telecom-digest.org

This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm-
unications on the Internet, having been founded in August, 1981 and
published continuously since then.  Our archives are available for
your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list
on the internet in any category!

URL information:        http://telecom-digest.org

Anonymous FTP: mirror.lcs.mit.edu/telecom-archives/archives/
  (or use our mirror site: ftp.epix.net/pub/telecom-archives)

RSS Syndication of TELECOM Digest: http://telecom-digest.org/rss.html
  For syndication examples see http://www.feedrollpro.com/syndicate.php?id=308
    and also http://feeds.feedburner.com/TelecomDigest

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
*   Judith Oppenheimer, President of ICB Inc. and purveyor of accurate  *
*   800 & Dot Com News, Intelligence, Analysis, and Consulting.         *
*   http://ICBTollFree.com, http://1800TheExpert.com                    *
*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
*   views of Judith Oppenheimer or ICB Inc.                             *
*************************************************************************

ICB Toll Free News.  Contact information is not sold, rented or leased.

One click a day feeds a person a meal.  Go to http://www.thehungersite.com

Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

              ************************

DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE JUST 65 CENTS ONE OR TWO INQUIRIES CHARGED TO
YOUR CREDIT CARD!  REAL TIME, UP TO DATE! SPONSORED BY TELECOM DIGEST
AND EASY411.COM   SIGN UP AT http://www.easy411.com/telecomdigest !

              ************************


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

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.
Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
your name to the mailing list. 

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only
and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #169
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu May  4 16:18:23 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id D3CEB14D60; Thu,  4 May 2006 16:18:21 -0400 (EDT)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #170
Message-Id: <20060504201821.D3CEB14D60@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu,  4 May 2006 16:18:21 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.0.4 (2005-06-05) on massis.lcs.mit.edu
X-Spam-Level: 
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	MAILTO_TO_SPAM_ADDR,NA_DOLLARS autolearn=ham version=3.0.4
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 4 May 2006 16:21:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 170

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Can Open Source Defeat Microsoft? (Jack Germain)
    Microsoft CEO Sees Web Services as Top R&D Priority (Reuters News Wire)
    US Steps Into Wiretap Suit Against AT&T (John Markoff)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 4, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    BPL Firm Current Communications to Announce New (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News: Thursday 4th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Mark J)
    In-Building_Solutions_2006 (Cellular-News)

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: Jack M. Germain <newsfactor@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Can Open Source Defeat Microsoft?
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 14:29:23 -0500


Jack M. Germain, newsfactor.com

While Microsoft has had some 20 years to make Office what it is today,
most industry analysts say that new open-source contenders, such as
OpenOffice, measure up reasonably well against Redmond's suite. But
they also say that while these suites do have most of the features of
Microsoft Office, they lack certain advanced capabilities that make
all the difference.

Clearly, Microsoft continues to define the office space and likely
will dominate office software for the foreseeable future. But an
interesting question to ask is whether a group of volunteers --
however large -- can ever hope to measure up against Microsoft's
millions of dollars. Gates and crew have poured countless programmer
hours into Office over the past 20 years, while OpenOffice and other
alternative product groups consist almost entirely of volunteers. Is
the idea so far-fetched that a group of volunteers can compete
successfully with Microsoft?

Because the two office suites are not on the same playing field in
terms of development funding, it is difficult to equate Microsoft's
programmer dollars against the time provided by open-source
volunteers. But there are plenty of those in the open-source community
who are willing to give that comparison a shot.

One of those is Jacqueline McNally, marketing project lead for
OpenOffice.org. "When volunteers give freely of their efforts and
time, it is often mistaken that we don't have value because we don't
appear on a balance sheet," said McNally from her office in Perth,
Australia. "It would be an interesting exercise if it were possible to
put a value on the time contributed to OpenOffice, considering there
are thousands of contributors providing millions of hours."

Competition Ongoing

While there are of course proponents and detractors on both sides of
the line, many analysts have identified open-source software and
nonproprietary formats as building up strong momentum against
Redmond. "The growing awareness of the benefits of open file formats
and transparency are driving interest in OpenOffice, KDE, Gnome, and
other alternatives to a Microsoft solution," said Stacey Quandt,
research director for security solutions and services for the Aberdeen
Group.

However, while there are plenty of proponents, the open-source
movement does have legitimate detractors. One is Michael Goulde,
analyst of software infrastructure for Forrester Research. According
to him, the coding for open-source products often provides a built-in
drawback. By way of example, he points to OpenOffice. "The actual code
for the first version was spaghetti," he said. "The code for 2.0 isn't
much better. This is going to be a bear to continue to evolve, and
they should probably start from scratch. It's no accident that in
Forrester surveys OpenOffice usage barely shows up."

Does the existence of these alternative software solutions pose any
kind of challenge to Microsoft? We posed that question at several
levels of Microsoft's vast media-management army along with requests
to discuss the open-source phenomenon. After promises for responses,
Microsoft's media messengers said the appropriate corporate responders
were all traveling and could not be reached.

A key official for the KDE organization, developers of one of the most
popular desktop environments for the Linux operating system, was happy
to comment. "I cannot speak for Microsoft, but I think that the KDE
project has quite a bit of pride over the KDE platform," said Ian
Reinhart Geiser, developer on the KDE project and the organization's
U.S. representative. "I think this pride is helping inspire us to
market KDE outside of the Linux arena."

Geiser noted that the interesting thing about the open-source model is
that the biggest customers tend to be the developers involved in the
projects and who are also working at corporations that end up using
the software. In this sense, the open-source movement is not unlike
grassroots political movements that seek to transform organizations
from within. "I think these developers may be a challenge (to
Microsoft) because communities are usually made up of individuals
versus complete companies," said Geiser. "I think the big focus on
marketing for KDE is to grow beyond these communities and market to
institutions such as businesses and schools."

Others close to the issue see the open-source model as being more
responsive to the marketplace, something that Microsoft's corporate
structure tends to restrict. "Open-source communities or projects,
including OpenOffice, can more quickly respond or be proactive than
large corporations," said McNally.  "Also, as an international
project, contributors and end-users have the opportunity to
participate in myriad ways, based on language or region. Our
volunteers are our most valuable resource."

Community Pressure

Will the community support that drives open-source products ultimately
have a larger impact on proprietary software makers like Microsoft in
terms of their own product development? Some industry watchers are
beginning to think so. What the volunteer model does is to drive the
cost of the software to zero, noted Forrester's Goulde. This cost
competition is starting to have an affect even on vendors
participating in open-source development, who find that to make money
on these products, they must raise the cost of their services. "That
cost is actually pushed up into the services," said Goulde.

Some think that the greatest pressure on the developers of proprietary
software will continue to come from innovation. That certainly seems
to be the case with Microsoft's quick turnaround in deciding to
overhaul its long-stagnant Internet browser now rather than wait to
release a new version in Windows Vista. Much of that marketing
decision resulted from the overwhelming success of the open-source
browser Firefox, with its tabbed interface and numerous
user-configurable enhancements.

The Gnome desktop environment is another example of how open-source
communities can force programming innovation. "I think there are many
examples of how a software monoculture can cause the overall quality
of software to deteriorate," said KDE.org's Geiser. "I think both KDE
and Gnome are also becoming successful enough that even Microsoft is
being forced to try to innovate again."

He said Gnome is a good example of this push for innovation because it
was started when the developers did not agree with where KDE was
going. "Over the years we have both inspired great innovations to each
other, making the desktop platforms on Linux much more
feature-complete than they where two or three years ago," he said.

Massachusetts Rebellion

Aberdeen researcher Quandt pointed to the current situation with the
Massachusetts Legislature as the latest battleground for one of the
most visible fights between open source and proprietary programs. At
stake is Microsoft's support for proprietary technology becoming a
potential hindrance to information access. The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts plans to phase out Microsoft Office and replace it with
OpenOffice, which supports the OpenDocument Format, she said. Adobe,
KOffice, Apache, Sun, and several other major vendors and groups
support the OpenDocument format.

"The marketing challenge for Microsoft is that while its [forthcoming]
XML implementation is royalty free, it is closed-source software and
does not address the issue of transparency and access to information
that government agencies are seeking," she said. "As the industry
logic for open file formats extends to other vertical segments, this
will drive more organizations to consider the long-term implications
of access to digital assets, and the costs of staying the course with
a proprietary solution."

This move by Massachusetts, however, is inherently flawed because the
OpenOffice programs do not have the capabilities for disabled workers
that the Microsoft Office environment has, noted Laura DiDio, senior
analyst at the Yankee Group. "Disabled workers will continue to use
Microsoft Office and it will cost taxpayers money to maintain both
programs throughout the state's offices."

DiDio said companies, as well as the Massachusetts Legislature, have
to consider the hidden costs associated with adopting
OpenOffice. These hidden costs include third-party tools, warranties,
I.T. staffing costs to retrain support givers, and the expense of
implementing security measures that work with the alternative
applications.

Another issue underlying the abandonment of proprietary applications
for open-source products is the recovery time, DiDio said. For
instance, she said, it takes Linux 30 percent longer to recover from a
security attack in contrast to Windows. The documentation for
open-source applications often is poor, she said, and the support is
nowhere near as robust as it is with Microsoft. "Thus, administrators
will spend much more time looking for the cure," she said.

Success Factors

Open source is continuing to expand because it is easier to follow
than to lead, asserted Goulde, who pointed out that quite a bit of
open-source software mimics capabilities that are in proprietary
products. It does the same with technologies that have become
commoditized. Why? Because that is the easy part, Goulde noted,
adding, "Who wants to pay for commodity technology anyway?"

Other factors are driving the gains made by open-source vendors
against the Microsoft giant. "The success of office productivity
alternatives to Microsoft is about ease of access to information,
lower costs, and not being locked in to a single I.T. vendor," said
Quandt.

The level of competition between proprietary and open-source vendors
often is shaded by one's involvement in the marketing challenge. For
instance, Al Campa, vice president of marketing for JasperSoft, sees
the fight moving away from the Microsoft battle front. His company
develops JasperReports, a suite of open-source reporting and analytics
software products. According to his perspective, open-source products
have replaced Microsoft as the lowest common denominator in
computing. "Microsoft is trying to make plays in both markets, but
isn't nimble and attractive enough to overcome open source's
popularity," Campa said.

But, despite this kind of enthusiasm echoed in every sector of the
open-source movement, the battle for open-source supremacy is far from
over.  However, as Campa pointed out, free is compelling. "Software
makers will continue to have a hard time competing with something that
is free," he said. But even in the open-source marketplace, free does
not always work.  "Today, people want to know that there is
documentation, product support, and durability," said Campa. "They
also want to know that it is safe."

To solve that marketing quandary, JasperSoft, like many companies
creating open-source software, makes two versions available to
customers: an open-source free version and another for-fee version
that comes with more advance features and support.

The bottom line, said Campa, is for companies to have a strategy. 
"There is not a software company out there that doesn't have an
open-source strategy," said Campa. "You can see this with Oracle, SQL,
IBM, and others, but every major software company also has to focus on
a commercial plan, or they won't become a company with a profit."

Microsoft has a hand in open source and traditional open-source
developers have been making money selling services on top of their
open-source products. It is this business conundrum that might
ultimately make the question about proprietary software versus
open-source software moot, as the lines between both camps become
increasingly blurred.

Copyright 2006 NewsFactor Network, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more technical news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft CEO Sees Web Services as Top R&D Priority
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 14:23:08 -0500


Microsoft Corp. plans to double spending on research and development
at its MSN Internet unit as the company focuses on software services,
Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said on Thursday.

The world's largest software maker caught investors off guard last
week when it said it would sacrifice billions of dollars in profit
next year to invest in new business areas.

Investors complained about the lack of clarity in Microsoft's plans to
compete with online rivals Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO -
news).

Speaking at an event to promote its online advertising efforts,
Ballmer said investments in the coming fiscal year, starting July 1,
are a sign of Microsoft's commitment to be a leader on the Web.

"These are certainly early days in this Internet world. I believe only
two or three companies can really deliver the infrastructure that's
required to keep pace with both consumer demand and advertisers'
needs," said Ballmer.

Microsoft said it planned to spend $1.1 billion for research and
spending at MSN in the 2007 fiscal year, up from $500 million in
fiscal 2005.

The company also plans to increase capital expenditure to $500 million
in fiscal 2007, from $100 million in 2005.

"We will spend as a company overall about $6.2 billion in R&D,"
Ballmer said without specifying a time frame.

"We've told our R&D folks that our number one priority is software as
a service," said Ballmer.

Shares of Microsoft rose 34 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $23.52 in
afternoon Nasdaq trade. Prior to Thursday trade, the stock had fallen
15 percent since the company forecast next year's earnings below Wall
Street estimates on April 27.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: John Markoff <nytimes@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: US Steps Into Wiretap Suit Against AT&T
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 09:51:08 -0500


By JOHN MARKOFF

SAN FRANCISCO, April 28 - The government asked a federal judge here
Friday to dismiss a civil liberties lawsuit against the AT&T
Corporation because of a possibility that military and state secrets
would otherwise be disclosed.

The lawsuit, accusing the company of illegally collaborating with the
National Security Agency in a vast surveillance program, was filed in
February by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties
group.

The class-action suit, which seeks an end to the collaboration it
alleges, is based in part on the testimony of Mark Klein, a retired
technician for the company who says Internet data passing through an
AT&T switching center in San Francisco is being diverted to a secret
room. There, Mr. Klein says, the security agency has installed
powerful computers to eavesdrop without warrants on the digital data
and forward the information to an undisclosed place.

The foundation has filed documents obtained by Mr. Klein that
ostensibly show detailed technical information on N.S.A. technology
used to divert Internet data. He has also said in a deposition that
employees of the agency went to the switching center to oversee
special projects.

The company has declined to address the suit publicly, saying it will
have no comment on matters of national security or customer privacy.

In its action Friday, the government filed a statement of interest
asserting military and state secret privilege in asking the judge,
Vaughn R. Walker, to dismiss the suit. Separately on Friday, AT&T also
filed two motions to dismiss.

The government's filing said the authorities "cannot disclose any
national security information that may be at issue in this case." The
document went on to say that the filing should not be construed as
either a confirmation or a denial of any of the claims made by the
civil liberties group about government surveillance activities.

Elsewhere in the document, however, the government said President Bush
had explained that after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he authorized
the security agency to intercept communications into and out of the
United States by people linked to Al Qaeda and related
organizations. The agency is ordinarily prohibited from intercepting
the telephone and digital communications of American citizens without
a warrant from a special intelligence court.

Responding to the filing, Cindy Cohn, legal director for the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, said, "We think the government's right
to conduct this program should be considered separately from the issue
of whether a telecommunications firm has the right to break the law."

The government's interest, Ms. Cohn said, is an indication that the
lawsuit is not frivolous.

The court plans to hear the various motions on May 17.

Earlier this year, the foundation asked the government to examine the
documents that the group was preparing to submit to the court related
to Mr.  Klein's testimony. At the time, the government chose not to
intervene, and the documents were filed under seal.

The documents, which include affidavits, lists of equipment and
technical specifications related to tapping fiber-optic network links,
have been obtained independently by a number of news organizations. 
They refer to a similar installation in an AT&T facility in Atlanta,
and Mr. Klein has said he believes there are related eavesdropping
facilities attached to AT&T centers in San Jose, Los Angeles, San
Diego and Seattle.

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

For more headlines and news stories from New York Times, Christian
Science Monitor and National Public Radio with no login nor registration
requirements, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 11:59:01 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Thursday, May 4, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  4, 2006
********************************

Innovating by Leaps & Bounds
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17800?11228

     In a world filled with national operators offerings a slew of
     complicated rate plans, the flat-rate operator used to stand
     apart.  But now the market is becoming even more complicated,
     thanks to the onslaught of prepaid MVNOs, the advent of free
     mobile-to-mobile calling and the latest trend of big-bucket
     calling plans featuring more than...

What's Behind the AT&T, BellSouth Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17797?11228

     The spectre of Ma Bell once again is haunting the telecom
     industry as AT&T Inc. and BellSouth Corp. have pledged to merge
     in a $67 billion deal that brings together two ILECs and their
     mutually owned wireless company, Cingular Wireless LLC. It also
     stirs up fears that the incumbents could grow so large they will
     just operate however...

ONO Delays IPO Until 2008 Â 
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/17791?11228

     Spanish leading cable TV and broadband operator ONO is now
     planning an initial public offering (IPO) on the Madrid stock
     exchange in the first quarter of 2008, when its integration with
     Auna's operations has been completed. The company had previously
     intended to float its shares either this year or next.
     Significance: The move reflects...

British Regulator Receives US$6.98M from Spectrum Auctions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17789?11228

     Telecoms regulator Ofcom has confirmed receiving 3.8 million
     pounds (US$6.98 million) in licence fees for the 12 spectrum
     licences that it awarded last week. The licences are for 6.6MHz
     of spectrum in the 1781.7-1785MHz paired with 1876.7-1880MHz
     bands, and would need to be operated on a low-power,
     technology-neutral basis. Ofcom had...

FCC Mandates VoIP Surveillance, Wiretap Compliance
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/17788?11228

     The Federal Communications Commission Wednesday mandated that all
     facilities-based broadband network operators and Voice over
     Internet Protocol (VoIP) service providers interconnected with
     the public switched telephone network (PSTN) must comply with
     federal statues on surveillance and wiretaps sought by
     law-enforcement and homeland-...

Telenor 1st-Quarter Net Profit Doubles
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17783?11228

     OSLO, Norway -- The state-controlled Telenor ASA
     telecommunications group on Thursday said its net profit for the
     first quarter more than doubled, boosted by the sale of its stake
     in satellite company Inmarsat PLC and strong operational results.
     The report beat market expectations, and shares soared 9.4
     percent to 78.75 kroner...

Alltel Posts Revenue Gains, Earnings Dip
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17782?11228

     Acquisition costs weighed on Alltel Corporation's first quarter
     earnings, which fell 5 percent, but the company did post
     quarterly revenue growth of nearly 20 percent. Wireless revenue
     increased 30 percent during the quarter and the company attracted
     165,000 new customers.  Alltel reported quarterly earnings of
     $297.4 million, or 77...

DT Plans Acquisitions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17781?11228

     Deutsche Telekom AG EO Kai-Uwe Ricke issued an unguarded
     challenge to pan-European rivals such as France Telecom SA ,
     Telefonica SA , and Telecom Italia SpA yesterday by saying "We
     are Europe's number 1 and are determined to...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 13:30:28 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: BPL Firm Current Communications to Announce New Funding


USTelecom dailyLead
May 4, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dAjUfDtutdsOiZDdua

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* BPL firm Current Communications to announce new funding
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon cuts monthly price for VoIP service
* AOL turnaround efforts not showing results
* RIM countersues Visto
* Visto aggressively defends its turf
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Get Important Telecom Contacts
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Faster Wi-Fi gear may not be ready for primetime
* Enterprise technologies not user-friendly, Google, Juniper execs say
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Wireless Philadelphia gets nod from two committees
* FCC approves wiretap levy
* FTC sues five companies that sold phone records

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dAjUfDtutdsOiZDdua

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Thursday 4th May 2006
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 07:33:42 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

Comverse Wins 3G Services Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17233.php

Comverse has been selected to supply a broad array of solutions and
services from its Total Communication portfolio to P4, Poland's new 3G
mobile operator. These solutions include Comverse's
Converged Billing solution, InSight next generation platfor ...

[[ Financial ]]

New Zealand Telecom 3Q Net Likely Down
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17218.php

Telecom Corp. of New Zealand is likely to report a drop in fiscal
third-quarter net profit Friday, analysts say, with its struggling
Australian operations continuing to be a drag on earnings. ...

Alltel CFO Backs Prior Full-Year Estimate
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17221.php

Alltel Corp.'s results for the first and second half should fall
within the company's prior expectations, according to Chief Financial
Officer Sharilyn Gasaway. ...

US Spectrum Auction Halts M&A Talk
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17222.php

Merger-and-acquisition activity in the wireless phone industry has
halted ahead of the Federal Communications Commission's wireless
spectrum auction, said Alltel Corp. Chief Executive Scott Ford. ...

Three operators make non-binding offers for Ola
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17225.php

After a 30-day postponement of the deadline for making non-binding
offers to become Colombia Movil's (Ola) partner, three operators 
have made "non-binding proposals," Ola parent companies ETB and EPM
said in a joint statement. ...

Iusacell Q1 net loss up 30%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17227.php

Mexican mobile operator Iusacell saw its first quarter net loss expand
to 491mn pesos (US$44.5mn), up 30% compared to the net loss of 377mn
pesos post in first quarter of 2005. ...

Telus 1Q Net Ex-Items Up On Subscriber Growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17229.php

Canada's Telus Corp. posted higher first-quarter earnings excluding
items due to continued strong wireless performance and high speed
Internet and wireless subscriber growth. ...

Mexico's America Movil Upgrades '06 Subscriber Outlook By 2 Million
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17230.php

Mexican wireless phone company America Movil on Wednesday raised its
2006 new subscriber target by 2 million customers and affirmed its
capital expenditure plan. ...

TTPCom Signs GSM Modem License Agreement
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17240.php

TTP Communications and Analog Devices have announced that TTPCom's
subsidiary TTPCom has reached an agreement with ADI - its long time
collaborator in the development of silicon and software for cellular
phones - under which TTPCom will transfer to A...

[[ Handsets ]]

Motorola Buys BenQ Research Center
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17235.php

Motorola has purchased a research office based in Denmark from BenQ
Mobile. The Aalborg facility and team will be integrated into
Motorola's Mobile Devices business and become a products
development center for Motorola. Terms of the transaction were ...

Samsung and Motorola Shine in Q1 Mobile-Phone Rankings
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17236.php

Samsung Electronics and Motorola defied the normal seasonal slowdown
in mobile-phone unit production in the first quarter, allowing them to
significantly boost their market share, according to iSuppli
Corp. Worldwide mobile-phone production in the fi...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

C&W outsources contact center to Accent
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17226.php

US CRM provider Accent has signed a multi-year contract to provide
contact center services on behalf of Caribbean telco Cable and
Wireless Jamaica, Accent said in a statement. ...

Nokia Wins Defense Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17238.php

The military equipment company, BAE Systems has selected Nokia to
build its GSM/EDGE network to support operations at its Merrimack,
USA, facilities. Under the contract, Nokia will supply a GSM/GPRS/EDGE
network of equipment and services, including a...

[[ Personnel ]]

Russia's Sky Link to mull CEO resignation on May 23
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17220.php

The extraordinary general meeting of shareholders (EGM) of Russian
CDMA mobile operator Sky Link is scheduled to consider the resignation
of the company's General Director Raisa Rozinova on May 23, the
company said in a press release late Tuesday. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Ofcom Details Spectrum Winners
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17219.php

The UK Office of Communications, or Ofcom, said Wednesday that it has
awarded 12 Wireless Telegraphy Act licences for the frequencies
1781.7-1785MHz paired with 1876.7-1880MHz as a result of its first
spectrum auction. ...

Cable&Wireless: To Offer Converged Service With New GSM License
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17223.php

Cable & Wireless PLC, Wednesday said it intends to use its new
spectrum license to offer services, aimed at corporate customers, that
allow one handset to work as a fixed or mobile phone. ...

Russian service to set fixed-to-mobile tariffs by June 20
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17224.php

Tariffs for calls from fixed-line to mobile phones will be set no
later than June 20, Uralsvyazinform fixed-line operator said
Wednesday, citing Galina Zhigulskaya, a department director at the
Federal Tariff Service. ...

Quad-play law gets warm reception from congress
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17228.php

Peru's congress cast an initial vote in favor of a law that would
permit quadruple play in a single terminal, provided by single or
multiple providers, the country's transport and communications
ministry (MTC) said in a statement. ...

US Spectrum Winners Could End Up With Negative Value Licenses
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17234.php

Declines in technology value were major reasons for the post-auction
fall in the market value of 1900 MHz PCS spectrum in the U.S. (1994 to
1997) and 1900/2100 W-CDMA spectrum in Europe (during 2000) concludes
a new report from The Shosteck Group. ...

Serbia Planning Privatisation of GSM Network
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17239.php

The Serbian Privatisation Agency and telecoms regulator, the Republic
Agency for Telecommunications have announced plans for a GSM/3G
License tender and the linked privatisation of the GSM network
operator, Mobi 63. The Privatization Agency says that...

[[ Statistics ]]

SingTel Says Mobile Subscribers Total 85 Million At End Of March
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17217.php

Singapore Telecommunications said it had 85 million mobile telephone
customers at the end of the March, a gain of 7.21 million from the end
of 2005. ...

Belarus' MDC subscriber base up to 2.14 million users May 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17231.php

The subscriber base of Belarusian mobile phone operator Mobile Digital
Communications (MDC) rose to 2.14 million users as of May 1 from 1.885
million users as of January 1, the company's press office said
Wednesday. ...

[[ Technology ]]

EV-DO Rev. A Optimization
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17232.php

Actix has unveiled its optimization solution for EV-DO Rev. A, the
latest high-speed 3G CDMA-based standard. Actix says that it is the
first to market with a solution that addresses the needs of the
growing number of operators that are already triali...

New WiFi Standard - Buyer Beware
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17237.php

The 802.11n Wi-Fi standard holds the promise of enabling a new
generation of networking applications including multimedia
distribution within the home and very high-speed data
connectivity. With a new draft 11n Draft Specification approved in
March 2...

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

From: Mark J <mjlas02@cox.net>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 23:30:45 -0700
Organization: Cox Communications


I have been using Vonage for nearly a year now, with no problems with
their service whatsoever.  The few times I have had trouble was when
the Internet service was out or I had trouble with my Linksys router
or Cisco 1900 switch, but only lasted for a minute or so.

Healthy Stealthy <healthystealthy@gmail.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.167.5@telecom-digest.org:

> Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
> switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
> it a mistake to switch to them? Any details?

> Thanks.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Vonage is certainly a better deal, and
> much less expensive than Verizon. I have Vonage service here as well,
> although in fairness I should mention I also still have landline
> service as well. Some readers here would suggest that there are other
> VOIP companies better than Vonage, and that may be true, but I think
> you are inquiring about the _concept_ of VOIP instead of landline, am
> I correct?  I am unwilling to totally abandon my landline service for
> VOIP.  PAT]

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

Subject: IIR's 10th_In-Building_Solutions_2006
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 12:49:31 -0500
From: cellular-news <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


IIR's 10th In-Building Solutions - European Summit Hilton Vienna, Austria - 22-25 May 2006

http://www.iir-events.com/IIR-Conf/page.aspx?id=1807 

Join IIR in Vienna to access vital information about how to best
design, plan, implement and optimise in-building solutions to achieve
best possible coverage and maximise network capacity.

The conference programme has been carefully designed to answer all of
your key questions through a mixture of Operator-led presentations, as
well as interactive seminar and discussion sessions. The nature of the
forum will allow you to discuss strategy for the development of
systems including GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSPA, Wi-Fi, UMA and WiMAX, while
hearing real-life implementation case studies from:

3 Sweden * Banverket * Bell Canada * Maritime Communications Partner *
Sonaecom * Swisscom Mobile * Telefonica Moviles * Telenor R&D * Telia
Mobile Denmark * T-Mobile International * Turkcell * Vodafone Egypt *
Vodafone Greece * Vodafone R&D

See http://www.iir-events.com/IIR-Conf/page.aspx?id=1807 for updates
to the programme and visit
http://www.iir-events.com/IIR-Conf/page.aspx?id=1809 to download the
conference brochure

The event also offers you excellent possibilities to network with your
peers, partners and colleagues during the exhibition. You will be able
to meet representatives from:

The conference Sponsors: Shyam Telecom, LGC Wireless, Comba Telecom,
Dekolink, ip.access and MobileAccess Networks

Exhibitors: Alan Dick, Avitec, Centurion, CSI, iBwave, Red-M, RFS,
Spinner and Zinwave

All in all, this event offers you the best learning and networking
resource for In-Building Solutions - DON'T MISS IT!

For more information and to book your place now, call +44 (0)20 7915
5055, e-mail your registration to us at
registration@iir-conferences.com or register online at
http://www.iir-events.com/IIR-Conf/page.aspx?id=1808

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #170
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri May  5 14:47:59 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Fri, 5 May 2006 14:50:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 171

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Court Challenges Internet Wiretap Rules (Ted Bridis)
    CBS Launches Entertainment Web Site (Reuters News Wire)
    Cellular-News: Friday 5th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, May 5, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Telecom Update Canada Issue 528 (Angus Telemanagment)
    AOL to Resell Clearwire Service (USTA Daily Lead)
    Spammers Fight Back (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (T)
    Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - Net Makes Voices Count (Herb Stein)
    Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - Net Makes Voices Count (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Herb Stein)
    Re: Can Open Source Defeat Microsoft? (Lisa Hancock)
    Interactive Voice Response - IVR Info (voiceinfo79@gmail.com)

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

Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
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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: Ted Bridis <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Court Challenges Internet Wiretap Rules
Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 11:46:43 -0500


By TED BRIDIS, Associated Press Writer

A U.S. appeals panel challenged the Bush administration Friday morning
over new rules making it easier for police and the FBI to wiretap
Internet phone calls. One judge told the government its courtroom
arguments were "gobbledygook" and invited its lawyer to return to his
office and "have a big chuckle."

The skepticism expressed so openly toward the government's case during
a hearing in U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia emboldened
a broad group of civil liberties and education groups who argued that
the U.S. improperly applied telephone-era rules to a new generation
of Internet services.

"Your argument makes no sense," U.S. Circuit Judge Harry T. Edwards
told the lawyer for the Federal Communications Commission, Jacob
Lewis. "When you go back to the office, have a big chuckle. I'm not
missing this. This is ridiculous. Counsel!"

At another point in the hearing, Edwards told the FCC's lawyer his
arguments were "gobbledygook" and "nonsense."

The court's decision was expected within several months.

Edwards appeared skeptical over the FCC's decision to require that
providers of Internet phone service and broadband services must ensure
their equipment can accommodate police wiretaps under the 1994
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, known as CALEA. The
new rules go into effect in May 2007.

Critics said the new FCC rules are too broad and inconsistent with the
intent of Congress when it passed the 1994 surveillance law, which
excluded categories of companies described as information services.

The FCC argued that providers of high-speed Internet services should
be covered under the 1994 law because their voice-transmission
services can be considered separately from information
services. "Congress intended to cover services (in the 1994 law) that
were functionally equivalent" to traditional telephones, Lewis said.

"There's nothing to suggest that in the statute," Edwards replied. "Stating
that doesn't make it so."

The panel appeared more willing to support the FCC's argument that
Internet-phone services -- which allow users to dial and receive calls
from traditional phone numbers -- may be covered under the 1994 law
and required to accommodate court-ordered wiretaps. The technology,
popularized by Holmdel, N.J.-based Vonage Holdings Corp., is known as
"voice over Internet protocol," or VOIP.

"Voice-over is a very different thing," U.S. Circuit Judge David
B. Sentelle said. He said it offered "precisely the same" functions as
traditional telephone lines.

Edwards told the lawyer for the civil liberties groups, Matthew Brill,
that on his challenge that VOIP services aren't covered under the
surveillance law, "I didn't think you have it."

Education groups had challenged the FCC rules because they said the
requirements would impose burdensome new costs on private university
networks.

The third judge on the panel, Janice Rogers Brown, did not comment or
ask any questions during the arguments.

On the Net:

Disputed FCC rules:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-187A1.pdf

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters2telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: CBS Launches Entertainment Web Site
Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 11:49:35 -0500


CBS Corp. has launched a Web site that will offer new programming as
well as some of its existing TV shows, as competition intensifies
between broadcasters and Internet firms such as Google Inc..

The site, called innertube, was launched on Thursday and will be free
to viewers and supported by advertising. Cadbury Schweppes, Chili's,
Pier 1 Imports Brinkmann Corp. and Verizon SuperPages.com are its
initial advertising sponsors, CBS said.

A link to innertube can be found at http://CBS.com.

CBS's new site, whose early plans the company first discussed with
Reuters in February, comes on the heels of a decision by Walt Disney
Co.-owned ABC network to offer its top shows online for free viewing
after they have aired on the network.

CBS's site will initially feature new shows created exclusively for
the Web as well as programs that are "companions" to its TV shows.

CBS said it also plans to make some of its top shows available on the
site "in the coming months" after they have aired on TV. Shows from
its archive of 2,600 titles and 100,000 hours of programming will also
be available.

"With this broadband channel, we've essentially bypassed cable and
created a general entertainment outlet utilizing existing creative and
content resources," Leslie Moonves, chief executive of CBS, said in a
statement.

Programming for innertube debuts this month with a handful of original
shows including "Greek to Chic," a college-based reality series and
"Beyond Survivor," a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of the TV
show.

In February, CBS said it planned to sell new episodes of "Survivor"
for $1.99 from its site.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines each day, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Friday 5th May 2006
Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 08:26:59 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ Financial ]]

SingTel 4Q Net Bolstered By Regional Mobiles
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17241.php

Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel) reported better-than-expected
fourth quarter earnings and unveiled a S$2.3 billion return of capital
as growth from Asian mobile operations offset lower profits in
Australia. ...

Embarq To Close Spinoff From Sprint Nextel May 17
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17244.php

Embarq Corp. expects to complete its spinoff from Sprint Nextel on May
17. ...

ANALYSIS: Strengths and weaknesses of Ola's three suitors
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17249.php

After months of speculation, and a failed first phase which was
extended by 30 days due to a lack of interest from potential bidders,
three mobile operators have decided to take up Colombia Movil's (Ola)
offer to become its strategic partner, hav...

[[ Handsets ]]

Qualcomm CEO: Winning Battle In Low-End Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17251.php

Qualcomm is winning the battle of low-end phones in key emerging
markets, Chief Executive Paul Jacobs said Thursday. ...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Golden Telecom says won't compete with major Ukrainian cell operators
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17245.php

USA registered telecommunications operator Golden Telecom does not
plan to compete against major Ukrainian mobile operators after it
receives additional GSM 1800 licenses, the company's spokespeople said
during a conference call Thursday. ...

Nextel unit invests US$50mn in southern expansion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17247.php

Latin American digital trunking service provider NII Holdings plans to
invest US$50mn this year to expand coverage of its Nextel Per unit,
local daily Diario Correo reported. ...

Digicel sets Haiti, French West Indies milestones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17248.php

Caribbean mobile operator Digicel has received regulatory approval to
acquire France's Bouygues Telecom Caraibe, a wireless operator in the
French West Indies, for 155mn euros (US$196mn), the company said in a
statement. ...

[[ Personnel ]]

Orange UK To Lose Up To 2,000 Staff
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17243.php

Orange said Thursday it will cut 15% of its jobs in the UK, a move
that will mean the loss of 1,800 to 2,000 jobs. ...

[[ Statistics ]]

Belarusian GSM operator BeST user base at 7,500 as of May 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17242.php

The subscriber base of state-controlled Belarus Telecommunications
Network, or BeST, which started commercial operations in the capital
city of Minsk on December 21, 2005, amounted to 7,500 users as of May
1, the company said late Wednesday. ...

Russia's MegaFon says subscriber base in Moscow up to 4 mln
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17246.php

The subscriber base of Russia?s third largest mobile operator MegaFon
in the Moscow License Area (MLA) rose to 4 million users as of
Thursday from 3 million users as of November 2005, Sonic Duo said in a
press release Thursday. ...

AMX: Mobile penetration to reach 65%-70% in matter of years
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17250.php

Latin American mobile group America Movil expects mobile telephony
penetration in Latin America to reach 65%-70% over the next few years,
driven by better handsets at lower prices, the company's CEO Daniel
Hajj told an investors conference...

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

Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 11:36:00 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, May 5, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  5, 2006
********************************

Verizon: Wireless Funds Fiber
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17812?11228

     Verizon Communications Inc. said profits for the quarter ending
     March 31 shrunk a bit from the prior year's quarter, due to costs
     related to its acquisition of MCI LLC , as well as additional
     costs related to the company's massive fiber optics
     projects. Sales and subscriptions were up, though, thanks to
     the...


France Telecom Culls UK Staff
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/17808?11228

     France Telecom SA is cutting between 1,800 and 2,000 jobs in the
     U.K. as it converges its British mobile and broadband businesses,
     Orange UK and Wanadoo UK , into a single unit under the Orange
     brand.  The cull is part of a broader headcount reduction program
     unveiled in February...

Verizon Slashes VoIP Prices
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/17806?11228

     Verizon has cut the price of its voice over Internet Protocol
     (VoIP) service to match that of Vonage -- a defensive move that
     could spark a price war.  The carrier also eliminated discounts
     for its broadband subscribers, pricing its VoIP service the same
     for all comers, including those in regions far outside its normal
     service area. ...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 11:17:48 -0700
Subject: Telecom Update #528, May 5, 2006
From: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE 
************************************************************
published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group 
http://www.angustel.ca

Number 528: May 5, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous 
financial support from: 
** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca 
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/ 
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.com/canada/telecom/
** MITEL NETWORKS: www.mitel.com/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions 
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE: 

** Decline of Legacy Services Squeezes Telcos 
      Telus Leads in Telco Revenue Gains 
** CRTC Chair Responds to Telecom Policy Report 
** VoIP Drives Primus Canada Revenue 
** RIM Offers Free Small Business Server 
** Avaya Adds Mid-Sized IP Systems 
** Bell to VoIP Customers: Switch Back for Free 
** Former CEO Sues Nortel 
** Nortel Completes Restatement 
** CRTC Hears Do-Not-Call Views
** Internet Registrar Seeks Board Members 
** Credit Union Plans Video Kiosks 
** Canadian Chip Maker to Work With Nokia 
** RIM in New Patent Fight 
** Five Million U.S. Households Use VoIP 

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

DECLINE OF LEGACY SERVICES SQUEEZES TELCOS: First quarter financial
results of Canada's four leading telcos show that all are suffering a
decline of local and long distance revenues. Compared to a year ago,
the change in these two categories totalled: MTS -7.4%; BCE -7.3%;
Aliant -3.9%; Telus -1.8% (includes data).

** In 2005, all of the telcos lost local lines, mainly to 
   competitors: MTS -6.5% (residential only); BCE -3.2%; 
   Telus -2.7%; Aliant -0.6%.

** Long distance now comprises less than 10% of total 
   revenues for Telus and BCE. BCE's LD revenue fell 15.2%.

TELUS LEADS IN TELCO REVENUE GAINS: Total revenue of the four telcos
changed as follows: Telus +5.4%; Aliant +3.9%; BCE +2.2%; MTS -0.5%.
Wireless revenue grew by 13% to 17%. Both Aliant and Telus report that
monthly disconnects on postpaid wireless accounts are now under 1%.

** Changes in operating income: Aliant +11.1%; MTS +6.0%; 
   Telus +1.2%; BCE -3.0%. 

** Changes in net income: MTS +3.5%; BCE no change; Aliant 
   -7.8%; Telus -13.3%. Aliant and Telus results were 
   affected by significant one-time events.

CRTC CHAIR RESPONDS TO TELECOM POLICY REPORT: In a speech to an industry
forum on April 30, CRTC Chair Charles Dalfen said the Commission is
assessing the Telecom Policy Review panel's recommendations and will
likely implement a number of them on its own initiative.

** Dalfen says he agrees with the principle of "after the 
   fact" regulation, but only if the Commission is empowered 
   to impose meaningful penalties. 

** His talk mentioned the interview published in Telecom 
   Update #525b, in which he predicted that business services 
   in most major cities will be deregulated in 18 months. 
   Dalfen also expects residential service in Halifax, 
   Montreal, Toronto, and some major western markets to 
   qualify soon.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/NEWS/SPEECHES/2006/s060430.htm
http://www.angustel.ca/update/up525b.html

VoIP DRIVES PRIMUS CANADA REVENUE: Primus Canada took in $78.6 million
in the first quarter of 2006, "driven by growth in local and VoIP
products."  The company has about 73,000 local lines in service.

** Virginia-based Primus Telecommunications Group reports a 
   US$4 million loss in the quarter; Primus Canada accounted 
   for 26% of its parent company's revenue.

RIM OFFERS FREE SMALL BUSINESS SERVER: RIM has announced BlackBerry
Enterprise Server Express, enabling small businesses to connect
BlackBerry devices to their office email system. The free software
includes a licence for one Blackberry, and licences can be purchased
for up to 14 more.  Businesses that expand beyond 15 devices can
convert the software to a full Enterprise Server by purchasing an
Unlock Code.

AVAYA ADDS MID-SIZED IP SYSTEMS: Avaya this week introduced three
telecom systems for businesses with 100-500 employees. MultiVantage
Express is an all-in-one IP PBX server, Avaya On Demand provides
IP-PBX and contact centre features on a per-month subscription basis,
and the S8400 Media Server allows customers with older Avaya systems
to migrate to IP telephony.

BELL TO VOIP CUSTOMERS - SWITCH BACK FOR FREE: CRTC Telecom Order
2006-103 says Bell Canada can waive reconnection charges for its
Digital Voice customers who want to return to Bell's wireline local
service. Bell told the Commission in November that some customers
resist migrating to its VoIP service without this assurance.

** Commissioner Langford dissented, saying this violates the 
   promotion rules and gives a preference to Bell's VoIP 
   customers over those of competitors.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Orders/2006/o2006-103.htm

FORMER CEO SUES NORTEL: Frank Dunn, the Nortel CEO who was fired "for
cause" in April 2004, is suing the company for wrongful dismissal,
defamation, and mental distress. The suit seeks unspecified punitive,
exemplary, and aggravated damages.

** Meanwhile, the Ontario Superior Court has ruled that Dunn must
   testify in the Ontario Securities Commission's investigation of
   Nortel. Dunn had said his testimony might be used against him in a
   U.S. criminal case, but the judge ruled that Ontario law protects
   him.

NORTEL COMPLETES RESTATEMENT: Nortel Networks has filed its 2005
annual report, including revenue "restatements" for 2003, 2004, and
the first nine months of 2005. The changes involve US$1.5 billion.

CRTC HEARS DO-NOT-CALL VIEWS: The CRTC's public consultation on how a
Canadian Do-Not-Call list should operate was held this week. Transcripts 
of the hearing are posted on the Commission's website.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/process/2006/may2.htm 

INTERNET REGISTRAR SEEKS BOARD MEMBERS: The Canadian Internet
Registration Authority has appointed a Nomination Committee to find
candidates to fill three positions on its Board of
Directors. Proposals must be received by June 3. For information, see
https://elections.cira.ca/2006/en/nom_com_nominees.html

CREDIT UNION PLANS VIDEO KIOSKS: Vantis, a Manitoba Credit Union with
22,000 members, is installing video kiosks in all of its branches to
allow customers to consult face-to-face with service reps. The system,
the first of its kind in a Canadian financial institution, is being
deployed by MTS Allstream, using Nortel's SIP multimedia platform.

CANADIAN CHIP MAKER TO WORK WITH NOKIA: Markham-based ATI
Technologies, a developer of video chips, has entered a long-term
strategic relationship with Nokia to develop mobile multimedia
devices.

RIM IN NEW PATENT FIGHT: Visto, a California-based developer of
wireless email products, is suing Research in Motion, alleging that
its BlackBerry product infringes on of four Visto patents. RIM has
countersued, asking a Dallas court to rule that no patent infringement
has taken place.

FIVE MILLION U.S. HOUSEHOLDS USE VoIP: TeleGeography reports that 5.4
million U.S. households now subscribe to a Voice over IP service,
twice the number one year ago. The research firm predicts that
one-fifth of U.S.  households will use VoIP in 2010.

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

HOW TO SUBMIT ITEMS FOR TELECOM UPDATE

E-mail ianangus@angustel.ca and jriddell@angustel.ca

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

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE (OR UNSUBSCRIBE)

TELECOM UPDATE is provided in electronic form only. There 
are two formats available:

1. The fully-formatted edition is posted on the 
   World Wide Web late Friday afternoon each week 
   at http://www.angustel.ca

2. The e-mail edition is distributed free of charge.
   To subscribe, send an e-mail message to:
      join-telecom_update@nova.sparklist.com 
   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send 
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===========================================================

COPYRIGHT AND CONDITIONS OF USE: All contents copyright 2006 Angus
TeleManagement Group Inc. All rights reserved. For further
information, including permission to reprint or reproduce, please
e-mail jriddell@angustel.ca.

The information and data included has been obtained from sources which
we believe to be reliable, but Angus TeleManagement makes no
warranties or representations whatsoever regarding accuracy,
completeness, or adequacy.  Opinions expressed are based on
interpretation of available information, and are subject to change. If
expert advice on the subject matter is required, the services of a
competent professional should be obtained.

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

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

Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 13:17:07 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: AOL to Resell Clearwire Service


USTelecom dailyLead
May 5, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dAwEfDtutdwOdJOmIO

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* AOL to resell Clearwire service
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* San Francisco's Wi-Fi network faces big hurdles
* Smartphone industry braces for new competitors
* Report: IPTV gear sales to top $6B in 2009
* U.K. wireless carrier O2 may seek to acquire broadband provider
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* How Telcos Can Win the Video Game with IPTV -- Tuesday, May 9, 1:00 p.m. ET
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Report: Internet is running out of real estate
* Gurus plot next 10 years online
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* AOL's got VoIP
* VoIP goes mobile with Mino Wireless
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Detroit may require hands-free devices for drivers

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dAwEfDtutdwOdJOmIO

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Spammers Fight Back
Date: 5 May 2006 15:37:56 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


I know that Pat supports the "flood the spammer" service provided by
Blue Security. It's interesting to note that the spammers have been
fighting back (which I suppose is testament that the service has some
effect). There's an interesting description of the attack posted on
the SANS.org Handler's Diary website:

   http://isc.sans.org/diary.php?n&storyid=1311

The Internet is becoming a very unfriendly place. :-/

John Meissen   
jmeissen@aracnet.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, indeed, the internet is becoming
less and less friendly every day. All this unfriendlyness began
several years ago when the intruders moved into our virtual community.
_They_ thought they could change all the rules around; _they_ thought
the rest of us were dimwits and imbiciles who would not dare to
stop them or say 'NO' to them. They bullied us around for years and
years without resistance, or very little resistance. When some of us
started to make resistance, the enablers were shocked. Didn't _we_
understand that _they_ (the enablers) were the only ones who knew
anything about anything?  Didn't we understand that the spammer-scammers 
had rights also (oh, boo-hoo!) and they might sue us if we offered any
resistance?  So the enablers began _attempting_ -- and that's all it
was, was a half-assed attempt -- to filter email. As the spammer-scammers
got more sophisicated, the enablers, like President Bush in 2003, 
thought this war will be over in short order, also revved up their 
filters. There was a lot of 'collateral damage'; like any war, many
innocent people got hurt, valid email never made it to its destination,
etc, legitmate digests never got delivered, etc. Finally some of us
decided enough was enough; I think it was about the time the ratio of
spam-scam versus legit reached 80-85 percent; we were not going to
wait until the ratio reached a hundred percent for even though that is
theoretically possible it is quite unlikely since there will always
be at least a few (very few!) pieces of legitmate mail in transit in
the queue somewhere to shave off a percentage point or two from the
level of !absolutely! (allspam-scam). When we saw the ratio reach the
95 percent mark a few times, we said 'that is close enough'. 

Years ago, some of us began outing the spammer-scammers by revealing
lots of personal data about them: for example, their personal
telephone numbers, the addresses where they lived in their white-trash
trailer park homes, where they were employed, even their driver's
records. At that point, we had to start fighting the enablers as well;
for after all, even spammer-scammers have 'privacy rights' you know --
oh boo-hoo, this is so sad, and who were _we_ -- how dare we! -- 
violate their rights. No matter that the rest of us here in the
virtual village have not had an unmolested postal system for many
years; by God, you better not harm or do DDoS on the spammer-scammers.

As far as I am concerned, there is _no_ realistic expectation where
communications on the net are concerned. If the spammer-scammers are
doing wholesale DDoS on legitimate sites and the legitimate sites are
responding in kind, _to protect what was ours all along_ (and that is
the key phrase) that suits me fine.  To hell with the enablers and
all their fanciful ideas about essentially ignoring it by making
feeble and ineffectual attempts to filter it out. PAT]

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 19:53:44 -0400


In article <telecom25.167.5@telecom-digest.org>, 
healthystealthy@gmail.com says:

> Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
> switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
> it a mistake to switch to them? Any details? 

> Thanks.

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Vonage is certainly a better deal, and
> much less expensive than Verizon. I have Vonage service here as well,
> although in fairness I should mention I also still have landline
> service as well. Some readers here would suggest that there are other
> VOIP companies better than Vonage, and that may be true, but I think
> you are inquiring about the _concept_ of VOIP instead of landline, am
> I correct?  I am unwilling to totally abandon my landline service for
> VOIP.  PAT]

Been using Vonage for a bit more than a year. I use that and Skype. 

The only thing that bothers me is that now the damned fees are
creeping into my monthly bill. For example, their $24.99 plan costs me
$28.98 after you add the federal and state taxes, and now the E-911
surcharge for RI.

But it's still a whole lot cheaper than an equivalent package with
Verizon. For example, for roughly the same service level (Actually
Vonage has MORE features - the web management stuff rocks!) Verizon
was charging me $88 a month.

So we've got $60 or more in fees before I say to hell with Vonage and
switch exclusively to Skype.

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

From: Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com>
Subject: Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices Count
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Fri, 05 May 2006 04:11:29 GMT


<Wesrock@aol.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.167.12@telecom-digest.org:

> In a message dated 1 May 2006 14:43:06 -0700, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com 
> writes:

>> Monty Solomon wrote:

>>> By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist

>>> Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to
>>> extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly
>>> serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games
>>> on the Net?

>>> "The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski,
>>> chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal.
>>> "Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer
>>> recommendations."

>> I don't hold much credence to it.  It has about as much influence as
>> traditional "word of mouth" has (although word of mount could be
>> pretty powerful).

> Specifically with respect to motion pictures, it is clear that
> critics do not and never did "drive culture."  Many, many pictures
> lauded by the critics failed miserably at the box office, while some
> that the critics considered either trash or beneath serious notice
> brought in lots of the public.

>> Further, the social advocates quickly grabbed on this stuff early on,
>> and have turned it into very partisan soapboxes, which has tuned out
>> others who aren't as passionate.  For example, there's a railroad
>> newsgroup that doesn't spend too much time talking about railroad
>> stuff.  Rather, it is mostly flame wars between advocates of passenger
>> trains and those who hate trains altogether.  The haters seem to be
>> very well organized and respond to almost every post.  (see
>> misc.transport.rail.americas and go through some of the threads).

> I am interested in railroads and railroading and for several years I
> participated in that particular newsgroup.  It became more and more
> merely flame posts between passionate advocates of these two
> positions.  I finally dropped out because, as you say, little about
> railroads was included in the posts and there was nothing but an
> endless iteration of the same arguments by the same people on both
> sides.

> However, I would suggest that the "anti-" faction did not hate trains
> altogether -- just passenger trains.

> There are well over 100 lists -- some have counted more than 200 -- on
> various railroad topics, some of them very tightly focused.  Some of
> them have hundreds of participants and engage in rational (and usually
> civil) discourse.

I suppose this not really on topic, but everybody posting to the Usenet
groups should first, write their message and/or response. Then re-read it.
Then ask themselves, "Would I send this to my mother?"

Come on folks! We're better than this.

Just my 2 cents worth.

> Wes Leatherock
> wesrock@aol.com

Herb Stein
herb@herbstein.com 

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Everyone's Always Been a Critic - But Net Makes Their Voices Count
Date: 5 May 2006 10:44:07 -0700


Wesrock@aol.com wrote:

> I am interested in railroads and railroading and for several years I
> participated in that particular newsgroup.  It became more and more
> merely flame posts between passionate advocates of these two
> positions.  I finally dropped out because, as you say, little about
> railroads was included in the posts and there was nothing but an
> endless iteration of the same arguments by the same people on both
> sides.

Unfortunately, posts about non passenger rail never seemed to generate
as much interest and responses.

I gave up on the urban transit newsgroup because that got particularly
bad.

The roads newsgroup has gotten a number of whacko comments mixed in
with politics from crossposting and that's contaminating it as well.

I believe participation on a newsgroup requires a basic belief in that
newsgroup's overall theme.  For example, IMHO it is inappropriate for
someone to espouse atheism on a religious newsgroup.  On the railroad
newsgroup, there were some reasonable critics of some aspects of psgr
rail operations or carriers which is fine.  But others would respond
to each and every post on psgr rail with a "broken record" of absurd
statements.  Probably the best thing would've been for such posters to
be ignored but nobody does that.

Many "utopian" advocates of computer communication (first BBSs and
then the Internet) strongly believed and encouraged no moderation and
full freedom of posting, believing that was the key to the best
discourse.  Unfortunately, real life and society doesn't work that
way.

It seems ever since BBS's and cable TV came out advocates have been
talking about a utopian world of free communiations (free of charges,
free of controls, full of wonderful information).  Of course many of
those advocates were and are self serving trying to sell hardware or
software products that really don't deliver as claimed.

The Internet, as it has evolved to this day, is a useful powerful
tool.  But like any power tools, it must be carefully used or it
will make things worse or even hurt someone, just like a chainsaw or
the automobile.

After WW II, people bought cars like crazy in the U.S.  Then people
began to get killed from all those new cars in large numbers.  There
was a way too long time lag until known safety measures were
implemented and much remains to be done.  The automakers had to be
pushed to include safety gear in cars and drivers have to be pushed
hard to drive safely 50 years later.

The Internet is similar.  Advocates are in total denial of the risks
of bad information, predators, fraud, hidden costs, etc.  I think the
general public should be more aware of those risks and advocates
challenged (especially commercial entities) for their lofty promises.

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

From: Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Fri, 05 May 2006 04:27:18 GMT


Mark J <mjlas02@cox.net> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.170.7@telecom-digest.org:

>I have been using Vonage for nearly a year now, with no problems with
> their service whatsoever.  The few times I have had trouble was when
> the Internet service was out or I had trouble with my Linksys router
> or Cisco 1900 switch, but only lasted for a minute or so.

Had you been having a heart attack, it would have actually been your
LAST problem.  And what's you option when the power goes out?

> Healthy Stealthy <healthystealthy@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:telecom25.167.5@telecom-digest.org:

>> Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
>> switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
>> it a mistake to switch to them? Any details?

>> Thanks.

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Vonage is certainly a better deal, and
>> much less expensive than Verizon. I have Vonage service here as well,
>> although in fairness I should mention I also still have landline
>> service as well. Some readers here would suggest that there are other
>> VOIP companies better than Vonage, and that may be true, but I think
>> you are inquiring about the _concept_ of VOIP instead of landline, am
>> I correct?  I am unwilling to totally abandon my landline service for
>> VOIP.  PAT]


Herb Stein
herb@herbstein.com

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Can Open Source Defeat Microsoft?
Date: 4 May 2006 14:21:35 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Jack M. Germain wrote:

> While Microsoft has had some 20 years to make Office what it is today,
> most industry analysts say that new open-source contenders, such as
> OpenOffice, measure up reasonably well against Redmond's suite. But
> they also say that while these suites do have most of the features of
> Microsoft Office, they lack certain advanced capabilities that make
> all the difference.

The history of technology is filled with technically inferior products
overtaking superior ones.  "Features" are not the only factor that
drives the marketplace.

Issues like compatibility, cost, and product support are important,
too.

> But an interesting question to ask is whether a group of volunteers
> -- however large -- can ever hope to measure up against Microsoft's
> millions of dollars.

Having worked with various volunteer organizations for much of my
life, IMHO they are a very weak type of organization.  I do not see
them being able to compete in the marketplace because of their
inherent weaknesses.

> But there are plenty of those in the open-source community
> who are willing to give that comparison a shot.

"Open source" in itself is only one of many factors in purchasing a
product, it is by no means a guarantee of success in itself.  Again,
technical superiority is by no means a guarantee of marketplace
success.

Whether we like it or not, Microsoft now has a powerful momentum
behind it that has created a "critical mass" for its products.  It
replaced earlier products that did not have that momentum.  The
competition must become radically superior in price/performance to MS
to gain a foothold and have some luck as well.  In practice that
requires that (1) the competition comes up with a great product at a
very low price, (2) MS itself has become stagnate and overpriced, and
(3) multiple large customers and hardware makers buy the alternative
product.

Years ago IBM had the mainframe market which meant the whole
information processing market mostly to itself.  But the competition,
ironically IBM's own PC division, came up with a better product, IBM's
mainframe divison got bloated, and customers loved the PC and
associated software.  Suddenly accounting applications that were once
the sole domain of the mainframe were now done on PC spreadsheet
programs.  Along with this was technological changes will allowed
cheap PCs to be built.

[public replies, please]

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

From: voiceinfo79@gmail.com <voiceinfo79@gmail.com>
Subject: Interactive Voice Response - IVR Info
Date: 4 May 2006 15:31:00 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com

Interactive Voice Response - IVR Info (May 2006), Introduction,
Application, Solutions, how IVR works, IVR Solutions, Examples, IVR
Software Informations  http://ivr-info.atspace.com

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

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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 6 May 2006 20:55:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 172

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Chinese Computer Giant Showcaes Capitalistis Credentials (Terril Yue Jones)
    Nevada Launching Web Site For Canadian Drug Imports (Reuters News Wire)
    New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web (Associated Press News)
    Future of the Internet (Dow Jones)
    Blog Got Vandalized Friday Evening (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    China Has 60 Million Bloggers! (Reuters News Wire)
    Blasts at Chinese Internet Cafes Kill 2 (Audra Ang)
    Re: Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing... (Linc Madison)
    Telephone Map of Africa with Country & City Codes (Linc Madison)
    Re: Virgin Mobile Warning (Mr Joseph Singer)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet.  All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and
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We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we
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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: Terril Yue Jones <latimes@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Chinese Computer Giant Showcaes Capitalistis Credentials
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:23:56 -0500


http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lenovo4may04,1,3131923.story?coll=la-headlines-business

 From the Los Angeles Times
By Terril Yue Jones
Times Staff Writer

Yang Yuanqing heads the world's third-largest maker of personal
computers.  But few in the United States have ever heard of him -- or
his company, for that matter.

Lenovo Group aims to change that. Since the Chinese company bought IBM
Corp.'s PC business last year for $1.25 billion, the company has moved
quickly to establish itself as a global brand.

To that end, Lenovo signed on as the official computer sponsor of the
2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, and the 2008 Summer Olympics in
Beijing.

Lenovo made the acquisition amid a backlash in Congress against
Chinese companies trying to purchase American corporations. Chinese
oil company CNOOC Ltd. ditched its attempt to buy Unocal Corp. and
appliance maker Haier Group ended its effort to join two U.S. firms to
acquire Maytag Corp.

Lenovo has moved its global headquarters to Purchase, N.Y., and kept
most of its ex-IBM development staff in North Carolina. The company
has brought its ThinkPad laptop line to U.S. retail stores and plans
to sell Lenovo PCs to small and medium-sized businesses.

Yang, Lenovo's 42-year-old chairman, was in the U.S. recently while
Chinese President Hu Jintao was making an official visit. He spoke
with journalists in San Francisco at the annual convention of the
Committee of 100, a group of Chinese American business and civic
leaders.

Question: How is Lenovo doing in the United States? Do consumers here
know the brand?

Answer: I don't think so. We are a new company, but so far we are
satisfied with our performance because we are keeping the business
very stable. This is our first target. Maybe for the next step we
should consider how to grow.  We recruited a new CEO [former Dell
Inc. executive William Amelio], and I believe he will lead this group
not only for the U.S. market but also the worldwide market.

Q: Do you worry about any stigma associated with being a Chinese
company in the minds of American consumers?

A: I'm not worried about the public. I'm a little bit worried about
the government. For the past couple of weeks, there have been some
articles related to procurement of our PCs by the State Department.

Our company is a 100% market-oriented company. Some people have said
we are a state-owned enterprise. It's 100% not true. In 1984 the
Chinese Academy of Sciences only invested $25,000 in our company. The
purpose of the Chinese Academy of Sciences to invest in this company
was that they wanted to commercialize their research results. The
Chinese Academy of Sciences is a pure research entity in China, owned
by the government. From this point, you could say we're different from
state-owned enterprises.

Secondly, after this investment, this company is run totally by the
founders and management team. The government has never been involved
in our daily operation, in important decisions, strategic direction,
nomination of the CEO and top executives and financial
management. Everything is done by our management team.

The third thing is actually we were the first group Chinese company to
be listed in the Hong Kong market, which is a totally free market. We
were the first group of Chinese companies to adopt a high standard of
corporate governance and diversified shareholder structure to get
foreign investors in our company.

Q: How will you enter the U.S. market and gain share?

A: The IBM PC business had some presence in the U.S. But they only
cover large enterprise customers, so-called relationship
customers. It's a very limited customer base. So in the future, we
will try to keep ThinkPad as a high premier brand to continue to sell
to this customer base. In the meantime, we will have the Lenovo brand
to cover small and medium businesses and maybe consumers.

Q: Will you sell Lenovo computers to U.S. consumers this year?

A: It will not be so fast. We asked our team in the U.S. to focus on
the commercial segment first.

Q: Will you do more deals like the kiosks Lenovo has in Best Buy,
where selected models are for sale?

A: So far we haven't had this thought. We sell to [small and medium
business] customers through Best Buy. Right now, we have no consumer
product line to be launched in the U.S. The Lenovo 3000 product line
is mainly for [that] segment. It's a good test. I think if we can have
success with Best Buy, that can give us a lot of experience.

Q: Are you structured more as a Chinese company or as a Western
multinational?

A: Lenovo was one of the first companies that awarded our founders and
management shares and gave our employees stock options. So I think
these incentives helped our company compete in the market.

Since we acquired the IBM PC business, we became a multinational
company.  Right now, our shareholder structure is very diversified, so
we have the Chinese Academy of Sciences, IBM and some private equity
companies as shareholders.

And we have a very international board. On our board, there is no
representative of the government, including the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, whose purpose is not controlling this company but getting a
return from the company. Right now, they are very happy - they only
invested 25,000 U.S.  dollars, but every year they can get a couple of
times that in dividend. So it's totally capitalist.

Q: Does the direct model work in China?

A: The direct model is good for relationship customers. But especially
for small cities in China, if you want to use a direct model, it
doesn't work.  For consumers, they want to look and feel the
machine. After they feel better, they will decide to buy. Also they
want to get the machine immediately after their payment. They cannot
wait three days or one week to get the machine. So you have to have
inventory in your retail shops.

Q: How big can the Lenovo brand be in the U.S.?

A: Certainly we wish our brand will be among the top-level PC brands.
Certainly we have a long way to go.

Q: You're already No. 3 in the world.

A: It's only related to scale. Our brand recognition is still weak,
especially in the U.S. and mature markets. From one aspect, we should
further leverage the IBM brand, the Think brand, to keep our business
stable. From other aspects, we should build ourselves a [Lenovo] brand
quickly.

Q: Do you feel the center of technology inevitably moves from the
U.S. to China?

A: China is actually more a manufacturing-oriented country. But the
government has started to pay more attention to innovation. The U.S.
government gave a lot of importance to [intellectual property]
protection in China, but the fact is the Chinese government started to
realize if we cannot protect IP, we cannot have a better environment
to encourage innovation.


Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Nevada Launching Web Site For Canadian Drug Imports
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:25:41 -0500


Over objections by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Nevadans
will be able to buy prescription drugs from Canada over the Internet
starting next week, a spokesman for Gov. Kenny Guinn said on Friday.

"Monday is the anointed day," said Steve George, a spokesman for the
Republican governor, referring to when a state Web site linking
consumers to pharmacies in Canada goes into operation.

Nevada regulators gave the Web site their final blessing on Thursday
after weighing a review of the program by the state attorney general,
who had been skeptical about the measure passed by state lawmakers
last year.

Responding to fast-rising drug prices, a number of U.S. states and
local government have urged the federal government to allow imports of
prescription drugs, which often cost less abroad. The U.S. government
opposes the imports.

"There will be a caveat on the Web site saying that the federal
government views getting prescriptions filled in Canada with
non-FDA-approved drugs as illegal," George said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
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For more news and headlines of interest, please go to:
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------------------------------

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:27:20 -0500


Despite a judge's recommendation that he only receive a reprimand, a
city worker accused of disregarding warnings to stay off the Internet
at work has been fired.

The office computer of Toquir Choudhri, a 14-year veteran of the
Department of Education, had been used to visit news and travel Web
sites.

Last month, Administrative Law Judge John Spooner ruled that surfing
the Web at work is equivalent to reading a newspaper or talking on the
phone.

He recommended the lightest possible punishment for Choudhri. Schools
Chancellor Joel Klein disagreed.

"The penalty of termination is appropriate and not shocking to one's
sense of fairness," Klein said Friday.

Choudhri's "abuse of the Internet at the time he is supposed to be
performing his job demonstrates his disinterest in the job," Klein
said.

Choudhri's lawyer, Martin Druyan, called the firing a "political
decision."

"It's unfair, it's shocking to the conscience and it's contrary to the
facts and the law," he said.


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Dow Jones <wsj@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Future of the Internet
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:30:02 -0500


      In the past 10 years the Internet has emerged as a global
network that enables instant communications and borderless
commerce. The popularity of blogs and the roll out of high-speed
wireless connections have already begun to reshape the Web, but what
will the Internet look like a decade from now?

      The Wall Street Journal Online invited Web pioneer Vint Cerf and
tech pundit Esther Dyson to discuss what they expect in the next 10
years. Mr.  Cerf envisions an interplanetary network, while Ms. Dyson
ponders a loss of privacy and an information glut. Their conversation,
carried out by email, is below.

      Mr. Cerf begins: Mobility has entered the world, big time,
during the past ten years and the Internet is adapting to
it. Geo-indexed information has increased in value as users query
"where is the nearest..." and get answers because the system knows
where you are when you ask, thanks to the Global Positioning
System. Combining media in processing information is increasingly
common. Voice a question but get the answer back on your laptop's
display, the car's navigational display or your mobile's small but
high-resolution screen. Take a photo with the phone and send it
automatically to your blog which you just dictated.

      THE PARTICIPANTS

      Vinton G. Cerf is the chief Internet "evangelist" for Google
Inc.  where he is responsible for identifying new technologies. From
1994 to 2005, Mr. Cerf was a senior vice president at MCI. Mr. Cerf
co-designed the TCP/IP protocols and basic architecture of the
Internet. In 2005, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom for
his work on the Web. He has been chairman of the Internet's regulatory
body, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or
ICANN, since 2000.  

Esther Dyson is editor at large at CNET Networks Inc., where she is
responsible for its quarterly newsletter, Release 1.0, and its PC
Forum executive conference. Before selling her business to CNET in
2004, Ms. Dyson had co-owned EDventure Holdings and edited Release
1.01 since 1983. She is a technology investor focused on emerging
markets and serves on the board of several start-ups. She was chairman
of the Electronic Frontier Foundation from 1995 to early 1998 and
founding chairman of ICANN from 1998 to 2000.Broadband is finally
coming, and is highly penetrant already in some communities such as
Hong Kong, Seoul and Tokyo. Our experiences with entertainment video
will almost certainly change as we tend to download and watch later
rather than watching only what is currently being transmitted.
Channel surfing will be replaced by menu selection. And advertising
will change in very interesting ways as a result -- but that's for
another installment.

      By the end of the decade, we will have a two planet Internet in
operation as the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is prepared to serve as a
store-and-forward relay to ground-based rovers, a mobile science
laboratory and other future missions to Mars. The Interplanetary
Internet, serving robotic and manned missions, will grow from this
simple configuration to a more complex backbone of interplanetary
links as each new mission is launched to the planets and satellites of
our solar system. Virtual visits to our near-space neighborhood will
be as common as a trip to the local supermarket as we amass enormous
amounts of information about the region of space in which we
live. Kids will have virtual field trips to visit the Spirit and
Opportunity sites on Mars and other places from which we have gathered
so much information already and will gather in the next decade.


      Ms. Dyson writes: The Internet will have become more ubiquitous
but less visible. It will still exist as PCs and monitors, but it will
also be all around us in other devices: everything from buses and
luggage transmitting their locations so they can be tracked, to
friends and children signaling their presence anytime you might want
to reach them. Rather than being a separate virtual world, the
Internet will encompass the physical world as well; most things will
have Internet identities available remotely as well as a physical
presence available only if you are nearby.

      What will the Internet look like a decade from now? Join a
discussion3.For most people and applications, the biggest issue will
be not search but filtering: So much will be knowable, but what do you
want to know. People will initially be overwhelmed with choices, but
vendors -- competing vendors, I hope, rather than monopolies or
governments -- will make default choices for individuals. My hope is
that those defaults will be socially valuable, but visible and easy
for any user to change for himself; "Paradox of Choice" author [Barry
Schwartz] has called this "libertarian paternalism."

      Mr. Cerf: Esther is spot-on about the Internet of devices: they
will be manageable through the network and various services will help
us to do that. Entertainment equipment and other consumer electronics
will likely be the first to undergo this transformation. Household
equipment will be next and then office equipment and the things in our
cars and festooned on our bodies.

      As to the information glut, we'll use all the tools we've used
in the past to cope with too much information. We don't read every
book, newspaper and magazine published. We don't see every movie. We
don't listen to every radio broadcast. We look for clues from friends,
trusted sources, personal experience, interest to refine and
select. We'll use all those tools and our automated search engines to
help out here.

      Ms. Dyson: I think you'll see a fundamental shift in the balance
of power towards individuals. Individuals will declare what kinds of
vendors they want sponsoring their content, and then those vendors
will have the privilege of appearing, discreetly, around the user's
content. There will be much less "advertising" and much more
communication to interested customers.  Advertisers will have to learn
to listen, not just to track and segment customers.

      So the message to marketers is: If you can't sell your product
(assuming it's already in the market), fix the product! Don't try to
change the situation by advertising.

      Consumers will publish wish lists for marketers to scan. Also,
their choices will be influenced by their friends' comments much more
than by marketers' messages.

      On the other hand, it will be much harder for consumers to get
free content anonymously, because advertisers will want to know more
about the people they are paying to reach. In many cases, whether
email or ads, users may even get a share of the marketer's
payments. (See AttentionTrust.org4 or my op-ed on Goodmail5 or my post
on Release 1.06.)

      This makes sense from advertisers' point of view, but it has a
social downside: People who buy Porsches can earn more from marketers
than people who buy used cars. People without money will find it
harder and harder to get free content -- which means a role for
nonprofits in funding access to content for all.


      Mr. Cerf: Advertising is going to be different on the network as
broadband kicks in. "IPTV" is a sort of misnomer that misleads into
thoughts of streaming audio and video when in fact it is an
opportunity to download and play later. In addition, it offers an
opportunity to download ancillary material that expands on the video,
perhaps adds some interactive software that might be relevant to it,
or even download advertising material associated with products placed
into the video program. One could even imagine freezing the screen
(pausing the video) and mousing around to click on objects in
view. Some of these might have had advertising material
downloaded. And since it might be known roughly where you are and at
what time you are watching, the advertising might contain live/Web
components that are tailored to these factors.

      Ms. Dyson: I'm going to take this in a slightly different direction.

      There's a lot of, er, attention being paid right now to the
so-called "attention economy." Indeed, O'Reilly [Media Inc.] subtitled
its recent (March) Web 2.0 conference "The attention economy." It even
featured author Michael Goldhaber, who wrote about the concept some 14
years ago for my newsletter Release 1.0.

      But people are generally missing the point; Mr. Goldhaber has
trouble getting attention for the mirror he is holding up. Most
commentators see the attention economy as the intention economy, where
attention = intention (to buy). That version of the attention economy
is all about sales leads and monetization of attention, and radical
ideas include the notion of users getting paid for their attention, as
I mentioned earlier, whether in the form of surfing behavior
(www.root.net7) or a willingness to read email.

      While adults worry about privacy, kids seek attention. They post
poetry, photos, exaggerated tales of personal exploits, music in order to
create an online presence that garners attention.

      Doesn't this all come down to money in the end? you might
ask. Don't kids buy things in order to get attention? Sure. And in the
same way, the new financial-industrial economy all came down to food
and shelter as we made the transition from an agrarian, feudal
economy. But there are new dynamics worth noting. Most users are not
trying to turn attention into anything else. They are seeking it for
itself.

      For sure, the attention economy will not replace the financial
economy. But it is more than just a subset of the financial economy we
know and love.

      Mr. Cerf: This is an interesting observation and frankly I'd not
thought about it in quite the same terms that Esther uses. I must
admit that the behavior patterns do look as if some of these users
(many of them young) feel "paid" when they have lots of "friends" or
lots of hits on their Web sites. I wonder how much of this is youthful
"I am ME! Look at ME!" Is any of this a kind of search for identity?
Is it exploration of different personas (as in the role-playing
games)? Some of this might be attributed to a natural desire to feel
part of a group (gangs, cliques, teams, etc.).

      To some extent, the infrastructure needed to support this
potentially self-centered behavior is being paid for through
advertising revenues, making it appear to be free to many or most
users.

      Ms. Dyson: Yes indeed, it is youthful behavior etc. - just as it
once was youthful behavior to be obsessed with money and to want more
money than you could use, which horrified the sages who cared more
about old-fashioned values. The shift is not absolute; it's where
society focuses (or where some societies are starting to
focus). Indeed, Mr. Goldhaber has been writing about this for many
years. In some ways it's an outgrowth of TV as much as of the Net. TV
makes people want attention; the Net enables them to get it.

      And yes, advertising supports most of it. It's just that the
advertisers are not the center of attention the way they would like to
be!

      Mr. Cerf concludes: The Internet reaches only about a billion
users so there are another 5.5 billion to go. It is beginning to
include a good deal of information in many languages, but the domain
name system needs to be outfitted with a similar capability. Access
speeds are increasing but in a very non-uniform fashion. Business
models for supporting various parts of the Internet are also in flux
with new models being tested almost daily.  Mobility is a component of
the Internet that is plainly of increasing importance and will drive a
variety of new applications. Entertainment media will be augmented
with Internet counterparts with results that may not be entirely
predictable but which will almost certainly have an interactive
component missing from the traditional media. A plethora of "things"
will become Internet connected and managed. There will be inventions
for the use of the Internet that will come from academic and user
settings to surprise us all when they appear, as they have in the
past, in unexpected ways -- propagating through viral
advertising. There's an Internet in your future, resistance is futile.

      Ms. Dyson closes: Let me add just a couple of points:

      The Internet so far has existed mostly in cyberspace, linking
computers fed data by humans and by other computers. The Internet of
the future will be much more tightly linked to physical space. First
of all, many of its future users will connect via cellphones, and the
net will know more about their physical locations and their identities
than it does about those who reach it by computer. Beyond that, as
Vint writes, the Internet will link things in space (on Earth as well
as in off-Earth "space").

      The Net of the future will know much more about the physical
world and all the things in it ... and of course that information will
be available to human users. The big challenges in the future will be
limiting distribution of that information (security, privacy,
confidentiality, etc.) on the one hand and filtering it out on the
other (not search, but data-mining, exception-reporting, spam
filtering, friend recommendations, behavioral targeting and the
like). The big questions are who controls the filtering: individuals,
organizations or governments? Will it be done transparently?


URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114597841180135354.html

Copyright 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. 

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

Subject: Blog Got Vandalized Friday Evening
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 19:15:50 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


Some of you know that several months ago I started a blog (actually a
couple of them) for non-telecom related topics which cross my mind
each day http://ptownson.blogspot.com Late Friday afternoon someone
unknown to me (but they wouldn't have it any other way) took exception
to one of my recent messages and chose to trash me out pretty
badly. The entire blog had to be rebuilt from scratch and I spent much
of the day Saturday doing that. Of course it will never get back
esthetically just like I had it before. Oh well, I did not have a lot
to do with my time today anyway, as it has been sort of damp and cold
here all day.

PAT
 
------------------------------

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: China Has 60 Million Bloggers!
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:19:30 -0500


Blogging is booming in China with the number of bloggers expected to
hit 60 million by the end of this year.

China is the world's second-largest Internet market after the United
States with more than 110 million users. A survey by Chinese search
engine Baidu.com put the current number of blog, or Web log, sites at
36.82 million which are kept by 16 million people, the official Xinhua
news agency said on Saturday.

The number of Chinese bloggers is expected to hit 60 million by the
end of this year, Xinhua said, quoting a report on China's media
industry by the prestigious Tsinghua University.

Zhang Xiaorong, strategy development director of "Bokee," which was
set up in 2002 and claims the biggest share of China's blogging
market, said his company adds about 100,000 blogs a day.

"The expected 60 million bloggers would account for more than half of
China's 110 million netizens," Xinhua quoted Zhang as saying.

The university report forecast the number of bloggers in China would
hit 100 million by 2007. Xinhua did not elaborate.

Although the industry has invested heavily in blogs, none of the blog
service providers are making profits, the report said.

A recent report by the Internet Society of China showed nine percent
of bloggers write every day, 29 percent write once to three times a
week, while 35 percent write four to six times a week, Xinhua said.

The growing stable of e-scribes has attracted homegrown firms and
foreign giants like Microsoft, Google and Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO -
news)

But the Communist Party's propaganda mandarins are obsessed with
control and have closed down some outspoken blogs. Chat forums and
online bulletin boards are routinely monitored for controversial
political comments and sensitive words such as "freedom" and
"democracy" are censored.


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Audra Ang <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Blasts at Chinese Internet Cafes Kill 2
Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:21:05 -0500


By AUDRA ANG, Associated Press Writer

Explosions rocked two Internet cafes in central China, killing two
people, injuring four and leaving the premises spattered with blood
and broken glass, a local official and state media said Saturday.

Authorities refused to say if bombs were involved in the blasts, which
occurred Friday night about 10 minutes apart at two cafes within about
33 feet of each other in Hefei, the capital of Anhui province. No
motive was apparent for an attack on the premises.

Such incidents are rare in China, although explosives are widely
available and reports of their use in criminal acts have risen in
recent years.

"The casualties include two dead and four injured people," said a man
who answered the telephone at the Hefei city government office. He
refused to give his name or any other details.

"This is a serious matter and the cause is still being investigated,"
he said.

Chinese local government officials frequently refuse to identify
themselves to reporters because they are not authorized to speak to
the media.

China has the second largest Internet population after the United
States, with more than 100 million users. Even the smallest towns have
cybercafes that are often packed with young people chatting online or
playing games.

An officer at the public security bureau in Hefei who gave only his
surname, Li, said it "wasn't clear" if explosives had been detonated.

A woman who answered the telephone at the Hefei First Aid Center,
where the injured were taken, would not release details on them.

The Ju Xing and Hao Yu Internet cafes are on Meiling Avenue, one of
Hefei's main streets, the state-run Anhui Daily newspaper said on its
Web site.

The blasts drew hundreds of onlookers to the site, it said. The
official Xinhua News Agency said they happened about 9:30 p.m.

A woman who was walking past Ju Xing at the time of the explosion said
she saw glass and cement spray from the cybercafe, according to Anhui
Daily.

"When we heard the first explosion, we thought firecrackers were being
set off," an unnamed resident was quoted as saying by the
newspaper. "The second one went off about 15 minutes later. It was
very loud. It sounded like a bomb exploded."

Another resident said panicked customers ran out after the first
explosion.  A woman in her 20s covered with blood screamed "What's
happening?" before collapsing, the newspaper said. She was later
helped away by passers-by.

Inside Ju Xing, "blood, glass and cement covered the floor," the
report said.

News photos showed gloved officers sifting through the rubble, which
included overturned chairs, computers, chunks of concrete and shards
of blue glass. Iron bars on the windows -- a common security feature
in Internet cafes -- had been twisted by the explosions and pipes were
exposed in the ceiling.

Ju Xing had about 70 to 80 computers while Yu Hao had about seven
small rooms that could accommodate 10 people each, Anhui Daily said.

The second explosion happened in one of the small rooms, leaving a 3.3
foot-wide crack in the ceiling, it said.

A customer, identified only by his surname Liu, said he was using a
computer in Ju Xing when he heard a loud bang and felt pain in his
face.

He said the inside of the room "was like a whirlwind," with glass and
cement flying everywhere.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines and stories, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Subject: Re: Big League Spammer Ralsky in Custody; May be Singing ...
Date: Fri, 05 May 2006 11:30:42 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.164.9@telecom-digest.org>, Robert Bonomi
<bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote:

> Note: the valleywag.com report is *UNCONFIRMED* by any other source
> at this time.  It's been picked-up/repeated in several other places,
> but _all_ the reports trace back to this single 'pseudonymous' source
> of unknown credibility.

The report appears to have been false.

http://www.spamdailynews.com/publish/Spam_King_Alan_Ralsky_not_jailed.asp
 
It is true, though, that Sanford Wallace, "The [other] Spam King,"
lost a civil suit brought by the FTC over "spyware," and was ordered
to pay over $4 million in damages.

See http://www.ftc.gov/os/caselist/0423142/WallaceFinalJudgment.pdf
[PDF file]

Not quite as "juicy" as bringing Ralsky up on criminal charges, but a
nice smack upside the head to a deserving target, all the same.

Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

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

Subject: Telephone Map of Africa with Country & City Codes
Date: Fri, 05 May 2006 11:39:09 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


The http://LincMad.com telecom site recently added a major new page,
with a map of Africa, showing the telephone and Internet country codes
for all the major countries, along with a listing of all country codes
and some major city codes, including many place names in the
appropriate local language(s), with time zone information as well. The
listing is in order by Internet ccTLD for the convenience of
international users.

The map is a work of art, suitable for framing. Well, it's a pretty
cool map, anyway.

I'm still working on a few bits of explanatory text; does anyone know
how to say "Daylight Savings Time" in Swahili? (Seriously.)

Check it out: http://www.LincMad.com/africa.html

Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad d0t c0m
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not think they use the phrase 
'Daylight Savings Time'. I think the expression they may use (as is
the case in many European counties) is 'Summer Time'.  PAT] 

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

Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 06:09:18 PDT
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Virgin Mobile Warning


NOTvalid@Queensbridge.us 3 May 2006 09:52:20 -0700 wrote:

> Virgin is now instituting a new policy that if you have had voice
> mail removed from your account, Virgin Mobile will send a
> supervisory signal back to the CALLING TELCO that your Vrigin phone
> has answered. That means, that if someone calls you from a pay phone
> and you do not answer, and you do not have Virgin voice mail they
> will get an intercept message that could cost the pay phone user
> fifty cents each time [depending on charges in your local area].

> Virgin has already started this and has stated that eventually all
> their customers will have this "supervised as answered".

> Perhaps they don't like lost revenue if you do not have an active
> mailbox.>>

Well, perhaps you need to shop for a different prepaid service if
that's Virgin's attitude that they feel that they have to charge their
customers "no matter what."  You'll lose the ability to use your
phone, but there are lots of alternatives with GSM and if your handset
is unlocked you have a choice of several including many MVNO's that
use the cingular network.  Go to prepaid.gsm.net and look at the USA
and look for MVNO's.  Be careful though where you look as severall do
charge for voicemail deposits though some do not.  None of them charge
for not answering your phone though as you indicate Virgin is or will
be shortly.

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

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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #173
Message-Id: <20060508192606.348771567D@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Mon,  8 May 2006 15:26:06 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 8 May 2006 15:30:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 173

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Newspaper Circulation Down (Robert MacMillan)
    Verizon Warns Others: NO Net Neutrality Wanted (Reuters News Wire)
    Class Action Suit Against Yahoo (Grant Gross)
    Verizon Playing Catch-up Against Cable Firms (Monty Solomon)
    Charge it at 30,000 Feet (Monty Solomon)
    Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price (BrianEWilliams)
    Google X is Back! (relay1000@gmail.com)
    VoIP Quality (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Letter From Spammers Regarding Blue Security (Staci Saldana)
    Microsoft Exec: IPTV Deployment Strategy Crucial (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News: Monday 8th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 8, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Mark J)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Dave Garland)
    Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web (Ron Chapman)

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: Robert MacMillan <reutrers@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Newspaper Circulation Down
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 12:50:57 -0500


By Robert MacMillan

U.S. newspaper circulation fell 2.6 percent as of the end of March,
according to data released on Monday, the latest evidence that readers
are defecting to the Internet and other media outlets.

A Newspaper Association of America analysis of semiannual data from
the Audit Bureau of Circulations on 770 daily newspapers found that
average daily circulation fell to about 45.4 million readers, compared
with about 46.6 million in the same six-month period ended March 31 a
year ago.

Sunday circulation at 610 newspapers fell 3.1 percent to 48.5 million.

The Audit Bureau of Circulations counts 882 U.S. daily newspapers
among its members. More than 85 percent of them reported their figures
for the latest report.

Circulation rose 0.5 percent for the New York Times' weekday and
Sunday editions. USA Today, Gannett Co. Inc.'s flagship paper, was up
0.1 percent to about 2.27 million.

More typical for the industry was a 1 percent drop reported by Dow
Jones & Co. Inc.'s flagship paper, the Wall Street Journal.

Newspaper companies have been fighting weak print advertising revenue
growth and falling profits as more people use the Internet and other
media to get their news.

Many companies have launched online editions of their papers, some of
them updating news throughout the day, to keep their hold on audiences
and compete with Web sites like those of Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO -
news) and Google Inc. which gather news from multiple sources.

But newspaper Internet advertising sales have not offset the weakness
seen in their print publications.

Still, the online newspaper audience is rising, the Newspaper
Association said. Newspaper Web sites averaged about 56 million
readers, or 37 percent of all online users, during the first quarter
of 2006, according to research firm Nielsen//NetRatings. That is an 8
percent increase over the same period a year ago, the association
said.

The Washington Post's daily and Sunday circulation figures were off
about 4 percent. The Los Angeles Times' daily circulation fell more
than 5 percent, while Sunday circulation was down nearly 2 percent.

Circulation also fell at newspapers that McClatchy Co. is buying from
Knight Ridder Inc. and selling to other companies.

The San Jose Mercury News, which McClatchy plans to sell to MediaNews
Group Inc., saw circulation fall almost 8 percent for its daily
edition and almost 5 percent on Sundays. The Philadelphia Inquirer's
daily and Sunday circulation figures fell more than 5 percent while
the Daily News was off more than 9 percent.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

To see more stories and headlines from the daily media, please
go to: http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Verizon Warns Others: NO Net Neutrality Wanted
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 13:17:49 -0500


Verizon warns financial sector on Internet fight

Verizon Communications warned the financial services industry may not
get the secure networks it needs if Congress adopts laws governing
high-speed Internet broadband networks, according to a company memo
obtained by Reuters on Monday.

The financial services industry is weighing whether to wade into a
fight over legislation on broadband service, known as "Net
neutrality." It fears that without safeguards on pricing for network
access, the costs to financial institutions could rise.

Verizon, the No. 2 U.S. telephone company, opposes legislation for Net
neutrality and sent the memo to its consultants urging them to discuss
with banking industry clients the arguments against possible
legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate.

"They are being fed a lot of cock-and-bull, Chicken Little stories
about how the future of their industry is at stake because another
network industry might have the freedom to price broadband services
according to market demand," Verizon's chief congressional lobbyist
Peter Davidson said in the memo.

He warned that the financial services industry "better not start
moaning in the future about a lack of sophisticated data links they
need" if Net neutrality laws were passed because the communications
industry may not invest in new networks.

Verizon and AT&T Inc. have expressed interest in expanding from flat pricing
for broadband to selling tiers of service based on the speed, reliability
and security. They have pledged not to block access to the open Internet.

"Why in the world should broadband network providers, who have
invested billions to create those networks, be denied such pricing
freedom?" Davidson said.

That has raised fears among Internet content companies such as
mazon.com Inc. and Google Inc. that they will be shunted to a slower
lane of the Internet if they do not pay more for dedicated access.

Davidson argued that that broadband providers are not "going to do
anything stupid to antagonize the people they rely on for their
money!"

A financial industry lawyer has been circulating a memo warning that
the sector ignores the Net neutrality debate at its peril and urged
companies to push for legislation that would preserve flat broadband
pricing for online financial services.

Financial services lobbyists have said they are concerned about the
issue, and are monitoring it.

The House could consider legislation this week that would preserve the
ability to surf on the open Internet but does not specifically bar
Internet providers from charging new fees to assure reliable service
to business users. It is part of a broader communications bill.

The Senate is considering its own legislation but only requires a
study on Net neutrality. Differences between the bills could prevent
any legislation from becoming law this year, analysts have said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: If allowing AT&T and Verizon to set
prices and standards of service on the net would effectively force
all the spammers out of business, then I am all for it!  PAT]

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

From: Grant Gross <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Class Action Suit Against Yahoo
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 12:54:45 -0500


Yahoo Faces Class-Action Spyware, Ad-Sales Suit
Grant Gross, IDG News ServiceFri May 5, 2:00 PM ET

An antispyware activist and lawyer has filed a class-action lawsuit
against Yahoo, accusing the Web heavyweight of placing advertisements
on spyware-vendor and "low-quality" sites.

Ben Edelman, a Massachusetts lawyer and spyware researcher, is one of
the lawyers who filed the lawsuit earlier this week on behalf of Yahoo
advertiser Crafts By Veronica, as well as other advertisers. The
lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in New Jersey, accuses Yahoo and
its ad sales subsidiary Overture Services Inof charging higher rates
for ads promised "premium" placement, but then placing those ads on
spyware-vendor sites and on Web pages with URLs that are misspellings
of popular sites.

A Yahoo spokeswoman wasn't immediately available for comment.

Money Matters

The lawsuit seeks to recover the money advertisers paid to Yahoo for
premium, "highly targeted," ad placement at Web sites including ones
owned by Microsoft and CNN, Edelman said. Although plaintiffs' lawyers
have not released an estimate of damages, it could run into the
hundreds of millions of dollars, he added.


"It seems like there's a lot of money at issue," Edelman said.

The lawsuit accuses Yahoo of placing ads on sites run by Intermix
Media and Direct Revenue, two companies identified in an April lawsuit
by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer as distributors of spyware
and unwanted pop-up adware. Both companies have disputed Spitzer's
charges.

Edelman agrees with Spitzer's assessment of the two companies, he
said.  "It's software that at least sometimes gets on your computer
without your permission," he said. "It tracks where you go online."

In addition, Yahoo places ads on so-called "typosquatting" Web sites,
the lawsuit says. Typosquatters register Web sites that have URLs that
are common misspellings of popular Web brands, and many typosquatting
sites that Yahoo placed premium ads have long lists of advertisements
as their only content, the lawsuit says. Ads placed with Yahoo have
appeared on Expedai.com, a typosquatter of the popular Expedia.com
travel site, the lawsuit says.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from tech sources, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 00:38:01 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon Playing Catch-up Against Cable Firms


By Bruce Mohl, Globe Staff  |  May 7, 2006

Sherri Patti of Woburn jumped from Comcast Corp. to Verizon
Communications for its FiOS fiber-optic triple play of phone, TV, and
Internet. She says she's getting more for less money.

Michael McGrath of Woburn switched from Comcast cable to FiOS. He says
his TV picture is better now, although he misses the New England Cable
News channel and Fox Sports New England, both of which are missing
from the Verizon channel lineup.

Stephen Gorin of Westwood replaced his Verizon DSL with Verizon's new
fiber-optic Internet service. He says his speed has improved, but he
was surprised at the six hours it took to install the service.

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/05/07/verizon_playing_catch_up_against_cable_firms/

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

Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 00:40:47 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Charge it at 30,000 Feet


http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2006/05/07/charge_it_at_30000_feet/

May 7, 2006

When it's time to buy a beer or a sandwich or rent a headset, American
Airlines passengers can now say, "Charge it." American last week began
rolling out a new service letting passengers use American Express and
other credit and debit cards to pay for in-flight purchases. American,
the biggest carrier at Boston's Logan International Airport by
passenger volume, expects the technology, which relies on wireless
handheld devices toted by flight attendants, will be available
systemwide by the middle of next month.

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

From: BrianEWilliams <sorry_no_email@yahoo.com>
Subject: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price
Date: 8 May 2006 08:17:56 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I just got this message from Vonage:

  Dear Valued Vonage Customer,

  As you may know, Vonage has filed a registration statement with the
  Securities and Exchange
  Commission (SEC) related to its proposed initial public offering (IPO)
  of common stock.  Because much of our success is attributable to our
  customers, we have asked the underwriters of the IPO to reserve shares
  of common stock for sale to certain Vonage customers at the IPO price
  in a Directed Share Program.

  You may be eligible to participate in the Directed Share Program if you
  meet certain eligibility
  requirements, including having been a Vonage customer from December 15,
  2005 through February 1, 2006.  You do not need to continue to be a
  Vonage customer in order to participate.  Further information about the
  terms and conditions of the Directed Share Program, including the
  eligibility requirements and the process for participating in the
  program, are available in our registration statement and at the
  following website: 

  http://www.vonageipo.com

  Thank you,

  Vonage

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: So is anyone going to purchase any
Vonage stock. I wonder if a half-century from now -- say around 2056
or so -- the stock will have obtained the reputation of AT&T stock
with the cartoon (1930's) of the old lady sitting placidly in her
rocking chair on the porch telling everyone how the dividends are
paid on a timely basis and take good care of her needs in her old age.
PAT]

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

From: relay1000@gmail.com
Subject: Google X is Back!
Date: 8 May 2006 09:11:55 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


http://google-x.blogspot.com -  Google X Directory is back

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: VoIP Quality
Date: 8 May 2006 10:02:35 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is there an automatic way of measuring VoIP quality?

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

From: Staci Saldana <708mhwarci@vista.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 07, 2006 1:10 AM
Subject: www.bluesecurity.com Members Urged to Get Out


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The message which follows was sent to
many folks over the weekend -- not just once, but in some instances
such as myself, a dozen or more times, by the spammers who broke
into Blue Security's data base.   PAT]

Dear Blue Frog Member,

As a follow-up to our previous emails, and, as promised, we are
stepping up in the fight against Blue Security.

The Blue Frog member email database has been compromised, and is
currently being distributed worldwide to spammers and to the
public. Attached to this email, you will find a zip file of the Blue
Frog database, which includes your own personal or business email
address(es). If you have not uninstalled Blue Frog yet, we highly
suggest you do so now in order to avoid your involvement in this war
any further.

Leaving your email address on the Blue Frog list is a risky choice, as
we will uphold our promise not only to increase your spam by 20 times
the amount you are receiving now, but to continue to make this list
publically available as well. Also, as the Blue Frog member database
is updated, we will find more creative ways in which to use it, and
frequently release it to whomever we wish.

Blue Security, Inc

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But if you _do_ leave your name on the
list (the .zip file by the way is not attached here) Blue Security
will continue to demand apologies and removals from the spammers' 
lists. And by the way, the .zip file with all the names and email
addresses of other netters was also send with a virus-worm enclosed
in it for your convenience. PAT]

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

Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 13:27:59 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Microsoft Exec: IPTV Deployment Strategy Crucial to Techology


USTelecom dailyLead
May 8, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBdIfDtuteaacZvDKC

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Microsoft exec: IPTV deployment strategy crucial to technology's success
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Vodafone announces plan to cut roaming charges
* Comcast offers VoIP service in Detroit
* T-Mobile to launch new roaming plan in Europe, North America
* Q-and-A with Sprint's Gary Forsee
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* How Telcos Can Win the Video Game with IPTV Tuesday, May 9, 1:00 ET
HOT TOPICS
* Level 3 snaps up TelCove
* Senate committee unveils draft of telecom bill
* U.S. wireless market may see further consolidation
* Nokia ships BlackBerry competitor
* Commentary:  Wi-Fi's growing pains
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Poll: 4 in 10 Americans play computer games
* Internet giants battle for control of mobile search
* Broadcasters take different approaches to broadband
* Who will pay for TV?
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Cable franchise debate heats up in Michigan

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBdIfDtuteaacZvDKC

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Monday 8th May 2006
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 09:04:08 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[3G News]]

PCTEL Wins 3G Roaming Deal with Vodafone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17275.php

PCTEL has announced that Vodafone has selected it's Roaming Client
software to be used as one of its 3G connectivity management software
solutions. The Roaming Client facilitates connection to the Internet
over different types of wireless networks. P...

[[Financial News]]

CEO: America Movil not interested in acquiring Millicom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17253.php

Mexican mobile holding group America Movil is not interested in
acquiring the Latin American assets of European mobile holding company
Millicom International Cellular, AMX chief executive Daniel Hajj said
during an investors' conference ca...

Comcel 1Q06 profits up 249%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17254.php

Colombian mobile operator Comcel saw its first quarter profits rise
249% year-on-year, to 147bn pesos (US$61.7mn), parent company America
Movil said in its first quarter earnings statement. ...

Brazil Mobile Co Tim Announces More Restructuring
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17262.php

Brazilian mobile-phone operator Tim Participacoes on Friday announced
another stage in its restructuring to bring all the Brazilian assets
of Telecom Italia under one structure and to hasten the use of tax
credits. ...

Taiwan's Senao To Spin Off Wireless Communications Unit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17264.php

The board of Taiwan's Senao International Co. approved a plan Friday
evening to spin off Senao's wireless communications business to form a
new company. ...

[[Handsets News]]

Qualcomm CEO: Winning Battle In Low-End Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17251.php

Qualcomm is winning the battle of low-end phones in key emerging
markets, Chief Executive Paul Jacobs said Thursday. ...

Hard Drives in Cellphones Could Spell the End for MP3 Players
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17271.php

Mobile phones offering generous data storage, enabled by small hard
drives with ever-greater capacities, may soon allow the cellular
handset to rival or surpass the portable MP3 player as the mass market
mobile music device of choice. Ten years ago, ...

[[Legal News]]

Russia's SMARTS says being investigated by police
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17261.php

The police have been investigating the operations of Russian regional
mobile operator SMARTS, the company's Deputy General Director Andrei
Girev told Prime-Tass Friday. ...

AT&T Agrees To $150 Million Settlement
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17263.php

AT&T Inc. agreed to a US$150 million settlement of class-action suits
tied to the offering of AT&T Wireless tracking shares in April
2000. ...

[[MVNO News]]

French Grocery Chain Auchan Launches MVNO On SFR Network
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17258.php

French supermarket chain Auchan announced Friday it would launch a
full mobile virtual network operator, or MVNO, on Vivendi Universal's
SFR network. ...

[[Network Contracts News]]

Ericsson Expands Coverage for Orange Botswana
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17269.php

Ericsson is assisting Orange Botswana to reach out to new customers,
previously too remote for cost-efficient coverage, by implementing the
Ericsson Expander solution. The Expander solution has allowed Orange
Botswana to achieve cell ranges of up to ...

Huawei Wins Philippines GSM Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17274.php

Huawei says that it has signed a GSM network expansion contract with
Digitel in the Philippines. As part of the contract, Huawei's GSM BTS
will be deployed to cover the whole Manila city in the Philippines,
helping to improve the congested mobile tra...

[[Network Operators News]]

O2 Mulls Expansion Into Fixed-To-Mobile Services In UK
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17252.php

U.K.'s mobile operator O2, a unit of Spain's Telefonica, said Friday
that it is considering taking its experience in combining mobile and
fixed-line operations to the UK and other markets. ...

BrT offers fixed-mobile convergence services
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17256.php

Brazilian fixed line operator Brasil Telecom will offer two
fixed-mobile convergence services in 2006, Brazilian newspapers
reported. ...

T-Mobile CEO: Will Continue To Focus On Mobile In UK
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17259.php

Wireless operator T-Mobile International will continue its strategy of
focusing on mobile communications services in the UK, Chief Executive
Rene Obermann said at the sidelines of a media event Friday. ...

A Palm Tree Which Can Survive Category 5 Hurricanes
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17268.php

Cable and Wireless has installed the first ever camouflaged Palm Tree
Cellular Tower in the Caribbean Island of Dominica. The Mono Palm as
it is known in technical terms is also the first in the OECS
region. Standing at approximately 100ft tall, the ...

Telecoms Repairs After Solomon Islands Riots
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17270.php

Following riots in the Solomon Islands, Solomon Telekom Fault
Engineers and Technicians have responded quickly to the total blackout
of landline telephones in and around the Chinatown area. As of
Thursday 20 April, Telekom's Fault and PABX rapid resp...

[[Offbeat News]]

Unlucky Cellphone Thieves
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17273.php

Three bungling cellphone thieves in Puchong, Malaysia had a
particularly bad run of luck last week when one of the robbers visited
a shop at Taman Kinrara claiming to want his cellphone repaired. When
the shopkeeper was looking at the phone, the thie...

[[Personnel News]]

Tower Worker Dies from Fall
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17265.php

A worker has died after falling some 90 feet from a cellphone tower
situated on the grounds of Bishop Carrol High School in Ebensburg,
USA. Michael Sellers, 25 was about half way up the tower, climbing to
install an antenna when the accident ocurred ...

[[Regulatory News]]

Russia's MTS finds local partner to bid for Egypt license
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17257.php

Russia's largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) has found a
local partner to participate in the tender for a third GSM license in
Egypt, Vedomosti and Kommersant business dailies reported Friday. ...

Two New Mobile Licenses for Isle of Man
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17276.php

The Communications Commission of the Isle of Man has issued two new
mobile licenses. Cable & Wireless already operates a cross-Island
telecoms link. Since 2002 it has provided fixed services to larger
customers on the Island. It will now be able to c...

[[Reports News]]

T-Mobile Tops Shop Staff Survey
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17267.php

As the number of wireless service offerings grows and new products
being offered become more complex to use, wireless customers
increasingly rely on the salesperson to help select the right service
plans to fit their communication needs, according to...

Over 100 WCDMA Networks Live
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17272.php

The worldwide movement by operators to deploy high speed mobile
broadband services -- based on the global W-CDMA and HSDPA technology
standards -- is fuelling unprecedented economies of scale in the supply
of equipment for carriers and handsets for con...

[[Statistics News]]

Indec: Mobile base grows 58.1% yoy
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17255.php

Mobile operators in Argentina closed March with 23.89 million lines in
service, up 58.1% compared to March 2005, when the number reached
15.10 million, according to statistics bureau Indec. ...

Ukraine's Kyivstar user base up to 15.146 mln users May 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17260.php

The subscriber base of Ukrainian mobile operator Kyivstar rose 8.8%
since the beginning of the year to 15.146 million users as of May 1,
the company said in a press release Friday. ...

Worldwide Mobile Phone Subscriber Base Expected to Reach 3.3 Billion by 2010
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17266.php

According to the Taiwan based Market Intelligence Center (MIC), the
number of global mobile phone subscribers is expected to grow from two
billion in 2005 to approximately 3.3 billion in 2010, representing a
CAGR (Compound Average Growth Rate) of 10....

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

Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 12:22:00 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 8, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  8, 2006
********************************

DBS vs. BELL: A LOSING PROPOSITION?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17841?11228

     THE RBOCS HAVE SOLD about 1.5 million subscriptions to direct
     broadcast satellite (DBS) services like those offered by DIRECTV
     Group Inc. and DISH Network since becoming resellers for those
     companies in 2003. But now telcos are installing fiber access
     networks to roll out IPTV, which would compete with their DBS
     wholesale partners. In...

The Wireless Back Office, Up Close and Personal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17839?11228

     As consumers demand more customization in the mobile environment,
     off-net activities threaten to reduce mobile operators to a bit
     pipe.  Carriers can protect their value and differentiation by
     enabling non-walled-garden m-commerce and adapting their
     back-office framework to support the shift toward
     personalization.  Consumers are using...

Two More Try to Join the Big Six
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17836?11228

     The mobile phone industry is dominated by six companies, but that
     isn't stopping a couple of manufacturers with limited brand
     recognition from seeking to boost their sales in the United
     States.  Nokia, of course, is the dominant power in handsets and
     claimed a 35-percent market share worldwide in the first quarter
     of 2006. At the end of...

Telefonica Signs Content Deal with Warner Brothers
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17830?11228

     Spain's fixed-line incumbent, Telefonica, has signed a contract
     with Warner Bros, the leading film and TV production company.
     Significance: The deal will enable Telefonica to distribute
     Warner films as part of its video-on-demand (VOD) offering, and
     make Telefonica's current IP TV service Imagenio more
     attractive. Spain's number two and...

Vodafone Selects New Roaming Client
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17826?11228

     Vodafone signed up as a licensee of PCTEL's Roaming Client
     software.  Financial terms of the agreement were not outlined.
     The mobile operator plans to use the software as one of its 3G
     connectivity management software solutions. The Mobile Connect
     software is designed to facilitate connection to the Internet
     over different types of...

Second Try: AOL AIMs At VoIP
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17824?11228

     Time Warner's AOL subsidiary, in another run at the VoIP market,
     is about to launch another VoIP service - this time built around
     its AIM instant messenger service and offering free phone numbers
     for incoming calls - a disruptive "market first" aimed at the
     hearts of such competitors as eBay subsidiary Skype.  According
     to multiple...

NTL Adds to UK Jobs Woe
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17821?11228

     U.K. cable operator ntl group ltd. (Nasdaq: NTLI - message board)
     is expected to announce Tuesday that it will cut about one third
     of its 17,000 employees following its merger with fellow cable
     firm Telewest Global Inc. (Nasdaq: TWSTY - message board). (See
     NTL & Telewest: Together at Last!.)  Weekend reports in the
     U.K. press...

Contest Seeks Answers to Wireless Networking Questions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17820?11228

     The arrival of wireless ad hoc networks has spawned numerous
     questions concerning service level tradeoffs. Will users
     sacrifice bandwidth, signal strength or speed to ensure system
     effectiveness? How can these tradeoffs be achieved? And what are
     the incentives that will get users to provide services -- such as
     routing -- to other nodes?...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: Mark J <mjlas02@cox.net>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 10:31:27 -0700
Organization: Cox Communications


When I lose power I have Vonage configured to forward calls to my cellphone, 
so that is not a problem.

Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.171.11@telecom-digest.org...

> Mark J <mjlas02@cox.net> wrote in message
> news:telecom25.170.7@telecom-digest.org:

>> I have been using Vonage for nearly a year now, with no problems with
>> their service whatsoever.  The few times I have had trouble was when
>> the Internet service was out or I had trouble with my Linksys router
>> or Cisco 1900 switch, but only lasted for a minute or so.

> Had you been having a heart attack, it would have actually been your
> LAST problem.  And what's you option when the power goes out?

>> Healthy Stealthy <healthystealthy@gmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:telecom25.167.5@telecom-digest.org:

>>> Right now I'm using Verizon. I have to save money. I'm thinking about
>>> switching to Vonage. Does anyone know anything about this company? Is
>>> it a mistake to switch to them? Any details?

>>> Thanks.

>>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Vonage is certainly a better deal, and
>>> much less expensive than Verizon. I have Vonage service here as well,
>>> although in fairness I should mention I also still have landline
>>> service as well. Some readers here would suggest that there are other
>>> VOIP companies better than Vonage, and that may be true, but I think
>>> you are inquiring about the _concept_ of VOIP instead of landline, am
>>> I correct?  I am unwilling to totally abandon my landline service for
>>> VOIP.  PAT]

> Herb Stein
> herb@herbstein.com

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Sun, 07 May 2006 01:29:06 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com>
wrote:

> Had you been having a heart attack, it would have actually been your
> LAST problem.  And what's you option when the power goes out?

There's all sorts of levels of service.  What do you do if 911 doesn't
work?  (What would you have done before 911 was introduced?)  What do
you do if the power is out?  (What do you do if your phone is a
cordless and won't work without power?)  What do you do if you're not
near a phone?

I don't see the fact that VOIP is innately a little less reliable than
landline as a show-stopper.  You just need to understand the tradeoffs
before you dive in. Of course they should tell you.  The same way as
the companies that sell cordless phones tell you that in event of a
power failure the phone is worthless.  The same way that cell phone
companies tell you that there are locations where the phone won't
work.

Dave

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

Date: Sun, 7 May 2006 02:34:41 -0400
From: Ron Chapman <ronchapman@wideopenwest.com>
Subject: Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web


In article <telecom25.172.3@telecom-digest.org>, Associated Press News
Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> Last month, Administrative Law Judge John Spooner ruled that surfing
> the Web at work is equivalent to reading a newspaper or talking on the
> phone.

> He recommended the lightest possible punishment for Choudhri. Schools
> Chancellor Joel Klein disagreed.

> "The penalty of termination is appropriate and not shocking to one's
> sense of fairness," Klein said Friday.

> Choudhri's "abuse of the Internet at the time he is supposed to be
> performing his job demonstrates his disinterest in the job," Klein
> said.

I would feel much better if "Schools Chancellor" Joel Klein knew the
meaning of the word "disinterest" and how it differs from "lack of
interest".

Maybe the schools should be run by educated people for a change.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums.  It is
also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup
'comp.dcom.telecom'.

TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
                        Post Office Box 50
                        Independence, KS 67301
                        Phone: 620-402-0134
                        Fax 1: 775-255-9970
                        Fax 2: 530-309-7234
                        Fax 3: 208-692-5145         
                        Email: editor@telecom-digest.org

Subscribe:  telecom-subscribe@telecom-digest.org
Unsubscribe:telecom-unsubscribe@telecom-digest.org

This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm-
unications on the Internet, having been founded in August, 1981 and
published continuously since then.  Our archives are available for
your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list
on the internet in any category!

URL information:        http://telecom-digest.org

Anonymous FTP: mirror.lcs.mit.edu/telecom-archives/archives/
  (or use our mirror site: ftp.epix.net/pub/telecom-archives)

RSS Syndication of TELECOM Digest: http://telecom-digest.org/rss.html
  For syndication examples see http://www.feedrollpro.com/syndicate.php?id=308
    and also http://feeds.feedburner.com/TelecomDigest

*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
*   Judith Oppenheimer, President of ICB Inc. and purveyor of accurate  *
*   800 & Dot Com News, Intelligence, Analysis, and Consulting.         *
*   http://ICBTollFree.com, http://1800TheExpert.com                    *
*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
*   views of Judith Oppenheimer or ICB Inc.                             *
*************************************************************************

ICB Toll Free News.  Contact information is not sold, rented or leased.

One click a day feeds a person a meal.  Go to http://www.thehungersite.com

Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

              ************************

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YOUR CREDIT CARD!  REAL TIME, UP TO DATE! SPONSORED BY TELECOM DIGEST
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              ************************


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

Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help
is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above.
Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
your name to the mailing list. 

All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only
and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #173
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon May  8 22:33:51 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 8 May 2006 22:35:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 174

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    'Bostmaster' Gets Five Years in Prison (Reuters News Wire)
    AT&T Plans Fast Web Alternatives in Rural Areas (Reuters News Wire)
    Qwest to Expand Bandwidth 'Just in Time' (Reuters News Wire)
    Help Needed With WAV File (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price (ceestand)
    Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price (Mark J)
    Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web (Linc Madison)
    Virtual PBX, Private Phone Systems, PBX Sip (likatrib@gmail.com)

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: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: 'Bostmaster' Gets Five Years in Prison
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 20:43:04 -0500


A 20-year-old who prosecutors say highjacked computers to damage
computer networks and send waves of spam across the Internet was
sentenced on Monday to nearly five years in prison.

Jeanson James Ancheta, a well-known member of the "Botmaster
Underground" who pleaded guilty in January to federal charges of
conspiracy, fraud and damaging U.S. government computers, was given
the longest sentence for spreading computer viruses, federal
prosecutors said.

He was sentenced to 57 months in prison and three years of supervised
release by U.S. District Judge Gary Klausner, who also ordered him to
pay $15,000 in restitution to the U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center in
China Lake, California, and forfeit to the government some $60,000 to
pay its expenses in his prosecution.

"Your worst enemy is your own intellectual arrogance that somehow the
world cannot touch you on this," Klausner said in sentencing Ancheta.

Ancheta was accused in the original 17-count indictment of hijacking some
500,000 computers using "bots," or programs that surreptitiously install
themselves on computers so they can be controlled by a hacker.

A bot net is a network of such robot, or "zombie," computers, which
can harness their collective power to do considerable damage or send
out huge amounts of junk e-mail.

Prosecutors say the case was unique because Ancheta was accused of
profiting from his attacks by selling access to his "bot nets" to
other hackers and planting adware, software that causes advertisements
to pop up, into infected computers.

In entering the guilty pleas, Ancheta admitted using computer servers
he controlled to transmit malicious code over the Web to scan for and
exploit vulnerable computers, which he then controlled as "zombie"
machines. He is expected to surrender to the United States Marshall
later today.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Reuters News, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: AT&T Plans Fast Web Alternatives in Rural Areas
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 20:45:58 -0500


Telephone operator AT&T Inc. said on Monday it would offer new
satellite-based fast Internet services in U.S. rural markets and
expand its investment in emerging WiMax wireless connections.

"We are beginning to offer satellite-based broadband service in areas
where our DSL service is not available today, giving more consumers a
broadband choice," AT&T Chairman and Chief Executive Ed Whitacre said
in a speech at the Detroit Economic club.

AT&T is partnering with satellite-based high-speed Internet provider
WildBlue to provide the service.

The telecommunications giant, which plans to buy BellSouth Corp. later
this year, will also expand its market efforts related to WiMax and
other fixed wireless technologies with new deployments this year in
Texas and Nevada.

"Today, we reach more than eighty percent of our residential customers
with DSL service," Whitacre said. "My hope is that through initiatives
such as these, we can bring the benefits of broadband to all our
customers."

WiMax is a more powerful version of Wi-Fi, a wireless Web connection
built into most laptops, but that only covers small areas such as a
coffee shop.

AT&T also said that, in the next three years, it would make a video
service it is developing available to more than 5.5 million low-income
households as part of its "Project Lightspeed" fiber optic network
plans.

AT&T is building a high-speed fiber network to support television
services and faster Internet connections as it works to compete better
with cable operators, which now offer telephone services, as well as
Internet and television.

"We have introduced the service in San Antonio, and it's going very
well," Whitacre said. "We will roll it out to many more markets later
this year."

Whitacre said the video service will be launched in Houston next.

"Then we will go to 18 million households in the next three years," he
said.

Another large regional telephone company, Verizon Communications, is
building a fiber network and already sells video services in several
markets.

Whitacre, speaking to reporters later, said the company was on track
to achieve its target of adjusted earnings per share growth in the
double digit percentage range in the next three years.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire  <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Qwest to Expand Bandwidth 'Just in Time'
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 20:48:03 -0500


By Ritsuko Ando

Qwest Communications International Inc., the fourth largest U.S. local
telephone company, said on Monday that it would expand high-speed
network capacity as much as customers want, but not too much more.

Qwest's Chief Executive Richard Notebaert told Reuters in an interview
that he aimed for "just in time" bandwidth expansion, referring to a
popular inventory strategy to optimize the return on investment.

"We have to be very thoughtful about our return on investor
capital. To do something where assets would not be fully utilized for
a number of years, I think, would be suspect on our part," he said.

His comments highlight the company's focus on improving its financial
health, the weakest of the four so-called "Baby Bells" and its pursuit
of a different strategy to its bigger rivals such as Verizon
Communications which have been investing heavily in broadband.

Qwest, he said, has so far kept up with customers' demand for
high-speed Internet connections, now providing many with speeds of
around 3 to 5 megabits per second, and some even 7 megabits, compared
to 1.5 megabits a few years ago.

It will spend around the same or slightly higher in 2006 than last
year to bolster bandwidth, he said.

Analysts have generally commended Notebaert for bringing discipline
and focus to Qwest.

Based in Denver, Colorado and servicing 14 western states, Qwest last
week posted a 54 percent rise in quarterly profit, helped by cost cuts
and growth in high-speed Internet subscribers.

It ended the first quarter with 1.7 million high-speed subscribers, up
13 percent from the 2005 fourth quarter and up 50 percent from a year
earlier.

It also ended the quarter with total debt of $15.4 billion, down $1.9
billion from a year earlier.

Qwest's improving cash position has helped Qwest's share price nearly
double over the past 52 weeks. But the stock, which closed Monday up
one percent at $6.82 on the New York Stock Exchange, is still far
short of its 2000 peak of more than $60.

Analysts expect the improving cash position to prompt a share buyback
or dividend payment soon, and Qwest has said it would make a decision
on the matter later this year.

Notebaert remained coy on the decision, saying only he would listen to
shareholders.

"Because they see what's happening, they have not been reticent in
sharing their opinions," he said, adding that any move may depend on
external factors such as interest rates.

Notebaert said he expected healthy growth in the wholesale business to
continue, and that it should eventually be seen as more of a
communications company than a regional telecoms company.

He also forecast an expected rise in demand for use of its optical
fiber networks.

Qwest and other long distance telephone network operators during the
dot-com boom expanded high speed fiber optic networks only to later
find that they had overestimated demand, leading to a glut of unused
optical infrastructure called "dark fiber.

"I think that eventually people will have to activate some of that
dark fiber. With streaming video and all those things, traffic has to
increase," he said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: 8 May 2006 13:14:25 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is there any sort of program that will analyze a WAV file of modem
sounds?

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

From: ceestand <ceestand@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price
Date: 8 May 2006 13:50:25 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I got the same thing. I fear clicking on the URL. Is this really
vonage? The only reference to it I can find is that supposedly the
Domain was up for sale on eBay ...

BrianEWilliams wrote:

> I just got this message from Vonage:

>   Dear Valued Vonage Customer,

>   As you may know, Vonage has filed a registration statement with the
>   Securities and Exchange
>   Commission (SEC) related to its proposed initial public offering (IPO)
>   of common stock.  Because much of our success is attributable to our
>   customers, we have asked the underwriters of the IPO to reserve shares
>   of common stock for sale to certain Vonage customers at the IPO price
>   in a Directed Share Program.

>   You may be eligible to participate in the Directed Share Program if you
>   meet certain eligibility
>   requirements, including having been a Vonage customer from December 15,
>   2005 through February 1, 2006.  You do not need to continue to be a
>   Vonage customer in order to participate.  Further information about the
>   terms and conditions of the Directed Share Program, including the
>   eligibility requirements and the process for participating in the
>   program, are available in our registration statement and at the
>   following website:

>   http://www.vonageipo.com

>   Thank you,

>   Vonage

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: So is anyone going to purchase any
> Vonage stock. I wonder if a half-century from now -- say around 2056
> or so -- the stock will have obtained the reputation of AT&T stock
> with the cartoon (1930's) of the old lady sitting placidly in her
> rocking chair on the porch telling everyone how the dividends are
> paid on a timely basis and take good care of her needs in her old age.
> PAT]

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

From: Mark J <mjlas02@cox.net>
Subject: Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 16:01:05 -0700
Organization: Cox Communications


I looked at the requirements for customers to get the Vonage IPO, and
it requires a minimum of 100 shares to purchase through a few specifed
brokers, by personal check or wire transfer only.  Since I cannot get
a bank account right now, I'll have to pass it up.

Details on the offer can be found at http://www.vonageipo.com

BrianEWilliams <sorry_no_email@yahoo.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.173.6@telecom-digest.org:

> I just got this message from Vonage:

> Dear Valued Vonage Customer,

> As you may know, Vonage has filed a registration statement with the
> Securities and Exchange
> Commission (SEC) related to its proposed initial public offering (IPO)
> of common stock.  Because much of our success is attributable to our
> customers, we have asked the underwriters of the IPO to reserve shares
> of common stock for sale to certain Vonage customers at the IPO price
> in a Directed Share Program.

> You may be eligible to participate in the Directed Share Program if you
> meet certain eligibility
> requirements, including having been a Vonage customer from December 15,
> 2005 through February 1, 2006.  You do not need to continue to be a
> Vonage customer in order to participate.  Further information about the
> terms and conditions of the Directed Share Program, including the
> eligibility requirements and the process for participating in the
> program, are available in our registration statement and at the
> following website:

> http://www.vonageipo.com

>  Thank you,

>  Vonage

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: So is anyone going to purchase any
> Vonage stock. I wonder if a half-century from now -- say around 2056
> or so -- the stock will have obtained the reputation of AT&T stock
> with the cartoon (1930's) of the old lady sitting placidly in her
> rocking chair on the porch telling everyone how the dividends are
> paid on a timely basis and take good care of her needs in her old age.
> PAT]

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thank you for looking into this for us.
I got the very same offer in my email Monday afternoon, but had not 
yet investigated it. I wish there had been a less expensive offer; I
might have purchsed one or two shares as a novelty.  PAT]

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

Subject: Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web
Date: Mon, 08 May 2006 16:20:01 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.173.15@telecom-digest.org>, Ron Chapman
<ronchapman@wideopenwest.com> wrote:

>> Choudhri's "abuse of the Internet at the time he is supposed to be
>> performing his job demonstrates his disinterest in the job," Klein
>> said.

> I would feel much better if "Schools Chancellor" Joel Klein knew the
> meaning of the word "disinterest" and how it differs from "lack of
> interest".

Well, I, for one, do know the meaning of the word "disinterest," and I
therefore know that Joel Klein used it correctly.

Disinterest: (noun) 2. lack of interest; indifference.
[source: American Heritage® online dictionary, via ask.com]

Given the context of the remark, it is quite clear that Mr. Klein was
not using it in the sense of "impartiality."

Perhaps you can explain the difference between "lack of interest" and
"lack of interest" for us.

> Maybe the schools should be run by educated people for a change.

Maybe the pot should be more careful in describing the kettle.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I went back to the original message
and am quoting from it here in the hopes someone will explain all
this to me:

>> Choudhri's "abuse of the Internet at the time he is supposed to be
>> performing his job demonstrates his disinterest in the job," Klein
>> said.

> I would feel much better if "Schools Chancellor" Joel Klein knew the
> meaning of the word "disinterest" and how it differs from "lack of
> interest".

> Maybe the schools should be run by educated people for a change.

Maybe Ron Chapman and Linc Madison can, between them, explain to me
what the difference is.   PAT]

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

From: likatrib@gmail.com
Subject: Virtual PBX, Private Phone Systems, PBX Sip, Phone Switches, Pabx
Date: 8 May 2006 18:07:10 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Virtual PBX,Private Phone Systems,PBX Sip,Phone Switches,Pabx,Free
Internet Calls

Introduction, Distributed Workforce, Virtual Organization,Field Offices
for Larger Concerns,Virtual PBX,Case Study-Centract,Knowledge Worker
Impact Quotient,Conclusions

http://www.freewebs.com/virtual-pbx/

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
Compuserve and America On Line, Yahoo Groups, and other forums.  It is
also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup
'comp.dcom.telecom'.

TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
                        Post Office Box 50
                        Independence, KS 67301
                        Phone: 620-402-0134
                        Fax 1: 775-255-9970
                        Fax 2: 530-309-7234
                        Fax 3: 208-692-5145         
                        Email: editor@telecom-digest.org

Subscribe:  telecom-subscribe@telecom-digest.org
Unsubscribe:telecom-unsubscribe@telecom-digest.org

This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm-
unications on the Internet, having been founded in August, 1981 and
published continuously since then.  Our archives are available for
your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list
on the internet in any category!

URL information:        http://telecom-digest.org

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  (or use our mirror site: ftp.epix.net/pub/telecom-archives)

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #174
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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 9 May 2006 14:40:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 175

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Verizon Seeks Change in US House Internet Language (Reuters News Wire)
    AOL Lays Off 1300 Employees (Anick Jesdanun)
    Cellular-News: Tuesday 9th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 9, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    AT&T to Offer Satellite Broadband, IPTV to Low-Income (USTA DailyLead)
    Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information (Biren)
    Spectrum of a Modem Signal (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Joshua Putnam)
    Re: Should I Switch to Vonage? (Thor Lancelot Simon)
    Re: Verizon Playing Catch-up Against Cable Firms (Steve Sobol)
    Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web (Linc Madison)
    Re: Charge it at 30,000 Feet (Charles Cryderman)
    Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price (BrianEWilliams)

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: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Verizon Seeks Change in US House Internet Language
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 12:54:12 -0500


Verizon Communications on Tuesday urged House of Representatives
lawmakers to revise proposed language on Internet network neutrality,
saying it could lead to prolonged litigation and uncertainty.

The provisions are part of a broader bill that would make it easier
for Verizon and AT&T Inc. to get into the subscription television
business. The companies have opposed legislation that would impose
so-called "Net neutrality."

The House measure codifies principles that the Federal Communications
Commission adopted last year and encourages high-speed Internet
service providers to ensure that consumers can freely surf the
Internet.

But Tom Tauke, Verizon's executive vice president of public affairs,
policy and communications, said those principles suggest consumers are
entitled to Internet access and competition, which he said could lead
to price controls and other regulations by an aggressive regulator.

"The spirit of the FCC language is fine but taking that language and
putting it in the statute, and the subsequent litigation that might
result from that, I think is problematic," Tauke said at an Internet
policy conference.

"So we encourage Congressman Barton and others to do a little careful
drafting of that language so that you have language that is more
appropriate for statute, which doesn't invite so much litigation down
the road," he said, referring to the Texas Republican Rep. Joe Barton
(news, bio, voting record), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee and a principle sponsor of the bill.

Similar legislation in the Senate calls for study of the net
neutrality issue, a position that Tauke said his company embraced.

The 1996 Telecommunications Act has been mired in almost a decade of
litigation. Companies have complained that prolonged legal fights have
hurt investment and innovation.

Verizon and AT&T want to expand flat pricing for high-speed Internet
broadband to selling tiers of service based on the speed, reliability
and security. They have pledged not to block access to the open
Internet.

But that has raised fears among Internet content companies such as
Amazon.com Inc. and Google Inc. that they will be shunted to a slower
lane of the Internet if they do not pay more for dedicated access.

Tauke said that concern was unwarranted.

It was unclear when the House bill would be considered by the full
House because the Judiciary Committee has demanded that it be given
time to review and amend the bill, arguing that it has jurisdiction on
some of the issues in the measure.

Verizon agreed to adhere to the FCC's principles on Net neutrality
when it won approval from the agency to acquire MCI Inc. last year.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Anick Jesdanun <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: AOL Lays Off 1300 Employees
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 12:56:03 -0500


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

AOL is laying off about 1,300 employees, or 7 percent of its worldwide
work force, and is closing its call center in Jacksonville, Fla.

Other cuts will come from call centers in Ogden, Utah, and Tucson,
Ariz.

The layoffs announced Tuesday represent the first major cuts since the
Time Warner Inc. Internet unit cut about 700 positions last fall.

Although AOL's subscription has been declining, spokesman Nicholas
Graham attributed the layoffs to more savvy customers and better tools
for them to help themselves.

"The Internet world of 2006 is very different from the world of 1996
when AOL first established these member centers," Graham said. "Today,
AOL members are more savvy and sophisticated online. They are very
different members today than they were in 1996."

In its early days, AOL had a reputation for attracting beginners,
leading some longtime users to deride the service as the "Internet on
training wheels."

But AOL dropped some of its hand-holding over the years and began
offering its subscribers computer-diagnosis, anti-spyware and other
free software, "allowing them to troubleshoot on their own," Graham
said.

In addition, he said, AOL has been expanding its online help areas,
such that 8 million customers a month now look up information
themselves online, compared with 5.5 million who interact with a human
by phone, e-mail or online chat.

"They are able to accomplish with a couple of clicks what it used to
take them a phone call or two or three to accomplish," Graham said.

As a result, Graham said, call volume has dropped by about 50 percent
since 2004.

"That's a remarkable success in terms of customer care," he said. "It
requires us to rebalance our work force."

By contrast, U.S. subscribers dropped by about 22 percent in the past
two years. AOL had 18.6 million subscribers as of March 31, down from
a peak of 26.7 million in September 2002, as more Internet users drop
dial-up connections in favor of broadband.

AOL is closing its Jacksonville center Tuesday, laying off 780
employees there. It is laying off 300 in Tucson and 125 in Ogden, with
nominal reductions in other locations such as Albuquerque, N.M., and
Dulles, Va.

More than 500 will remain employed in Tucson and 400 in Ogden. The
Ogden reductions take effect Tuesday, and Tucson's are effective June
30.

Shares in Time Warner rose 1 cents to $17.06 in morning trading
Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Tuesday 9th May 2006
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 09:21:27 -0500
From: cellular-news <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ Financial ]]

Australian Government Still Hoping For Telstra Sale Oct, Nov
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17278.php

CANBERRA (Dow JOnes)--The Australian government Monday deferred a
decision about selling the final tranche of major local telecoms
company Telstra Corp., a spokesman for Finance Minister Nick Minchin
said.

Vodafone Plans To Cut European Roaming Fees Next Year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17284.php

Under pressure from European regulators, British mobile-phone giant
Vodafone Group on Monday said it will slash fees charged to customers
for calls made while traveling in Europe by at least 40% next year.

Telecom Italia 1Q Net +13%, Margins Fall
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17285.php

Telecom Italia, Monday said first-quarter net profit rose 13% due to
the buyout of its mobile unit's minorities but margins fell on
competitive pressure and the recent implementation of termination rate
cuts.

[[ Handsets ]]

FOCUS: Euroset eyes IPO, strong interest expected from investors
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17286.php

The booming Russian stock market and foreign investors strong interest
have encouraged Russia's largest mobile handset retailer Euroset to
make an initial public offering (IPO). Analysts expect Euroset's IPO
to be successful as investors are natural

Telia's Top Ten Handset Sales in April 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17290.php

For the first time two 3G handsets are in Telia's top ten list of
best-selling phones in Telia retail stores. The 3G phones are the
Nokia 6280, which directly entered the list in fifth place, and the
Samsung Z140. The April top ten list contains a nu

Quarter of Europeans Replace Their Phone Each Year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17297.php

Twenty-seven percent of European mobile users replace their cell
phones every year, according to Telephia. This rate increases by more
than twofold after 24 months, with roughly 60% of Europeans buying new
phones by the two year mark. Telephia's Q1 2

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Mobile DRM Issues Set to Cost Europe US$4.4 billion in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17294.php

The Mobile Entertainment Forum (MEF) has called on the industry to end
revenue leakage and protect content rights by delivering an open and
interoperable mDRM solution based on a clear open standard. DRM is
core to every mobile transaction - every ti

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Chinook Wireless Switches From CDMA to GSM
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17287.php

Chinook Wireless has selected Nokia to build a GSM/GPRS/EDGE network
throughout Montana, USA. Nokia is supplying the entire radio and core
network, along with network services. The companies have signed a
five-year supply contract covering equipment,

GSM Coverage for Alaskan Oil Fields
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17288.php

Dobson Communications says that it has launched Cellular One wireless
service in Deadhorse, Alaska, extending its GSM/EDGE network to the
key staging area and oil-service headquarters for the North Slope oil
fields.

Vodafone Portugal Updates PrePay Billing Platform
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17292.php

Lucent Technologies says that it has completed the deployment of a
real-time charging solution for mobile messaging for Vodafone
Portugal. The mobile messaging solution helps Vodafone Portugal better
manage prepaid customer accounts, and more easily

[[ Network Operators ]]

Telecom to invest US$66mn in Patagonia
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17281.php

Telecom Argentina has pledged a 200mn-peso (US$65.8mn) investment in
the country's Patagonia region this year, Agencia Nacional de Noticias
reported.

Mobile Co O2 To Announce Cuts In Roaming Charges Soon
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17283.php

UK mobile operator O2 said Monday it plans to unveil cuts in the fees
it charges customers when they make calls from outside their home
countries, following earlier announcements along similar lines from
rivals Vodafone Group and Deutsche Telekom's T

[[ Offbeat ]]

Bears With Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17291.php

In Sweden, the month of May is when bears in the country wake up after
their winter hibernation period and leave their dens. It is also the
time to change the batteries in their "mobile phones". In the forests
between Orsa and Sveg in the Dalarna reg

[[ Regulatory ]]

EU To Regulate Mobile Roaming Despite Vodafone Offer
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17277.php

The European Commission Monday said it would press ahead with plans to
regulate mobile phone roaming costs, despite a Vodafone Group offer to
slash its fees by up to 40%.

Ministry doubts case for fourth mobile operator
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17279.php

The appearance of a fourth mobile operator in Colombia is unlikely,
given the current number of operators and the particular companies
that are interested in Colombia MÃ³vil (Ola), according to a report
commissioned by the communications ministry

Court rejects Digitel appeal of US$390k fine
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17280.php

Venezuelan mobile operator Digitel has lost its appeal against the
imposition of an 840mn-bolÃ­var (US$390,000) fine, local daily El
Carabobeno reported.

Govt: Mobile service quality improved
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17282.php

Mobile telephony service quality in Colombia improved 1Q06 in
comparison with 4Q05, local daily Nueva Economia reported, citing a
study by the industry and commerce regulator.

Eleven Bid for Egyptian GSM License
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17289.php

Egypt's National Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (NTRA) has
confirmed that eleven companies have submitted bids for the country's
3rd GSM operating license. A high-level committee was formed by the
NTRA to undertake the technical evaluation o...

[[ Reports ]]
LED Drivers--Phones and TVs; Cost and Power Consumption Hurdles Remain

http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17293.php Televisions will succeed
mobile phone handsets in the next five years as the key driver for
growth in the LED industry, as consumers switch over to flat-panel
televisions, principally liquid-crystal display (LCD) TVs, says a new
report from Strategy

MDs Prefer Mobiles to Landlines
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17296.php

Three out of four Managing Directors of medium-sized Swedish companies
would prefer to use mobiles as the only phones for all their
companies' employees, provided that their total telephone costs would
not increase. This is shown in a survey carried

[[ Statistics ]]

India Challenges China as Fastest Growing Mobile Phone Market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17295.php

The pace of India's mobile phone market growth is accelerating and the
country is on track to surpass Russia and the U.S. in total
subscribers. That is one of the conclusions of an updated report from
Datacomm Research Company.

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

Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 11:40:04 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Tuesday, May 9, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May  9, 2006
********************************

Cable Operator NTL Plans To Cut Work Force by More Than a Third After
Telewest Merger  http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17855?11228

     LONDON -- Cable operator NTL Inc. said Tuesday it plans to cut
     more than a third of its work force following its acquisition of
     rival Telewest Global.  NTL, which also purchased Richard
     Branson's Virgin Mobile Holdings PLC last month, said that it
     will reduce its 17,000-strong work force by 6,000 by the end of
     next year.  NTL said a...

Greek Mobile Wireless Operator Cosmote To Buy 42 percent Stake in Germanos
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17854?11228

     ATHENS, Greece -- Cosmote Mobile Telecommunications said Tuesday
     it has signed a deal to buy a 42 percent stake in mobile telephony
     retailer Germanos at a price of  EUR19 (US$24) per share. 
     Cosmote said it will also launch a public offer for the remaining
     shares in Germanos at the same price after August.  The deal is
     subject...

AT&T To Resell Satellite Broadband Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17852?11228

     NEW YORK -- AT&T Inc. plans to expand its high-speed Internet
     offerings by selling satellite-based access to customers in rural
     areas who cannot be reached by broadband over phone lines.  AT&T
     said Monday it is partnering with WildBlue Communications Inc. to
     sell satellite broadband under its own brand, starting this
     month...

U.S. Mobile Phone Sales Up
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17845?11228

     The U.S. mobile phone market shrugged off the typical post
     holiday lull, posting an 11 percent year-over-year increase in
     the first quarter of 2006, according to NPD Group. Motorola
     retained its spot as the top supplier to the U.S. consumer
     market. U.S. consumers snapped 34.8 million wireless handsets
     during the first quarter of...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 13:45:37 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: AT&T to Offer Satellite Broadband, IPTV to Low-Income Households


USTelecom dailyLead
May 9, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBpkfDtuteaZuNnLXa

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* AT&T to offer satellite broadband, IPTV to low-income households
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* BellSouth ramps up marketing efforts
* Report: Wireline spending up in Q1 on broadband expansion
* Report: Verizon offers $38B for Vodafone stake
* Local telecoms look for alternatives as wholesale access prices rise
* Sprint Nextel, Alltel ink roaming pact
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* We're not Cable -- Differentiating Telco IPTV
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Alcatel tries to improve mobile TV
* Warner Bros. teams with former enemy BitTorrent for online
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Connecticut says IPTV not subject to franchise regs

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBpkfDtuteaZuNnLXa

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

From: Biren <biren.gandhi@gmail.com>
Subject: Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information
Date: 9 May 2006 08:48:33 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I have a question about call forwarding and availability of "dialed
number" (this could be applicable to both landline and GSM phones):

Some user has set up his/her phone (with number A) to forward "all"
incoming calls to a certain number B (using sequence *21*B# for GSM)
and some caller C calls in A's number.

Is there any way we can obtain "original dialed number" (i.e. A) at
site B -- before deciding to respond to the forwared call? At site B,
caller ID provides original caller (i.e. C) -- but can we correctly
obtain "called id" by some means? Is it available at all?

If number B is an 800 (or other toll-free) number with ANI/DNIS
service, can we get the originally dialed number?

Thanks.

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: Spectrum of a Modem Signal
Date: 9 May 2006 08:49:37 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
to see?

It just looks like a lump in the frequency domain, but I'm not sure I
did it right.

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

From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Mon, 8 May 2006 20:45:42 -0700
Organization: .


In article <telecom25.173.13@telecom-digest.org>, mjlas02@cox.net 
says:

> When I lose power I have Vonage configured to forward calls to my cellphone, 
> so that is not a problem.

My home network equipment is on a UPS.  If the PC shuts down promptly,
the UPS will keep the network, including Vonage, running for four or
five hours.  I can hook up outside power if the outage lasts longer
than that.

If my network goes down, then my phone forwards to my cell.  So does
my office phone.

Calling from my home, 911 gets me to the right dispatch center using 
either Vonage or my cell phone, I've had occasion to try both.


josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/>
Books for Bicycle Mechanics and Tinkerers:
<http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/bikebooks.html>

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

From: tls@panix.com (Thor Lancelot Simon)
Subject: Re: Should I Switch to Vonage?
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 16:21:42 UTC
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.


In article <telecom25.173.14@telecom-digest.org>,
Dave Garland  <dave.garland@wizinfo.com> wrote:

> It was a dark and stormy night when Herb Stein <herb@herbstein.com>
> wrote:

>> Had you been having a heart attack, it would have actually been your
>> LAST problem.  And what's you option when the power goes out?

> There's all sorts of levels of service.  What do you do if 911 doesn't
> work?  (What would you have done before 911 was introduced?)

You would have dialed "0" for operator, and the operator would have
dispatched the emergency call.

> What do you do if the power is out?

If you have a traditional wireline phone, you do exactly what you do
if the power is not out; the telephone system is independent from
commercial power generation in this regard (power is supplied by
batteries at the central office; that's why it's 48VDC).

Voice over IP is not "a little less reliable"; it's enormously less
reliable.  Despite this, I have Vonage service at my home; but, having
worked in telephony for a long time, I understand the risks.  One
ought not minimize them for others who have less technical knowledge.

Thor Lancelot Simon	                      tls@rek.tjls.com

  "We cannot usually in social life pursue a single value or a single moral
   aim, untroubled by the need to compromise with others."   - H.L.A. Hart

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

From: Steve Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net>
Subject: Re: Verizon Playing Catch-up Against Cable Firms
Date: Mon, 08 May 2006 19:48:03 -0700
Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com


Monty Solomon wrote:

> By Bruce Mohl, Globe Staff  |  May 7, 2006

> Sherri Patti of Woburn jumped from Comcast Corp. to Verizon
> Communications for its FiOS fiber-optic triple play of phone, TV, and
> Internet. She says she's getting more for less money.

> Michael McGrath of Woburn switched from Comcast cable to FiOS. He says
> his TV picture is better now, although he misses the New England Cable
> News channel and Fox Sports New England, both of which are missing
> from the Verizon channel lineup.

Verizon managed to inadvertently disconnect a bunch of businesses
along Bear Valley Road here in Apple Valley recently, while doing FiOS
upgrades.

And their DSL still sucks. I have to use it at work :( (I have Charter
cable at homee and the service is rock-solid.)

Steve Sobol, Professional Geek ** Java/VB/VC/PHP/Perl ** Linux/*BSD/Windows
Apple Valley, CA
Resident of Southern California -
the home of beautiful people and butt-ugly traffic jams

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

Subject: Re: New York City Fires Employee for Surfing the Web
Date: Tue, 09 May 2006 02:46:44 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.174.7@telecom-digest.org>, Linc Madison
<lincmad@suespammers.org> wrote:

> In article <telecom25.173.15@telecom-digest.org>, Ron Chapman
> <ronchapman@wideopenwest.com> wrote:

>>> Choudhri's "abuse of the Internet at the time he is supposed to be
>>> performing his job demonstrates his disinterest in the job," Klein
>>> said.

>> I would feel much better if "Schools Chancellor" Joel Klein knew the
>> meaning of the word "disinterest" and how it differs from "lack of
>> interest".

Ron's point was that the meaning of "disinterest" is "impartiality,"
rather than "lack of interest." Ron was upbraiding the NYC Schools
Chancellor for his supposed misuse of the word "disinterest."

> Well, I, for one, do know the meaning of the word "disinterest," and I
> therefore know that Joel Klein used it correctly.

> Disinterest: (noun) 2. lack of interest; indifference.
> [source: American Heritage online dictionary, via ask.com]

I pointed out that Ron is in fact wrong. Although "disinterest" does
mean "impartiality," it also means "lack of interest" -- precisely
what Ron said it does not mean. Since "lack of interest" is verbatim
one of the definitions of "disinterest," there is no difference at all
between "disinterest" and "lack of interest."

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I went back to the original message
> and am quoting from it here in the hopes someone will explain all
> this to me:

There you have it.

Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

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

Subject: Re: Charge it at 30,000 Feet
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 11:14:32 -0400
From: Cryderman, Charles <Charles.Cryderman@globalcrossing.com>


Monty Solomon posted:

> When it's time to buy a beer or a sandwich or rent a headset,
> American Airlines passengers can now say, "Charge it." American last
> week began rolling out a new service letting passengers use American
> Express and other credit and debit cards to pay for in-flight
> purchases. American, the biggest carrier at Boston's Logan
> International Airport by passenger volume, expects the technology,
> which relies on wireless handheld devices toted by flight
> attendants, will be available system wide by the middle of next
> month.

Northwest has been doing this for at least the last 6 months. In fact
they no longer accept cash. You can only use NW vouchers or any credit
card.

Chip Cryderman

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

From: BrianEWilliams <sorry_no_email@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Vonage Customers Get Shares at IPO Price
Date: 9 May 2006 08:33:12 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


That website is the real thing.  I called UBS at 201-352-999 to
confirm.  You can also call Vonage at 866-431-9801 for website tech
support.

Note to the Editor, you can always buy a share or two on the open
market.

I've decided to buy a decent size piece as a speculation.  I passed on
Google, and I still regret that decision.  The IPO is coming out the
week of May 22, so we'll see then if I made the right decision

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

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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 10 May 2006 12:25:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 176
 
Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Cingular Pulls Offensive Ringtone (Associated Press News Wire)
    British Computer Hacker Being Extradited to USA (Kate Holton)
    Audio Capture of Modem's Signals (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories? (Frank Stearns)
    Cellular-News: Wednesday 10th May 2006 (cellular-news)
    TelecomDirect Daily News Update - Wednesday, May 10 (TelecomDirect-Daily)  
    Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal (DLR)
    Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal (Reed)
    Re: Telephone Map of Africa with Country & City Codes (DarkFiber)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Cingular Pulls Offensive Ringtone
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 10:21:42 -0500


Cingular Wireless Pulls Ringtone From Its Web Site the Company Calls
'Blatantly Offensive'

The Associated Press

BROWNSVILLE, Texas - Cingular Wireless LLC pulled a ringtone from its
Web site Tuesday after learning that it carried a message the company
called "blatantly offensive."

The cell phone company became aware of the ringtone, which uses mixed
English and Spanish and threatens deportation, after an inquiry from a
reporter for The Brownsville Herald.

The newspaper reported in its online edition Tuesday that the ringtone
started with a siren, followed by a male voice saying in a Southern
drawl, "This is la Migra," a slang term for the Border Patrol.

"Por favor, put the oranges down and step away from the cell phone. I
repeat-o, put the oranges down and step away from the telephone-o. I'm
deporting you back home-o," the voice continued.

Hispanic activists called the product racist.

"It's horribly offensive and a disgusting thing," Brent Wilkes,
national executive director of the League of United Latin American
Citizens, told the newspaper.

Cingular removed the $2.49 ringtone, among thousands available for
downloading from its Web site, Tuesday afternoon, said company
spokesman Mark Siegel.

"Needless to say, we deeply regret and apologize for it ever being
there in the first place. The ringtone is blatantly offensive," he
said.

The ringtone became available between late February or early March and
was downloaded eight times, Siegel said. It was developed by Barrio
Mobile, Siegel said. Barrio Mobile is a brand owned by Lagardere
Active North American, the U.S. division of a French media company.

Cingular officials were reviewing the process used to screen
ringtones, which are developed by several other companies, he said.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Kate Holton <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: British Computer Hacker Being Extradited to USA
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 10:23:45 -0500


By Kate Holton

A British computer expert accused by Washington of the world's
"biggest military hack of all time" should be extradited to the United
States to stand trial, a court ruled on Wednesday.

Gary McKinnon, 40, was arrested last June following charges by U.S.
prosecutors that he illegally accessed 97 government computers --
including Pentagon, U.S. army, navy and NASA systems -- causing
$700,000 worth of damage.

Britain's Home Secretary (interior minister) will make the final
decision on deportation.

McKinnon, whose hacking name was "Solo," has admitted gaining access
to U.S.  government computers but denies causing any damage.

He had tried to fight extradition, saying he was "already hung and
quartered over there" and would not receive a fair trial.

Prosecutors said McKinnon hacked into sensitive networks over a
one-year period from February 2002, crippling U.S. defense systems in
the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

At the time of the indictment, Paul McNulty, U.S. Attorney for the
Eastern District of Virginia, said "Mr McKinnon is charged with the
biggest military computer hack of all time."

However, McKinnon's supporters say the U.S. government should be
grateful to him for highlighting its security shortcomings.

If found guilty in the U.S, he could face up to 70 years in jail and
fines of up to $1.75 million.

"My intention was never to disrupt security," McKinnon told reporters
outside Bow Street magistrates court in London on Wednesday. "The fact
that I logged on with no password meant there was no security to begin
with."

McKinnon's solicitor Karen Todner said they would launch an
appeal. She argues her client will not receive a fair trial in the
U.S. and could easily be tried in Britain.

In a recent interview with Reuters, McKinnon said the U.S. wanted to
make a show of his deportation rather than face the tougher task of
fixing their computer system.

He said he was just an ordinary computer nerd who wanted to find out
whether UFOs and aliens existed.

(Additional reporting by Michael Holden)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: Audio Capture of Modem's Signals
Date: 9 May 2006 13:02:56 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I created an audio capture of my modem's signals at:

http://server2.uploadit.org/files/mike7411-modaud2.JPG

Anyone know how to interpret this?  I thought it was running at 300
bps, but it doesn't look like it.

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

From: Frank Stearns <franks.pacifier.com@pacifier.net>
Subject: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories?
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 03:42:45 -0000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


Is there an online source that supports cross-searching regular and
reverse directories based on partial information?

I received an important job-offer vmail that was incomplete -- the
caller left a first name and phone number, but the phone number
consists of only the area code and prefix. The last four digits are
missing.

It was too late for *69 (other calls had come in -- unless there's
some secret way to go back further than the last incoming call), and I
don't have caller ID.

If one had proper database access, it would be trivial to search for
that first name -AND- for all numbers starting with the known A/C and
prefix.  (This is a potential of 9999 names, but based on the first
name I'd expect a return of 50 to 100 hits -- certainly a manageable
list to review. With telco help I have already determined that the
prefix does not include cells or PBXs.)

However, all the online sources I've found so far want a complete #
for the reverse, and a full last name for the regular directory to
work.

Any suggestions where else I could go do such a search? I'm even
willing to script something to step through 9999 numbers in a reverse
directory site, if such a site were ascii-based and would allow such
activity.

Thanks in advance for any suggestions,

Frank Stearns

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Wednesday 10th May 2006
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 08:56:39 -0500
From: cellular-news <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

CDG Publishes EV-DO Market and Operators' Case Studies
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17317.php

The CDMA Development Group (CDG) has reported that operators in Asia
and the U.S. have seen a significant uptake of CDMA2000 1xEV-DO
broadband wireless services and, as result, higher revenues and
growth. In some markets, operators report that their ...

[[ Financial ]]

MobilCom 1Q Net Profit EUR18 Million V EUR28.3M
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17298.php

German telecommunications company MobilCom, Tuesday said first-quarter
net profit decreased to EUR18 million from the EUR28.3 million
reported for the same period last year. ...

KPN Profit Rises 41% On Mobile Operations
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17299.php

Dutch phone company Royal KPN on Tuesday said its quarterly profit
rose 41%, helped by a one-off gain from the sale of its mobile
satellite assets and a strong performance from its wireless
division. ...

Govt to open Hondutel to partner
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17303.php

The Honduran government plans to privatize state-run telco Hondutel by
means of an international partner, finance minister Hugo NoÃ© was
quoted as saying by Reuters. ...

ETB, EPM reject first phase offers for Ola partnership
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17304.php

Colombian municipal telcos ETB and EPM have rejected the three
non-binding offers received from companies interested in becoming a
strategic partner for their mobile unit Colombia Movil (Ola), local
daily La Republica reported. ...

Verizon Reportedly Rebuffed With $38B Offer For Wireless Stake
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17305.php

Verizon Communications made an offer of $38 billion to buy the 45% it
doesn't already own of Verizon Wireless, only to see Vodafone Group
demand $12 billion more, according to a published report Tuesday. ...

Altimo Welcomes Telenor Position On Vimpelcom Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17307.php

Altimo, a unit of Alfa Group Russia, Tuesday said it is pleased that
Telenor has accepted Altimo's proposal over the possible merger of
Vimpel Communications and Kievstar. ...

Qualcomm Provides an Analysts Market Update
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17316.php

Qualcomm recently held an Analysts Day for investors. Merrill Lynch
were there and report that the day, unsurprisingly was focused
predominantly on growth expectations of the WCDMA market. Growth of 3G
markets (both evolving from CDMA and GSM upgrade...

[[ Handsets ]]

USA Handset Sales Reached US$2.3 Billion in Q1 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17308.php

According to The NPD Group, mobile phone sales to consumers in the
U.S. reached 34.8 million units in the first quarter of 2006. This
number represents an increase of more than 11% compared to sales
during the same period in 2005. NPD estimates total...

[[ Messaging ]]

Messaging Remains Important Source of Revenue for Mobile Operators in
Western Europe http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17309.php

At a time when operators are heavily focusing on rolling out data
applications and offering a wide range of content, their bread and
butter still lies with SMS. According to a recent IDC study, the
mobile messaging market in Western Europe, which inc...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

3G Budweiser
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17310.php

Hutchison 3G UK says that it has signed a deal with official FIFA
World Cup (football/soccer) sponsor Budweiser to extend Budweiser's
FIFA World Cup advertising campaign onto the 3 portal. Hutchison 3G UK
will form part of Budweiser's new media marke...

Sky Television Trialing MediaFLO Mobile TV Service
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17315.php

Qualcomm and the UK pay-TV provider, BSkyB have announced that they
are to conduct technical trials of Qualcomm's MediaFLO
technology. Expected to begin during the summer of 2006, the technical
trial will feature 10 channels of BSkyB content on a sma...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Aircom Wins T-Mobile Network Rollout Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17312.php

Mobile network engineering supplier, Aircom International have
announced that they have been awarded a multi-million pound managed
service contract by T-Mobile UK. Aircom was selected for this single
vendor contract to facilitate T-Mobile's aggressiv...

Motorola Wins Nigerian CDMA Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17314.php

Nigeria's NITEL has signed a contract with Motorola for the deployment
of a CDMA network across the capital city, Lagos. The contract, which
follows the US$50 million GSM contract signed between Motorola and
NITEL in 2003 builds upon a successful CDM...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Sprint Expands Nationwide Roaming Pact With Alltel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17300.php

Sprint said Tuesday it has signed a new 10-year agreement with Alltel,
renewing and expanding their reciprocal nationwide voice and data
roaming agreement. ...

GTD Manquehue markets mobile service, plans quad-play
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17301.php

Chilean telecoms operator GTD Manquehue has indirectly added mobile
telephony to its product range through a marketing deal with the
country's number three mobile operator Smartcom, company executives
told BNamericas. ...

Alltel, Cingular Wireless Extend Roaming Pact Until 2012
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17306.php

Alltel Corp. and Cingular Wireless extended an agreement that allows
customers of both companies to roam on each other's networks until
2012. ...

Australian CDMA Network Shutdown Date Announced
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17311.php

Hutchison Telecoms Australia has announced that over 200,000 customers
have upgraded from 2G CDMA services to W-CDMA following the rebranding
of Orange to 3 CDMA in February and the launch of upgrade offers to
those customers. With such a significant...

[[ Reports ]]

ANALYSIS: Sea change in mobile market imminent
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17302.php

Colombia's mobile market is about to undergo a sea change, with
operators nearing their saturation points and service capacity being
stretched so thin that it would perhaps be better called
non-service. ...

Increasing Consumer Adoption of M-Payment Schemes - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17313.php

Mobile payments are set to rise to US$10 billion in total revenue by
2010, thanks to the entrance of new players offering m-payment schemand subsequent consumer demand, according to Alan Goode, senior
analyst and author with Juniper Research. And ...

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 11:38:25 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, May 10, 2006


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 10, 2006
********************************

CosmOTE Eyes Mobtel
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17884?11228

     Greek mobile operator CosmOTE is considering a bid for Sebia's
     second mobile operator, Mobtel, which is being auctioned by the
     Serbian government Significance: The government is currently
     auctioning Mobtel's GSM 900 licence, with a tender to sell Mobtel
     at a starting price of 800 million euro (US$994
     million). Mobtel's previous owners,...

Mobile Email Standards Bubble Up
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17874?11228

     Even as the enterprise mobile email industry continues to embroil
     itself in patent disputes, work is progressing at the Internet
     Engineering Task Force (IETF) and the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA)
     to create universal open standards for interoperable mobile
     messaging services that will work across devices, carriers, and
     operating systems.  ...

Euro Giants Issue NGN RFPs
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17870?11228

     Vendor marketing teams are dealing with a flurry of major telecom
     equipment RFPs (request for proposals) from major European
     carriers that need the latest Ethernet and VOIP infrastructure
     for their next-generation networks.  BT Group plc and Colt
     Telecom Group plc ...

Report: Vodafone Rejects Verizon Offer
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17868?11228

     Rumors are once again swirling about negotiations between Verizon
     Wireless parents Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group. The
     latest: Vodafone reportedly turned down a $38 billion offer to
     sell the wireless unit to Verizon, according to the U.K.'s The
     Daily Telegraph. Neither company is commenting on the report.
     Vodafone chief Arun...

IMS-Based Apps May Not Generate Expected Windfall for Service Providers
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17867?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- IP Multimedia Sub-System (IMS)-based
     communication applications, enhanced by presence and other
     personalized functionality, will add value to existing services,
     but may not generate a windfall of new consumer spending, reports
     In-Stat.  The main revenue benefits that IMS provides lie in the
     integration of...

Cable Chief Implores Troops To Fight On
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/17863?11228

     The head of the American Cable Association yesterday told a
     gathering of cableco managers and "Inside The Beltway" listeners
     that the business must continue to press its case among
     legislative and regulatory policy makers to maintain a level
     playing field against incumbent local exchange carriers in
     competitive service delivery.  ACA and...

Wireless Sensors Help First Responders
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17861?11228

     When an earthquake strikes a city, one of the first and most
     important tasks facing emergency managers is determining which
     bridges are still safe enough for first responders to travel
     across. Visual inspections are time consuming and, when made in
     haste, potentially inaccurate.  Far better and faster structure
     analyses can be provided by...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 09 May 2006 15:44:43 -0400
From: DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
Subject: Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal


mike7411@gmail.com wrote:

> If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
> to see?

> It just looks like a lump in the frequency domain, but I'm not sure I
> did it right.

In a way over simplified explanation, most modems these days (dial up
for sure) transmit a series of tones all the time spaced fairly
closely together. These tones are twisted and shifted to allow each
one to carry multiple bit patterns. Thus a spectrum view would
typically show a "lump" of signals running all the time.

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

From: Reed <reedh@rmi.net>
Subject: Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 01:46:12 GMT


mike7411@gmail.com wrote:

> If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
> to see?

> It just looks like a lump in the frequency domain, but I'm not sure I
> did it right.

A standard dial modem must operate over a band-limited channel between
approx 300 to 4000 khz. Therefore it's analog output frequencies
should fall within this band. Some harmonics may appear outside this,
but they would be spurious.

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

From: DarkFiber <blockME@blockip.org>
Subject: Re: Telephone Map of Africa with Country & City Codes
Date: Tue, 09 May 2006 14:36:45 -0600
Organization: blockME.org


On Fri, 05 May 2006 11:39:09 -0700, Linc Madison wrote:

> I'm still working on a few bits of explanatory text; does anyone know
> how to say "Daylight Savings Time" in Swahili? (Seriously.)

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do not think they use the phrase 
> 'Daylight Savings Time'. I think the expression they may use (as is
> the case in many European counties) is 'Summer Time'.  PAT]

ITYM Daylight Saving Time ^ 

See 'Spelling and grammar' on http://webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/b.html

DarkFiber / BlockIP.org
blockme@blockip.org is a spamtrap
 ...please do not feed it email!

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

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #176
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed May 10 19:12:48 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #177
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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 10 May 2006 19:15:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 177

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Kansas Hacker Charged With Hacking Military Computers (Spam Daily News)
    Suspects Arrested in Global Child Porn Raid (Reuters News Wire)
    NY Man to Settle in Washington's First Spyware (Spam Daily News)
    Verizon May Sell Landlines in Seven States (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal (Laura Halliday)
    Re: Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information (r.e.d.)
    Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories? (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (Robert Bonomi)

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: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Kansas Hacker Charged With Hacking Military Computers
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 11:59:19 -0500


 From Spam Daily News

Matthew R. Decker, 21, was indicted Tuesday in Wichita, Kansas, with
'accessing without authorization' U.S. Army computers and with
'unlawfully possessing, with intent to defraud,' 531 credit card
numbers and account information.

The government seeks the forfeiture of more than $53,200 in proceeds
from the crimes, as well as computer equipment used in the crime,
reports The Wichita Eagle.

The crimes are alleged to have occurred in November 2003 and January
2005, in Sedgwick County.

If convicted, Decker faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal
prison and fines of up to $500,000.

Copyright 2006 The Wichita Eagle

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From:Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Suspects Arrested in Global Child Porn Raid
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 11:50:45 -0500


Police in 12 European Union countries and the United States searched
more than 150 houses and arrested several people suspected of being
involved in child pornography, the European police agency said on
Wednesday.

The operation, codenamed "Baleno," is the result of a worldwide
investigation led by the Dutch National Police Agency, Europol said in
a statement.

The Dutch police provided initial intelligence to 76 countries related
to an Internet message board whose members' activities included
possession and distribution of child abuse material, the statement
said.

The network used sophisticated techniques to hide members' electronic
identities and to post encrypted content for a short period of time on
free Web services.

"Today's arrests and house searches are an important action against
those who either directly or indirectly are responsible for the sexual
exploitation of children," Europol Director Max-Peter Ratzel said in
the statement.

"The next step in the investigation will be to try to prove the link
between the illegal content and the active abuse."

Europol did not say how many people were arrested nor in which
countries.

Raids were carried out in Austria, Belgium, Estonia, France, Hungary,
Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and
Sweden, it said.

The investigation in the United States was led by the FBI.

In June last year, police in 13 European countries raided 150
locations in another child pornography crackdown, seizing computers,
videos and other material and made some arrests.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-dgest.org>
Subject: NY Man to Settle in Washington's First Spyware Case
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 11:55:58 -0500


 From Spam Daily News
New York man to settle in Washington's first spyware case

Gary T. Preston, of Jamaica, N.Y., will pay $7,200 in legal costs and
attorneys' fees, and the cost of the government's investigation and
prosecution. Investigators allege that Preston permitted Secure
Computer's Web domains to be registered in his name and provided his
credit card to make company purchases.

The settlement does not include any admission or finding of
wrongdoing, but prohibits Preston from assisting any person or
organization in disguising its identity from the public or law
enforcement.

"While his activities did not directly violate Washington's spyware
act, they made it much more difficult to identify the real seller of
Spyware Cleaner," Washington State Attorney General Rob McKenna said.

Preston is the second defendant to settle in the Attorney General's
case against Secure Computer, based in White Plains, N.Y., and
associates in the United States and India.

Filed in January in U.S. District Court in Seattle, the lawsuit is the
office's first under the state's 2005 Computer Spyware Act and follows
a five-month investigation by the Attorney General's Consumer
Protection High-Tech Unit.

The suit alleges that Secure Computer has marketed and sold Spyware
Cleaner since at least 2004 through pop-up ads, spam e-mails, and
deceptive hyperlink ads that offer a "free scan."

The state's investigation found that this scan always detected spyware
on a user's computer, even if none existed. The investigation also
showed that the full version of Spyware Cleaner, available only by
purchase, failed to detect spyware on a deliberately infected computer
and erased the Hosts file, rendering the computer vulnerable to
potential attacks from unwanted programs.

"Software programs such as those used to sell Spyware Cleaner are
known as scareware because their intent is to cause anxiety," McKenna
said.  "That sort of activity is deceptive and illegal under
Washington's spyware law."

Burke and Preston were both named as defendants in the suit. In
addition, three other individuals were charged in connection with
advertising Spyware Cleaner: Zhijian Chen, of Portland, Ore.; Seth
Traub, of Portsmouth, N.H., and Manoj Kumar, of Maharashtra, India.

The state reached a settlement with Chen in April. He will pay nearly
$84,000 in fines and consumer restitution and the government's
expenses for promoting Spyware Cleaner through Net Send messages sent
to personal computers throughout the United States. The messages
simulated system warnings. By agreeing to the settlement, Chen admits
violating Washington's Computer Spyware Act and Consumer Protection
Act.


NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 14:11:53 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Verizon May Sell Landlines in Seven States


USTelecom dailyLead
May 10, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBAYfDtutebToZGSzo

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Verizon may sell landlines in seven states
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Ericsson ramps up IMS push
* Cable operators could bid on wireless spectrum
* Talk of Vodafone-Vivendi deal resurfaces
* Cisco, Cablevision report earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* We're not Cable - Differentiating Telco IPTV
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* TiVo to offer video from Internet through Brightcove deal
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Verizon wins another video franchise in New York
* Cablevision asks FCC to end price controls in N.Y. town
* FCC begins spectrum auction for in-flight broadband networks
* Verizon's Tauke says telecom bill should be simplified
* Telecoms don't need local franchise deals, Oklahoma AG says

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dBAYfDtutebToZGSzo

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 22:06:23 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.175.7@telecom-digest.org>, <mike7411@gmail.com>
wrote:

> If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
> to see?

authoritative answer:  "It depends."

On a WHOLE lot of things you didn't bother to mention.

2-wire vs 4-wire.  (i.e. dialup vs. lease-line.)

FDX or HDX  (two modems talking *simultaneously* to each other, or *one*
             talking while the other only 'listens').

Modulation methodology (e.g. FSK, QAM, PEP, PFSK, etc.)

Encoding.

Modulation 'protocol' (e.g. Bell 202T, Bell 208A, V.42bis, V90, etc.)

Data rate.

And the *actual*data* being transmitted at the time.

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

From: laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal
Date: 10 May 2006 15:07:54 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


mike7...@gmail.com wrote:

> If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
> to see?

> It just looks like a lump in the frequency domain, but I'm not sure I
> did it right.

Old, slow (< 9600 bps) modems used relatively simple FSK and PSK
modulation. The classic Bell 212A (long the standard 1200 bps dialup
modem), for example, used 4-ary differential PSK.

New modems use trellis-coded modulation with multi-dimensional signal
constellations. Analyzing them is not trivial (graduate-level signal
processing). Decoding them isn't either.

Exactly what are you trying to accomplish?


Laura Halliday VE7LDH     "Que les nuages soient notre
Grid: CN89mg                    pied a terre..."
ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W       - Hospital/Shafte

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

From: r.e.d. <red-nospam-99@mindspring.com>
Subject: Re: Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 16:29:36 GMT
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net


It's been a long time since I've looked at this, but I think the
capability you want is supposed to be addressed by the ISDN
"Redirecting Number" Information Element.

Easier said than done.  I have an August 1996 copy of AT&T Technical
Reference 41459, the ISDN Primary Rate Interface (PRI) Specification.
I don't know if it's been changed since then, but In Appendix 1,
Service Specific Capabilities it says:

1.5  Existing Capabilities Description
1.5.1  Call Processing
1.5.1.1  Number Digits
The number digits supported are as specified in the Overview, with the
following exceptions: The description about the use of the Called
party subaddress, Calling party subaddress, Redirecting number, and
Connected number information elements is not applicable since these
information elements are not supported.

As to the main body of 41459, there are scattered references
throughout it to the Redirecting Number IE.  Its applicability to the
cellular network I really don't know.  VoIP people probably can speak
to this as well.

Some 41459 quotes:

PART III - Layer 3 Implementation
3.6.6.7  Redirecting Number

The purpose of the Redirecting number information element is to
identify the number from which a call diversion or transfer was
invoked.(footnote 3) This information element may not be interpreted
by the network.  Hence, the network may only need to recognize the
information element identifier.  The maximum length of this
information element is 20 octets.

(footnote 3.) If Redirecting Number is user generated, then it is
transported as MA UUI and will not be interpreted by the network.  If
it is network generated, then it is not transported as MA UUI and will
be interpreted by the network.

Note 3: At the redirecting user-network interface, the presentation
indicator is used for indicating the intention of the redirecting user
for the presentation of the redirecting number to the called user.
This may also be requested on a subscription basis.  If octet 3a is
omitted, and the network does not support subscription information for
the redirecting number information restriction, the value "00 -
presentation allowed" is assumed.

Under 3.9.1.3  Message Associated User-to-User Signaling (MA-UUI)

In addition to the User-user information element, the network may
treat the following information elements as user data information
elements when present in the appropriate messages (listed with their
MA UUI length restrictions):

- Called party subaddress (3-23 octets),
- Calling party subaddress (3-23 octets),
- High layer compatibility (3-5 octets),
- Low layer compatibility (3-16 octets),

11
- Redirecting number (3-17 octets),
- Locking Shift to Codeset 6 and any Codeset 6 information elements (1-129
octets), and
- Locking Shift to Codeset 7 and any Codeset 7 information elements (1-129
octets).

This all may not help much, but maybe it gives you a starting point.

r.e.d.

Reply to "red99" (not  "rednospam99") @mindspring.com

Biren <biren.gandhi@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:telecom25.175.6@telecom-digest.org:

> I have a question about call forwarding and availability of "dialed
> number" (this could be applicable to both landline and GSM phones):

> Some user has set up his/her phone (with number A) to forward "all"
> incoming calls to a certain number B (using sequence *21*B# for GSM)
> and some caller C calls in A's number.

> Is there any way we can obtain "original dialed number" (i.e. A) at
> site B -- before deciding to respond to the forwared call? At site B,
> caller ID provides original caller (i.e. C) -- but can we correctly
> obtain "called id" by some means? Is it available at all?

> If number B is an 800 (or other toll-free) number with ANI/DNIS
> service, can we get the originally dialed number?

> Thanks.

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories?
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 21:03:02 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.176.4@telecom-digest.org>, Frank Stearns
<franks.pacifier.com@pacifier.net> wrote:

> Is there an online source that supports cross-searching regular and
> reverse directories based on partial information?

> I received an important job-offer vmail that was incomplete -- the
> caller left a first name and phone number, but the phone number
> consists of only the area code and prefix. The last four digits are
> missing.

If it was a job offer, it was *probably*not* from a "personal" phone,
but from the company offices.  Thus the 'personal name' first name is
not likely to be much help.

Depending on where you are, and the locale the call came from, your
public library *may* have a print-copy "City Directory", or "Criss-
Cross Directory" for the origin locale.

OR, if that call is _that_ important, you can go _buy_ a printed
reverse directory from Polk <www.city directory.com>, Hill-Donnelly
<www.hilldonn.com>, or Haines & Company <www.haines.com>

I'm not going to comment on the 'believability' of a call coming in
with a real "job *offer*", where you had absolutely _no_idea_ who was
calling -- didn't recognize the voice, the person's name, *or* the
locale of the call.

Note for future reference: the 'lost value' of not being able to
return this call would have paid for Caller-ID for _how_many_ months?

If you 'routinely' get unsolicited job offers by phone, adding Caller
ID to your service would seem to be 'cheap insurance'.  :)

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Assuming of course, the caller did not
have a block on his caller ID, or like happens to be the case quite
often with company switchboards, DID numbers and similar, the caller
ID was accurate and could be used.   PAT]

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 22:37:40 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.174.4@telecom-digest.org>, <mike7411@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Is there any sort of program that will analyze a WAV file of modem
> sounds?

Yes.  

At least 27,389 of them, in fact.  *grin* No, I'm not going to list
them for you.  :)

It all depends on *WHAT*YOU*WANT*TO*DO* with the file, which you
couldn't be bothered to specify.

Now, my crystal ball has been behaving somewhat erratically lately, so
what follows may not be at all relevant to what you "really" want to
do.

If you are hoping to be able to recover the 'bits' of the digital data
from a 'conversation' between two modems, this is
*virtually*impossible* for an 'standard' modem connection with an
analog-side speed above 2400 BPS.  For _most_ 1200-2400 baud, it is
merely 'very difficult' -- unless it is a half-duplex
controlled-carrier communication.  On the other hand, for the
'trivial' modulation systems commonly used at speeds below 500 baud,
it is fairly straihtforward to do.  simple differtial analysis of the
output of a pair of properly tuned high-Q 'narrorow-bandpass' filters
(sometimes called 'notch' filters in a different application) will
extract the digital data.

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

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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 11 May 2006 14:52:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 178

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Telework Could Help in Pandemic, But US Not Set Up For It (Maggie Fox)
    EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote (Huw Jones)
    Verizon Claims Net Neutrality Will Limit its Appeal (Grant Gross)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 11, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    NSA Has Compiled Records of Domestic Phone Calls (US Telecom DailyLead)
    FSK (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories? (Dave Garland)
    ICT Industry Leaders from Around the World Speak in Hong Kong (Lisa Reyes)

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: Maggie Fox <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Telework Could Help in Pandemic, But US Not Set Up For It
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 12:15:55 -0500


By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

If a flu pandemic kept 40 percent of the workforce away from the
office, telecommuting could help keep governments offices and many
businesses running -- but hardly anybody is properly set up to do
this, experts told the U.S. Congress on Thursday.

A report from the Government Accountability Office found that only
nine of 23 federal agencies had plans in place for key staff to work
from home, via computer, during a pandemic.

"One reason for the low levels of preparations reported is that FEMA
(the Federal Emergency Management Agency) has not provided specific
guidance on preparations needed to use telework during emergencies,"
the GAO report reads.

Only a few of the agencies documented that they had made the needed
preparations to effectively use telework during an event, GAO
Comptroller General David Walker told a hearing of the House
Government Reform Committee.

"None of the 23 agencies demonstrated that it could ensure adequate
technological capacity to allow personnel to telework during an
emergency," Walker said.

The H5N1 avian flu virus has spread rapidly in recent months, leaving
Asia and moving into birds across Europe and into Africa. It does not
yet easily infect people, but it has made 205 seriously ill and killed
115 of them.

A few mutations could turn this virus into a pandemic strain that
would pass easily from person to person and spread around the world in
weeks or months.

Experts agree that at the peak of the pandemic, 40 percent of workers
could be unable to leave home, either because they are ill, caring for
someone who is ill, caring for children because schools would be
closed, or simply afraid.

Many jobs can be done via computer, telephone or teleconference and
U.S.  agencies have been asked to be ready to do this.

YOU CAN'T JUST DIAL UP

But it requires planning, said Dr. Jeffrey Runge, acting under
secretary for science and technology at the Department of Homeland
Security.

"It is one thing to say we are all going to use the Internet for
work," Runge told the hearing. But there are fears that Internet
access could be overwhelmed if millions of workers all try to use
limited bandwidth at the same time.

"It turns out to be quite a more complex problem than saying, 'guys go
home and log on'," Runge said.

Linda Springer, Director of the Office of Personnel Management said
one agency needed to be put in charge of coordinating this, and said
rehearsing telework plans was essential.

told the hearing.

"Under an emergency, particularly a pandemic, you might have a lot
more people teleworking than normal. It is important to make sure you
have the technological capacity to do this, you have the software
licenses to do this. You don't know what you don't know."

Paul Kurtz, executive director of the Cyber Security Industry
Alliance, said no one had evaluated the total capacity of the
Internet's infrastructure.

"We simply don't know about what the impact would be if, for example,
even half the 60,000-plus employees of the Department of Health and
Human Services -- who help coordinate the entire national health care
system -- were to attempt to work off-site," Kurtz said.

And, he said, agencies may have been reluctant to allow employees to
telework up to now because it would save them money that would have to
be returned to the Treasury.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news reports, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It seems to me we should be looking for
and expecting a _huge_ pandemic of 'bird flu' here in the United
States sooner or later; what do you think?  PAT]

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

From: Huw Jones <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 12:18:26 -0500


By Huw Jones

The Internet governing body's decision to reject a new .xxx Internet
domain for porn sites is a clear case of ICANN and USA political
interference in the Web's governance, the European Commission said on
Thursday.

The board of the U.S.-based Internet Corporation of Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN) voted by 9 to 5 on Wednesday to dismiss the
application to register the domain name, which would be like the .com
or .net at the end of an Internet address.

Supporters said a .xxx domain would have made it easier to confine sex
sites or filter them out, but critics such as the Family Research
Council, a conservative U.S.-based religious group, complained it
would only legitimize the porn industry, and ICANN agreed with that.

The EU executive said the decision underscored the need to make ICANN
independent quickly, following unsuccessful demands last year by a
group of countries including the EU to make ICANN fully independent.

"We see here a first clear case of political interference by ICANN,"
said Martin Selmayr, spokesman for EU Information Society and Media
Commissioner, Viviane Reding.

He said correspondence between ICANN and the U.S. Department of
Commerce, highlighted the "interference."

ICANN, a California-based non-profit group, cannot make changes to the
domain-name system without the approval of the U.S. Commerce
Department, however they have done so in the past when it suited them.

"It's a worrying development that the U.S. administration has
interfered in this process," Selmayr said.

He urged further steps to complete the privatization of ICANN in the
course of this year to release it from the oversight of the Department
of Commerce.

ICANN said in a statement on Wednesday that its discussion had focused
on issues such as sponsorship, compliance issues and public policy
concerns.

The .xxx application was seen as a test case of ICANN's independence.

At a summit in Tunis last November, the United States fought off
attempts to wrest control of the domain-name system from the Commerce
Department.

The U.S. control of the domain-name system had become a sticking point
for countries like Iran and Brazil, who argued that it should be
managed by the United Nations or some other global body.

The United States argued that such a body would stifle innovation with
red tape.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Grant Gross <idg@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Verizon Claims Net Neutrality Will Limit its Appeal 
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 18:39:18 -0500


Grant Gross, IDG News Service

WASHINGTON, D.C.-- Efforts in the U.S. Congress to prohibit broadband
providers from impairing or favoring some network traffic will "shut the
door" to new services, a Verizon Communications official said Tuesday.

Current congressional attempts to write a so-called Net neutrality
provision into law would stop broadband network operators from
offering VPNs (virtual private networks) to online gaming vendors
looking to improve connectivity or to hospitals launching home
health-monitoring services over IP (Internet Protocol), said Tom
Tauke, Verizon's executive vice president of public affairs, policy,
and communications.

Tauke's concerns that Verizon could no longer offer VPNs are
"ridiculous," said Art Brodsky, a spokesperson for Public Knowledge,
an online rights advocacy group.

"The point is that there has to be room for a company other than
Verizon's favored health-monitoring partner to offer the service as
well," Brodsky said in an e-mail.

Industry Response

Tauke's speech -- at a broadband policy summit sponsored by Pike &
Fischer, a research and publishing company -- was a focused rebuttal
to consumer groups and e-commerce firms calling for a Net neutrality
provision to be included in telecommunications reform legislation now
being debated in Congress.

Advocates for Net neutrality want lawmakers to prohibit large
broadband providers from blocking or impairing their customers' access
to competing Web sites or applications. Net neutrality advocates say a
law is necessary because recently deregulated broadband providers --
many of which have few competitors -- have also talked of charging
e-commerce companies new fees for top-priority network connections.

But Verizon's Tauke said most current Net neutrality proposals --
including one in a House of Representatives telecom reform bill that
Net neutrality advocates complain is too weak -- would limit broadband
providers from offering innovative services that need connectivity
guarantees. "The Internet, after all, is a network of networks," he
said. "It operates on a 'best efforts' basis, and therefore no carrier
is accountable for end-to-end management or quality of service." The
House bill would prohibit the U.S.  Federal Communications Commission
from creating new Net neutrality rules and would only allow the
organization to investigate blocking abuses after the fact.

The Net neutrality provision in a bill approved by the House Energy
and Commerce Committee last month says consumers are "entitled" to
broadband access and competition. Overzealous regulators could
interpret that language to mean broadband prices should be regulated,
Tauke said after his speech.

Background Instead of creating new government regulation of the
Internet, lawmakers should let the marketplace and consumers decide
what's needed, Tauke said. "If policy makers decide that all network
access must be the same -- that a carrier cannot differentiate or
discriminate -- we will be shutting the door on an array of new and
exciting services for consumers," he said.

Blocking access to Web content consumers want makes no sense, Tauke
added.  He compared a broadband provider blocking Web content to a
premium coffee shop replacing its coffee with an instant grocery-store
brand. "On paper, it makes them more money; in reality, it puts them
out of business," he said.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What are _your_ feelings on net neutrality?
How should this go, realistically?  PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 12:04:18 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Thursday, May 11, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 11, 2006
********************************

Moving from Billing Customization to Consolidation is Smart Business
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17902?11228

     Technological advancements (such as IP multimedia subsystems),
     industry mergers and acquisitions, more stringent government
     regulations and heightened customer expectations impact the
     billing environment as much as or more than any other aspect of
     the operator's business. And because it's the touch point to the
     customer and the cash...

Comstar Bids for Svyazinvest Stake in MGTS
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17901?11228

     The board of Svyazinvest is considering the latest offer from
     Comstar UTS for its stake in Moscow fixed-line unit MGTS. Comstar
     has offered 490 roubles (US$18.13) per share for Svyazinvest's
     28% holding, which amount to 23.3% of the total charter
     capital. Comstar currently owns a 63.7% stake in MGTS, equating
     to just over 53.0% of the...

Companies Weigh Bid on Wireless Licenses
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17897?11228

     NEW YORK -- Time Warner Inc.'s cable TV unit is considering a bid
     for cell-phone spectrum licenses together with three other cable
     companies and Sprint Nextel Corp.  The chief executive of Time
     Warner Cable, Glenn Britt, told an analyst conference Wednesday
     that the group will file an application with the Federal
     Communications...

European Telecoms Regulators Cool on EU Plans To Fix Roaming Prices
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17893?11228

     BRUSSELS, Belgium -- National telecoms regulators from the EU's
     25 member states said Thursday they opposed the European
     Commission's plans to slash the cost of using mobile phones
     abroad.  Fixing retail prices 'often has unexpected
     consequences,' the European Regulators Group said in a
     statement, saying it still wanted the...

AT&T Teams with MobiTV
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17888?11228

     AT&T is turning to MobiTV to power a television service that will
     be delivered over its Wi-Fi network. The television service will
     be accessible from the AT&T Wi-Fi portal, according to the
     companies.  The service is slated to launch this month at nearly
     7,000 AT&T-owned and operated Wi-Fi hot spots, including
     airports,...

Intelsat Closer To Panamsat Buyout
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17886?11228

     Intelsat Ltd. now says it expects its proposed $3.2 billion
     transaction to buy Panamsat to close in the second or third
     quarter of this year, thus creating what it is calling the
     largest fixed satellite services (FSS) operator in the world
     (Satellite News, April 26).  In its quarterly financial report
     for the three months ended March 31,...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 13:29:44 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Report: NSA Has Compiled Records of Domestic Phone Calls


USTelecom dailyLead
May 11, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dCksfDtutedddlALEg

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Report: NSA has compiled records of domestic phone calls
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Analyst: Telecoms on track to surpass cable in broadband
* BT's new service merges functions of mobile, desktop phones
* RIM gears up to launch BlackBerry in China
* Deutsche Telekom reports earnings
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* VoIP for Dummies
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Could power lines edge wireless networks?
* Wi-Fi use grows in the home
* Report: Wireless services for SMBs could be $18B market in '06
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* AT&T deal in Illinois likely to result in regulatory shift
* Analysis: Spectrum auction could shake up U.S. wireless market
* FCC's economist says a la carte would work fine

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dCksfDtutedddlALEg

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: FSK
Date: 10 May 2006 16:12:49 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is there any way to force my modem to use FSK?

I know there's an AT+MS= command, but I can't figure out the exact
format for my modem.

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: 10 May 2006 16:17:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I would like to recover the bits of the digital data from a
conversation between two modems.

Why do you think this is virtually impossible for a standard modem
connection with an analog-side speed above 2400 BPS?

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories?
Date: Wed, 10 May 2006 23:30:05 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when Frank Stearns
<franks.pacifier.com@pacifier.net> wrote:

> I received an important job-offer vmail that was incomplete -- the
> caller left a first name and phone number, but the phone number
> consists of only the area code and prefix. The last four digits are
> missing.

A reverse search is unlikely to find Mike at Fubar Inc. if all the info
you have is his first name and a partial phone number.  If you know the
name of the company, you can probably track him down by calling their
switchboard.

There's something a little odd about this.

Dave

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

From: Lisa Reyes <forums_@iec.org>
Subject: ICT Industry Leaders from Around the World Speak in Hong Kong
Date: THU, 11 MAY 2006 12:07:14 -0500
Reply-To: lreyes@iec.org


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Lisa Reyes
Phone: +1-312-559-3325
E-Mail: mailto:lreyes@iec.org

ICT Industry Leaders from Around the World Speak in Hong Kong for
IEC's Broadband World Forum Asia 2006

Service Provider Executives Discuss Carrier Progress toward the
Converged Broadband Network in an Exclusive Plenary Panel this 16 May

CHICAGO 11 May, 2006 As Asia leads the world in broadband penetration
and innovative services, the IEC takes the Broadband World Forum Asia
2006 to Hong Kong from 15-18 May and hosts ICT executives from
around the world to discuss the latest leading-edge developments.

The Tuesday Plenary Panel, Carrier Progress toward the Converged
Broadband Network, features Chairperson Paul Berriman, head of
Strategic Market Development at PCCW; Chris Bilton, BT vice president
of Networks & ICT and BT Group chief technology officer; Thami
Msimango, chief technology officer of Telkom South Africa; and
Telefonica's Antonio Shcuh, director of Special Projects.

IEC President John Janowiak stated, "We're excited to host these key
players in one forum so they can share their latest understanding of
broadband advancements on a carrier scale."

Bilton commented, "The Broadband World Forum in Hong Kong is one of
the key industry events of the year. The panel discussion is a
particularly interesting session. It will discuss progress to date
from a selection of leading network operators from around the world on
the deployment of NGNs, how they are meeting the challenges of meeting
customer requirements in an increasingly mobile- and service-oriented
world, the architecture and key technologies that underpin some of
today’s leading NGNs, and some of the key challenges and issues
around NGN deployment based on their experiences at the leading edge
of NGN deployment."

Bilton continued, "Attendees at this session should gain a good
understanding of the common and specific challenges that network
operators face from different regions around the world, how these have
driven their approaches to NGN deployment, updates on their progress
in deploying NGNs, and how they are working with regulators, partners,
and customers to maximize the benefits of NGN deployment."

Msimango also expressed, "Broadband technology is a key economic
enabler for both developing and developed nations. It is particularly
imperative for the developing world to sensitize their communities to
the vistas that broadband technology opens for them and how it can
enhance the lives of even ordinary people. It is within this framework
that my address will focus on a global view of how broadband is
deployed in both the developing and developed worlds."

Finally, Schuh added, "Telefonica will be sharing our insight on the
benefits of an hybrid approach to TV. We feel that while IPTV is an
amazing product that brings terrific benefits to customer's life,
technical requirements and economics may hinder deployment in the near
term. After analyzing our markets and other operators' experiences, we
developed an approach combining IPTV and DTH. This, together with
geomarketing and customer segmentation, should enable us to access a
broader base of customers and adapt to specific segment needs while
keeping critical time-to-market and ROI constraints. In our
presentation, we will discuss the main ideas behind this approach and
present initial findings from our joint launch of audio-visual
services."

Schuh concluded, "This is a great moment for the broadband industry: a
host of new technologies are becoming economically viable, and
customers are increasingly more sophisticated and interested."

The Broadband World Forum Asia brings together technology leaders from
different parts of the globe to compare and exchange telecommunication
developments and ideas. ICT professionals will learn firsthand the
various broadband advancements in the Asia-Pacific region.

Visit www.iec.org/events/2006/bbwf_asia for complete information or
contact Lisa Ann Reyes at +1-312-559-3325 or mailto:lreyes@iec.org.

###

ABOUT THE BROADBAND WORLD FORUM ASIA 2006

With KT as the official host sponsor, the IEC's Broadband World Forum
Asia premiered in 2004 in Seoul, South Korea, drawing more than 1,500
industry professionals to register. The show continued with last
year's Broadband World Forum Asia 2005, held in Yokohama, Japan, with
NTT as the official host sponsor. Increasing registration numbers by
more than 100 percent, the show drew more than 3,000 industry
professionals to register, included more than 150 presentations, and
presented more than 120 industry experts as speakers. This year, the
Broadband World Forum Asia 2006 team and official host sponsor, PCCW,
will host numerous industry-leading companies to exhibit and expect
approximately 3,500 people to attend. For complete information, visit
http://www.iec.org/events/2006/bbwf_asia.

The IPTV Global ComForum also premieres at this year's Broadband World
Forum Asia 2006 as a co-located event that will address issues such as
content licensing, market realities, managing broadband services over
an IP/MPLS core, security environments, digital rights management,
personalization, interactivity for the end user, and more. For
complete information, visit http://www.iec.org/events/2006/iptv.

ABOUT THE IEC

A nonprofit organization, the IEC is dedicated to catalyzing
technology and business progress worldwide in a range of
high-technology industries and their university communities. Since
1944, the IEC has provided high-quality educational opportunities for
industry professionals, academics, and students.

In conjunction with industry-leading companies, the IEC has developed
an extensive, free, on-line educational program. The IEC conducts
industry-university programs that have substantial impact on
curricula. It also conducts research and develops publications,
conferences, and technological exhibits that address major
opportunities and challenges of the information age.

More than 70 leading high-technology universities are IEC affiliates,
and the IEC handles the affairs of the Electrical and Computer
Engineering Department Heads Association and Eta Kappa Nu, the honor
society for electrical and computer engineers. The IEC also manages
the activities of the Enterprise Communications Consortium. Please
visit http://www.iec.org.

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #178
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri May 12 19:16:48 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Fri, 12 May 2006 19:20:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 179

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Cellular-News: Friday 12th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Storm of Controversy Brews Over NSA's Surveillance (USTelecom dailyLead)
    The Front Lines - May 11, 2006 (Jonathan Marashlian)
    Apple Patent Filing Hints at Mobile Phone (Monty Solomon)
    Plantronics M60 Feedback (Danglerb)
    The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote (Linc Madison)
    Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote (Mark Crispin)
    Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote (Brian Inglis)
    Re: FSK (Laura Halliday)
    Re: FSK (Geoffrey Welsh)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (DLR)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (John L)
    Re: VoIP Quality (Scott Dorsey)
    Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal (Scott Dorsey)
    Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories? (Frank Stearns)
    Re: Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information (Mr Joseph Singer)
    Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft (Vientus)

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,
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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.  

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Friday 12th May 2006
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 08:57:48 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]


DoCoMo, Microsoft To Form 3G Mobile Music Service
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17339.php

NTT DoCoMo and Microsoft said Thursday that they will team up to
provide mobile music services with DoCoMo's 3G handsets. ...

[[ Financial ]]

Moviles 1Q Net Profit +3.5% As LatAm Drives Operations
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17338.php

Spanish wireless operator Telefonica Moviles, Thursday said
first-quarter net profit rose 3.5%, with solid growth in Latin America
offsetting some weakness in its domestic operations. ...

Comcel to emit unknown amount of debt
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17340.php

Colombian mobile provider Comcel is planning to issue bonds and
securities, local paper Portafolio reported. ...

Deutsche Telekom Profit Rises 10% On Mobile, Asset Sale
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17346.php

Deutsche Telekom, Europe's largest phone company, on Thursday said
quarterly profit rose 9.7% on strong growth at its U.S. wireless unit
and an arbitrage payment from Celcom Malaysia. ...

PRESS: Telenor agrees to get cash, equity in Kyivstar deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17348.php

Norwegian telecommunication company Telenor has agreed to accept both
cash and equity for its stake in Ukraine's largest mobile operator
Kyivstar from Russia?s second largest mobile operator VimpelCom,
VimpelCom's shareholder Altimo and Kjell Morten ...

Russia's VimpelCom completes merger of StavTeleSot
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17350.php

Russia's second largest mobile operator VimpelCom has completed the
merger of its subsidiary in the Stavropol Region, StavTeleSot, with
its parent company, VimpelCom said Thursday. ...

Craig McCaw's Clearwire Files $400 Million IPO
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17351.php

Wi-Max  services firm  Clearwire,  led by  cellular trailblazer  Craig
McCaw, on Thursday  filed to raise up to US$400  million in an initial
public offering. ...

O2 End March User Base 32.79 Million, +16% Or 699,000 On Year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17354.php

O2 Chairman & Chief Executive, Peter Erskine, said Friday that during
the first quarter "The strong momentum in all O2's businesses has been
maintained within the Telefonica Group. Across O2, now including the
Czech Republic, we added 699,000 mobile ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Russia's DIXIS buys Mobile retailer in Southern Federal District
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17353.php

Russian consumer electronics retailer DIXIS has bought Mobile cellular
handset retailer, which operates in the Southern Federal District,
DIXIS said in a press release Thursday. ...

[[ Legal ]]

RIM Says US Appeal Court Rules In Its Favor In InPro Suit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17352.php

Research In Motion said the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit on Thursday affirmed the finding of non-infringement of
U.S. Patent No. 6,523,079, which is held by InPro II Licensing,
S.a.r.l. ...

[[ Messaging ]]

RIM Announces Plans To Launch BlackBerry Service In China
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17344.php

Research In Motion (RIMM) Thursday said it will launch BlackBerry
service in China through China Mobile Communications Co. ...

[[ MVNO ]]

T-Mobile Executive Sees Increased Competition In UK Market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17345.php

The head of Deutsche Telekom's mobile arm in the UK Thursday predicted
increased competition in the market as more 'virtual' operators
launch. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Siemens Gets Wireless Technology Order From T-Mobile
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17347.php

Siemens said Thursday it has received an order from T-Mobile
International unit to expand its third-generation wireless technology
or W-CDMA networks in Germany and Austria. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

AMX, TEM negotiate new mobile concessions
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17341.php

Regional mobile groups America Movil and Telefonica Moviles are
preparing to negotiate new concessions in Ecuador, where their current
contracts expire this year, news service Notimex reported. ...

Govt to change telecoms regulations, but "no nationalization"
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17342.php

Bolivia's government has announced plans to introduce a new regulatory
framework for the telecommunications sector, but does not plan to
nationalize any of the sector's companies, local daily El Diario
reported. ...

Committee approves bill for operators to inform users' balance
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17343.php

Brazil's congressional consumer protection committee has approved a
bill that would force mobile operators to keep prepaid users informed
of their account balance, according to a lower house bulletin. ...

European Regulators Come Out Against EU Roaming Plan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17349.php

European telecommunications regulators Thursday criticized a European
Commission proposal to slash mobile phone roaming charges, in the
latest sign of growing opposition to the plan. ...

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

Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 13:49:38 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead  <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Storm of Controversy Brews Over NSA's Surveillance


USTelecom dailyLead
May 12, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dCwEfDtutedTmJmGTJ

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Storm of controversy brews over NSA's surveillance program
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Clearwire files for IPO
* BellSouth, Samsung team up
* Cisco taps a new leader for Linksys
* O2 considers fixed-line play
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Infineon tests 65 nm chip
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Business VoIP penetration expected to double by 2010
* Skype expands lanuage options with interpreting service
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* DOJ takes telecoms' side on franchising
* Connecticut AG to oppose franchise plan
* Philly greenlights Wi-Fi plan
* European regulators oppose EU's plan to cut roaming fees

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dCwEfDtutedTmJmGTJ

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

Reply-To: <jsm@thlglaw.com>
From: Jonathan Marashlian <jsm@thlglaw.com>
Subject: The Front Lines - May 11, 2006
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 15:37:08 -0400
Organization: The Helein Law Group


http://www.thefrontlines-hlg.com/ The FRONT LINES
Sponsored by The Helein Law Group, P.C. http://www.thlglaw.com/

Advancing The Cause of Competition in the Telecommunications Industry

FCC ADOPTS SECOND REPORT & ORDER CLARIFYING CALEA OBLIGATIONS OF CERTAIN
IP-BASED SERVICE PROVIDERS

On May 3, 2006, the FCC adopted a Second Report and Order and
Memorandum Opinion and Order (Second Order) on implementation of the
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA).  The
primary goal of the Order is to ensure that Law Enforcement Agencies
(LEAs) have all of the resources that CALEA authorizes to combat
crime and support homeland security, particularly with regard to
facilities-based broadband Internet access providers and
interconnected voice over Internet protocol (VOIP) providers.

The FCC's CALEA proceedings were initiated by a Joint Petition filed
by the Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and
Drug Enforcement Administration in March 2004.  The First Report and
Order concluded that facilities-based broadband Internet access and
interconnected VOIP providers were considered telecommunications
carriers=94 and, hence, are subject to CALEA.  The First Report is
currently the subject of appeal pending before the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, American
Council on Education v. FCC.  Recently, the case was argued before
the court and reports are that the panel of judges was highly critical
of the FCC's decision, with one Judge calling the FCC attorney's
argument in support of CALEA extension to Internet access providers,
gobbledygook.

Nevertheless, the Second Order affirms that the CALEA compliance
deadline for facilities-based broadband Internet access and
interconnected VoIP services will be May 14, 2007, as established by
the First Report and Order.

The Second Order clarifies that this May 14, 2007 compliance date will
apply to all facilities-based broadband Internet access and
interconnected VoIP providers.  By applying the same compliance date
to all providers the FCC hopes to eliminate confusion about the
applicability of the deadline, avoid any skewing effect on
competition, and prevent migration of criminal activity onto networks
with delayed compliance dates.

The FCC also clarified that, absent the filing of a petition, it will
not intervene in the ongoing process among telecommunications
standards-setting bodies, LEAs and other interested persons, to
develop assistance capability standards.

The FCC clarified that providers are given the option of using Trusted
Third Parties (TTPs) to assist in meeting their CALEA obligations.
TTPs are available to provide a variety of services for CALEA
compliance, including processing requests for intercepts, conducting
electronic surveillance, and delivering relevant information to LEAs.
The Second Order makes clear however that, if a provider chooses to
use a TTP, the provider remains responsible for ensuring the timely
delivery of call-identifying information and call content information
to a LEA and for protecting subscriber privacy, as required by CALEA.

The Second Order concludes that carriers are responsible for CALEA
development and implementation costs for post-January 1, 1995
equipment and facilities, and rejected imposing a national surcharge
to recover CALEA costs.

And, with regard to enforcement of its rulings, the FCC announced it
would take separate enforcement action under section 229(a) of the
Communications Act against providers that fail to comply with CALEA.

Finally, the Second Order requires all carriers providing
facilities-based broadband Internet access and interconnected VoIP
service to submit interim reports to the Commission to ensure that
they will be CALEA-compliant by May 14, 2007.  All facilities-based
broadband Internet access and interconnected VoIP providers to whom
CALEA obligations were applied in the First Report and Order are to
come into compliance with the system security requirements in the
Commission's rules within 90 days of the effective date of the Second
Order.

However, given the skepticism shown by the D.C. Circuit Court during
oral arguments of the American Council on Education v. FCC appeal,
there is the potential for a delay to 90-day compliance deadline.
This rapidly developing area of concern warrants increased attention
on the part of allentities subject to CALEA requirements.

WASHINGTON UTILITIES AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION (WUTC) TO IMPLEMENT
NEW STATE LAW ELIMINATING USE OF PRICE LISTS FOR COMPETITIVE SERVICES

On June 8, 2006, a new law takes effect in the state of Washington
which eliminates the use of price lists for competitively classified
telecommunications services.

The new law contemplates that instead of using Price Lists filed with
the WUTC, companies will communicate directly with their customers
through written contracts or customer service agreements.  All
telecommunications carriers who currently have affected Price Lists on
file shall be required to withdraw them and provide their customers
with information about ongoing rates, terms and conditions.

The new law does not, however, affect tariffs or regulatory fees and
carriers are still required to work with WUTC to resolve consumer
complaints.

WUTC will accept new price list filings until June 7, 2006.  After
that, new price list filings will not be accepted and the WUTC will
begin accepting notices of Price List withdrawals.  By June 30, 2007,
affected carriers must either withdraw existing Price Lists or
petition for a one-year extension.

If you have any questions about the new law or procedures being
implemented by WUTC, please contact your regulatory counsel.  If you
have none or seek guidance with respect to your obligations, please
contact Jonathan S.  Marashlian at jsm@thlglaw.com or 703-714-1300.

CONNECTICUT PROPOSES PER LINE ASSESSMENTS TO SUPPORT STATEWIDE 911
EMERGENCY SERVICES

On May 3, 2006, the Connecticut Department of Public Utility Control
released a Draft Decision in its annual assessment proceeding to fund
development and administration of the state=92s enhanced 911 program.
In accordance with Conn. Agencies Regs. =A728-24-10(a), the Draft
Decision proposes that on and after June 1, 2006, each telephone and
telecommunications company providing local telephone service
(including ILECs and CLECs) and each Commercial Mobile Radio Service
(CMRS) provider (including CMRS resellers) shall assess a fee against
each of its subscribers based on the following multi-line assessment
schedule:

Wireless Telephone Numbers/ Local Access Lines
Per-Line Assessment

1
$0.37

2
$0.28

3
$0.25

4 or 5
$0.22

6-10
$0.19

11-25
$0.15

26-50
$0.12

51-99
$0.09

100+
$0.07

Furthermore, the Draft Decision proposes that, no later than September
30, 2006 and quarterly thereafter, all local and CMRS companies
provide reports to the Department regarding the quarterly payments
made to the state's Enhanced 911 Fund.

The Department expects to render a final decision on this matter on
May 24, 2006.

The Front Lines is a free publication of The Helein Law Group, P.C.,
providing clients and interested parties with valuable information,
news,
and updates regarding regulatory and legal developments primarily
impacting
companies engaged in the competitive telecommunications industry.

The Front Lines does not purport to offer legal advice nor does it
establish a lawyer-client relationship with the reader. If you have
questions about a particular article, general concerns, or wish to
seek legal counsel regarding a specific regulatory or legal matter
affecting your company, please contact our firm at 703-714-1313 or
visit our website:

 http://www.thlglaw.com/ www.THLGlaw.com

The Helein Law Group, P.C.
8180 Greensboro Drive, Suite 700
McLean, Virginia 22102

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

Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 14:02:08 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Apple patent filing hints at mobile phone


Apple patent filing hints at mobile phone
By Jessie Seyfer
Mercury News

The smoldering rumor that Apple could someday unveil a mobile phone
just got doused with gasoline.

On Thursday, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office made public a
December 2004 patent application by Apple describing a hypothetical
wireless mobile device, as well as how a person could use such a
device to mark media items -- video, ringtones, graphics or video --
for later download.

An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment on the filing. But at least
one analyst believes it's a clear indication that an Apple-branded
phone is not a question of if, but when.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/14513108.htm

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

From: Danglerb <mikefordz@gmail.com>
Subject: Plantronics M60 feedback
Date: 11 May 2006 12:38:40 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


My wife speaks softly, and doesn't like any headset that "clamps" on
your head, just ear dongle things, so finding a good headset is taking
some time. She likes the mini phone devices for dialing, and we have a
Spectra something that seems fine, but when we tried a Plantronics M60
headset she kept getting feedback from the microphone.

I bought the M60 cheap on ebay, and it was in a ziplock (looked like
typical bulk oem packing to me with a part number to match the M60 used
with a Samsung cell phone), so I am wondering if maybe its just a cheap
clone, or is this a general problem with the M60?

I ordered a Sennheiser PC120 to see if that works better.

Any suggestions on either a better miniphone or headset (eardongle
style)?

I have a few old Plantroics T10 dialers around, but not sure how I
would wire up an adapter for 2.5mm.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: 12 May 2006 12:45:13 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

In the railroad and roads newsgroups, there was a discussion on the
issue of the rights of photographers to take pictures of public works
vs. the need for security of those works against terrorists.  Some
facilities (highway toll roads, transit agencies) do not allow
photography from public safe locations which traditionally was a
absolute right.

I myself aren't sure.  I don't agree with either extremes--the govt
must have some limitations on citizen spying and we must preserve our
long existing rights, but the govt does need the power and ability to
spy on potential terrorists to protect us.

[public replies please].

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

Subject: Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 12:26:34 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.178.2@telecom-digest.org>, Huw Jones
<reuters@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> Supporters said a .xxx domain would have made it easier to confine
> sex sites or filter them out, but critics such as the Family Research
> Council, a conservative U.S.-based religious group, complained it
> would only legitimize the porn industry, and ICANN agreed with that.

I have to agree 100% with the EU on this one. The porn industry *IS*
legitimate -- it is a legal business, with thousands of properly
registered, tax-paying, law-abiding companies involved. If you don't
like pornography, then don't surf the porn sites -- but that's exactly
what the ".xxx" TLD was designed to facilitate.

Let's suppose that you're a parent and you don't want your kids to see
porn sites. You're never going to get the sex sites off the Internet
completely; that's beyond dreaming. Where there is demand, there will
be supply. As things stand now, you have to fiddle with web ratings and
content-blocking services, but they have difficulty distinguishing a
site about cervical cancer from a hardcore version of Girls Gone Wild.
With a .xxx TLD, at least those sites that choose to locate there could
be blocked by a single checkbox in your computer's preferences.

We should create .xxx (or .sex or .porn, or whatever you want to call
it), and provide legal incentives for sites to move there. For example,
it should be much more difficult to prosecute a ".xxx" site for
peddling porn to minors, since it would be so trivially easy for the
responsible adults to block the kids' access.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

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

From: Mark Crispin <mrc@CAC.Washington.EDU>
Subject: Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 13:14:31 -0700
Organization: University of Washington


On Thu, 11 May 2006, Huw Jones wrote:

> The Internet governing body's decision to reject a new .xxx Internet
> domain for porn sites is a clear case of ICANN and USA political
> interference in the Web's governance, the European Commission said on
> Thursday.

And if ICANN had permitted it, the EU would say that this is a clear
case of ICANN being in the pay of US interests (in this case,
pornographers) to the detriment of the rest of the network.

Opposition to .xxx wasn't just conservative religious groups; the IETF and 
a number of foreign governments also opposed it.

 -- Mark --

http://panda.com/mrc
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.

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

Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 07:20:42 GMT
From: Brian Inglis <Brian.Inglis@SystematicSW.Invalid>
Subject: Re: EU Slams ICANN Interference With Sex Site Vote
Reply-To: Brian.Inglis@SystematicSW.ab.ca
Organization: Systematic Software


On Thu, 11 May 2006 12:18:26 -0500 in comp.dcom.telecom, Huw Jones
<reuters@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> By Huw Jones

> The Internet governing body's decision to reject a new .xxx Internet
> domain for porn sites is a clear case of ICANN and USA political
> interference in the Web's governance, the European Commission said on
> Thursday.

> The .xxx application was seen as a test case of ICANN's independence.

> At a summit in Tunis last November, the United States fought off
> attempts to wrest control of the domain-name system from the Commerce
> Department.

> The U.S. control of the domain-name system had become a sticking point
> for countries like Iran and Brazil, who argued that it should be
> managed by the United Nations or some other global body.

> The United States argued that such a body would stifle innovation with
> red tape.

Drugs, pornography, and prostitution are all legal in various
jurisdictions.  This isn't stifling innovation with red tape?  Having
WIPO decide domain name disputes isn't red tape?  How about the effect
of the EU and/or the Arab League running alternate root servers?


Thanks. Take care, Brian Inglis
 	Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Brian.Inglis@CSi.com 	(Brian[dot]Inglis{at}SystematicSW[dot]ab[dot]ca)
    fake address		use address above to reply

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

From: laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: FSK
Date: 11 May 2006 13:23:47 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


mike7 ... @gmail.com

> Is there any way to force my modem to use FSK?

Yes. Make it connect at 300 baud so it uses the Bell 103 protocol and
modulation.

It's one thing to post all these questions, but several people
(including me) have asked just what you're trying to accomplish,
because you keep omitting crucial details. If you're not prepared to
meet people halfway, why should they lift a finger to help you?


Laura Halliday VE7LDH     "Que les nuages soient notre
Grid: CN89mg                    pied a terre..."
ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W       - Hospital/Shafte

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

From: Geoffrey Welsh <reply@newsgroup.please>
Subject: Re: FSK
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 17:02:28 -0400
Organization: UseNetServer.com


mike7411@gmail.com wrote:

> Is there any way to force my modem to use FSK?

Essentially, you need to configure it to operate in '300 bps' mode
(though you may be able to squeeze higher speeds out of it; in the BBS
days, we used run '300 bps' Bell 103J-compatible modems at 400 bps or
even higher, as long as both sides know it and the quality of the
conneciton and the modems is sufficient.)

> I know there's an AT+MS= command, but I can't figure out the exact
> format for my modem.

It varies from chipset to chipset.  Some modems (e.g. most USR modems
manufactured in the past 20 years or so) have online help, while other
information may be available on the web.


Geoffrey Welsh <Geoffrey [dot] Welsh [at] bigfoot [dot] com>
Never leave until tomorrow what can wait until next week. 

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 22:32:56 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.178.7@telecom-digest.org>, <mike7411@gmail.com>
wrote:

> I would like to recover the bits of the digital data from a
> conversation between two modems.

> Why do you think this is virtually impossible for a standard modem
> connection with an analog-side speed above 2400 BPS?

Because it _is_.   <grin>

Because I know how such things work.

Because you -- the eavesdropper -- cannot tell which parts of the
'hiss' belong to which end of the conversation.

Because *BOTH* ends use the _same_ frequencies. At the *same* time.

At either end, by "knowing" what _you_ are putting on the wire, you
can 'deduce' what the other end is doing, by 'cancelling' your signal
from what you 'hear' on the wire.

WITHOUT that 'insider' knowledge, your best bet is "Miss Cleo".

This is also why there is all that hissing going back and forth
_before_ the modems 'connect' -- they are each 'seeing' what the line
conditions look like, *without* 'near-end' interference, when the
far-end modem does 'known things' on the line.  *Then* they both start
talking, still saying 'known things', to verify that they can filter
out their own noise and recover what the far end is saying.
*ONLY*THEN* do they announce 'connect', and let "user" data flow
across the connection.

With _extremely_high-end_ equipment that has been precision calibrated
and the artifacts of gear identified and compensated for, *and* with a
non- trivial amount of testing with known data on the suspect phone
circuit, one _may_ be able to decode the bit-stream.

It is far simpler to play "man in the middle" by using a pair of your
own modems, and intercepting the call start-up.  one end (a) talks to
your 1st modem, "thinking" it is talking to the far end (b), wile your
2nd modem is talking to that far end, in it's place.  Now, you've got
the recovered bit-stream passing between your 1st and 2nd modems, in
decoded digital form, with the two halves of the conversation
separated.  reading _that_ is 'trivial', as they say.

of course, going _that_ way means that you run afoul of any number of
laws forbidding 'wiretapping', and/or interception of wire
communications, but you're not going to let a little thing like _that_
stop you, are you?  After all, you have the same legal issues with
taking a recording of the modem 'conversation' in the first place.
<grin>

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

Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 21:01:35 -0400
From: DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File


mike7411@gmail.com wrote:

> I would like to recover the bits of the digital data from a
> conversation between two modems.

> Why do you think this is virtually impossible for a standard modem
> connection with an analog-side speed above 2400 BPS?

Modems these days and for a long time have a limit of (I think) 2400
baud. This means they can only change the signal 2400 times a second
on a voice grade line. So to get the higher bit rates they have to
encode multiple things 2400 times a second. One way is the multiple
frequencies. The other is that the tones on each frequency are
shifted, twisted, etc ... in a way such that each frequency can
represent multiple bits at any one time. For all of this to work two
modems first go through a process where they test the line at each
frequency to determine to determine the attenuation and distortion
imposed on by the circuit at each frequency so that these issues can
be factored into the real signal. Plus some frequencies will not be
used if the signal at that frequency doesn't meet some minimal
standards.

So to reconstruct the bit patterns you'd have to know the result of
the "training" plus have a high enough quality of recording to
reconstruct not just the frequencies but the actually phase
distortions and skews and run the result back through a DSP
process. If you have lots of time, signal processing experience, and a
very fast computer (or computers) you might do it. But the first issue
is the initial training in effect results in an encryption key that
you have to break before you can even start.

Now I'm sure that US Robotics and Rockwell have some programs that
might do this and maybe the DIA, CIA, and NSA but past that ???

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

From: johnl@iecc.com (John L)
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: 12 May 2006 01:31:36 GMT
Organization: I.E.C.C., Trumansburg NY USA


> I would like to recover the bits of the digital data from a
> conversation between two modems.

Hmmn.

> Why do you think this is virtually impossible for a standard modem
> connection with an analog-side speed above 2400 BPS?

Because each end sends data using the full spectrum available, and
uses echo cancelling to subtract off its own signal and recover the
signal from the other end.  If you don't already know what one end is
sending, you can't do that.

R's,

John

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: VoIP Quality
Date: 11 May 2006 14:37:53 -0400
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


In article <telecom25.173.8@telecom-digest.org>, <mike7411@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Is there an automatic way of measuring VoIP quality?

Well, you can measure whether the signal "breaks up," that is to say
how often the system cannot meet realtime deadlines.

But most of the audible quality issues have to do with the perceptual
encoding system required, and sadly there is no automatic way of
measuring that. 

 --scott -- "C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: Spectrum of a Modem Signal
Date: 11 May 2006 14:52:59 -0400
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


In article <telecom25.175.7@telecom-digest.org>, <mike7411@gmail.com>
wrote:

> If I plot the spectrum of a short modem signal, what should I expect
> to see?

Depends on the modem.

> It just looks like a lump in the frequency domain, but I'm not sure I
> did it right.

If you make the bins small enough, you should see every individual carrier.

With a Bell 103 modem, there will be one carrier.  With a modern 56k
modem there will be dozens of them all across the band.

Scott
"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

From: Frank Stearns <franks.pacifier.com@pacifier.net>
Subject: Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories?
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 18:58:38 -0000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com> writes:

> It was a dark and stormy night when Frank Stearns
> <franks.pacifier.com@pacifier.net> wrote:

>> I received an important job-offer vmail that was incomplete -- the
>> caller left a first name and phone number, but the phone number
>> consists of only the area code and prefix. The last four digits are
>> missing.

> A reverse search is unlikely to find Mike at Fubar Inc. if all the info
> you have is his first name and a partial phone number.  If you know the
> name of the company, you can probably track him down by calling their
> switchboard.

> There's something a little odd about this.

Odd in what way? The gentlemen did not leave a last name or a company name 
(sure wish he had!); the last four digits were cut off from the message. 
As noted, I did determine with telco help that the prefix I have was not 
for a PBX or cell.

If it were possible to do what is a *trivial* query in any database where 
one has partial match and selective field ability, I'd probably have 
50-100 returns on such a query, and would be willing to call each one and 
politely ask if they'd called me.

So, again, isn't there some way to search a telephone DB in this way, or 
perhaps a site that would permit 9,999 reverse dir queries via a 
looped script?

Thanks in advance,

Frank Stearns

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

Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 16:40:45 PDT
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Call Forwarding and "Dialed Number" Information


Biren <biren.gandhi@gmail.com> 9 May 2006 08:48:33 -0700 wrote:

> I have a question about call forwarding and availability of "dialed
> number" (this could be applicable to both landline and GSM phones):

> Some user has set up his/her phone (with number A) to forward "all"
> incoming calls to a certain number B (using sequence *21*B# for GSM)
> and some caller C calls in A's number.

> Is there any way we can obtain "original dialed number" (i.e. A) at
> site B -- before deciding to respond to the forwared call? At site B,
> caller ID provides original caller (i.e. C) -- but can we correctly
> obtain "called id" by some means? Is it available at all?

> If number B is an 800 (or other toll-free) number with ANI/DNIS
> service, can we get the originally dialed number?>>

As they say "it depends."  Normally in forwarding/diverting situations
the original number will show in the call display of the end party and
not the number that it's being forwarded/diverted from.  If the number
it's being forwarded/diverted is a toll-free number it may "destroy"
forwarding or it may keep it intact.  When I use my "Kall8"
http://www.kall8.com number to forward to another number the
original number is presented to the end party's caller ID display.  I
have an option with my toll-free number that I can have either the
"real" number presented or the toll-free number presented to the end
party's display.

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

From: Vientus <vientus@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: MySpace Hires Child Safety Expert From Microsoft
Date: 12 May 2006 11:22:57 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


masonboro_island@yahoo.com wrote:

> That's an interesting idea.  Wouldn't people just give fake numbers
> though?

If you gave a fake number you would not be able to complete the
sign-up. For example, when you sign up for myspace Phoneconfirm.com
calls your home phone number (based on your input) and an automated
voice reads a PIN number over the phone. You would then need to input
that correct PIN number into a field on the myspace profile sign-up
screen.  If you gave a fake phone number, obviously you won't get the
call

I went to the website but I'm not completely sure how it works.  When
 you sign up the site calls the number you provided?

Yes. If that phone number was associated with underage users,
harassing or sexual pradators etc ... it would be flagged and couldn't
be used for further sign-ups. Think of the process of having a
phoneconfirm on myspace as a bit like a library card -- phoneconfirm
is a basic identity process that helps serve to create a social
contract of accountability on myspace and other social networking
sites.  

>> I'm at least happy that social networking sites are
>> acknowledging the problem and that places like NCMEC are providing
>> services where people can report child exploitation.  

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Another site where child
>> exploitation is dealt with in an unusual -- almost vigilate way --
>> is http://perverted-justice.com PAT]

I think the "library card" identity confirmation process is a good
middle ground -- using a kind of "soft" identity confirmation system
like phoneconfirm on myspace -- that isn't as vigilante as perverted
justice, nor as much of a regulatory hand grenade as US Rep.
Fitzpatrick's bill, and isn't as mayhem producing as as the current
status quo.

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
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and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 13 May 2006 13:10:12 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 180

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Maxim Kniazkov)
    Quest Ignored NSA Request (Katherine Shrader)
    US Dismisses Concerns Over New Microsoft Browser (Peter Kaplan)
    DOJ Asks Court to Extend Microsoft Antitrust Order (Grant Gross)
    The Great Microsoft Blunder (John Dvorak)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (George Berger)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Dave Garland)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (George Mitchell)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Joshua Putnam)

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
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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: Maxim Kniazkov <afp@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 12:06:32 -0500


by Maxim Kniazkov

US President George W. Bush has moved to quell a firestorm over his
government's secret collection of telephone records of tens of
millions of private citizens, insisting they were all needed to
"target Al-Qaeda."

But the latest controversy has already spawned a major lawsuit against
Verizon, one of the telephone companies involved, and members of
Congress expressed unease over what they see as gradual erosion of
privacy rights.

The lawsuit, filed in New York on Friday, seeks from Verizon five
billion dollars in damages, alleging the company has broken the law by
agreeing to provide the National Security Agency with telephone
records of its clients.

The plaintiffs argue phone companies should not cooperate with the
NSA, which specializes in electronic espionage, without a proper court
warrant based on well-grounded "suspicion of terrorist activity or
other criminal activity."

But in his weekly radio address on Saturday, Bush rushed to assure the
public the secret program did not target innocent private citizens.

"It is important for Americans to understand that our activities
strictly target Al-Qaeda and its known affiliates," he said.

But he gave no answer to questions raised on Capitol Hill as to why a
program with a purported narrow target would need such a massive
database.

The existence of the program was first disclosed Thursday by USA Today
newspaper, which said the database compiled by the NSA following the
September 11, 2001 attacks contained phone records of tens of millions
of Americans provided by AT and T, Verizon and BellSouth.

Officials would not provide any details on how the records were used.

But former government security experts and media reports indicated its
genesis lay in US phone numbers found on Al-Qaeda suspects captured
overseas.

These numbers, the experts said, immediately become the focus of the
NSA's attention, with the circle of surveillance growing exponentially
as calls are made to or from the numbers in question.

Specially designed computer programs watch for patterns in these
contacts and analyze them to make sure no terrorist cell is operating
within the United States.

Bush said the intelligence activities he had authorized were "lawful"
and members of Congress from both sides of the aisle had been
adequately briefed.

"The privacy of all Americans is fiercely protected in all our
activities," he insisted. "The government does not listen to domestic
phone calls without court approval."

The new controversy follows charges the president may have broken the
law when he authorized the NSA in the wake of 9/11 to conduct wiretaps
of international phone calls made by Americans suspected of terrorist
ties without a requisite court warrant.

But if the wiretaps put the White House on the spot, the new
revelations could mean a world of legal and financial trouble for the
phone companies.

The lawsuit in New York was filed under the 1986 Stored Communications
Act, which expressly forbids the companies from turning over client
records to the government without a warrant.

The statute also gives consumers the right to sue for violations of
the act and allows claims of at least 1,000 dollars for each
violation.

"If you've got 50 million people, that's potentially 50 billion
dollars," said Peter Swire, a law professor at Ohio State University
and a former White House adviser on privacy issues.

The controversy could also complicated the confirmation process for
Air Force General Michael Hayden nominated on Monday to be the next
CIA director.

Republican Chuck Hagel, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
said Hayden, who headed the NSA when the surveillance programs were
put in place, had to answer many questions.

"He knows that hes not going to be confirmed without answering those
questions," Hagel warned.

Copyright 2006 Agence France Presse.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
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------------------------------

From: Katherine Shrader <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Quest Ignored NSA Request
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 18:35:33 -0500


By KATHERINE SHRADER, Associated Press Writer

Telecommunications giant Qwest refused to provide the government with
access to telephone records of its 15 million customers after deciding
the request violated privacy law, a lawyer for a former company
executive said Friday.  For a second day, the former National Security
Agency director defended the spy agency's activities.

In a written statement, the attorney for former Qwest CEO Joseph
Nacchio said the government approached the company in the fall of 2001
seeking access to the phone records of Qwest customers, with neither a
warrant nor approval from a special court established to handle
surveillance matters.

"Mr. Nacchio concluded that these requests violated the privacy
requirements of the Telecommunications Act," attorney Herbert J. Stern
said from his Newark, N.J., office.

The Bush administration is facing new questions about civil liberties
after the disclosure that the NSA collected information on millions of
Americans' everyday telephone calls.

On Friday, CIA director nominee Michael Hayden defended as lawful the
secret surveillance programs he oversaw as NSA head from 1999 to 2005,
but he declined to comment on the phone-calls database or specific
operations.

"It's been briefed to the appropriate members of Congress," Hayden
told reporters outside a Senate office. "The only purpose of the
agency's activities is to preserve the security and the liberty of the
American people. And I think we've done that."

Nacchio told Qwest officials to refuse the NSA requests, which kept
coming until Nacchio left the company in June 2002, his lawyer said.

In contrast, AT&T Corp., Verizon Communications Inc. and BellSouth
Corp.  complied with the request to turn over phone records shortly
after Sept. 11, 2001, USA Today first reported on Thursday.

Qwest, the No. 4 U.S. local phone company, serves customers in 14
Western states. Based in Denver, Qwest Communications International
Inc. has come under fire over criminal and ethical allegations. 
Nacchio himself is under federal indictment on insider-trading
charges.

In a statement, Verizon said press coverage has contained errors about
how the company handles customer information. "Verizon will provide
customer information to a government agency only where authorized by
law for appropriately defined and focused purposes," the company said.

Two New Jersey public interest lawyers sued Verizon on Friday for $5
billion, claiming the phone carrier violated privacy laws by turning
over customers' records. The lawsuit asks the court to stop Verizon
from supplying the information without a warrant or the subscriber's
consent.

Lawmakers have been pressing the Bush administration for information
about the NSA's database of telephone records in advance of hearings
reviewing Hayden's nomination to be CIA director, scheduled for next
Thursday.

The White House on Friday reiterated its support for Hayden and the
NSA's operations.

"We're 100 percent behind Michael Hayden," said press secretary Tony
Snow.  "There's no question about that, and confident that he is going
to comport himself well and answer all the questions and concerns that
members of the United States Senate may have in the process of
confirmation."

Snow added that questions on classified material may have to be
handled in closed sessions with select senators who are cleared for
access to that information.

Some senators were trying to separate the issue of Hayden's
confirmation from questions about White House decisions and the
surveillance programs.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he didn't yet know if
collection of the phone records was illegal.

Yet Reid said he has no "specific problems" with Hayden going into the
hearing process and said the Air Force general "has always proven to
be a person of intellect and a person of independence."

Republicans, including Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John
Warner of Virginia, have said Hayden was relying on the advice of top
government lawyers when the operations were initiated.

But Sen. Ron Wyden (news, bio, voting record), D-Ore., an Intelligence
Committee member, said he now questions Hayden's credibility, adding,
"The American people have got to know that when the person who heads
the CIA makes a statement that they are getting the full picture."

The NSA was using the data to analyze calling patterns to detect and
track suspected terrorist activity, according to information the White
House gave to Sen. Wayne Allard (news, bio, voting record),
R-Colo. "Telephone customers' names, addresses and other personal
information have not been handed over to NSA as part of this program,"
Allard said.

Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., said on PBS' "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer" that
"the president's program uses information collected from phone
companies" - the telephone number called and the caller's number. Bond
is a member of the select panel allowed access to all information on
another controversial Bush program, the warrantless surveillance
operations.

After meeting with Hayden on Friday, Sen. Chuck Hagel (news, bio,
voting record), R-Neb., said he had "absolute confidence" in the
general and that his Senate confirmation hearings should provide the
facts on the monitoring programs.

"He's going to have to explain what his role was. To start with, did
he put that program forward, whose idea was it, why was it started?"
Hagel said.

Sen. Susan Collins (news, bio, voting record), R-Maine, praised Hayden
as an excellent nominee. But the chairwoman of the Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs Committee said it was disconcerting "to have
information come out by drips and drabs, rather than the
administration making the case for programs I personally believe are
needed for our national security."

Associated Press writers Michael J. Sniffen and Elizabeth White contributed
to this report.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

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daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
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------------------------------

From: Peter Kaplan <reuters@telecom-digest.org>`
Subject: USA Dismisses Concerns Over New Microsoft Browser
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 18:37:12 -0500


By Peter Kaplan

U.S. antitrust authorities on Friday rejected concerns that a search
feature in the new version of Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer
browser would give the company an unfair advantage over Google Inc.

The Justice Department said it had investigated and found no basis for
concerns that a new search box included in the Internet Explorer 7
browser would give an unfair advantage to Microsoft's MSN search
service.

The department said the new Internet search box in Microsoft's browser
"respects users' and (computer makers') default choices." It said
government officials had "concluded their work on this matter."

The comments by the Justice Department were part of a report filed
with U.S.  District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, the judge overseeing
Microsoft's compliance with its landmark 2002 antitrust settlement
with the government.

Google, the world's most popular Web search provider, had expressed
concerns about the new Microsoft browser, according to a May 1 article
in the New York Times.

The article quoted a Google vice president saying the search box was
unfairly set to default to MSN's search service. "We don't think it's
right for Microsoft to just set the default to MSN. We believe users
should choose," Google's Marissa Mayer said.

Internet Explorer is the dominant browser on the Internet. Google
likened the new search box to the conduct that provoked the
government's earlier antitrust suit against Microsoft, according to
the Times article.

In the antitrust case, Microsoft was accused of using its Windows
operating system monopoly to crush the rival Netscape Internet
browser.

Representatives of Google were not immediately available for comment
on Friday.

Similar concerns have been expressed by the European Commission, which
has questioned the way Microsoft's upcoming new operating system,
known as Vista, may package Internet search functions.

In its filing, the Justice Department said it concluded the new search
box in Internet Explorer was not anticompetitive, even though it would
default to MSN in some instances.

It based that conclusion on the fact that the default could be easily
changed by computer users. On new PCs, the department said, computer
manufacturers can set the default to other search engines, including
Google or Yahoo Inc.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

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

From: Grant Gross <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: DOJ Asks Court to Extend Mixrosof Antitrust Order
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 12:17:02 -0500


Grant Gross, IDG News Service

WASHINGTON-- The U.S. Department of Justice asked a U.S. judge today
to extend parts of a Microsoft antitrust order for at least two years
because of the company's delays in supplying technical documentation
to licensees of its communications protocols.

Microsoft agreed with the DOJ's request to extend the order two years
beyond its scheduled expiration in November 2007, the company said in
a statement.  The company has also agreed to allow the DOJ and 17
state plaintiffs in the antitrust case to ask for an additional
three-year extension if they still have complaints about Microsoft
documentation.

The Justice Department is committed to "full and vigorous enforcement"
of the final judgment, J. Bruce McDonald, deputy assistant attorney
general in the DOJ's Antitrust Division, said in a statement. 
Companies that want to license the communications protocols will be
able to obtain compete and accurate documentation as a result of the
extension, he said.

Major Remaining Complaint

The state of the technical documentation, used by companies that
license the communications protocols in Microsoft's software, is one
of the major complaints remaining in the antitrust settlement approved
by Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly in November 2002. Kollar-Kotelly, of
the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, must approve an
extension of the settlement order.

Under the settlement, Microsoft was required to license the
communication protocols to other IT vendors interested in developing
server software that works with Microsoft's Windows operating system.

As part of the new agreement, Microsoft will change the way it has
produced technical documentation, now writing it as it develops
software, the company said Friday. The licensing of the protocols will
become part of Microsoft's "regular product development and business
processes," Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, said in a
statement.

Microsoft will also create a new interoperability lab in which
licensees can test and debug their protocols and obtain easy access to
on-site Microsoft engineering assistance.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

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http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: John Dvorak <pcmag@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: The Great Microsoft Blunder
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 12:19:22 -0500


John Dvorak - PC Magazine

I think it can now be safely said, in hindsight, that Microsoft's
entry into the browser business and its subsequent linking of the
browser into the Windows operating system looks to be the worst
decision-and perhaps the biggest, most costly gaffe-the company ever
made. I call it the Great Microsoft Blunder.

It looks like a whopper that keeps whacking the company. The most
recent bash came from the Eolas v. Microsoft patent suit over aspects
of the ActiveX usage in Internet Explorer. Microsoft lost and was
slapped with a $521 million settlement.

If the problem is not weird legal cases against the company, then it's
the incredible losses in productivity at the company from the
never-ending battle against spyware, viruses, and other security
problems. All the work that has to go into keeping the browser afloat
is time that could have been better spent on making Vista work as
first advertised.

All of Microsoft's Internet-era public-relations and legal problems
(in some way or another) stem from Internet Explorer. If you were to
put together a comprehensive profit-and-loss statement for IE, there
would be a zero in the profits column and billions in the losses
column-billions.

The joke of it is that Microsoft is still working on this dead
albatross and is apparently ready to roll out a new version, since
most of the smart money has been fleeing to Firefox or Opera. This
means new rounds of patches and lost money. Continue reading...

This fiasco and the great Microsoft Blunder began when Marc
Andreessen, then of Netscape, made some silly, off-handed remark about
how the browser would become the next platform for applications and
suggested, in so many words, that Microsoft would be
destroyed. Instead of the boys at Microsoft laughing out loud and then
ignoring this remark, they started scrambling around like ants on a
hot stove.

The next thing you know, Microsoft went Internet slaphappy. Besides
cobbling together a browser from any code it could license, it rolled
out all sorts of Internet magazines and various Internet-centric ideas
to the point where it was obvious to anyone watching that the company
itself was believing all the hype coming from outside.

The main piece of propaganda among the Internet-centric ideas was that
the personal computer is dead. "There'll be no computers in a few
short years, as everything will be embedded and become appliances,"
said all the experts.

This appliance malarkey comes and goes, but always goes. We still have
computers, we still need operating systems, and we still need
Microsoft Office. Yes, there are alternatives to everything, but the
gold standards for all these basics make most of the money, no matter
what anyone idealizes to the contrary.

But Microsoft buys the fear. It must have some of the lowest corporate
self-esteem for any dominant company in the history of modern
business. The company is like the panicky old woman wondering how she
lost a penny in her purse while giving exact change in the express
line at the grocery store.  Hey lady, you are holding things up!

So what can Microsoft do about its dilemma? First, it needs to face
the fact that this entire preoccupation with the browser business is
bad for the company and bad for the user. Microsoft should pull the
browser out of the OS and discontinue all IE development
immediately. It should then bless the Mozilla.org folks with a cash
endowment and take an investment stake in Opera, to influence the
future direction of browser technology from the outside in. Then,
Microsoft can worry about security issues that are OS-only in nature,
rather than problems compounded by Internet Explorer.

Of this I can assure you. People will not stop buying Microsoft
Windows if there is no built-in browser. Opera and/or Firefox can be
bundled with the OS as a courtesy, and all the defaults can lead to
Microsoft.com if need be.

Of course we already know that this will never happen, since Microsoft
is a creature of habit. So it will forever be plagued by its greatest
blunder ever. Have fun, boys.

Copyright 2006 Ziff Davis Inc.

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

From: George Berger <gberger@his.com>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 20:40:39 -0400
Organization: Heller Information Services


In article <telecom25.179.6@telecom-digest.org>, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com 
wrote:

> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
> vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

> In the railroad and roads newsgroups, there was a discussion on the
> issue of the rights of photographers to take pictures of public works
> vs. the need for security of those works against terrorists.  Some
> facilities (highway toll roads, transit agencies) do not allow
> photography from public safe locations which traditionally was a
> absolute right.

> I myself aren't sure.  I don't agree with either extremes--the govt
> must have some limitations on citizen spying and we must preserve our
> long existing rights, but the govt does need the power and ability to
> spy on potential terrorists to protect us.

> [public replies please].

The telephone companies keep records on telephone contacts (which number 
called which number) without going into the substance of the 
conversations. It's a "Point A to Point B" record.  Is this "spying" by 
the telcoms?  No.  Millions of records are kept, probably without either 
your specific permission or knowledge that they keep every contact you 
make, or is made to you.

NSA uses this Point A to Point B calling information to detect
patterns in communications, without knowing the substance of the
conversations -- or even who the individual was on either end of the
link. Is this "spying?" I think not.

The other piece of the question pertains to direct interception of
calls between known foreign agents or terrorists and individuals
within the US boundaries who may -- or may not -- be US citizens.
Substance of the conversations IS of interest.  "Spying?" Call it what
you will. Further, not all US citizens are straightforward and
trustworthy individuals.  There are a few bad apples.

George

I know that you believe that you understood what you think I said, but I am
not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.
            -- Robert McCloskey, State Department spokesman (attributed)

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 20:25:14 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
> vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

I would suggest that the first point is, the government must not
violate the law.  And simply having some high official say "it's legal
if I say it is" is not a defense.  If the government (or contractors,
at the government's direction) violates the law, the parties involved
should face the same legal consequences as you and I do if we violate
the law.  

Violating the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by "engaging in
electronic surveillance under color of law except as authorized by
statute", which in this case would mean without warrant or court
order, has a penalty of up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine,
plus a civil liability to *each* aggrieved party of "(a) actual
damages, but not less than liquidated damages of $1,000 or $100 per
day for each day of violation, whichever is greater; (b) punitive
damages; and (c) reasonable attorney's fees and other investigation
and litigation costs reasonably incurred. "  My desk calculator
couldn't deal with the number you get when you figure "not less than"
$100/day for 5 years for 2 million people.  At least if we get $10,000
fines from all the Administration, NSA, AT&T, etc. people involved, it
will help offset the civil damages a little.

"Orders" hasn't cut it as a defense since Nuremberg.

This is especially important in an administration where the President
thinks that if he crosses his fingers when signing a law, the law
doesn't apply to him.

The second point would be, we know it won't be limited to national
security (or, "national security" will be redefined to include whatever
the official in charge wants to spy on).  Think how useful that
communications information could be in solving a drug case.  Already,
prosecutors are misusing the "Patriot" act by classifying their crime of
choice (say, producing methamphetamine, or tax evasion) as "terrorism".
Or a corruption case.  Or, since it's secret and nobody will know, why
not use it to find out who leaked that info to that reporter.  Oh, the
data is there, we can tell who called who, why can't it be subpoenaed by
a divorce lawyer?   That's why courts need to supervise on a
case-by-case basis, to prevent those abuses.

I think you may have opened up a firestorm of a topic.

Dave

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

From: George Mitchell <george@m5p.com>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 22:04:48 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national
> security vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

A news poll on ABC tonight said that about 2/3 of respondents thought
it was just fine for the NSA to accumulate everybody's phone records.
Even theirs.  After all, they didn't have anything to hide.

As for myself, I am diametrically opposed to this point of view.  I
feel personally threatened to a far greater degree by the federal
government's assaults on my privacy than by any terrorist.  Our
personal security is based on our rights -- not the abridgement of
those rights.

 -- George Mitchell

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

From: Joshua Putnam <josh@phred.org>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 22:08:17 -0700


If there is a legitimate need to curtail human rights to fight
terrorists, then the authority to do so should be narrowly tailored,
debated by the full Congress, codified in law, and subject to judicial
review.

I have little doubt that the NSA could have obtained the authority to
review phone records if the issue had been brought to Congress after
9/11, considering what other authority was granted to various
executive departments in the so-called Patriot Act.

What offends me is not that particular surveillance technique, but
rather this Administration's habit of engaging in any number of
activities without any legal authority, any meaningful Congressional
oversight, or any chance for judicial review.

We're supposed to have a President, not a King, one of three
*co-equal* branches of government.

A generation from now, people will look back on the excesses of the
Bush Administration with as much shame and disbelief as we do today
looking back on the Japanese concentration camps of WW II or the
imposition of jail sentences for people who spoke German in public
during WW I.


josh@phred.org is Joshua Putnam
http://www.phred.org/~josh
"My other bike is a car."

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun May 14 15:10:59 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #181
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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 14 May 2006 02:09:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 181

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Ban on Cellphones in NYC Schools Causes Uproar (Canadian Press)
    Spammers Identify 'Secure Addresses' From Blue Security (Anick Jesdanun)
    Antispam Firm Blue Security Says was Victim of Attack (Jaikumar Vijaya) 
    Blue Security Denies Fault ion Blog Outage (Greg Keizer)
    Policy Post 12.08: Illegal NSA Data Mining Highlights Need (Monty Solomon)
    NSA has Massive Database of Americans' Phone Calls (Monty Solomon)
    Cheney Pushed U.S. to Widen Eavesdropping (Monty Solomon)
    Questions Raised for Phone Giants in Spy Data Furor (Monty Solomon)
    Scan This Book! (Monty Solomon)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Wesrock@aol.com)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Gordon Burditt)
    Last Laugh! Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular? (8ackgr0und N015e)

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: Canadian Press News Wire <canada@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Ban on Cellphones in NYC Schools Causes Uproar Among Students, Parents
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 13:22:29 -0500


NEW YORK (AP) - Elizabeth Casanola sneaks her cell phone past the
metal detectors at her high school by slipping it down her pants, just
below the waistband, where she knows she won't be patted down.

A ban on cell phones in the nation's biggest school system is creating
an uproar among parents and students alike, with teenagers smuggling
their phones inside their lunches and under their clothes, and
grown-ups insisting they need to stay in touch with their children in
case of another crisis like Sept. 11.

Parents have written angry letters and e-mails, staged rallies and
news conferences, and threatened to sue. Some City Council members are
introducing legislation on their behalf.

But Mayor Michael Bloomberg and schools Chancellor Joel Klein have
staunchly refused to drop the ban. They insist cell phones are a
distraction and are used to cheat, take inappropriate photos in
bathrooms, and organize gang rendezvous. They are also a top stolen
item.

Students have refused to give up their phones, saying the devices have
become too vital to their daily existence and to their parents' peace
of mind.

"My mother, she needs me to have the cell to call me and check up on
me," said Steven Cao, 16, a sophomore who lives in Staten Island and
attends Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan. He called the ban stupid.

Some parents would prefer a policy that lets students have cell phones
but prohibits their use in classes.

New York's 1.1-million-student school system has banned beepers and
other communication devices since the late 1980s. But schools have
long used an "out-of-sight, out-of-trouble" approach. Then, late last
month, city officials began sending portable metal detectors every day
to a random but small set of schools to keep out weapons. And the
detectors have led to the confiscation of hundreds of cell phones.

New York has one of the country's toughest policies on student cell
phones, and also bans other electronic devices such as iPods.

Detroit bans cell phones, and a two-time violator will not get the
phone back. Boston relied on a school-by-school approach until
recently, when it changed the policy to let students have a phone, but
only if it is turned off and out of sight. Los Angeles lets kids have
cell phones, but they can use them only during lunch and breaks.

Kenneth Trump, president of Ohio-based National School Safety and
Security Services, said his research indicates most schools ban the
phones. Others require students to turn off the devices during school
hours.

New York principals said the ban is tough to enforce, especially in
large schools without metal detectors.

"Every kid today does carry a cell phone," said Howard Lucks,
principal of New Utrecht High in Brooklyn. "The kids keep them in
their backpacks, their pockets. As soon as they see an administrator
or teacher, they put it away very quickly."

Even at schools with permanent metal detectors, students find ways to
sneak the phones inside. Casanola sometimes smuggles her phone in
pieces, with the battery separate from the main body.

Once inside the school, another tactic is to hide the phone in a
sandwich roll, according to one principal. Some students leave phones
at nearby stores that charge small holding fees.

Yen Ramirez, a junior at Manhattan's Washington Irving High, said
students need their phones for emergencies. The ban is a problem
"because you never know what could happen."

Students insist that most classmates use their cell phones
responsibly, and they brush off criticism that previous generations
got along fine without them.

"It's kind of ridiculous that we think we can't survive without a cell
phone when people did it for thousands of years," said Elisa Muyl, 14,
a freshman at Stuyvesant High. "But now that they have this invention,
we should use it."


Copyright The Canadian Press, 2006

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

From: Anick Jesdanun <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Spammer Identifies 'Secure' Email Addresses From Blue Security
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 23:12:38 -0500


By ANICK JESDANUN
The Associated Press

NEW YORK -- One spammer has managed to identify e-mail addresses on a
"do-not-spam" list touted as secure, taking advantage of an obvious
flaw with such lists and prompting critics to wonder what took so
long.

Those who submitted their addresses to Blue Security Inc.'s Blue Frog
registry have been getting messages that threaten, among other things,
"nonsensical spams 20-40 times more than you would normally" get,
according to a copy provided by the company.

Blue Security described the spammer's tactics as "bullying" and
"extortion" as well as a sign the company's controversial anti-spam
tactics are working, annoying spammers enough to prompt such a
response.

Critics, however, say such lists are fundamentally flawed.

"Do-not-spam" registries work by encouraging users to submit their
e-mail addresses -- Blue Security says it has 450,000. Before sending
out a batch of messages, spammers are supposed to remove any addresses
appearing on such lists.

The lists are generally encrypted so spammers can't mine them for new
addresses. Instead, spammers run their lists through an identical
encryption algorithm, and the resulting fingerprints are
compared. Spammers can then remove any matches.

But John Levine, co-author of "Fighting Spam for Dummies," said
spammers merely have to run their lists, see what's been removed and
compare that with the original to find out the addresses on the
"do-not-spam" lists.

"It's only a surprise that it took this long," Levine said.

Eran Reshef, Blue Security's chief executive, said spammers must
already have the e-mail address to learn it is on the "do-not-spam"
list.

Blue Security has been criticized for what Levine calls its vigilante
approach. Users install software that sends complaints to spammers
automatically. Thousands complaining at once can knock out a Web site
and, the company says, encourage spammers to stop.

According the company, the spammer responded not only by threatening
users if they don't stop but also by making Blue Security's Web site
inaccessible outside Israel, where the company has major operations.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Jaikumar Vijaya <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Antispam Firm Blue Security Says Was Victim of Attack
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 23:44:36 -0500


The CEO of an antispam firm whose service was knocked offline by a
spammer claimed his company was the victim of a sophisticated attack
carried out, in part, with the help of someone at a top-tier Internet
Service Provider (ISP).

Eran Reshef, CEO of Blue Security, an Israeli antispam firm, said that
his company was attacked by a major spammer named PharmaMaster who
used a combination of methods to knock out the company's Web site and
the servers hosting its services. He also hit back at criticism that
the response by Blue Security to the attacks caused widespread
problems to others.

Blue Security operates an antispam service designed to deter
junk-mailers by spamming them back. Blue Security's Do Not Intrude
program allows individuals to register their email addresses with the
company and essentially flood spammers who send them email with
automated opt-out requests.

The attacks that crippled Blue Service were preceded by PharmaMaster
sending out threatening emails to subscribers of the Do Not Intrude
Registry, warning them of even more spam if they did not withdraw
their subscriptions.

PharmaMaster then appears to have gotten someone at a major ISP to
block Blue Security's IP address on the Internet's backbone routers,
most probably via a process called black-holing, Reshef claimed. With
black-holing, an ISP essentially removes the advertised path to a
particular Web site or IP address -- making it completely inaccessible
to the outside world. According to Reshef, PharmaMaster informed Blue
Security that he had gotten an ISP to agree to blackhole the company
before the attacks started.

"Immediately, we started seeing our IP address getting blacklisted by
other ISPs," Reshef said. As a result, traffic to the company's main
Web site dropping from the usual 100 hits per minute to about two per
minute in less than an hour -- and nothing at all from outside of
Israel. At almost the same time, massive distributed denial of service
(DDoS) attacks were launched against the dedicated servers that
provide Blue Security's antispam service. The servers, located at five
separate hosting provider sites, were bombarded with up to 2GB of
traffic per second, rendering them inaccessible.

In what Reshef said was a bid to tell subscribers what was happening,
Blue Security pointed the company's corporate Web server URL to its
blog, which is hosted by Six Apart in San Francisco. PharmaMaster then
launched a DDoS attack against the server hosting Blue Security's
blog. That resulted in thousands of other blogs hosted by Six Apart to
be knocked offline.

The DDoS attacks against the company's dedicated servers meanwhile
resulted in service disruptions to five hosting providers and major
DNS service provider Tucows, he said.

Pointing the company's main URL to the Blue Security blog site on Six
Apart when it was under attack may not have been the best idea, Reshef
said. But at the time, the company had little idea that the attacker
would launch a separate denial of service attack on the blog site as
well.

Todd Underwood, chief operations and security officer at Renesys, an
Internet monitoring company, said that based on traffic analysis, Blue
Security's main Web site appears to have been under a DDoS attack for
at least two days before it redirected its URL to the blog.

"I do think if you are under attack it is your duty not to redirect it
against someone else," Underwood said. "It is not a fair or an ethical
decision," he said, adding that it is hard to imagine that Blue
Security didn't know it was being hit with a DDoS attack when it
pointed its URL to the blog site.

Underwood also said that it was unlikely that a spammer would have
been able to get an individual at a major ISP to install a "no route"
to Blue Security, as Reshef claimed. "These are not the kind of
networks where people can sneak in and make routing configuration
changes" without logging that change or discussing it with others, he
said. "The suggestion that some Russian spammer could bribe someone to
install a no-route" is hard to believe, he said.

John Levine, chairman of the Internet Anti-Spam Research Group, said
that other antispam efforts have been similarly targeted as well. But
they did not involve an ISP. And neither did those who were attacked
respond like Blue Security did, he said. "If you know you are under a
DoS attack, pointing your DNS at other parties is irresponsible," he
said.  

Copyright 2006, IDG Communications New Zealand Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Greg Keizer <techweb@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Blue Security Denies Fault in Blog Outage
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 23:58:07 -0500


By Gregg Keizer,  TechWeb.com
http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=187200875

Blue Security's chief executive last week denied that the server he
repointed at a TypePad blog earlier this week brought along a denial
of service attack that caused that blogging service, and others hosted
by Six Apart, to crash.

"When we changed the domain name server to point to TypePad, there was
no traffic flowing into our corporate server at http://www.bluesecurity.com "
said Eran Reshef, Blue Security's CEO.

"I'm one of the victims here," Reshef said.

The dispute over the whats and hows and whens of the incident, which
dropped Six Apart's TypePad, LiveJournal, and MessagePad blogging
services offline for approximately 8 hours late Tuesday and early
Wednesday U.S. time, was fueled Thursday by analysts who said Reshef's
story didn't add up.

Friday, Reshef acknowledged that some of his company's servers had
been subjected to a large denial-of-service (DoS) attacks for days,
but said those were operational, or back-end, servers, and not
connected to his anti-spam company's front door at http://bluesecurity.com.
Earlier, he had denied that any DoS wasunderway.

"I just discovered that today," he said.

"There was no DoS on the corporate server," when he repointed the URL
to a dusted-off blog on TypePad's blogs.com domain to get out the word
that the site was unavailable outside Israel, where Blue Security is
based.

Reshef had earlier said that a Russian spammer, dubbed "PharmaMaster,"
had bribed a worker at a "major ISP" to reroute Internet traffic so
that no page requests reached Blue Security's Web site from outside
the country. Friday, Reshef said that further investigation now led
him to believe that a "blackhole filter," a technology often applied
in DoS defenses, was maliciously used to block incoming traffic.

Reshef provided TechWeb with copies of Blue Security's Web logs that
showed a drop in access from locales outside Israel over an hour and
45 minute span. During the last 7 minutes of that log, only 28 percent
of the site accesses originated outside Israel.

"It wasn't the best decision to reroute traffic to TypePad," Reshelf
said.  But he again defended the repointing, saying that if he had
suspected the attacker would follow Blue Security to the TypePad blog,
he would have done things differently. "I would have just put out a
press release," he said.

Reshef said that TypePad readers were able to add comments to the blog
for at least 30 minutes after Blue Security repointed its
servers. Blue Security redirected its site to TypePad at 11:20
p.m. (GMT) on Tuesday, May 2, he said. But comments were posted from
11:27 to 11:57 p.m., at which point the string broke, not to be
resumed for more than two hours. Six Apart said this week that the DoS
attack began at approximately 4:00 p.m. PDT (midnight GMT, May 3), or
about 40 minutes after Blue Security said their site was
redirected. "If the site [wwwl.bluesecurity.com] had been under attack
[when we redirected], packets would have reached TypePad within
minutes," Reshef said. That users were able to reach the blog and
leave comments proves that Blue Security did not drag an ongoing DoS
attack to TypePad and Six Apart.

But when asked if he had contacted Six Apart prior to repointing his
corporate site, or informed them that other company servers were
currently under attack at the time, he only answered "I'm not saying
this was the smartest move."

For its part, San Francisco-based Six Apart refused to divulge details
of the attack's timeline. "We're not pointing the finger at anyone,"
said Jane Anderson, a spokesperson for Six Apart. "No, we've not
contacted Blue Security, but we have been in touch with the FBI. This
[DoS] was a criminal event, and we intend to follow up."

One possible explanation for the mysterious drop-off in incoming
traffic to http://www.bluesecurity.com -- which was what led Reshef
and his company to redirect the URL to TypePad -- is that Blue
Security's own Israeli ISP shut down traffic to block a building DoS.

Todd Underwood, the chief of operations and security at Manchester,
N.H.-based Renesys, an Internet monitoring and routing analysis firm,
said Friday that it's possible that Blue Security's ISP used a
blackhole filter to stem an outside attack.

"It's entirely plausible that NetVision put a black hole filter in
place," said Underwood, "if they were seeing large numbers of packets
aimed at Blue Security and didn't want to drag the traffic all the way
from, say, New York."

NetVision, which has offices in Tel Aviv and Haifa, Israel, was not
available due to the time difference.

"No, I haven't talked with NetVision," said Reshelf, who confirmed
that NetVision was his company's ISP. "They haven't called us,
either."

Reshef said he and others at Blue Security had been too busy dealing
with the crisis this week to find out if NetVision had activated a
blackhole filter. He acknowledged, however, that it was a "possible
explanation."

"If that's what happened, and they haven't told us about it for four
days, then I will have to have a long talk with them," Reshef said.


Copyright 2005 CMP Media LLC

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

Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 18:19:47 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Policy Post 12.08: Illegal NSA Data Mining Highlights Need for


Policy Post 12.8, May 11, 2006

A Briefing On Public Policy Issues Affecting Civil Liberties Online
from The Center For Democracy and Technology

(1) Illegal NSA Data Mining Highlights Need for Congressional Oversight
(2) Program Appears Illegal, Regardless of How Database Was Compiled
(3) Relevant Statutes for Access to Stored Records

http://www.cdt.org/publications/policyposts/2006/8

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

Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 18:34:40 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: NSA Has Massive Database of Americans' Phone Calls


By Leslie Cauley, USA TODAY

The National Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone
call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by
AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth, people with direct knowledge of the
arrangement told USA TODAY.

The NSA program reaches into homes and businesses across the nation by
amassing information about the calls of ordinary Americans - most of
whom aren't suspected of any crime. This program does not involve the
NSA listening to or recording conversations. But the spy agency is
using the data to analyze calling patterns in an effort to detect
terrorist activity, sources said in separate interviews.

"It's the largest database ever assembled in the world," said one
person, who, like the others who agreed to talk about the NSA's
activities, declined to be identified by name or affiliation. The
agency's goal is "to create a database of every call ever made" within
the nation's borders, this person added.

For the customers of these companies, it means that the government has
detailed records of calls they made -- across town or across the
country -- to family members, co-workers, business contacts and others.

The three telecommunications companies are working under contract with
the NSA, which launched the program in 2001 shortly after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, the sources said. The program is aimed at
identifying and tracking suspected terrorists, they said.

The sources would talk only under a guarantee of anonymity because the
NSA program is secret.

http://usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-10-nsa_x.htm

For more news and headlines from USA Today, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 23:38:36 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Cheney Pushed U.S. to Widen Eavesdropping


By SCOTT SHANE and ERIC LICHTBLAU
The New York Times
May 14, 2006

WASHINGTON, May 13 - In the weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks, Vice
President Dick Cheney and his top legal adviser argued that the
National Security Agency should intercept purely domestic telephone
calls and e-mail messages without warrants in the hunt for terrorists,
according to two senior intelligence officials.

But N.S.A. lawyers, trained in the agency's strict rules against
domestic spying and reluctant to approve any eavesdropping without
warrants, insisted that it should be limited to communications into
and out of the country, said the officials, who were granted anonymity
to discuss the debate inside the Bush administration late in 2001.

The N.S.A.'s position ultimately prevailed. But just how Gen. Michael
V. Hayden, the director of the agency at the time, designed the
program, persuaded wary N.S.A. officers to accept it and sold the
White House on its limits is not yet clear.

As the program's overseer and chief salesman, General Hayden is
certain to face questions about his role when he appears at a Senate
hearing next week on his nomination as director of the Central
Intelligence Agency. Criticism of the surveillance program, which some
lawmakers say is illegal, flared again this week with the disclosure
that the N.S.A. had collected the phone records of millions of
Americans in an effort to track terrorism suspects.

By several accounts, including those of the two officials, General
Hayden, a 61-year-old Air Force officer who left the agency last year
to become principal deputy director of national intelligence, was the
man in the middle as President Bush demanded that intelligence
agencies act urgently to stop future attacks.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/14/washington/14nsa.html?ex=1305259200&en=4293d682ba33afda&ei=5090

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

Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 23:41:10 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Questions Raised for Phone Giants in Spy Data Furor


By JOHN MARKOFF
The New York Times
May 13, 2006

The former chief executive of Qwest, the nation's fourth-largest phone
company, rebuffed government requests for the company's calling
records after 9/11 because of "a disinclination on the part of the
authorities to use any legal process," his lawyer said yesterday.

The statement on behalf of the former Qwest executive, Joseph P.
Nacchio, followed a report that the other big phone companies -- AT&T,
BellSouth and Verizon -- had complied with an effort by the National
Security Agency to build a vast database of calling records, without
warrants, to increase its surveillance capabilities after the Sept.
11 attacks.

Those companies insisted yesterday that they were vigilant about their
customers' privacy, but did not directly address their cooperation
with the government effort, which was reported on Thursday by USA
Today. Verizon said that it provided customer information to a
government agency "only where authorized by law for appropriately
defined and focused purposes," but that it could not comment on any
relationship with a national security program that was "highly
classified."

Legal experts said the companies faced the prospect of lawsuits
seeking billions of dollars in damages over cooperation in the
program, citing communications privacy legislation stretching back to
the 1930's. A federal lawsuit was filed in Manhattan yesterday seeking
as much as $50 billion in civil damages against Verizon on behalf of
its subscribers.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/13/washington/13phone.html?ex=1305172800&en=0872ff5e182d5e7c&ei=5090

For more news and headlines from New York Times, the Christian Science
Monitor and National Public Radio with no login nor registation
requirements, please go to: 
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 00:16:54 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Scan This Book!


By KEVIN KELLY
The New York Times
May 14, 2006

In several dozen nondescript office buildings around the world,
thousands of hourly workers bend over table-top scanners and haul
dusty books into high-tech scanning booths. They are assembling the
universal library page by page.

The dream is an old one: to have in one place all knowledge, past and
present. All books, all documents, all conceptual works, in all
languages. It is a familiar hope, in part because long ago we briefly
built such a library. The great library at Alexandria, constructed
around 300 B.C., was designed to hold all the scrolls circulating in
the known world. At one time or another, the library held about half a
million scrolls, estimated to have been between 30 and 70 percent of
all books in existence then. 

But even before this great library was lost, the moment when all
knowledge could be housed in a single building had passed. Since then,
the constant expansion of information has overwhelmed our capacity to
contain it. For 2,000 years, the universal library, together with
other perennial longings like invisibility cloaks, antigravity shoes
and paperless offices, has been a mythical dream that kept receding
further into the infinite future.

Until now. When Google announced in December 2004 that it would
digitally scan the books of five major research libraries to make
their contents searchable, the promise of a universal library was
resurrected. Indeed, the explosive rise of the Web, going from nothing
to everything in one decade, has encouraged us to believe in the
impossible again. Might the long-heralded great library of all
knowledge really be within our grasp?

Brewster Kahle, an archivist overseeing another scanning project, says
that the universal library is now within reach. "This is our chance to
one-up the Greeks!" he shouts. "It is really possible with the
technology of today, not tomorrow. We can provide all the works of
humankind to all the people of the world. It will be an achievement
remembered for all time, like putting a man on the moon."  And unlike
the libraries of old, which were restricted to the elite, this library
would be truly democratic, offering every book to every person.

But the technology that will bring us a planetary source of all
written material will also, in the same gesture, transform the nature
of what we now call the book and the libraries that hold them. The
universal library and its "books" will be unlike any library or books
we have known. Pushing us rapidly toward that Eden of everything, and
away from the paradigm of the physical paper tome, is the hot
technology of the search engine.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/14/magazine/14publishing.html?ex=1305259200&en=c07443d368771bb8&ei=5090

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

From: Wesrock@aol.com
Date: Sat, 13 May 2006 20:35:12 EDT
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?


In a message dated Fri, 12 May 2006 20:40:39 -0400, George Berger
<gberger@his.com> writes:

> The telephone companies keep records on telephone contacts (which number 
> called which number) without going into the substance of the 
> conversations. It's a "Point A to Point B" record.  Is this "spying" by 
> the telcoms?  No.  Millions of records are kept, probably without either 
> your specific permission or knowledge that they keep every contact you 
> make, or is made to you.

This may be true of toll calls, but why would they keep records, or
even make a record, of local calls which in most parts of the country
are flat rate unlimited?  These records are of no value to the telco
nor to the customer.
 
Once a local call is taken down (disconnected) there is no reason to
record the historical fact.

Wes Leatherock
wesrock@aol.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I can tell you that since ESS became
the most common switching system, telco has had and maintains 
records on _all_ calls. Whether or not the calls are billed for or
not (i.e. 'local' or 'toll'), there still is a record kept of them 
for whatever reason, for reasons like CALEA and other things. PAT]

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

From: gordonb.zu0a9@burditt.org (Gordon Burditt)
Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 01:12:53 -0000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


> But in his weekly radio address on Saturday, Bush rushed to assure the
> public the secret program did not target innocent private citizens.

Cheney did not "target" a fellow hunter either.  Funny how that person
was injured anyway.

> Specially designed computer programs watch for patterns in these
> contacts and analyze them to make sure no terrorist cell is operating
> within the United States.

I'd like to see the output of such a program analyzing contacts
between members of Congress and lobbyists made public, to ensure that
no bribing of congresscritters is taking place.

Gordon L. Burditt

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

From: 8ackgr0und N015e <background.static@gmail.com>
Subject: Last Laugh! Re: Online Cross-Search of Reverse-Regular Directories?
Date: 13 May 2006 18:30:45 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Frank Stearns wrote:

> Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com> writes:

>> There's something a little odd about this.

> Odd in what way? The gentlemen did not leave a last name or a
> company name (sure wish he had!); the last four digits were cut off
> from the message.

"Hi, this is George ... I've got a job for you, call me at
202-456-...."

As opposed to:

Hi Frank, this is George Bush, I got your name and number from Harriet
Meirs. She speaks highly of you.  She said you would be able to help
us here at the White House with a problem we have tracking down male
prostitutes who pose as journalists.  We are trying to keep this
confidential, so call me directly on my private line.  Ask for George
at 202-456-2930. 

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Big guffaw! Snort, laugh ... now 
should I or shouldn't I print that Direct Inward Dial centrex number
to Dubya's office? At least it was the direct line into the Oval
Office back in the days of Bush the First when I published the pirated
copy of the White House internal phone directory which came my way 
back in the 1980's ... by now, it probably was abused so much his
Highness probably ordered C&P -- or whoever their telephone company is
 -- to change the number. PAT]

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #181
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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 14 May 2006 16:11:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 182

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Myths and Falsehoods on NSA Domestic Call-Tracking Program (Media Matters)
    We Must All be Terrorist Suspects Now (Eugene Robinson)
    Can TV's and PC's Live Together Happily Ever After? (Monty Solomon)
    Satellite System Is Over Budget and in Trouble (Monty Solomon)
    311 (Monty Solomon)
    A-la-Carte Cable TV (Neal McLain)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Linc Madison)
    Re: Help Needed With WAV File (Geoffrey Welsh)

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: Media Matters <mediamatters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Myths and Falsehoods on the NSA Domestic Call-Tracking Program
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 14:00:11 -0500


http://mediamatters.org/
Myths and falsehoods on the NSA domestic call-tracking program

Summary: Media Matters documents the misleading or false claims
advanced by media figures and Bush administration supporters in the
wake of news that the National Security Agency had since 2001 been
secretly collecting records of phone calls made by millions of
Americans.

On May 11, USA Today reported that the National Security Agency (NSA)
had since 2001 been secretly collecting records of phone calls made by
millions of Americans. The article reported that the NSA, in
cooperation with three major phone companies, "reaches into homes and
businesses across the nation by amassing information about the calls
of ordinary Americans -- most of whom aren't suspected of any crime"
and uses the data "to analyze calling patterns in an effort to detect
terrorist activity."

The public disclosure of the domestic call tracking program provoked
bipartisan criticism and calls for a full congressional investigation.
Further, it revived the contentious debate over the NSA's warrantless
eavesdropping on U.S. residents' international communications. As The
New York Times revealed last year, the president authorized the agency
to conduct such surveillance shortly after the September 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks, in apparent violation of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA), which requires court approval in order to
conduct domestic electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence
purposes.

As with the exposure of the warrantless surveillance program in
December 2005, media figures and Bush supporters have advanced
numerous misleading or false claims in the wake of the news, as Media
Matters for America documents below.

#1: The NSA has access only to Americans' phone numbers and call
records -- not names, addresses or other identifying information.

In reporting on the NSA call-tracking program, some media figures have
emphasized that the phone companies are not providing callers' names
and addresses to the agency -- only their phone numbers and records of
their various calls. Examples include:

a.. CNN national security correspondent David Ensor: The phone
companies provide the NSA "the phone numbers they call -- not the
names, not the addresses of the people they called." [CNN
International's Your World Today, 5/11/06] 

b.. NBC senior investigative correspondent Lisa Myers: "The data
provided by AT&T, Verizon, and Bell South reportedly includes phone
calls made and received but not customers' names and addresses."
[NBC's Today, 5/11/06] 

c.. ABC chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross: "Officials say
the phone records, with no names attached, are fed into NSA computers,
programmed to track patterns between the U.S. and places where
suspected terrorists might be, such as Afghanistan and Pakistan."
[ABC's World News Tonight, 5/11/06] 

d.. Fox News host John Gibson: "[T]he NSA is compiling phone calling
patterns in an effort to track terrorists here in this country. No
addresses or names are reportedly part of that information being
collected." [Fox News' The Big Story with John Gibson, 5/11/06]

e.. Fox News correspondent Carl Cameron: "The data records that the
NSA is obtaining do not contain customer names, addresses, or anything
about the actual call content."  [Fox News' Special Report with Brit
Hume, 5/11/06] 

f.. Fox News correspondent Jim Angle: "But others of both parties said
this is far different and far less intrusive than actually listening
to suspected terrorist communications. In this case, the NSA is
reportedly collecting nothing more than phone call records, without
any names or addresses." [Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume,
5/11/06] But the original May 11 USA Today article on the program made
clear that phone customers' names, addresses, and "other personal
information" can "easily" be obtained by cross-referencing their phone
numbers with other databases, as Media Matters for America noted. A
May 12 Washington Post article further reported that "the government
has many means of identifying account owners, including access to
commercial databases from ChoicePoint and LexisNexis."

Similarly, some reporters have failed to challenge Republican
lawmakers' assertions that the data collected by the NSA is limited to
phone numbers.  For instance, in a May 12 article, Associated Press
staff writer Katherine Shrader uncritically reported Sen. Wayne
Allard's (R-CO) claim that "[t]elephone customers' names, addresses
and other personal information have not been handed over to NSA as
part of this program."

#2: The NSA is only tracking phone calls, not listening to them.

In describing the specifics of the NSA call-tracking program, certain media
figures have claimed that the NSA only captures call records and does not
use the data for surveillance. On the May 11 edition of CNN's Live From ...,
CNN congressional correspondent Ed Henry reported, "[T]he government appears
to be ... collecting these records but not actually eavesdropping, not
listening in on the calls, an important distinction." On the May 11 edition
of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes, co-host Sean Hannity claimed, "[A]ll we're
looking at are patterns ... we're not looking at the content, we're not
listening to people's calls."

But in affirmatively claiming that the NSA is not using the data for
surveillance, Henry and Hannity are in effect asserting that the NSA's
call-tracking program operates independent of the NSA's warrantless
domestic eavesdropping program. They offer no support for this
claim. Indeed, a May 12 Washington Post article reported that the two
programs are directly linked, as the data provided to the NSA by the
major phone companies assists the agency in selecting targets for
warrantless surveillance. From the May 12 Post article:

Government access to call records is related to the previously disclosed
eavesdropping program, sources said, because it helps the NSA choose its
targets for listening. The mathematical techniques known as 'link analysis'
and 'pattern analysis,' they said, give grounds for suspicion that can
result in further investigation.

Despite this report, the Post and ABC News conducted a poll on the
call-tracking program that asserted that the NSA is not "listening to
or recording the conversations," as Media Matters noted. Sixty-three
percent of respondents found the program, as misleadingly described,
acceptable.

#3: The Clinton administration implemented a more intrusive surveillance
program.

Shortly after the disclosure of the NSA's warrantless domestic
surveillance program in December 2005, conservative media figures
attempted to draw a parallel between the Clinton administration's use
of a surveillance program known as Echelon and the warrantless
domestic eavesdropping authorized by the Bush administration. In the
wake of this new revelation, media have equated the NSA call-tracking
operation and Echelon. For instance, a May 12 New York Post editorial
claimed that "the program has clear antecedents in a widely rumored
surveillance program called Echelon, which was hotly debated across
the Internet back in 1999 -- nearly two years before President Bush
took office." On the May 12 edition Fox News' Fox & Friends, co-host
Brian Kilmeade said, "This has been happening since 2000. This isn't
one man's policy. The foundation was already laid for this six years
ago."

But as Media Matters noted in response to the earlier comparisons, in
contrast with the Bush administration's surveillance program, the
eavesdropping of U.S. residents conducted under Echelon was carried
out in compliance with FISA, according to then-CIA Director George
J. Tenet. In his April 12, 2002, testimony before the House
Intelligence Committee Tenet denied that Echelon was used to spy on
U.S residents without a warrant. He said, "We do not target their
conversations for collection in the United States unless a FISA
warrant has been obtained from the FISA court by the Justice
Department." Then-National Security Agency director Lt. Gen. Michael
V. Hayden -- currently Bush's nominee for CIA director -- also
appeared before the committee and testified, "If [an] American person
is in the United States of America, I must have a court order before I
initiate any collection [of communications] against him or her."

By contrast, since the disclosure of their warrantless domestic
surveillance program, Bush has asserted -- and administration
officials such as Hayden have repeated -- that he possesses the
authority to eavesdrop on U.S. residents' communications without FISA
approval.

Conservative media figures such as Hannity and syndicated columnist
Michelle Malkin have gone a step further, however, and claimed that
Echelon was more intrusive than the Bush administration's current
surveillance activities. On the May 11 Hannity & Colmes, Hannity said,
"Under the Echelon program there is the ability to monitor, as I said,
the substance and content. ... So it seems odd to me that we have a
far more intrusive program that liberals support, and now they're all
up in arms about a far less intrusive program [the NSA call-tracking
program]." In a May 12 column, Malkin wrote, "The paper [USA Today]
admits the kind of data collection involved is not new.  The Clinton
administration's Echelon program was far more intrusive."

As with Hannity's claim that the NSA is not using the phone records
data to intercept communications of Americans, these assertions rest
on the assumption that the data collection program operates
independently of the NSA warrantless domestic surveillance
program. But as noted above, the Post has reported that the two are
directly linked.

#4: Only Democrats are criticizing the NSA program.

In reporting on the NSA data collection program, various media figures
have cast the controversy as a purely partisan dispute by suggesting
that only Democrats have criticized the program. In fact, a number of
prominent Republican congressmen -- current and former -- have also
denounced the program or at least voiced skepticism. As Media Matters
noted, Sens. Arlen Specter (R-PA) and Lindsey O. Graham (R-SC), and
House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) all raised questions and
criticism of the program following its disclosure. According to a May
12 USA Today article, Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA) "questioned why the
phone companies would cooperate with the NSA." According to Grassley:
"Why are the telephone companies not protecting their customers?
... They have a social responsibility to people who do business with
them to protect our privacy as long as there isn't some suspicion that
we're a terrorist or a criminal or something."

On the May 11 edition of Hannity & Colmes, former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich (R-GA) said:

  GINGRICH: I'm not going to defend the indefensible ... I'm prepared
to defend a very aggressive anti-terrorist campaign, and I'm prepared
to defend the idea that the government ought to know who's making the
calls, as long as that information is only used against terrorists,
and as long as the Congress knows that it's under way. But I don't
think the way they've handled this can be defended by reasonable
people. It is sloppy.

On the May 11 edition of MSNBC's Scarborough Country, host and former
Rep.  Joe Scarborough (R-FL) said: "Memo to the president and
congressional leaders who signed up on this lousy program: We don't
trust you anymore."

And yet, on the May 11 edition of Fox News' The Big Story with John
Gibson, homeland defense correspondent Catherine Herridge reported:
"The NSA issue dominated the session of the Senate Judiciary Committee
today with senior Democrats on this committee saying the new
revelation will impact Hayden's confirmation." On the May 11 edition
of Special Report, Fox News chief White House correspondent Carl
Cameron -- during a "hard news" segment -- attacked Democrats for
"complaining about the NSA programs without really knowing what they
are" and echoed Republicans in saying that "is precisely why so many
Republicans say Democrats just aren't serious about security."

#5: "Experts agree" this type of data collection is "legal"

A variety of media figures have stated unequivocally that the NSA data
collection program is "legal," or that "experts agree" the program is
legal.  There are, however, a number of experts who have said that the
administration might be acting illegally. The New York Times reported
on May 12: "Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security
Studies [CNSS], said, 'If they don't get a court order, it's a crime.'
She said that while the F.B.I. might be able to get access to phone
collection databases by using an administrative subpoena, her reading
of federal law was that the N.S.A. would be banned from doing so
without court approval. Depending on how it was conducted, it may have
also have been a crime." The CNSS also issued a statement featured on
its website, stating, "On May 11, 2006, USA Today reported that the
NSA has been secretly collecting the phone records of millions of
Americans. The President held a news briefing in which he carefully
failed to deny that the program exists. Such surveillance, if not
authorized by the FISA court, is illegal." A May 12 USA Today article
quoted Georgetown University law professor David Cole saying: "This
may well be another example where the Bush administration, in secret,
decided to bypass the courts and contravene federal law."

In addition, Newsday reported on May 12:

However, James Dempsey of the nonprofit Center for Democracy and
Technology said several laws appear to apply to the described program.

Real-time collection of data would require the NSA to get a warrant
either from a criminal court or from the special court created by the
Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act, he said.

And if the NSA is collecting historical records, the telecommunica-
tions companies face the Electronic Communications Privacy Act and
another law that prohibits sharing information without a subpoena or
court order, he said.

Nevertheless, on the May 11 broadcast of NBC's Nightly News, senior
investigative correspondent Lisa Myers reported: "Some experts agree
that the program, if conducted properly, is legal. But some warn there
is also great potential for abuse." Myers failed to note that there
are experts who have gone beyond warning of the potential for abuse to
challenge the reported program's legality. Similarly, ABC News chief
investigative correspondent Brian Ross reported on the May 11
broadcast of World News Tonight: "In fact, many experts we talked to
today said the program is legal, they believe, based on a U.S. Supreme
Court decision that held that phone customers have no expectation of
privacy for the phone numbers they dial. What worries some, of course,
Elizabeth, is what the government does next if they detect what they
think is a suspicious pattern."

But, while the Supreme Court ruled in Smith v. Maryland (1979) that
the use of "pen registers" -- devices that record only the numbers
dialed and received at a specific phone -- is not a violation of
Fourth Amendment rights, some legal experts have noted that the NSA's
phone data collection program might violate federal statutory law. As
George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr explained in a
May 11 entry on his weblog:

  To summarize, my very preliminary sense is that there are no Fourth
Amendment issues here but a number of statutory problems under
statutes such as FISA and the pen register statute. Of course, all of
the statutory questions are subject to the possible argument that
Article II trumps those statutes. As I have mentioned before, I don't
see the support for the strong Article II argument in existing
caselaw, but there is a good chance that the Administration's legal
argument in support of the new law will rely on it.

On the May 11 edition of MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews, Roger
Cressey, NBC counterterrorism analyst and former counterterrorism
advisor to Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush, claimed that
"assembling the database in and of itself is not illegal." Fox News
host Bill O'Reilly claimed on the May 11 edition of The O'Reilly
Factor that "there's nobody who believes that the Bush administration
is going to lose any of this stuff in a court of law."

#6: NSA program could have prevented 9-11 attacks

A number of media figures have suggested that the NSA data collection
program could have prevented the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
had it been in place before then. This same claim was advanced by the
Bush administration to defend the NSA's warrantless domestic
surveillance program when its existence was publicy disclosed in
December 2005, as Media Matters noted. This argument, however, is
completely unsubstantiated. As Media Matters noted when Hayden
advanced this claim in January, the 9-11 Commission and congressional
investigators determined that it was primarily bureaucratic problems
 -- rather than a lack of information -- that were responsible for the
security breakdown. The Washington Post reported on January 24:

Hayden echoed a claim earlier this month by Vice President [Dick]
Cheney that, if the NSA program had been in place prior to the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, "it is my professional judgment that we would
have detected some of the 9/11 al Qaeda operatives in the United
States."

Like Cheney, however, Hayden did not mention that the NSA, CIA and FBI
had significant information about two of the leading hijackers as
early as January 2000 but failed to keep track of them or capitalize
on the information, according to the Sept. 11 commission and
others. He also did not mention NSA intercepts warning of the attacks
the day before, but not translated until Sept. 12, 2001.

But Matthews, on the May 11 edition of Hardball, said to Sen. Ken Salazar
(D-CO):

  MATTHEWS: Well, here's where the tire hits the road, Senator.
Suppose our authorities had broken up 9-11 the day before, because
they noticed telephone traffic which suggested 19 people were about to
grab four planes and take them in to buildings. Would that have
justified the program if that had happened?

On the May 11 edition of Special Report with Brit Hume, Fox News chief
Washington correspondent Jim Angle reported:

  ANGLE: For instance, if this had been in place before 9-11, and the
U.S.  had the phone number used by Al Qaeda planner Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed, it could have searched the database to locate which numbers
he was calling in the U.S., which might have led to the hijackers
before they boarded their planes.

Angle's suggestion that the program could have provided the NSA with
alleged 9-11 mastermind Khalid Shaik Mohammed's phone number, thus
leading authorities to discover the 9-11 plot, ignored the fact that
the NSA was monitoring Mohammed's phone calls the day before the
attacks and captured a conversation between him and lead hijacker
Mohammed Atta. But, as Knight Ridder reported on June 7, 2002:

A secretive U.S. eavesdropping agency monitored telephone conversations
before Sept. 11 between the suspected commander of the terror attacks
and the alleged chief hijacker, but did not share the information with
other intelligence agencies, U.S. officials said Thursday.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the conversa-
tions between Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and Mohammed Atta were intercep-
ted by the National Security Agency, or NSA, an intelligence agency
that monitors and decodes foreign communications.

The NSA failed to share the intercepts with the CIA or other U.S.
intelligence agencies, the officials told Knight Ridder. It also
failed to promptly translate some intercepted Arabic-language
conversations, a senior intelligence official said.

#7: Veracity of USA Today report is in question

Some in the media have suggested that the original USA Today report on
the NSA's call-tracking program may be unfounded. For instance, on the
May 11 edition of Special Report, host and Fox News Washington managing
editor Brit Hume cited the USA Today story and added, "Whether that
was actually true or not, it was enough to set off another uproar on
Capitol Hill over allegations of domestic spying."  Similarly, Fox
News senior judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano declared on the May 11
edition of Fox News' The Big Story that we need to know the "facts"
about the NSA program. He then said of the USA Today article, "The
newspaper is just the newspaper reporter's opinions."

In fact, while the Bush administration has not confirmed or denied the
substance of the USA Today report, several members of Congress have
confirmed the existence of the program. According to a May 11
Bloomberg News Service article, Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS), a member of
the Senate Intelligence Committee, disclosed that he had been briefed
about the program. Further, on the May 11 edition of PBS' The NewsHour
with Jim Lehrer, Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) said, "I'm a member of the
subcommittee of the Intelligence Committee that's been thoroughly
briefed on this program and other programs."

- J.K. & S.S.M.

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

From: Eugene Robinson <anniston@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: We Must All be Terrorist Suspects Now 
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 14:06:58 -0500


by Eugene Robinson, The Anniston Star

At least now we know that the Bush administration's name for spying on
Americans without first seeking court approval -- the "terrorist
surveillance program" -- isn't an exercise in Orwellian doublespeak
after all. It's just a bald-faced lie.

Oh, and at least now the Senate will have a few questions to ask
Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the man George W. Bush has named to head the
CIA, at his confirmation hearings.

While Hayden was running the super-secret National Security Agency,
according to a report Thursday in USA Today, the NSA began collecting
comprehensive records of telephone calls made by "tens of millions of
Americans." If your service is provided by AT&T, Verizon or BellSouth,
according to the newspaper, this means your phone calls -- all the
calls you've made since late 2001. Of the major phone companies, only
Qwest reportedly declined to cooperate.

The allegation, which the president refused to confirm or deny, is not
that the spooks are actually listening in as you call home to check on
the kids or talk to the bank about refinancing your mortgage.  Rather,
the idea is to be able to look at a given phone number -- yours, let's
say -- and see all the other numbers that you called over a given
period of time, or that called you.

No names are attached to the numbers. But a snoopy civilian with
Internet access can match a name with a phone number, so imagine what
the government can do.

You'll recall that when it was revealed last year that the NSA was
eavesdropping on phone calls and reading e-mails without first going
to court for a warrant, the president said his "terrorist surveillance
program" targeted international communications in which at least one
party was overseas, and then only when at least one party was
suspected of some terrorist involvement. Therefore, no one but
terrorists had anything to worry about.

Not remotely true, it turns out, unless tens of millions of Americans
are members of al-Qaida sleeper cells -- evildoers who cleverly
disguise their relentless plotting as sales calls, gossip sessions and
votes for Elliott on "American Idol." (One implication, by the way, is
that the NSA is able to know who got voted off "Idol" before Ryan
Seacrest does.)

Step back for a moment. There's an understandable tendency, with this
administration, to succumb to a kind of "outrage fatigue." Pre-cooked
intelligence on Iraq, secret CIA prisons, Abu Ghraib -- the accretion
is numbing, and it's easy just to say "there they go again" and count
the months until the Decider heads home to Texas for good. Bush and
his people have tried to turn flouting the law into a virtue if it's a
law they find inconvenient. They've tried to radically change our
concept of privacy. We already knew the NSA was somehow monitoring
phone calls, so what's the big deal?

The big deal is that now we know that the administration -- I'll say
"apparently," although if the report were untrue I think the president
would have denied it -- is keeping track of the phone calls of
millions of citizens who have nothing at all to do with terrorism.
Bush has tried to convince us that the overwhelming majority of
Americans are not affected by domestic surveillance, but now we know
that the opposite is true: The overwhelming majority of us are.

The president's claim, in his brief statement on the report, that the
government isn't "trolling through the personal lives of millions of
innocent Americans" is as disingenuous as Bill Clinton's claim that he
"didn't inhale." There's no point in collecting all that data if you
don't analyze it, and when you do it's inevitable that you learn
things about at least some innocent people that those people thought
were nobody else's business, certainly not the government's.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter, R-Pa., his frustration
evident, said he intended to call executives of AT&T, Verizon and
BellSouth to testify at hearings, since the administration won't
explain just what it's doing.

And, of course, Hayden's confirmation hearings are coming up.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who has been one of Hayden's strong
supporters, said the new disclosures on spying may create "a major
impediment" to a nomination that was expected to quickly sail through.

"Shame on us, in being so far behind and so willing to rubber-stamp
anything this administration does," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. He
was referring to the Senate, but he could have been speaking for the
entire nation.

Copyright (c) 2006 Consolidated Publishing.
Source: The Anniston Star

http://www.annistonstar.com/opinion/2006/as-columns-0514-0-6e12r2838.htm

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 11:23:19 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Can TV's and PC's Live Together Happily Ever After?


Media Frenzy
Can TV's and PC's Live Together Happily Ever After?
By RICHARD SIKLOS
The New York Times

HOLY Grails, swirling myths and big lies seem to be in the air these
days - and we're not just talking about a certain heavily publicized
movie opening this week that is based on a certain megaselling novel.
Rather, consider the much-ballyhooed convergence between television
and personal computers (a k a the grail), which seems to edge ever
closer with every week.

Slowly but surely, it seems that TV programs and movies are finding
their way onto the Internet through a growing array of distribution
outlets.

Just in the last few weeks, for example, Warner Brothers announced it
would make hundreds of its hit films and shows available this summer
for paid download via the file-sharing site BitTorrent; Fox
Entertainment has joined the other major networks on iTunes with
downloadable episodes of "24" and "Prison Break"; TiVo announced a
deal with the Web video outfit Brightcove that intends to give people
with TiVo boxes access to Internet fare on their TV sets; and ABC and
CBS have begun streaming replays of some of their most popular shows
on their Web sites, offering a new advertising-supported way to tune
in.

Even though no one seems to be making much money yet on these ventures
and there are still chewy legal and rights issues to sort out, there
is palpable excitement -- a sense that the TV and movie industries are
going to head off the pirates and file-sharing teens by making their
products widely available online in legal ways.

In doing so, it seems the ultimate no-brainer that anyone with a fancy
TV monitor and a broadband Internet connection will next be able to
pluck their favorite TV programs and movies off the Web (and
eventually choose to disconnect their cable or satellite provider, or,
as I've written previously, at least force the cable operators to
offer smaller and more appealing packages of channels).

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/14/business/yourmoney/14frenzy.html?ex=1305259200&en=a448180f023f9882&ei=5090

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 11:29:11 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Satellite System Is Over Budget and in Trouble


By WARREN E. LEARY
The New York Times
May 12, 2006

WASHINGTON, May 11 - A new weather satellite system planned for
civilian and military use is behind schedule and billions of dollars
over budget because of technical problems and poor management,
according to testimony Thursday before the House Science Committee.

Johnnie E. Frazier, the inspector general for the Commerce Department,
said managers from agencies involved in the program had failed to
respond to problems as they arose and to challenge overly optimistic
progress reports from the project director.

In addition, Mr. Frazier said, the program suffered from a flawed
contract incentive program that awarded millions in bonus money to the
prime contractor, Northrop Grumman Space Technology, even as the
satellite system fell months behind schedule and costs grew by $3
billion or more.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/12/washington/12satellite.html?ex=1305086400&en=b0335bffd5c15a90&ei=5090

For more headlines and news from New York Times, Christian Science
Monitor and National Public Radio, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 13:08:16 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: 311


Excerpts from

The Model City
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/magazine/articles/2006/05/14/the_model_city/

The piece de resistance, however, is 311. Dial that number from almost
any phone in the city, and you reach Somerville's help line.  Street
unplowed? Cat up a tree? Want to know your alderman's name?  Simple
questions are answered. Complex ones get a case number, and residents
can track their concerns on the Web as easily as a FedEx package.

It's a remarkable idea: A local government that actually treats its
citizens like customers and holds itself accountable to them. Few
places in Massachusetts have 311, and no other has put in place
Somerville's mix of budgeting and management tools.

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

From: Neal McLain <nmclain@annsgarden.com>
Subject: A-la-Carte Cable TV
Reply-To: nmclain@annsgarden.com
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 05:39:13 -0400


"McCain a la Carte Bill Expected Soon"
The Hill, May 10, 2006
By Alexander Bolton

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is planning to introduce legislation on
cable television programming that is expected to put him at odds with
several of the nation's largest Christian television networks and
could complicate his effort to woo social conservatives for the 2008
presidential election.

Specifically, McCain is expected to unveil a bill this week that would
give cable companies regulatory incentives to offer their customers
content on a channel-by-channel basis, which is known as 'a la carte'
programming because of its resemblance to restaurant menus that price
entrees and side orders separately.

http://www.freepress.net/news/15428

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

Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 11:10:36 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.179.6@telecom-digest.org>,
<hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote:

> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
> vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

It's very, very simple: the NSA and other arms of the Executive Branch
should spy on terrorists *within* the laws passed by Congress, and
*with* judicial oversight. Under the Constitution, the President lacks
any and all authority to order anything different.

The NSA program of listening to the content of telephone conversations
in which at least one party is a "U.S. person" (not necessarily a
citizen, nor even necessarily a permanent resident) is absolutely and
unequivocally illegal and unconstitutional. "In time of war" the
Constitution doesn't cease to exist, nor do its limitations on police
powers. Neither the U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act nor the Authorization to
Use Military Force (AUMF) gave the Executive any such powers -- nor
could they, since the powers arrogated by the administration are
beyond Congress' authority to grant. The administration has even
admitted that the reason they did not ask Congress to modify the law
to permit this surveillance program is that they did not believe that
the Congress would comply. In other words, "We figured you would
probably say no, so we just did it without asking."

The other NSA program, of collecting telephone call records, is a bit
more tricky, since it is (supposedly) not intruding into the content
of the calls. There is considerable reason to believe that the telcos
violated their own legal obligations to their customers (the privacy
clauses in their contracts) by turning over the records without a
court order, but the violation of the law -- if any -- by the NSA was
certainly far less egregious than in the wiretap case. The Supreme
Court has ruled that you do not have a legitimate privacy claim to the
records of what numbers you called and for how long. Police have often
sought call records as part of an investigation, although those
searches were much more limited and much more closely tailored to the
individual cases.

Of course, the other element in both schemes is the effectiveness and
wisdom of the program. I don't know who first said it, but, "We're
looking for a needle in a haystack, so wantonly piling on more hay
might not be the best plan." We do need more data about the terrorists
and their plans, but far more than that, we need more intelligent
collection of data. There have been published reports that the FBI has
been really steamed because the vast majority of the leads produced by
the NSA's illegal espionage program have been wild goose chases -- a
complete waste of the Bureau's resources without making America the
slightest bit safer. Simply put, we don't have the resources to make
use of the data we already have, so going after mountains of unsifted
raw data isn't the best use of our capabilities.

But even if the programs produce some results, the question remains,
at what cost? I'm not at all pleased at the idea of the government
snooping through my private communications, or even knowing who I
called and when. Do I have something to hide? Hell yes! Every single
one of us has something to hide. Just because some activity is legal
doesn't mean that it's in my interests for the world to know about it,
and the line between the government's knowing about it and the world's
knowing about it is altogether too thin.

Beyond that, our government has a long history of misusing such
powers.  The FBI wiretapped Martin Luther King because he was a
subversive -- in other words, an "uppity nigger" -- even though he was
acting completely within the law. President Nixon spied on his
political enemies for purely partisan reasons. The Fourth Amendment is
there for good reason, to protect the lives of innocent, law-abiding
citizens from unwarranted intrusion by the government. To allow
President Bush to ignore those protections, as he undeniably has, is
the essence of treason.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

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

From: Geoffrey Welsh <reply@newsgroup.please>
Subject: Re: Help Needed With WAV File
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 14:22:11 -0400
Organization: UseNetServer.com


DLR wrote:

> Modems these days and for a long time have a limit of (I think) 2400
> baud. This means they can only change the signal 2400 times a second

According to some old notes I have, V.34 uses signal rates up to 3429
baud and I don't think that V.34bis added to the modulation rates.
Since 'Plain Old Telephone Service' connections are sampled at 8000 Hz
for transport through the digital public switched telephone network,
the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem states that the highest
theoretical signal rate is 4000 Hz, but real-world implementations can
only approach that.

> on a voice grade line. So to get the higher bit rates they have to
> encode multiple things 2400 times a second. One way is the multiple
> frequencies. The other is that the tones on each frequency are
> shifted, twisted, etc ... in a way such that each frequency can

That's true of every popular modulation since Bell 103J; if I recall
correctly, Bell 212A used phase shifts to encode 2 bits at 600 baud
for 1200 bps, V.22bis used phase and amplitude variations to encode 4
bits at 600 baud for 2400 bps, and Telebit PEP modulation used
pashe/amplitude modulation to encode a variable number of bits at 6
baud simultaneously on hundreds of carriers, each on a unique
frequency, to achieve ~11 kbps (PEP1), ~18 kbps (PEP2), or ~23 kbps
(TurboPEP).  But those and other modulations were either half-duplex
(PEP, V.29FT) or split the available frequencies either symmetrically
(Bell 103J, Bell 212A, V.22bis) or asymmetrically (USRobotics' HST) in
order to allow bidirectional communication.

> Now I'm sure that US Robotics and Rockwell have some programs that
> might do this and maybe the DIA, CIA, and NSA but past that ???

Not being an expert in digital signal processing, I could not guess
how hard it would be to accomplish but, with computing power
practically exploding (pity all that power and more is wasted running
bloated code, but that's off-topic) and the availability of computing
clusters and grids, I wouldn't think that it would really be that hard
for the modulations described above.  (That said, I won't have it done
by end of day ... or year ... or ...)

However, as others have pointed out, the real challenge with
higher-speed modulations such as V.32 (9600 bps full-duplex) and V.34
(28800 & 33600 bps) is that, unlike the modulations listed above and
in addition to the complicated modulations that you describe, they
send and receive on the same frequencies and use echo cancellation in
order to discriminate what the other side is sending from the echos of
what the near side is sending.  This adds another very complex layer
and, without access to the transmitted data from at least one side, it
might well prove to be impossible for a third party to decode what the
other side is sending.


Geoffrey Welsh <Geoffrey [dot] Welsh [at] bigfoot [dot] com>
Never leave until tomorrow what can wait until next week. 

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

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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 15 May 2006 15:40:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 183

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    US Spy Agency Built 'Largest Database Ever Known' (Spam Daily News)
    Verizon Gets Sued Big Time Over NSA Dealings (Spam Daily News)
    The NSA is on the Line - All of Them (Monty Solomon)
    Dialing 311? Hold that Call (Monty Solomon)
    Everyone's Always Been a Critic -  Net Makes Their Voices (Monty Solomon)
    Invasion of the Computer Snatchers (Monty Solomon)
    Cellular-News: Monday 15th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 15, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Internet Takes TV in a Whole New Direction (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: 311 (Arthur Kamlet)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Steven Lichter)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (John Mayson)
    Re: Blog Got Vandalized Friday Evening (John Mayson)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

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

From: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: US Spy Agency Built 'Largest Database Ever Known'
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 15:24:20 -0500


 From Spam Daily News
      US spy agency building database of every call ever made
      Posted on May 11, 2006

After report says millions of Americans' phone records have been given
to the National Security Agency (NSA), Bush says privacy is 'fiercely
protected.'

The National Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone
call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by
AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth, people with direct knowledge of the
arrangement told USA TODAY.

The three telecommunications companies are working under contract with
the NSA, which launched the program in 2001 shortly after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, the sources said.

With access to records of billions of domestic calls, the NSA has
gained a secret window into the communications habits of millions of
Americans.

For the customers of these companies, it means that the government has
detailed records of calls they made -- across town or across the
country -- to family members, co-workers, business contacts and others.

"It's the largest database ever assembled in the world," said one
person, who, like the others who agreed to talk about the NSA's
activities, declined to be identified by name or affiliation. The
agency's goal is "to create a database of every call ever made" within
the nation's borders, this person added.

The NSA's domestic program, as described by sources, is far more
expansive than what the White House has acknowledged.

Last year, Bush said he had authorized the NSA to eavesdrop -- without
warrants -- on international calls and international e-mails of people
suspected of having links to terrorists when one party to the
communication is in the USA. Warrants have also not been used in the
NSA's efforts to create a national call database.

Under Section 222 of the Communications Act, first passed in 1934,
telephone companies are prohibited from giving out information
regarding their customers' calling habits: whom a person calls, how
often and what routes those calls take to reach their final
destination. Inbound calls, as well as wireless calls, also are
covered.

Section 2702 of Title 18 in the Electronic Communications Privacy Act
prohibits electronic communications service providers from knowingly
divulging a record or other information pertaining to a subscriber or
customer to any government entity without customer consent, subpoena
or court order.

Among the big telecommunications companies, only Qwest has refused to
help the NSA. According to multiple sources, Qwest declined to
participate because it was uneasy about the legal implications of
handing over customer information to the government without warrants.

Qwest's CEO at the time, Joe Nacchio, was deeply troubled by the NSA's
assertion that Qwest didn't need a court order -- or approval under
FISA -- to proceed. Adding to the tension, Qwest was unclear about who,
exactly, would have access to its customers' information and how that
information might be used.

The NSA told Qwest that other government agencies, including the FBI,
CIA and DEA, also might have access to the database, the sources said.

Unable to get comfortable with what NSA was proposing, Qwest's lawyers
asked NSA to take its proposal to the FISA court. According to the
sources, the agency refused.

The NSA's explanation did little to satisfy Qwest's lawyers. "They
told (Qwest) they didn't want to do that because FISA might not agree
with them," one person recalled. For similar reasons, this person
said, NSA rejected Qwest's suggestion of getting a letter of
authorization from the U.S. attorney general's office. A second person
confirmed this version of events, reported USA TODAY.

Defending his administration's espionage program, Bush said
intelligence activities he had authorized were lawful and the
government was not eavesdropping on domestic phone calls without court
approval.

"We're not mining or trolling through the personal lives of millions
of innocent Americans," Bush said from the White House. "Our efforts
are focused on links to al-Qaida and their known affiliates. So far,
we've been very successful in preventing another attack on our soil."

Ever since news of the surveillance program became public in December,
the president and members of his administration have stressed that it
was limited to intercepting phone conversations and e-mail messages
where one party to the conversation was outside the United States. In
January, Bush assured Americans that "one end of the communication
must be outside the United States."

However, the government has abruptly ended an inquiry into the
warrantless eavesdropping program because the National Security Agency
refused to grant Justice Department lawyers security clearance.

The Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility, or
OPR, sent a fax Wednesday to Democratic Rep. Maurice Hinchey of New
York saying it was closing its inquiry because without clearance it
could not examine department lawyers' role in the program.

"We have been unable to make any meaningful progress in our
investigation because OPR has been denied security clearances for
access to information about the NSA program," OPR counsel H. Marshall
Jarrett wrote to Hinchey. Hinchey's office shared the letter with The
Associated Press.

In December, The New York Times revealed that Bush had authorized the
NSA to wiretap, without warrants, international phone calls and
e-mails that travel to or from the USA. The following month, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group, filed a
class-action lawsuit against AT&T. The lawsuit accuses the company of
helping the NSA spy on U.S. phone customers.

The lawsuit does not name the government as a defendant, but the
Department of Justice has sought to quash the lawsuit, saying it
threatens to expose government and military secrets.

The usefulness of the NSA's domestic phone-call database as a
counterterrorism tool is unclear. Also unclear is whether the database
has been used for other purposes.

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

From: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Verizon Gets Sued Big Time Over NSA Dealings
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 15:25:50 -0500


 From Spam Daily News

Attorneys Bruce Afran and Carl Mayer claim the carrier violated
privacy laws by turning over phone records to the U.S. National
Security Agency (NSA) for a secret government surveillance program.

The federal suit, filed in New York, asks the court to stop Verizon
from turning over any more records to the NSA without a warrant or
consent of the subscriber. It also seeks $1,000 for each violation of
the Telecommunications Act, or $5 billion if the case is a class
action.

Afran and Mayer said they would consider filing suits against
BellSouth and AT&T in other jurisdictions.

Under Section 222 of the Communications Act, first passed in 1934,
telephone companies are prohibited from giving out information
regarding their customers' calling habits: whom a person calls, how
often and what routes those calls take to reach their final
destination. Inbound calls, as well as wireless calls, also are
covered.

Orin Kerr, a former federal prosecutor and assistant professor at
George Washington University, said his reading of the relevant
statutes put the phone companies at risk for at least $1,000 per
person whose records they disclosed without a court order.

Section 2702 of Title 18 in the Electronic Communications Privacy Act
prohibits electronic communications service providers from knowingly
divulging a record or other information pertaining to a subscriber or
customer to any government entity without customer consent, subpoena
or court order.

"This is the largest intrusion into civil liberties ever seen in the
United States," said Afran, who is a professor at Rutgers University.
"Americans expect their phone records to be private. That's our
bedrock governing principle of our phone system."

Afran said that he and Mayer will also ask for documents dealing with
the origination of the program and President Bush's role in it.

Verizon said in a statement that because the NSA program is highly
classified, it wouldn't confirm or deny whether the company
participated in the program. It also declined to comment about the
lawsuit.

A government official, while not confirming the existence of the NSA
program, pointed to a 1979 Supreme Court case, Smith v. Maryland. The
official said justices ruled that the acquisition of basic phone
records - calling numbers, called numbers and duration of calls - is
not a "search" under the Fourth Amendment and that individuals do not
have a reasonable expectation of privacy in such call record data.

But Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies,
said after that case Congress required courts to approve the use of
electronic devices that capture basic information about calls in real
time, or to get a court order or a subpoena for phone records stored
by phone companies.

The National Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone
call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by
AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth, people with direct knowledge of the
arrangement told USA TODAY.

Qwest was apparently alone among the four major telephone companies to
have resisted the requests to cooperate with the government effort. A
statement issued on behalf of former Qwest Communications CEO Joseph
Nacchio by his lawyer, Herbert J. Stern, said that after the
government's first approach in the fall of 2001, "Mr. Nacchio made
inquiry as to whether a warrant or other legal process had been
secured in support of that request."

"When he learned that no such authority had been granted and that
there was a disinclination on the part of the authorities to use any
legal process, including the Special Court which had been established
to handle such matters, Mr. Nacchio concluded that these requests
violated the privacy requirements of the Telecommications Act and
issued instructions to refuse to comply," Stern said.

      Verizon Issues Statement on NSA and Privacy Protection
   Verizon Communications today issued the following statement:

The President has referred to an NSA program, which he authorized,
directed against al-Qaeda. Because that program is highly classified,
Verizon cannot comment on that program, nor can we confirm or deny
whether we have had any relationship to it.

Having said that, there have been factual errors in press coverage
about the way Verizon handles customer information in general.
Verizon puts the interests of our customers first and has a
longstanding commitment to vigorously safeguard our customers' privacy
 -- a commitment we've highlighted in our privacy principles, which are
available at http://www.verizon.com/privacy.

Verizon will provide customer information to a government agency only
where authorized by law for appropriately-defined and focused
purposes.  When information is provided, Verizon seeks to ensure it is
properly used for that purpose and is subject to appropriate
safeguards against improper use. Verizon does not, and will not,
provide any government agency unfettered access to our customer
records or provide information to the government under circumstances
that would allow a fishing expedition.

In January 2006, Verizon acquired MCI, and we are ensuring that
Verizon's policies are implemented at that entity and that all its
activities fully comply with law.

Verizon hopes that the Administration and the Congress can come
together and agree on a process in an appropriate setting, and with
safeguards for protecting classified information, to examine any
issues that have been raised about the program. Verizon is fully
prepared to participate in such a process.

            Source: Verizon


NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
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http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html
 
For more news and headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org./td-extra./newstoday.html

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 21:51:56 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: The NSA is on the Line - All of Them


An intelligence expert predicts we'll soon learn that cellphone and
Internet companies also cooperated with the National Security Agency
to eavesdrop on us.

By Kim Zetter

May. 15, 2006 | When intelligence historian Matthew Aid read the USA
Today story last Thursday about how the National Security Agency was
collecting millions of phone call records from AT&T, Bell South and
Verizon for a widespread domestic surveillance program designed to
root out possible terrorist activity in the United States, he had to
wonder whether the date on the newspaper wasn't 1976 instead of 2006.

Aid, a visiting fellow at George Washington University's National
Security Archive, who has just completed the first book of a
three-volume history of the NSA, knew the nation's bicentennial marked
the year when secrets surrounding another NSA domestic surveillance
program, code-named Project Shamrock, were exposed. As fireworks
showered New York Harbor that year, the country was debating a
three-decades-long agreement between Western Union and other
telecommunications companies to surreptitiously supply the NSA, on a
daily basis, with all telegrams sent to and from the United
States. The similarity between that earlier program and the most
recent one is remarkable, with one exception -- the NSA now owns
vastly improved technology to sift through and mine massive amounts of
data it has collected in what is being described as the world's single
largest database of personal information. And, according to Aid, the
mining goes far beyond our phone lines.

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/05/15/aid_interview/

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

Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 00:48:57 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Dialing 311? Hold That Call


http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/14/dialing_311_hold_that_c=
all/

May 14, 2006

Ric Kahn's article '311' (City Weekly, April 30) hits the nail on the
head with regard to the desirability of a centralized citizen request,
dispatch, and tracking system for city services, but misses the mark
in suggesting that 311 should be the access code.

I believe that using 311 as the telephone access code for the
centralized request line is not a good idea in 2006. 311 works only if
all callers in the city can reach it -- if it's ''routable," in
telecom industry lingo. And with today's widespread use of cellphones
and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services such as Vonage or
Skype, that's a problem. The author points to Baltimore's success with
311 -- but that system was set up 10 years ago, when nearly everyone's
primary means of calling was a conventional ''wireline"
telephone. Today, many people have gone completely wireless, or
switched from a conventional wireline service to VoIP.

The article mentions that Somerville has instituted 311 service.
Suppose Boston did, too, and suppose a Charletown resident, near the
Somerville line, dials 311 from a cellphone. That call might be picked
up by a nearby cell tower in Somerville.

The wireless industry has been working long, hard, and expensively to 
solve the problem for Enhanced 911 emergency services, and it's not 
completely fixed yet.

The Menino administration is correct in advocating use of a
conventional 10-digit telephone number to access a central citizen
request line. A 10-digit phone number is universally routable.

Kenneth Pogran
Lexington

Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.

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

Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 02:13:22 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Everyone's Always Been a Critic -- Net Makes Their Voices Count


By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist 

Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to
extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly
serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games
on the Net?

Amazon.com may have been one of the first sites, in the mid-1990s, to
allow its users to share their thoughts about a book, just below the
venerable Publishers Weekly or Booklist write-up. Now, such sites as
Blogcritics.org collect reviews written by bloggers, and Apple's
iTunes Music Store allows users to share their iMixes -- lists of
favorite songs on a particular theme, like ''NJ Best," a selection
from Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, and other musicians with roots in
the Garden State.

"The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski, 
chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal. 
"Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer 
recommendations."

Already, consumers can sample a broader range of critical opinion on
the Internet -- some of it relevant and thoughtful, covering products
that wouldn't ordinarily be reviewed by the mainstream media, and some
of it biased or one-dimensional. ('This game rocks!' ) And marketers,
such as movie studios and book publishers, are trying to figure out
how Internet tastemakers figure into their relationship with their
customers.

This year, for instance, movie studios have chosen to forgo advance
critics' screenings for more new movies than they did during the same
period of last year. The supernatural thriller 'Silent Hill' wasn't
shown to critics before it opened on April 21 -- some of the first
reviews showed up on the website AintItCoolNews.com that morning --
and yet the movie was last weekend's best box office performer.

And publishers such as Boston's Beacon Press are noticing that some
niche titles, such as a recent collection of writings about Iranian
culture, can attract more critical attention online than off.
Publicity director Pamela McColl says that Beacon is still trying to
assemble lists of influential book blogs -- "there are a lot of blogs
out there," she says -- but that the firm already provides review
copies to some critics who write solely for the Net. Not surprisingly,
McColl says that online reviews seem to be more influential among
younger readers.

At press events where video game companies introduce products, Greg 
Kasavin has started to notice more non-journalists in the audience.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/30/everyones_always_been_a_critic____but_the_net_makes_their_voices_count/

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

Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 16:26:26 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Invasion of the Computer Snatchers


[Interview with 0x80 from February 2006]

Invasion of the Computer Snatchers
Hackers are hijacking thousands of PCs to spy on users, shake down 
online businesses, steal identities and send millions of pieces of 
spam. If you think your computer is safe, think again

By Brian Krebs
Sunday, February 19, 2006; W10

In the six hours between crashing into bed and rolling out of it, the
21-year-old hacker has broken into nearly 2,000 personal computers
around the globe. He slept while software he wrote scoured the
Internet for vulnerable computers and infected them with viruses that
turned them into slaves.

Now, with the smoke of his day's first Marlboro curling across the
living room of his parents' brick rambler, the hacker known online as
"0x80" (pronounced X-eighty) plops his wiry frame into a tan,
weathered couch, sets his new laptop on the coffee table and punches
in a series of commands. At his behest, the commandeered PCs will
begin downloading and installing software that will bombard their
users with advertisements for pornographic Web sites. After the
installation, 0x80 orders the machines to search the Internet for
other potential victims.

The young hacker, who has agreed to be interviewed only if he isn't 
identified by name or home town, takes a deep drag of his smoke and 
leans back against the couch to exhale. He smiles. This is his day 
job, and his work is finished in less than two minutes. In two weeks, 
he will receive a $300 check from one of the online marketing 
companies that pays him for his services.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/14/AR2006021401342.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Monday 15th May 2006
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 09:11:18 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[3G News]]

HSPA Networks to Dominate Mobile Infrastructure Revenue
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17368.php

High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) network deployments will garner over
60% of infrastructure revenue in 2012, according to a new report from
Telecom Trend. The report says the infrastructure market will generate
over $100 billion in revenue in 2012. "W...

[[Financial News]]

O2 End March User Base 32.79 Million, +16% Or 699,000 On Year
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17354.php

O2 Chairman & Chief Executive, Peter Erskine, said Friday that during
the first quarter "The strong momentum in all O2's businesses has been
maintained within the Telefonica Group. Across O2, now including the
Czech Republic, we added 699,000 mobile ...

O2 CEO Sees Mobile Roaming Use Increasing This Summer
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17356.php

UK mobile-telecommunications operator O2 said Friday it sees people
increasing the use of mobile phones on holidays, as roaming charges
decline. ...

Telefonica Profit Jumps 40% On O2, Cesky
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17357.php

Telefonica, Europe third-largest telecommunications company, on Friday
said quarterly profit jumped 40%, helped by the contribution of recent
acquisitions O2 and Cesky Telecom. ...

Telecom net profit drops 99%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17358.php

Telecom Argentina closed the first quarter of 2006 with a net profit
of 3mn pesos (US$984,898), down 99% compared to the 279mn-peso profit
posted in the same period in 2005, the company said in a
statement. ...

TEM: LatAm operations now represent 50% of total revenues
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17360.php

Spain's TelefÃ³nica MÃ³viles saw its Latin American revenues grow 35%
in the first quarter compared to 1Q05, reaching 2.17bn euros
(US$2.78bn), TEM said in a statement. ...

[[Handsets News]]

Motorola Sues Over Handset Copies
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17371.php

Motorola says that it has reached agreement in a lawsuit filed against
South Korean manufacturer KBT Mobile for infringements of patents,
trademarks and designs for the Motorola RAZR mobile phone. With the
settlement, KBT has agreed to discontinue al...

[[Legal News]]

Speedus Files Patent Suits Against Verizon Wireless
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17362.php

Speedus Corp. on Friday said its unit, CellularVision Technology &
Telecommunications L.P., has filed patent infringement suits against
Verizon Wireless, a joint venture of Verizon Communications and
Vodafone Group. ...

[[Messaging News]]

BlackBerry's China Prospects Look Limited
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17355.php

Research in Motion, maker of the BlackBerry handheld e-mail device,
said Thursday that it would introduce its service in China through a
partnership with China Mobile Communications Co. ...

[[Mobile Content News]]

Nokia Signs Commercial DVB-H Mobile TV Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17366.php

Finland's Digita and Nokia have signed the world's first commercial
DVB-H mobile TV platform supply contract. Nokia will deliver to Digita
its Nokia Broadcast Solution (MBS) 3.0, which is a service management
solution for DVB-H services. The MBS 3.0 ...

Operators and Media Cos Fight Over Mobile Content Revenues
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17370.php

Media and entertainment players are looking at ways to target the
consumer in a more personal and direct way without losing their
revenue share of the lucrative mobile entertainment market to the
mobile operators says a new report from Informa Teleco...

[[Network Operators News]]

Nextel Launches Digital Trunking Services In Cancun
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17363.php

The Mexican subsidiary of digital trunking operator NII Holdings has
launched service in the Caribbean resort city of Cancun, the company
said in a press release. ...

[[Offbeat News]]

Qualcomm Donates CDMA Kit to Congo Hospital
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17372.php

Qualcomm says that it has made a commitment to provide a cash donation
and CDMA2000 1xEV-DO service and devices for the Biamba Marie Mutombo
Hospital and Research Center in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, along with Palomar Pomerado Healt...

[[Regulatory News]]

UAE Urges US To Open Up Telecommunications Sector -Report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17365.php

The United Arab Emirates is urging the USA to open up its telecom
sector to UAE companies, Gulf News newspaper reported Sunday quoting
Sultan bin Saeed al-Mansouri, UAE minister of Governmental Sector
Development. ...

[[Reports News]]

Global Wireless Growth Slowing - Free Report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17367.php

 From a global perspective, wireless growth of total active
subscribers increased 17% in 2005 compared to 35% in 2004, based on
Fitch's Global Wireless Review special report. Fitch expects that the
trend for slowing total subscriber growth will contin...

Telecom Equipment Sales Growing By Third for 2009
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17373.php

Worldwide total telecom and datacom equipment revenue totaled US$107.9
billion in 2005 and will grow 33% to US$143.5 billion in 2009,
according to a new market share and forecast report by Infonetics
Research. Wireless broadband and mobile radio acce...

[[Statistics News]]

Ukraine's UMC mobile subscriber base up to 14.6 mln as of May 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17364.php

The total subscriber base of Ukraine?s Mobile Communications (UMC),
Ukraine?s second largest mobile phone operator, rose 1% in April to
14.6 million users as of May 1, the company said in a press release
Friday. ...

[[Technology News]]

EU expected to propose semiconductor plant
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17359.php

European officials were expected to make a proposal Thursday to build
a semiconductor plant in Brazil, local newspapers reported. ...

Nokia, Google Partnership Highlights WiFi Trend
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17361.php

Google's expected partnership with Nokia for a WiFi device could be
seen as a bet on the trend of more communities installing wireless Web
connections. ...

New 65nm Mobile Phone Chip Works First Time
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17369.php

Infineon Technologies has announced that the first cell phone chips
equipped with its advanced 65-nm CMOS process technology are now
available. The components functioned perfectly right from the start,
as testing in Duisburg, Munich and Bangalore, In...

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

Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 12:16:50 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 15, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 15, 2006
********************************

T-Mobile Registers 1 mil. T-Mobile@home CustomersÂ 
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/17948?11228

     Germany's leading mobile operator, T-Mobile (part of Deutsche
     Telekom), had registered nearly 1 million subscribers for its
     T-Mobile@home service by end- April 2006, up from 200,000 at the
     end of February.  The fixed-mobile convergence (FMC) offering was
     launched four months ago.  Significance: The service allows
     customers to use their...

Nokia To Announce Upgraded 770 Internet Tablet with Google Talk Feature
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17936?11228

     HELSINKI, Finland -- The world's largest mobile phone maker,
     Nokia Corp., said Monday it will launch a new version of the
     Nokia 770 Internet Tablet to feature Google Talk that will enable
     users to speak to each other over the Internet and send instant
     messages.  The launch will be announced by Nokia and Google
     Inc. in the Swedish...

Chip Design Promises Longer Battery Life
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17932?11228

     Dead batteries are the bane of all mobile device users. But
     relief may be on the way, thanks to a wireless chip design that
     uses only a tenth as much energy as existing designs.  The
     possible solution lies in a technology known as an "injection
     locked frequency divider" (ILFD). Wireless chip manufacturers
     have long known about...

Clearwire Preps for IPO
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17930?11228

     Craig McCaw is ready to take its WiMAX technology company public.
     Clearwire filed details with the Securities and Exchange
     Commission about a planned initial public offering to raise $400
     million.  Clearwire first launched its pre-WiMAX service offering
     in 2004 to a limited audience. Since then, the company has ramped
     up its rollout...

New Treo out of the Box
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/17929?11228

     Introducing the first new mobile device in two years based on its
     native operating system, Palm Inc. today unveiled the
     long-awaited Treo 700p, a voice/mobile email device that runs on
     high-speed EV-DO networks. Delayed more than once, and the object
     of feverish speculation in online forums, the new release is the
     first Palm OS-based...

Cellular Prices Tumble As O2 and Telefonica Cater To 'High Roamers'
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17927?11228

     European cellular customers who use their mobile phones outside
     of their home countries are set to benefit from lower charges as
     wireless operators across Europe announce plans to reduce roaming
     charges. In what is being touted as an industry first and the
     most significant of several roaming initiatives, O2 and
     Telefonica Moviles have...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 13:37:42 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Internet takes TV in a whole new direction


USTelecom dailyLead
May 15, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDeEfDtutefarpHCkN

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Internet takes TV in a whole new direction
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Qwest buys OnFiber Communications
* American-owned cable company gets personal in Japan
* Palm unveils Treo for faster networks
* Nokia to put Google Talk on Web device
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Maximizing Returns on IPTV and Mobile TV
HOT TOPICS
* Verizon may sell landlines in seven states
* AT&T to offer satellite broadband, IPTV to low-income households
* Microsoft exec: IPTV deployment strategy crucial to technology's success
* Q-and-A with Sprint's Gary Forsee
* Report: NSA has compiled records of domestic phone calls
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Media multitasking -- everyone's doing it
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Upcoming spectrum auction could alter wireless playing field
* Editorial: Government should change approach to wireless spectrum

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDeEfDtutefarpHCkN

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

From: kamlet@panix.com (Arthur Kamlet)
Subject: Re: 311
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 20:17:32 UTC
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.
Reply-To: ArtKamlet@aol.REMOVE.com


In article <telecom25.182.5@telecom-digest.org>,
Monty Solomon  <monty@roscom.com> wrote:

> Excerpts from

> The Model City
> http://www.boston.com/news/globe/magazine/articles/2006/05/14/the_model_city/

> The piece de resistance, however, is 311. Dial that number from almost
> any phone in the city, and you reach Somerville's help line.  Street
> unplowed? Cat up a tree? Want to know your alderman's name?  Simple
> questions are answered. Complex ones get a case number, and residents
> can track their concerns on the Web as easily as a FedEx package.

> It's a remarkable idea: A local government that actually treats its
> citizens like customers and holds itself accountable to them. Few
> places in Massachusetts have 311, and no other has put in place
> Somerville's mix of budgeting and management tools.

I live in Columbus OH which has had 311 service as described here, for
quite a while, but only from an AT&T phone.  If your service is from
elsewhere, 311 doesn't work.  Nor from wireless phones.

Art Kamlet     ArtKamlet @ AOL.com   Columbus OH    K2PZH

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

Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
From: Steven Lichter <shlichter@sbcglobal.net>
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 23:47:43 GMT


In article telecom25.182.7@telecom-digest.org, Linc Madison at
lincmad@suespammers.org wrote on 5/14/06 11:10:

> In article <telecom25.179.6@telecom-digest.org>,
> <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote:

>> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
>> vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

> It's very, very simple: the NSA and other arms of the Executive Branch
> should spy on terrorists *within* the laws passed by Congress, and
> *with* judicial oversight. Under the Constitution, the President lacks
> any and all authority to order anything different.

> The NSA program of listening to the content of telephone conversations
> in which at least one party is a "U.S. person" (not necessarily a
> citizen, nor even necessarily a permanent resident) is absolutely and
> unequivocally illegal and unconstitutional. "In time of war" the
> Constitution doesn't cease to exist, nor do its limitations on police
> powers. Neither the U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act nor the Authorization to
> Use Military Force (AUMF) gave the Executive any such powers -- nor
> could they, since the powers arrogated by the administration are
> beyond Congress' authority to grant. The administration has even
> admitted that the reason they did not ask Congress to modify the law
> to permit this surveillance program is that they did not believe that
> the Congress would comply. In other words, "We figured you would
> probably say no, so we just did it without asking."

> The other NSA program, of collecting telephone call records, is a bit
> more tricky, since it is (supposedly) not intruding into the content
> of the calls. There is considerable reason to believe that the telcos
> violated their own legal obligations to their customers (the privacy
> clauses in their contracts) by turning over the records without a
> court order, but the violation of the law -- if any -- by the NSA was
> certainly far less egregious than in the wiretap case. The Supreme
> Court has ruled that you do not have a legitimate privacy claim to the
> records of what numbers you called and for how long. Police have often
> sought call records as part of an investigation, although those
> searches were much more limited and much more closely tailored to the
> individual cases.

> Of course, the other element in both schemes is the effectiveness and
> wisdom of the program. I don't know who first said it, but, "We're
> looking for a needle in a haystack, so wantonly piling on more hay
> might not be the best plan." We do need more data about the terrorists
> and their plans, but far more than that, we need more intelligent
> collection of data. There have been published reports that the FBI has
> been really steamed because the vast majority of the leads produced by
> the NSA's illegal espionage program have been wild goose chases -- a
> complete waste of the Bureau's resources without making America the
> slightest bit safer. Simply put, we don't have the resources to make
> use of the data we already have, so going after mountains of unsifted
> raw data isn't the best use of our capabilities.

> But even if the programs produce some results, the question remains,
> at what cost? I'm not at all pleased at the idea of the government
> snooping through my private communications, or even knowing who I
> called and when. Do I have something to hide? Hell yes! Every single
> one of us has something to hide. Just because some activity is legal
> doesn't mean that it's in my interests for the world to know about it,
> and the line between the government's knowing about it and the world's
> knowing about it is altogether too thin.

> Beyond that, our government has a long history of misusing such
> powers.  The FBI wiretapped Martin Luther King because he was a
> subversive -- in other words, an "uppity nigger" -- even though he was
> acting completely within the law. President Nixon spied on his
> political enemies for purely partisan reasons. The Fourth Amendment is
> there for good reason, to protect

The only Good Spammer is a dead one!!  Have you hunted one down today?
(c) 2006 I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot in Hell Company
the lives of innocent, law-abiding

> citizens from unwarranted intrusion by the government. To allow
> President Bush to ignore those protections, as he undeniably has, is
> the essence of treason.

> Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
> <http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
> Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
> DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

I can remember many years ago while still working for GTE, I was
helping out in a business office filing bills for UCLA dorms, when a
court order came down to copy a companies bill. We were told to make
copies and send the bills up to the legal department and file the
copies.  I had always thought that some sort of order hadto be given
from a court to get information.  Just look at the stink that was made
here in the Riverside, Ca. area when Sprint would not give out the
location of a car that had been stolen with a child in it.  Sprint
wanted a court order before releasing the data, and finally did give
it to the police after the phone owner give written permission.

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

From: John Mayson <john@mayson.us>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 20:02:30 -0500


I had replied to this thread days ago, but there's a disconnect
between my NNTP server and this group.  PAT, I don't care if you post
my address.  I have good spam filters.  :-)

> I am curious as to what people think of the issue of national security
> vs. privacy in light of the recent revelations.

I am staunchly against any wiretapping without a judicial warrant.   
I'm also quite concerned about the NSA having a database of our calls.

> In the railroad and roads newsgroups, there was a discussion on the
> issue of the rights of photographers to take pictures of public works
> vs. the need for security of those works against terrorists.  Some
> facilities (highway toll roads, transit agencies) do not allow
> photography from public safe locations which traditionally was a
> absolute right.

I'm an avid scanner listener.  I used to go to the airport with my
scanner and stand on top of my van's roof and photograph airlines
coming and going.  The airport police would even pause while a plane
was in my field of view so as to not block my picture.  This was 1999
and 2000.  I haven't even tried since 9/11 and don't plan to.  Just
not worth the hassle.

> I myself aren't sure.  I don't agree with either extremes--the govt
> must have some limitations on citizen spying and we must preserve our
> long existing rights, but the govt does need the power and ability to
> spy on potential terrorists to protect us.

The government seems to have a policy: people are no good.  None of us
can be trusted.  I don't trust a government that doesn't trust me.

John Mayson <john@mayson.us>
Austin, Texas, USA

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

From: John Mayson <john@mayson.us>
Subject: Re: Blog Got Vandalized Friday Evening
Date: Sun, 14 May 2006 22:45:05 -0500


> Some of you know that several months ago I started a blog (actually a
> couple of them) for non-telecom related topics which cross my mind
> each day http://ptownson.blogspot.com Late Friday afternoon someone
> unknown to me (but they wouldn't have it any other way) took exception
> to one of my recent messages and chose to trash me out pretty
> badly. The entire blog had to be rebuilt from scratch and I spent much
> of the day Saturday doing that. Of course it will never get back
> esthetically just like I had it before. Oh well, I did not have a lot
> to do with my time today anyway, as it has been sort of damp and cold
> here all day.

PAT,

It looks like you have three blogs, all of them identical.  I read
your blog on LiveJournal and was surprised to read about the one on
Blogspot.  I also came across a third, but I forget where it lives.

Are they really all the same, or am I missing something?  :-)

I was never comfortable with blogging, then came across this great
quote on a web page, which I stole for mine.  :-)

"Moment of theoretical introspection: I don't do blogs. I'm so prone  
to historical revision that any entry I'd post would be totally torn  
to shreds within months when I reread it later and wondered just what  
the heck was I thinking then."

John Mayson <john@mayson.us>
Austin, Texas, USA


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: They are not all _exactly_ the same;
the main difference is that http://ptownson.blogspot.com has a lot
more features on it which change daily, such as cartoons, other news
reports, classical music, _and sponsors_, etc. The essays which appear
there also appear on Blogspot and are used on 
http://www.livejournal.com/patrick_townson and 
http://ptownson.blogstream.com , but the latter two do not contain all
the other features.  PAT]

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

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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 15 May 2006 22:47:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 184

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    They Know Who We're Calling (Richard Sisk)
    Bell South Claims it Gave up no Phone Record Either (Walter Putnum)
    Chat Rooms Help FBI Hunt Down Pedophiles (Mark Sherman)
    Sype Launches Free Call Promotion in US, Canada (Eric Auchard)
    Alternatives to GPS: WiFi, Bluetooth, UWB (kkolodziej@indoorlbs.com)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Danny Burstein)
    Re: US Spy Agency Built 'Largest Database Ever Known' (jmeissen@aracnet)

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
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We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we
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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: Richard Sisk <nydailynews@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: They Know Who We're Calling
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 20:22:58 -0500


      New York Daily News - http://www.nydailynews.com
      BY RICHARD SISK
      DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
      Friday, May 12th, 2006

WASHINGTON - A new furor over Big Brother tactics erupted yesterday
when it was revealed that the Bush administration has been tracking
nearly every phone call in the country over the past five years.

The colossal secret database of phone calls, first reported by USA
Today, prompted Democratic and Republican members of Congress to
demand answers from the White House, and at least one Senate committee
chairman promptly called for public hearings.

President Bush did not confirm the massive tracking program, but in a
hastily arranged White House announcement tried to assure Americans he
was protecting their privacy.

"We're not mining or trolling through the personal lives of millions
of innocent Americans," Bush said.

"The government does not listen to domestic phone calls without court
approval. ... The privacy of ordinary Americans is fiercely protected
in all our activities," the President said. He did not take any
questions.

Bush defenders on Capitol Hill confirmed that the National Security
Agency began collecting records of landline and cell phone calls
shortly after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and condemned leaks on the
project.

"This is nuts," said Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.). "We are in a war, and we
have got to collect intelligence on the enemy. And you can't tell the
enemy in advance how you're going to do it."

But Democrats and several Republicans questioned the program's
legality.

Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) said she was "deeply disturbed" by the
disclosures.

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said that "when the average American hears
that his or her phone records might have been used, they're going to
say, 'What? What happened? How did they use it? What permission did
they have to use it?'"

After 9/11, the NSA secretly contracted with AT&T, Verizon and
BellSouth for the records on all calls made over the more than 200
million phones serviced by the firms. The Denver-based Qwest firm
refused to turn over data on its 14 million phones.

White House Deputy Press Secretary Dana Perino tried to downplay any
sense of domestic spying.

"If you are calling to make reservations at a restaurant, and if you
are calling your daughter at college or if you are calling to plan
your wedding, the government has no interest in knowing about those
calls," Perino said.

She said the government is only "interested in finding out if Al Qaeda
is planning an attack in America."

Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), the Judiciary Committee chairman, said he
would subpoena the phone companies to appear before his committee.

"We're really flying blind on the subject and that's not a good way to
approach the Fourth Amendment and the constitutional issues involving
privacy," Specter said.

The uproar in Congress recalled the debate earlier this year of the
NSA's eavesdropping without court approval on phone calls and e-mails
between the U.S. and overseas where an Al Qaeda link was suspected.

The Justice Department claimed then that a Bush executive order
allowed the special Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to be
bypassed.  The White House did not say yesterday whether an executive
order had been signed for the phone record collection.

With Kenneth R. Bazinet

      10 Things You Should Know About Phone Scandal


      1. What is the National Security Agency doing?

The government spy agency is collecting the telephone records of
ordinary Americans and building a massive database of nearly every
call made within the country. We're talking 200 million phone lines
across the U.S.  and billions of calls, including an untold number
just in New York City.

      2. When did this start?

Shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, according to USA Today. The
bigger question is, where does the NSA snooping stop? Because if they can
track our calls, there's little to prevent them from reading our e-mails,
text and video messages. Even Internet phone services that encrypt their
calls could be vulnerable to Big Brother.

      3. Why is the NSA doing this?

Identify potential terrorists by tracking who talks to whom in
personal and business calls, whether local or long distance. It's a
process known as "social network analysis" that aims at identifying
previously undetected connections between people.

      4. Are the feds listening in to our phone calls?

They claim they are not. But they are keeping track of who we
call. The NSA records don't include names and addresses. But critics
say identifying a caller from a phone number is a snap. They also
question the government's rationale for doing this because terrorists
can easily get off "the grid" by using pay phones, calling cards and
Internet cafes. They can also cover their tracks by using disposable --
or a variety of -- cell phones.

      5. Which telephone companies turned over their records to the NSA?

Verizon -- with 7 million landline users just in New York State --
AT&T, and BellSouth Corp. cooperated with the feds. They are the
nation's biggest telecommunications companies and provide local and
wireless phone service to more than 200 million customers. But Qwest,
which has 14 million customers in 14 mostly Western states, refused.
Bell South said it refused also.

      6. What's President Bush's position?

Bush insists the feds are not "mining or trolling through the personal
lives" of Americans. He says the NSA's actions are "lawful" and that
he has briefed members of Congress.

      7. What does Congress say?

Many Democrats and some Republicans are outraged and are demanding
answers. They suspect it may be unconstitutional and violate privacy
rights.  Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) has vowed to grill phone company
honchos about the NSA snooping. But Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) is
defending the program as a necessary tool for fighting terrorism.

      8. What is the potential political fallout?

It could stall the confirmation of Bush's pick to run the CIA, Air
Force Gen. Michael Hayden. He was already taking flak for spearheading
the NSA's electronic eavesdropping program on telephone calls and
e-mails from within the U.S. to suspected terrorists overseas.

      9. So that's different from what we're finding out now?

Yes. That program involved the NSA tapping telephone calls and e-mails
from within the U.S. to suspected terrorist overseas - without
warrants.  This NSA program keeps tabs on all of us - also without our
knowledge.

      10. What happens now?

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) warned of a "major constitutional
confrontation." The debate over civil liberties and the legal
underpinnings for the Bush administration's actions has already
begun. But the public is divided over how much privacy should be
sacrificed in the name of safety from terrorism.

      Corky Siemaszko

      What the administration has said
      about domestic surveillance:

      Jan. 23

Gen. Michael Hayden, deputy director of national intelligence: "This
is not about intercepting conversations between people in the United
States.

 ... This is focused. It's targeted. It's very carefully done. You shouldn't
worry."

      Jan. 25

President Bush: "This is a targeted program to intercept
communications in which intelligence professionals have reason to
believe that at least one person is a member or agent of Al Qaeda or a
related terrorist organization. The program applies only to
international communications."

      Feb. 6 Attorney General Alberto Gonzales: "Only international
communications are authorized for interception under this
program. ... To protect the privacy of Americans still further, the
NSA employs safeguards to minimize the unnecessary collection and
dissemination of information about U.S.  persons."

      Yesterday:

President Bush: "The privacy of ordinary Americans is fiercely
protected in all our activities. We're not mining or trolling through
the personal lives of millions of innocent Americans."

NSA spokesman Don Weber: "The NSA takes its legal responsibilities
seriously and operates within the law."

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Way back in the 1960's when Electronic
Switching Systems (ESS) were first being developed, telco's major
complaint was that the telephone network had essentially gotten out of
control; among other things, anyone who knew how the 'system' worked
(and more people were find out every day about the old-style 'frames'
and other apparatus; how ancient and unreliable it was becoming; and
the various limitations of the 'system' where people who were less
than honest were concerned, or people who were malevolent in their
intentions, and telco finally had enough of it and said the entire
system had to be rebuilt from the ground up. 

Now, what telco said to the public was there would now be all these
new, modern conveniences such as 'call waiting', 'three way calling'
and such, to smooth over their _real_ intention, which was to get a
phone system which was totally under their thumbs for once. What telco
did _not_ tell you was that no longer, to 'trace a call' did an
operator have to call a tech to go back in the frames and spend 30-45
minutes looking around, only to after several minutes hear the 
sickening sound of the tandems collapsing; all he could do at that 
point was shrug his shoulders, turn around and walk away and tell the
business office -- or whoever had ordered the trace -- that it failed
but 'maybe tomorrow we can find out who the bugger is ... '. And ditto
when the feds wanted something done; it was a real pain in telco's
backside to have to run those jumpers around all over in the frames
area. Now with ESS, it became a very simple matter to go see the 
nerd who was sitting at the terminal and ask him 'did X talk to Y
today?  When? How long?  He could tell you in a few seconds who was
doing what at any given time, and provide you with a print out of
it as well. 

So, while the smiling service rep was talking _you_ into purchasing a
few of the new features 'which we are now equipped to provide in your
calling area' the overall intent of ESS was a lot more nefarious. Why
hell, we can even let the public in on certain subsets of these new
toys such as 'return last call' and 'speed dialing' and charge them
for those new conveniences also. By nickle-and-diming the subscribers
for these new toys, we can even amortize a small portion of what it
cost us to instll them. Should any of the customers get nosy and
ask us, "just how do _you_ know who I talked to earlier today?" we
just pass it off as a peculiar question and let it go at that. 

No, ESS was not intended as a 'customer convenience'; it was intended
to restore telco to the people who built it in the first place.   PAT]

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

From: Walter Putnam <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Bell South Claims it Gave up no Phone Record Either
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 20:12:46 -0500


By WALTER PUTNAM, Associated Press Writer

BellSouth Corp. said Monday its "thorough review" found no indication
it gave telephone records to the National Security Agency as part of a
federal anti-terrorism surveillance program.

A report last week by USA Today identified BellSouth, along with AT&T
Inc.  and Verizon Communications Inc., as companies that had complied
with an NSA request to turn over millions of customer phone records
after the 2001 terror attacks.

"Based on our review to date, we have confirmed no such contract
exists and we have not provided bulk customer calling records to the
NSA," the Atlanta-based regional Bell said in a statement.

BellSouth spokesman Jeff Battcher said the company's investigation
found "no contract with the NSA and we are confident that we have
turned over no phone records."

Last week, Battcher said the company had "not provided any information
we would need a subpoena for, and they were evasive about obtaining a
subpoena. We were not happy with their answers at all, and felt
for sure this would get _our company_ in a lot of trouble. They asked
us, just as they asked Qwest; we told them go away and do not bother
us without a warrant."

The USA Today report followed earlier revelations of wiretapping on
overseas calls without a court order and sparked a renewed national
debate over government intrusion into Americans' civil liberties in
the fight against terrorism.

Critics denounced the phone companies for complying with the NSA
surveillance request, while others approved of compromising privacy for
national security.

Another of the regional Bells, Denver-based Qwest Communications
International Inc., did not comply with the federal request for call
logs. "The whole thing stunk badly, in our estimation," said one
source. 

An AT&T spokesman said the company had no comment on BellSouth's
statement.  A Verizon representative did not immediately return a call
for comment.

Last week, Verizon said it had complied with relevant laws and was
"committed" to customer privacy. San Antonio-based AT&T said it
respects customers' privacy but has "an obligation to assist law
enforcement and other government agencies responsible for protecting
the public welfare."

Battcher said BellSouth's customer service department had received
little more than two dozen complaints about reports that private phone
records may have been relayed to the government.

"We have 20 million land line customers, so 26 complaints is not a
lot," Battcher said.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Mark Sherman <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Chat Rooms Help FBI Hunt Down Pedophiles
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 20:20:06 -0500


By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer

Seconds after she announces her presence in an online chat room, the
girl is besieged by a half-dozen men who want to know more about her.

"r u a virgin?" one man asks, after about a dozen quick exchanges that
begin with her age (13) and why she is home on a school day (illness).

The edgy online banter is taking place in an AOL chat room ostensibly
for women who like older men, but known as a forum for men who want to
make contact with girls. The supposed 13-year-old in this case,
though, is not a child, but an undercover FBI agent who is working out
of the bureau's main child pornography unit in a suburban Washington
office park.

The demonstration for an Associated Press reporter was intended to
show off the FBI's growing effort to fight child pornography, which
has yielded increases of more than 2000 percent in arrests and 350
percent in federal prosecutions over 10 years.

Agents use chats and other more private exchanges to seek out
potential pedophiles and pornographers. Another man who believed he
was talking to a 13-year-old asked how old she likes her men, then,
"virgin?" The agents save transcripts of the online conversations,
photographs that get exchanged and telephone numbers that are
revealed, intentionally or not.

These introductory conversations, in some cases, lead to illegal
activity; but the ease with which they're made show how large a
problem looms. Child pornography is frighteningly easy to find on the
Internet -- images are traded freely, children are lured into dangerous
situations and sexual abuse of children as young as infants is
available on demand.

Finding people who want child pornography "is like shooting fish in a
barrel," said Stacey Bradley, an FBI supervisory agent in the Innocent
Images unit. "Most people have no idea the _huge_ number of pedophiles
there are around the world, or even, for that matter, the United
States," she added. 

One out of every five children ages 10 to 17 receive sexual
solicitations online, according to the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children.

"The Internet is a great place, but there are certain parts of town
you don't want to be," said Arnold Bell, chief of the FBI's Innocent
Images unit.

There is wide agreement that images are proliferating and that
peddlers of child pornography are becoming more savvy to counter the
enhanced police effort to combat it.

Orin S. Kerr, a George Washington University law professor and expert
on computer crime, said investigators posing as children typically
steer clear of unfairly entrapping people on the other end of their
online conversations by taking a passive approach.

"If agents are careful, entrapment never needs to come up. They take a
suggestive screen name, go into a chat room and wait to be
contacted. The screen will light up," Kerr said.

He said he was aware of only one case that was tossed out of court in
which a state investigator, posing as a mother, was found to have
improperly lured the defendant by aggressively pushing him to get
involved with her children.

More often, authorities struggle to keep pace with the availability of
sexually explicit pictures of children and a lingering view among the
public that what advocates and police call child pornography often is
women dressing up to appear younger, said Ernie Allen, the missing and
exploited children center's president.

The real danger that child pornography presents, shown in several
recent cases of sexual abuse that have come to public attention, "is a
phenomenon that American and the world has only begun to understand, "
Allen said.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales recently called attention to the
issue in a speech filled with graphic images that he said was
necessary to get the nation's attention.

On a recent day in the FBI unit, a working group that includes police
officials from several countries was working a major investigation
that appeared to reach into most states and dozens of countries,
according to pins that were stuck into maps on the wall. Bell, the
unit chief, would not discuss the investigation.

Several agents acknowledged that they can get discouraged by the
volume of images and the number of people who appear eager to see
them. Bradley, the FBI supervisor, estimated that 80 percent of the
customers for child pornography are in the United States. "But there
are so many pedophiles, its like a 'needle in a haystack'; the
pedophiles are the haystack, they are everywhere."

"But even if I stop just one person from getting molested, it makes a
difference," she said.

The undercover agent chatted with one man for more than an hour. She
tried to stay in character with frequent use of the word "like" and
alternate spellings that produced "kewl" for cool.

This man sent a photograph, ostensibly of himself, showing a balding
man with a mustache and beard. He said he had three grandchildren and
asked whether the 13-year-old had a computer in her bedroom, a setup
that would allow her easier access with less parental interference.

While this man mainly avoided risque questions and answers, the
undercover agent regarded him as the most promising prospect for
engaging in darker, possibly illegal exchanges, should they meet again
online.

On the Net:

FBI Innocent Images program: http://www.fbi.gov/innocent.htm

Justice Department child exploitation and obscenity section:
http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/ceos/

National Center for Missing and Exploited Children:
http://www.missingkids.com

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
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For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
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------------------------------

From: Eric Auchard <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Sype Launches Free Call Promotion in US, Canada
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 20:15:21 -0500


By Eric Auchard

Skype, the Web telephone company, said on Monday it would allow
consumers in the United States and Canada to make free phone calls, a
promotional move that marks a new blow to conventional voice calling
services.

The offer, which extends through the end of 2006, covers calls from
computers or a new category of Internet-connected phones running Skype
software making calls to traditional landline or mobile phones within
the United States and Canada.

Previously, users of Skype, a unit of online auctioneer eBay Inc.,
were required to pay for calls from their PCs to traditional
telephones in both countries. Calls from North America to phones in
other countries will incur charges.

Skype already offers free calling to users worldwide who call from
computer to computer.

The company is seeking to accelerate usage in the North American
market, where adoption of its voice-over-Internet technology has
lagged other regions of the globe. Based in Luxembourg, it counts more
than 100 million registered users globally, including 6 million in the
United States.

Henry Gomez, general manager of Skype North America, said he believes
the move would rapidly accelerate adoption of the service. Skype will
pick up the interconnection costs of making calls to phone networks
owned by other carriers, he said.

"Skype anticipates that completely free calling in the U.S. and Canada
will expand Skype's increasing penetration in North America and
solidify Skype's position as the Internet's voice communication tool
of choice," Skype said in a statement.

The offer is likely to put price pressure on rival voice-over-Internet
phone service Vonage Holdings Corp., which is expected to go public
later this month. A spokesman did not return calls seeking comment.

Although Vonage and Skype serve somewhat different markets -- with
Vonage acting as a full replacement service for traditional phones
over Internet lines, and Skype considered by most as a complement to
existing service -- the free offer could siphon customers away from
Vonage.

"In one stroke, Skype simplifies the choice to try Skype," said Phil
Wolff, an editor at Skype Journal, an independent consulting group
that publishes an online news site on Skype developments. "This
promotion targets Skype's hardest market: North America."

The move puts pressure on rival Internet services such as Microsoft
Corp., Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news), AOL, Earthlink and Google
Inc., which charge small per-minute fees for computer-to-phone
services, Wolff said.

Skype, which allows free Web-based calls between members, said the
offer to U.S. and Canadian consumers is made feasible by the low cost
structure of North American telecom markets relative to other
countries, where phone tariffs are higher.

"The structure and efficiency of the telecommunications industry in
the U.S.  and Canada make it possible for Skype to offer free calls,"
Skype said on its Web site.

In October, eBay CEO Meg Whitman signaled that Skype users could
eventually expect to make telephone calls for free, with no per-minute
charges, as part of a package of services through which carriers make
money on advertising or transaction fees.

"In the end, the price that anyone can provide for voice transmission
on the 'Net will trend toward zero," she said.

The company is betting that by combining electronic markets, online
payment systems and Web-based communications, eBay can emerge as a
leader in all three businesses.

Gomez said the free phone service promotion will not alter the
company's plans to generate more than $200 million in revenue during
2006, up from roughly $60 million last year. Skype will promote the
offer via online advertising, radio spots and ads in selected local
cable TV markets, he said.

Shares of eBay closed down 26 cents at $31.23 on Nasdaq.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: kkolodziej@indoorlbs.com
Subject: Alternatives to GPS: WiFi, Bluetooth, UWB
Date: 15 May 2006 14:45:46 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


There is a new group, Alternatives to GPS.

http://groups.google.com/group/GPS-Alternatives

New Book and Resource website
http://indoorLBS.com

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: Mon, 15 May 2006 21:28:52 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


[ snip ]

*Stop* *right* *there*.

The very way the question was phrased is misleading, as it sets up a
yes/no, black/white dichotomy between "National security" versus
"privacy".

Of _course_ people are going to think highly o national security.

But ... there ain't _nothing_ in the original claims that shows any
validity to the arguments that stomping on privacy rights, oh, and
violating the laws left and right (allegedly, to be sure, but it
certainly looks like it) and shredding the US Constitution (same
disclaimer) has anything whatsoever with making us safer.

My third grade civics teachers would be embarrassed for anyone putting
together a survey like this, and would cry over the lost minds of
people using arguments in this manner.

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

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: US Spy Agency Built 'Largest Database Ever Known'
Date: 16 May 2006 00:11:02 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


In article <telecom25.183.1@telecom-digest.org>, Spam Daily News
<spam@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> From Spam Daily News
>      US spy agency building database of every call ever made
>      Posted on May 11, 2006

> After report says millions of Americans' phone records have been given
> to the National Security Agency (NSA), Bush says privacy is 'fiercely
> protected.'

> From an ABC news blog:
"A senior federal law enforcement official tells ABC News the
government is tracking the phone numbers we (Brian Ross and Richard
Esposito) call in an effort to root out confidential sources.

A pattern of phone calls from a reporter, however, could provide
valuable clues for leak investigators."

http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2006/05/federal_source_.html

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue May 16 18:28:20 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 16 May 2006 18:30:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 185

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Nokia Launches Google Talk (Reuters News Wire)
    NYC Central Park Getting Free WiFi (Agence France Presse)
    Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query? (donhdoyle@yahoo.com)
    Cellular News: Tuesday 16th May 2006 (Cellular News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 16, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    BellSouth Denies Giving NSA Records (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call (Thor Lancelot Simon)
    Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy? (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: They Know Who We're Calling (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Thomas D. Horne)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
Internet.  All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and
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See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Nokia Launches Google Talk 
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 16:02:56 -0500


Nokia, the world's biggest mobile phone maker, unveiled a new version
of its Internet tablet device running Google Talk communications
software on Tuesday.

The deal between Finnish-based Nokia and Web search leader Google Inc.
allows people to chat with other users of instant-messaging software
via the Nokia Wi-Fi device, which relies on short-range wireless
networks.

The Nokia 770 Internet tablet, introduced last year, offers wireless
access to digital music and video, as well as access to e-mail.

The new version of the Internet tablet, unveiled in Stockholm on
Tuesday, also has a full-screen finger keyboard.

Rather than using cell-phone networks, the 770 device relies on
unregulated local wireless connections.

Ari Virtanen, of Nokia's Multimedia division, said the device had been
selling well since its launch last year.

"The first months have been very encouraging," he told a news
conference, adding that sales of the product had ramped up in November
and sold out in the Christmas market.

The product reached its volume expectations for 2005 and Nokia was
heading into mass volumes of the 770, he said, adding that the
profitability target for the device was about the same as for other
Nokia products.

Virtanen said Nokia did not see any direct rivalry between the tablet
and regular mobile phones.

"I cannot see any direct competition between these two business
domains. Of course, they always overlap, but we do not see any direct
competition," he said.


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Agence France Presse News Wire <afpp@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: NYC Central Park Getting Free WiFi
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 16:05:03 -0500


New York's Central Park and a number of other public spaces will
become public Internet hubs starting this summer when the city's parks
begin offering free wireless net access, the city government said.

"We expect Central Park to be launched in July, and the rest of the
parks in the late summer," the Department of Parks and Recreation
said. Among those green spaces going on-line for public Wi-Fi access
will be Washington Square, Union Square, Brooklyn's Prospect Park and
Flushing Meadows.

Beginning in 2003 the city sought service providers to furnish Wi-Fi
service for the parks, but delays set in and only one park -- Battery
Park at Manhattan's tip facing the Statue of Liberty -- finally got
the service.

The city is also seeking a Wi-Fi provider for Dag Hammarskjold Plaza
facing the United Nations and for the Brooklyn Heights promenade.

A handful of small parks in the city have had free Wi-Fi access since
2002 thanks to private donors.

Copyright 2006 Agence France Presse.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
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http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
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For more tech reports, please go to:
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------------------------------

From: donhdoyle@yahoo.com <donhdoyle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Calling the USA while traveling in Europe Query ?
Date: 16 May 2006 10:08:06 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I'm new to internet telephone service.

I'm going to be travelling in Europe this summer and need to be able
to talk periodically to people in the US.  I will have my portable
computer with a wireless card.  Can I load Skype softward on my
computer and then use Skype from an internet connection in the hotel?

What better ways might you suggest for inexpensive voice communication
back to the US from Europe?

While I'm at it, I gather that I will need some kind of headset/micro-
phone in order to use Skype.  I'm considering the Logitech 350; any
opinions on this or a better solution?

Many thanks,

Don Doyle

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This is sort of a toss up for me,
trying to suggest _which_ service is best. Personally, I would go
with Vonage which is essentially the same except instead of a 
headset/microphone (attached to the computer) you use a TA (telephone
adapter box) attached to the incoming broadband port (which you would
have to use for your laptop computer anyway) and a telephone (any phone
will do) which plugs into the TA box.) You get the TA box free when you 
sign up with Vonage (or several other companies) and phones usually
are a lot less expensive than a good microphone.  PAT] 

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Tuesday 16th May 2006
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 09:05:43 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

European Shift to 3G Handsets Accelerates
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17386.php

According to IDC's Western European Quarterly Mobile Devices Market
Tracker, the Western European mobile phone market (consisting of
traditional mobile phones and converged devices) maintained
double-digit growth in the opening quarter of 2006 as shi...

 [[ Financial ]]

Vodafone Shares Rise On Verizon Wireless Report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17375.php

Shares of Vodafone Group were the best performing in the British
large-cap stock market index Monday following the latest speculation
over the possible sale of its Verizon Wireless holding to Verizon
Communications. ...

Personal posts US$1.93mn net loss
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17377.php

Argentine mobile operator Telecom Personal posted a net loss of 6mn
pesos (US$1.93mn) in the first quarter of 2006, a direct reversal from
the 6mn-peso net profit recorded in 1Q05, the company said in a
statement. ...

UPDATE: Verizon, Vodafone Hear More Noise On JV Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17381.php

Speculation has again heated up over a deal between Verizon
Communications and Vodafone Group over full control of their lucrative
joint venture, but some aren't convinced a deal is imminent. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Motorola Launches HIV-AIDS Handset
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17390.php

Motorola has joined up with the AIDS/HIV organisation -- Project RED --
and will be offering Red branded handsets. Launched by co-founders
Bono and Bobby Shriver at the World Economic Forum last January,
(PRODUCT) RED is designed to deliver a sustainab...

Motorola outstrips Samsung in Vietnam
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17391.php

Nokia still dominates with 50% of the Vietnamese market share, a drop
of 2% over February 2006. While Samsung and Sony Ericsson lost 1% of
the market share each, falling to 18% and 3% respectively, Motorola
gained 4% to end at 22%. The company held o...

[[ Legal ]]

Russian court rejects Norway's Telenor claim vs VimpelCom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17378.php

The Moscow Arbitration Court has rejected a lawsuit filed by Norwegian
telecommunication company Telenor that sought to void VimpelCom's
extraordinary general meeting of shareholders (EGM) held on September
14, 2005. ...

Poll:51% Of Americans Oppose NSA Phone Database-Report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17379.php

About 51% of Americans disapprove of a Pentagon database of phone
calls made by ordinary citizens, a USA Today/Gallup poll showed, the
newspaper reported Monday. ...

[[ Messaging ]]

Minimal Understanding of SMS Short Codes - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17395.php

Three years after the introduction of common SMS Short Code in the
USA, only 47% of adult consumers know how to use it, according to data
released by Mediamark Research and Zoove. Unsurprisingly the study
found that 91% of adults found it easy to res...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

One Monthly Million Music Sales On 3G Network
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17387.php

Hutchison 3G UK has announced that its customers bought more than one
million music tracks and videos in the last month. The figures clearly
demonstrate the influence 3 is having on UK music sales with 17% of
all digital downloads (audio tracks) bein...

Motorola Calls for easier Java in Handsets
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17389.php

Motorola has announced a new initiative aimed at encouraging greater
unification of Java technology for the mobile industry. The company
says that it will open source its Java test framework and sample test
cases and will develop the reference implem...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Oman Operator Upgrades SMS Capabilities
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17388.php

LogicaCMG has won a contract to supply additional Next Generation
Messaging products and solutions to Oman Mobile. Oman Mobile, faced
with strong growth of demand as well as new competition entering the
marketplace, is upgrading its existing LogicaCM...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Eurotel To Close Analog NMT Voice Services In July
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17376.php

Czech cellular operator Eurotel Praha SRO , Monday said it will close
its analog voice services that use Nordic Mobile Telephone technology,
or NMT, in July. ...

Inmarsat Gets FCC Green Light To Launch Service In U.S.
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17382.php

Inmarsat, a London-based satellite-services provider, got approval
from the Federal Communications Commission on Friday to start rolling
out a new broadband service in the USA. ...

IN DEPTH: Having unveiled new logo, MTS may too late to catch up with
rivals http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17383.php

In the last few weeks Muscovites could see billboards in the streets
with an unfamiliar logo -- a white egg inside a red square. No company
name was put on the billboards. Market participants speculated that it
was probably a new logo for Russia's lar...

[[ Offbeat ]]

Shia Ringtone Starts Fight in Iraqi Parliament
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17384.php

A ringtone started a fight at the Iraqi Parliament last week. A phone
belonging to Ms al-Saidi, but being held by one of her bodyguards rang
out with a Shia prayer - presumably a RealTone as opposed to a
polyphonic tune. At this, the Sunni speaker Ma...

Medical Operations by the Light of Cellphones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17385.php

According to a report on a private television network, hospital
surgeons in Lahore, Pakistan have been carrying out medical operations
using the light from cellphone screens at times, due to persistent
power failures in the national electricity suppl...

Nokia Bans the Mobile Phone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17392.php

Nokia's vice president of multimedia strategy and business
development, Harry Santamki vows to take a sip of cod liver oil
 from the bottle on his desk if he ever utters the word "phone". Which
is odd considering what Nokia is most famous for making....

[[ Regulatory ]]

GSM Assoc Says Roaming Law Will Cost EUR4.3 Billion In Sales
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17374.php

A proposed European Commission regulation on roaming mobile phone
charges could cost operators EUR4.3 billion in lost sales and EUR2.3
billion profits, the GSM mobile phone operators' association said
Monday. ...

Australian Regulator Publishes Mobile Chat Regulations
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17394.php

The Australian Communications and Media Authority has released a guide
for mobile chat providers on how to make their services safer for
children. The Guide recognises the benefits that mobile chat services
can bring for communications and social net...

[[ Reports ]]

Ultrawideband Shipments to Reach Nearly 300 Million in 2011
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17393.php

Several formidable-looking barriers appear, at first glance, to pose
serious obstacles to widespread commercial success for Ultrawideband
(UWB). But closer examination reveals that few of them will
drastically inhibit the market, which a new ABI Rese...

Defining the Emerging European Enterprise Mobility Market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17396.php

Yankee Group says that the European mobile enterprise market is at an
inflection point, where growing demand presents European mobile
operators with a chance to capitalize on the market opportunity. The
leading European mobile operators - Orange, T-M...

[[ Statistics ]]

Eurotel:Over 80,000 Use CDMA Wireless Broadband Internet
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17380.php

Czech cellular operator Eurotel Praha, Monday said it had more than
80,000 users of its wireless broadband Internet service using the CDMA
standard, as at May 15. ...

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

Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 11:58:42 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Tuesday, May 16, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 16, 2006
********************************

Court Upholds VimpelCom's WellCom Purchase; Telenor to Appeal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17972?11228

     The Moscow Arbitration Court has rejected Telenor's attempt to
     void the purchase of Ukrainian RadioSystems (WellCom) by
     VimpelCom. Telenor had hoped to invalidate the extraordinary
     general meeting (EGM) of VimpelCom shareholders in September 2005
     at which the decision was made to purchase WellCom for US$231
     million. Telenor objected that...

Skype Offers Free Calls to Regular Phones
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17964?11228

     SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Skype, eBay Inc.'s Internet telephone
     subsidiary, has stopped charging users for dialing up people on
     traditional landline and mobile phones in the U.S. and Canada.
     The Internet telephone service, which has always offered free
     PC-to-PC calls around the world, said Monday it will offer its
     SkypeOut service for...

Verizon Wireless Price Tagged At $48B
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17958?11228

     Rumors rampant on both sides of the Atlantic say Verizon and
     Vodafone have finally settled on a price for Vodafone's
     45-percent share of Verizon Wireless - $48 billion plus
     assumption of $8 billion in debt.  Such a deal reportedly could
     be done by the end of the month.  The $48 billion is just more
     than halfway between the $38 billion and...

No Email? No Problem
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17957?11228

     As companies look for ways to roll out more enterprise
     applications to mobile workers, many assume that any new apps
     will run on a device primarily intended for mobile email, such as
     a BlackBerry or a Treo.  Now, BlackBerry maker Research In Motion
     Ltd. (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM - message board; Toronto: RIM) says it
     will deconstruct that...

Motorola Touts Open Source Java
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/17955?11228

     Motorola is aiming to take mobile Java to the next level by
     embracing open sourcing. The company believes an open source
     approach will speed development time and drive innovation.  Mark
     VandenBrink, senior director and chief architect, Motorola Mobile
     Devices, notes that Java already is being used on nearly 1
     billion mobile handsets,...

Verizon Sued in Mobile TV Patent Fight
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17952?11228

     Holding company Speedus Corp. has sued Verizon Wireless for
     infringement of two patents that deal with the transmission of
     television services over cellular networks, and it's
     investigating whether to sue any other carriers.  "We've been
     assessing our patent portfolio for some time, and it came to our
     attention that there's likely...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 13:29:43 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: BellSouth denies giving NSA records


USTelecom dailyLead
May 16, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDoMfDtutegpbRUltw

	 TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* BellSouth denies giving NSA records
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Report: DSL posts record gains in Q1
* Skype offers free PC-to-phone calls in U.S., Canada
* Alcatel, Redback stage strong showing in Q1
* China Telecom, PCCW connect Hong Kong and China via private line Ethernet service
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Selecting the Best Wireless Architecture
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* NBC takes wraps off broadband channels
* Shift toward IMS changes the game for software vendors
* Survey: TV as pastime lags behind Internet, friends and movies
* Study: UWB poised to boom
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Analysis: Lawsuits over surveillance face uphill battle
* Baltimore County Council approves Verizon upgrade
* NYC sets deadline for Wi-Fi in parks
* Lawmaker rallies support for national franchise plan

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDoMfDtutegpbRUltw

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

From: tls@panix.com (Thor Lancelot Simon)
Subject: Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 06:32:13 +0000 (UTC)
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.
Reply-To: tls@rek.tjls.com


In article <telecom25.183.4@telecom-digest.org>, Monty Solomon
<monty@roscom.com> wrote:

>    http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/14/dialing_311_hold_that_call/

> I believe that using 311 as the telephone access code for the
> centralized request line is not a good idea in 2006. 311 works only if
> all callers in the city can reach it -- if it's ''routable," in
> telecom industry lingo.

This is nonsense.  311 is used in some of the most competitive
telephone markets in the country, including New York City -- and
customers of all carriers can reach it just fine.

     Thor Lancelot Simon	                       tls@rek.tjls.com

  "We cannot usually in social life pursue a single value or a single moral
   aim, untroubled by the need to compromise with others."      - H.L.A. Hart

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: The Balance Between National Security and Privacy?
Date: 16 May 2006 08:06:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Danny Burstein wrote:

> The very way the question was phrased is misleading, as it sets up a
> yes/no, black/white dichotomy between "National security" versus
> "privacy".

Actually, the question sets up the opposite: it's an area with many
shades of gray -- far from absolute black or white.

> Of _course_ people are going to think highly o national security.

As you could see from other postings that is not necessarily the case.

> But ... there ain't _nothing_ in the original claims that shows any
> validity to the arguments that stomping on privacy rights, oh, and
> violating the laws left and right (allegedly, to be sure, but it
> certainly looks like it) and shredding the US Constitution (same
> disclaimer) has anything whatsoever with making us safer.

"Constitutional rights" are complicated and fluid and anything but
black and white.  The rights evolve over time based on Supreme Court
interpretations.  The WW II forced Japanese-American relocation was
upheld by the Court.  The McCarthyism-era actions were initially
upheld by the court.  In the mid 1950s the court changed (with Warren)
and the interpretations and attitudes changed significantly; a lot of
McCarthyism-era cases were thrown out at that time.

I am not familiar with the specific details of current laws nor
specific details of exactly what was and was not tracked.  Indeed, in
all the hubbub I don't think too many people actually understand the
legal details.  Perhaps someone who is familiar with those details can
fill us in.

The separate issue is effectiveness for protection.  The ACLU is suing
(so far unsuccessfully) to stop random searches of bags on NYC transit
lines, claiming the random searches won't deter an attack.  Are you
saying this NSA research won't protect us?

> My third grade civics teachers would be embarrassed for anyone putting
> together a survey like this, and would cry over the lost minds of
> people using arguments in this manner.

Sorry you don't like this discussion, but I don't agree at all.  The
question is perfectly reasonable and the ensuing discussion of varying
opinions is more enlightening than merely a flood of copied news
articles.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: They Know Who We're Calling
Date: 16 May 2006 08:45:17 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Way back in the 1960's when Electronic
> Switching Systems (ESS) were first being developed, telco's major
> complaint was that the telephone network had essentially gotten out of
> control; among other things, anyone who knew how the 'system' worked
> (and more people were find out every day about the old-style 'frames'
> and other apparatus; how ancient and unreliable it was becoming; and
> the various limitations of the 'system' where people who were less
> than honest were concerned, or people who were malevolent in their
> intentions, and telco finally had enough of it and said the entire
> system had to be rebuilt from the ground up.

My understanding of ESS history is a bit different.  The Bell System,
since it started, was constantly looking for more efficient ways to
handle traffic.  This lowered the cost of telephone service which
generated more business allowing it to take advantage of economies of
scale.  This all created a positive cycle -- more business led to more
efficiency and lower costs which led to more business.

In the late 1930s the crossbar switch, a powerful "thinking" switch,
was perfected and placed into service.  During the war a long distance
version was placed into service and after the war an advanced model
was developed.  But the Bell System recognized early on that it wasn't
enough.  Crossbar was electro-mechanical which required costly
maintenance and limited switching speed.  Changes meant hand rewiring.
Telephone usage was still growing strong.  Efforts began early on to
replace relays with electronics.

The problems you speak of -- external abuse of the toll network,
unreliable frames -- came well after ESS prototype designs were being
tested.  That is, ESS was fully committed and in production by the
late 1960s.  Indeed, according to one writer, ESS actually caused some
of the 1970s service problems since it supposedly _completely_ crashed
when hit with massive call volume (don't know if that's true) instead
of just slow dial tone.

> Now, what telco said to the public was there would now be all these
> new, modern conveniences such as 'call waiting', 'three way calling'
> and such, to smooth over their _real_ intention, which was to get a
> phone system which was totally under their thumbs for once.

Actually, Bell System exhibits of the 1960s did proclaim the speed,
capacity, efficiency, and control of ESS.  Computer technology and
logic control were alien concepts to the majority of the population
back then so it wasn't something the public would readilly understand.
I would not describe it as "smooth over their real intention".  Keep
in mind the management of the Bell System in those years, especially
before deregulation and breakup, was technically oriented and very
happy to show off technical advances.  Bell had travelling and
permanent demonstration exhibits all over the place.

Let's face it, the typical phone user could care less what was on the
other end of their phone, be it a hamster wheel or 'space age'
electronics.  Did they get a dial tone and reach their desired party?
was all that mattered.

> What telco did _not_ tell you was that no longer, to 'trace a call'
> did an operator have to call a tech to go back in the frames and
> spend 30-45 minutes looking around ...

Actually, back in the late 1960s the country experienced a nasty fad of
prank calls that the Bell System could not handle for the reasons you
describe.  That was no secret.

> And ditto when the feds wanted something done; it was a real pain in
> telco's backside to have to run those jumpers around all over in the
> frames area.

I've been in exchanges and saw such jumpers -- they did not seem to be
that big of a deal.  Such testing equipment (dial record keepers and
other monitors) were developed along with panel switching early on for
maintenance and service quality testing.  If the feds had a court order
the phone company complied with whatever was needed.  (I think someone
once wrote here the phone company would point out the proper contacts but
the feds had to do the dirty work themselves.)  Anyway, I strongly
doubt ESS was developed mostly to serve the feds' interests because
reasonable means existed before ESS.

> So, while the smiling service rep was talking _you_ into purchasing a
> few of the new features 'which we are now equipped to provide in your
> calling area' the overall intent of ESS was a lot more nefarious. ...

I don't agree with that at all.  As mentioned, the ability to trace
calls was _desired_ by the public as a result of severe prank and abuse
calls.

The new calling features were not a nickel-dime thing, but a profit
center.  Nothing wrong with that.  You want plain POTS, fine, continue
paying $4/month.  You want call waiting, an extra $3/month.  Customer
is happy with the new feature and the phone company is happy with the
revenue.  People in more affluent areas liked the new features, liked
the status symbol of having call waiting and putting someone on hold,
and didn't mind paying the money for it.

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

From: Thomas Daniel Horne <hornetd@mindspring.com>
Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 21:27:50 GMT
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net


Gordon Burditt wrote:

>> But in his weekly radio address on Saturday, Bush rushed to assure the
>> public the secret program did not target innocent private citizens.

> Cheney did not "target" a fellow hunter either.  Funny how that person
> was injured anyway.

>> Specially designed computer programs watch for patterns in these
>> contacts and analyze them to make sure no terrorist cell is operating
>> within the United States.

> I'd like to see the output of such a program analyzing contacts
> between members of Congress and lobbyists made public, to ensure that
> no bribing of congresscritters is taking place.

> Gordon L. Burditt

You'll never see it but you can bet that all kinds of pattern analysis
is taking place to discover which of us are communist err ah I mean
Democrats.  

 -- Tom Horne

"people willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve 
neither and will lose both"  Benjamin Franklin

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

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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 17 May 2006 14:00:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 186

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Suits Filed Against Telco in New York, Elsewhere (Larry Neumeister)
    Software Makers Crack Down on Net Piracy (Michael Leidtke)
    Cablevision Takes on Telcos (Reuters News Wire)
    Telemarketing Law Question (mc)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 17, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (john@mayson.us)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Gordon Burditt)
    Re: They Know Who We're Calling (Jim Stewart)
    Re: They Know Who We're Calling (Julian Thomas)
    Re: Nokia Launches Google Talk (john@mayson.us)
    Re: Calling the USA while traveling in Europe Query? (donhdoyle@yahoo.com)
    Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call! (Anthony Bellanga)

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: Larry Neumeister <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Suits Filed Against Telco in New York, Elsewhere
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 17:46:48 -0500


By LARRY NEUMEISTER
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK -- AT&T Inc. and BellSouth Corp. were added as defendants to
a lawsuit seeking $200 billion in damages from phone companies accused
of violating privacy laws by turning over phone records to the
government, lawyers said Tuesday.

The companies were added to a lawsuit filed Friday by two New Jersey
lawyers in U.S. District Court in Manhattan that accused Verizon
Communications Inc.  of turning over records for a federal secret
surveillance program.

The lawsuit also now includes 26 plaintiffs from 18 states who
contacted two public interest lawyers after hearing about the lawsuit,
the lawyers said at a news conference outside the courthouse.

The lawsuit claims the companies violated the Telecommunications Act
and the Constitution by turning over the records to the government.

The lawsuit was filed after USA Today Thursday identified AT&T,
Verizon and BellSouth as companies that complied after the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks with a National Security Agency request for
tens of millions of customer phone records.

In a statement, Atlanta-based BellSouth has said it had no evidence it
was contacted by the spy agency or that it gave the government access
to any customers' phone call records.

"Based on our review to date, we have confirmed no such contract
exists and we have not provided bulk customer calling records to the
NSA," the statement said.

New York-based AT&T spokesman Larry Solomon said in an e-mail Tuesday
that at AT&T, "we vigorously protect our customers' privacy."

He said the company does not allow wiretapping without a court order
and has not given customer information to law enforcement authorities
or government agencies without legal authorization.

Solomon said the company has "an obligation to assist law enforcement
and other government agencies responsible for protecting the public
welfare, whether it be an individual or the security interests of the
entire nation."

But he said when government agencies ask AT&T for help, the company
responds "strictly within the law and under the most stringent
conditions."

He added: "Beyond that, we can't comment on matters of national
security.  This is a national security issue and needs to be addressed
on a national level."

Verizon has said it could not confirm or deny whether the company
participated in the NSA program but promised any access to customer
records would be limited.

"Verizon does not, and will not, provide any government agency
unfettered access to our customer records or provide information to
the government under circumstances that would allow a fishing
expedition," the company said.

Since the lawsuit was filed, New Jersey lawyers Carl J. Mayer and
Bruce I.  Afran said their offices have been flooded with phone calls
and e-mails from people across the country who want to join the action
as plaintiffs.

"Some are outright outraged at what the government is doing," Mayer
said.

Others, including dozens of lawyers, have offered to provide legal
expertise, he said.

He cited an e-mail from one Studio City, Calif., man who wrote that he
was not looking for money but just wanted "to protect my civil
liberties."

He also noted an e-mail from a West Newbury, Mass., man who said he
called Verizon to complain about an invasion of privacy and was
forwarded to a supervisor who asked, "Are you involved in a criminal
activity such that you are concerned with us turning over your
records?"

Mayer said the lawyers might seek to subpoena President Bush or others
in the White House to get to the truth of the scandal.

Afran said the lawsuit was not politically motivated, and added that
he has been a supporter of many of the administration's policies.

"Never in the United States have we seen such widespread abuse of
basic civil rights," he said.


Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Michael Liedtke <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Software Makers Crack Down on Net Piracy
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 12:03:33 -0500


By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Business Writer

Computer software makers launched a crackdown on illegal Internet
sales of their products Tuesday by suing suspected pirates who have
set up shop on the popular online auction site eBay Inc.

Usually fierce rivals Symantec Corp. and McAfee Inc. teamed up to kick
off the crusade by targeting five different eBay sellers in three
lawsuits filed Monday in a Los Angeles federal court.

"If online marketplaces are going to pursue the free-market ideals
that they aspire to, they must make sure the products they sell are
authentic," said Joe Fitzgerald, Symantec's vice president of
intellectual property.

The two leading makers of antivirus software decided to sue after
uncovering evidence that the individuals named in the complaints had
completed more than 15,000 sales involving pirated software between
October 2005 and December 2005, said Keith Kupferschmid, an executive
with the Software & Information Industry Association.

The trade group is coordinating the software industry's efforts to
patrol eBay and other Internet auction sites for pirates. Kupferschmid
said the group intends to buy copies of pirated software in the
auctions and then sue "egregious" copyright violators without
forewarning. The industry expects to file the suits on a monthly
basis.

The campaign isn't currently aimed at eBay or the buyers of pirated
software.

Besides software makers, the association also represents a large
number of providers of electronic information, including The
Associated Press.

This week's initial burst of lawsuits named: Edward Cosmos of
Bloomington, Calif.; Grace Chan of San Jose, Calif.; Kevin Liu of New
Brunswick, N.J..; Mary Tian of New Brunswick, N.J.; and G.T. Tian of
Highland Park, N.J.

"I did nothing wrong," said a man who identified himself as Liu after
the AP sent an e-mail asking him to call. The man didn't respond to
another question before the phone call abruptly ended.

Cosmos and the Tians didn't immediately respond to e-mails sent to
their eBay profiles Tuesday. Chan's auction registration is no longer
active, according to eBay. Efforts to locate a phone number for her
were unsuccessful.

Cosmos and Chan received nothing but positive feedback from sellers,
according to their eBay profiles. A few negative remarks were mixed
with the mostly flattering commentary posted about Liu and the Tians
on eBay's site.

The civil suits seek unspecified damages, as well as court orders to
prevent future copyright and trademark infringement.

Software makers have long complained about pirates looting their
sales. The industry estimates it loses $11 billion to $12 billion a
year from the distribution of pirated software.

The industry believes 90 percent of all software sold on Internet
auctions violates copyrights or licensing agreements, Kupferschmid
said.

San Jose, Calif.-based eBay disagreed with those estimates. "We know
(piracy) is an issue, but we don't think it's a big problem,"
spokesman Hani Durzy said. Ebay supports the software industry's
efforts to penalize pirates, Durzy said.

Copyright holders and eBay don't always agree on the definition of an
improper sale.

For an example, a small business that bought a piece software that was
never installed on a computer may have a legal right to sell the
unopened copy on eBay, Durzy said, even though the manufacturer might
disagree.

In auctions involving clear-cut cases of piracy, eBay removes the
listing within hours, Durzy said.

But Kupferschmid said eBay sometimes takes several days before
shutting down an auction of pirated software. He also expressed
frustration with an eBay policy that allows sellers previously flagged
for piracy to run future auctions.

"It's like playing 'Whack-A-Mole,' " Kupferschmid said. "You take one
auction down and then another one pops up."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Cablevision Takes on Telcos
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 12:05:14 -0500


Cablevision takes on telcos with cheaper international calls.

Cablevision Systems Corp. on Wednesday said it will offer a simpler
and cheaper international call rate plan in the latest salvo in the
growing battle between cable and phone companies for subscribers.

The Bethpage, New York-based company said that its Optimum Voice
digital phone service will offer international calls to any country in
the world for 4 cents a minute, eliminating country-based pricing.

The World Call package offers its 900,000 digital voice customers 500
minutes a month at $19.95. This would be in addition to the standard
monthly fee of $34.95 for unlimited calls within the U.S., Canada and
Puerto Rico.

When compared with other cable companies, Cablevision has the highest
voice penetration of 20 percent of homes passed in its New York
tri-state area customer base.

In recent weeks the battle between the cable and the phone companies
has become more heated as the cable companies have claimed to have had
major success in grabbing market share in telecoms traditional areas
of voice and high speed Internet customers.

Comcast Corp., Time Warner Inc.'s cable unit and Cablevision all
posted their best recent subscriber growth during the first quarter
prompting analysts to say that they were winning subscribers from the
their telecom rivals.

Patricia Gottesman, Cablevision executive vice president of product
management and marketing, did not specify how much cheaper Optimum
Voice would be than the average telecom's prices.

But she added, "As long as you can build products and services that
have a broad appeal you have an opportunity competitively to make a
difference."

Phone companies including AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications offer
country-based international calls with a variety of plans included
discounted calls to specific countries.

Todd Mitchell, analyst at Kaufman Bros said international call price
plans had more of an impact regionally across the United States
depending on the demographic of the region.

"Where you're going to get the heavy usage is where you need to have
the offering where communities are calling home to their families."


Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Telemarketing Law Question
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 18:57:48 -0400


What legal penalties apply to a telemarketer who autodials all the
numbers in town that are not on the do-not-call list (without checking
whether they are homes, businesses, hospitals...)?

Our whole university was hit with a recorded ad for a local business
this morning.  Receptionists with rollover systems got, of course,
numerous multiple copies.

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

Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 11:40:37 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 17, 2006
********************************

Mobile/Wi-Fi Roll-Out Rages On; France Telecom Readies Launch
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17993?11228

     France Telecom is to launch a mobile/Wi-Fi phone before the end
     of the year, in an apparent bid to pile the pressure on Iliad and
     Neuf Cegetel. The company said yesterday that it will launch its
     dual phone, which allows users to move seamlessly between a
     mobile network and their home wireless network. Reuters said a
     France Telecom...

Getting Thin: Motorola's Slvr L2
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17984?11228

     Thin is in, particularly when it comes to cell phones.  For
     proof, take a look at Motorola's new Slvr L2 for Cingular, a
     phone that's so thin it could almost double as a bookmark. The
     Slvr L2 is less than a half-inch thick and weighs about 3
     ounces. The phone follows in the footsteps--but is slightly
     smaller than--Motorola's...

Verizon Denies Offering NSA Customer Phone Records
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17982?11228

     NEW YORK -- Verizon Communications Inc. says it did not give the
     government records of millions of phone calls, joining fellow
     phone company BellSouth in disputing key assertions in a USA
     Today article.  The denials leave open the possibility that the
     National Security Agency requested customer calling data from
     long-distance...

Wireless Internet Access Urged for New York City Parks
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/17980?11228

     NEW YORK -- Sunshine, daffodils and ... wireless Internet access?
     All of these should be widely available at New York City parks,
     high-tech advocates said at a City Council hearing on the state
     of Wi-Fi al fresco.  "We believe that free Internet is an
     amenity and should be provided to all New Yorkers just as grass,
     trees and...

Leap Looks to Swap Wireless Spectrum
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17978?11228

     Leap Wireless International forged a deal to swap some spectrum
     in Michigan for spectrum in New York. The spectrum swap is being
     carried out by Leap subsidiary Cricket Licensee II.  The
     agreement calls for Leap to exchange 10 MHz of spectrum in Grand
     Rapids, Mich., for 10 MHz of spectrum in Rochester,
     N.Y. Independently, the licenses...

TeliaSonera: Another Strong Broadband Statement
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17973?11228

     Sweden-based TeliaSonera made a key move to boost its position in
     the Norwegian broadband market by acquiring a more-than-82-percent
     stake in NextGenTel Holding, the Number Two broadband/xDSL
     operator in Norway.  The deal to acquire NextGenTel will enable
     TeliaSonera to offer a series of broadband services, including
     VoIP and IPTV, to...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Date: 17 May 2006 08:59:20 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


It's been reported here that Skype is allowing users to make free
calls to the US and Canada during 2006.  I have a Skype account, but
never used it.  I tried it last night and it works well.  I used my
iPod earbuds and built-in mic on my iBook and the call was clear.

For those who have never used skype, you dial regular telephone
numbers by prefacing the country code with the plus-sign (+).  For
instance: +1 212 555 1212.  This got me wondering.  Are free calls
limited to the US and Canada or the entire NANP?  I was able to call a
number in Bermuda (+1 441) using Skype, so it would appear Skype users
can call anyone in +1 for free.

I'm about to order a USB headset for my computer.  I'll be in Mexico
on business next month and it'll be easier (and cheaper) to make calls
back to the States using Skype.

John Mayson

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

From: gordonb.bkvq0@burditt.org (Gordon Burditt)
Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 22:13:31 -0000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


>>> But in his weekly radio address on Saturday, Bush rushed to assure the
>>> public the secret program did not target innocent private citizens.

>> Cheney did not "target" a fellow hunter either.  Funny how that person
>> was injured anyway.

>>> Specially designed computer programs watch for patterns in these
>>> contacts and analyze them to make sure no terrorist cell is operating
>>> within the United States.

>> I'd like to see the output of such a program analyzing contacts
>> between members of Congress and lobbyists made public, to ensure that
>> no bribing of congresscritters is taking place.

>> Gordon L. Burditt

> You'll never see it but you can bet that all kinds of pattern analysis
> is taking place to discover which of us are communist err ah I mean
> Democrats.  

Can't they get that kind of information much more simply by looking at
voter registration records?  Legally, even?  Is the fact that I voted
in the Republicrat primary rather than the Demican one public
information?  When primary time comes around, I get a lot more
propaganda from candidates in the party primary that I last voted in
than ones from the other party.

Gordon L. Burditt

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

Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 15:58:44 -0700
From: Jim Stewart <jstewart@jkmicro.com>
Subject: Re: They Know Who We're Calling 


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

>> So, while the smiling service rep was talking _you_ into purchasing a
>> few of the new features 'which we are now equipped to provide in your
>> calling area' the overall intent of ESS was a lot more nefarious. ...

> I don't agree with that at all.  As mentioned, the ability to trace
> calls was _desired_ by the public as a result of severe prank and abuse
> calls.

> The new calling features were not a nickel-dime thing, but a profit
> center.  Nothing wrong with that.  You want plain POTS, fine, continue
> paying $4/month.  You want call waiting, an extra $3/month.  Customer
> is happy with the new feature and the phone company is happy with the
> revenue.  People in more affluent areas liked the new features, liked
> the status symbol of having call waiting and putting someone on hold,
> and didn't mind paying the money for it.

Not to mention the vast operational savings that ESS yielded.  Picture
a 10 story building in the geographic center of a large city.  Picture
crafts-people on all 10 stories maintaining the switch.

Now picture the ESS on one floor, serviced by a handful of techs and
the other 9 floors being rented out as prime office real estate.

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

From: Julian Thomas <blackhole@jt-mj.net>
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 19:47:26 -0400
Subject: Re: They Know Who We're Calling


In <20060516222819.B9D94157B6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, on 05/16/06 at
06:28 PM, editor@telecom-digest.org typed:

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Way back in the 1960's when Electronic
>> Switching Systems (ESS) were first being developed, telco's major
>> complaint was that the telephone network had essentially gotten out of
>> control; among other things, anyone who knew how the 'system' worked
>> (and more people were find out every day about the old-style 'frames'
>> and other apparatus; how ancient and unreliable it was becoming; and
>> the various limitations of the 'system' where people who were less
>> than honest were concerned, or people who were malevolent in their
>> intentions, and telco finally had enough of it and said the entire
>> system had to be rebuilt from the ground up.

> My understanding of ESS history is a bit different.  The Bell System,
> since it started, was constantly looking for more efficient ways to
> handle traffic.  This lowered the cost of telephone service which
> generated more business allowing it to take advantage of economies of
> scale.  This all created a positive cycle -- more business led to more
> efficiency and lower costs which led to more business.

I'm with Jeff/Lisa on this.  For a few months in the 1950's I worked
at Bell Labs in the very early ESS development project.  There didn't
seem to be any hidden agenda for capturing all sorts of call data, and
in fact in those early days, the storage technologies just weren't
there to do what is being done today.  They were far more concerned
about eliminating pay phone fraud.

 Julian Thomas:      http://jt-mj.net
 In the beautiful Finger Lakes Wine Country of New York State!
 Warpstock X - October 12-15 2006; Windsor, Ont.  I'll be there - will you?

 There are very few personal problems that cannot be solved by a suitable 
 application of high explosives.

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Nokia Launches Google Talk
Date: 16 May 2006 17:24:55 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Does anyone own a Nokia 770?  It's Linux-based and looks like a great
tool.  I owned a Sharp Zaurus SL-5500 PDA which was also Linux-based.
It was ahead of its time when I bought it, but Sharp stopped
supporting it.  :-(

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

From: donhdoyle@yahoo.com <donhdoyle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Calling the USA while traveling in Europe Query ?
Date: 16 May 2006 17:36:23 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I'm wondering about portability with the telephone, adapter box, vs
headset with microphone.  I'll be traveling for 5 weeks, moving around
quite a bit, so it is important to travel light.

--DD

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

Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 19:42:18 -0600
From: Anthony Bellanga <anthonybellanga@notpublic.info>
Reply-To: no-spam@no-spam.no-spam
Subject: Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call!


********************************************************************
PAT - DO NOT display my email address anywhere in this post! Thanks.
********************************************************************

Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> posted Kenneth Pogran of Lexington MA's
comment to the Boston Globe:

   http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/14/dialing_311_hold_that_call/

>> I believe that using 311 as the telephone access code for the
>> centralized request line is not a good idea in 2006. 311 works
>> only if all callers in the city can reach it -- if it's "routable"
>> in telecom industry lingo.

and then Thor Lancelot Simon (tls@panix.com) replies:

> This is nonsense.  311 is used in some of the most competitive
> telephone markets in the country, including New York City --
> and customers of all carriers can reach it just fine.

It's NOT nonsense!

Just because 311 apparantly works "fine" in New York City among
various carriers and service providers doesn't necessarily mean that
it will work just as fine everywhere else it has been implemented.

I see that Thor snipped out the rest of the original posting by Monty
of Kenneth Pogran's reply to the Globe:

>> And with today's widespread use of cellphones and Voice over Internet
>> Protocol (VoIP) services such as Vonage or Skype, that's a problem.
>> The author points to Baltimore's success with 311 -- but that system
>> was set up 10 years ago, when nearly everyone's primary means of
>> calling was a conventional "wireline" telephone. Today, many people
>> have gone completely wireless, or switched from a conventional
>> wireline service to VoIP.

>> The article mentions that Somerville has instituted 311 service.
>> Suppose Boston did, too, and suppose a Charletown resident, near the
>> Somerville line, dials 311 from a cellphone. That call might be
>> picked up by a nearby cell tower in Somerville.

>> The wireless industry has been working long, hard, and expensively to 
>> solve the problem for Enhanced 911 emergency services, and it's not 
>> completely fixed yet.

>> The Menino administration is correct in advocating use of a
>> conventional 10-digit telephone number to access a central citizen
>> request line. A 10-digit phone number is universally routable.

This all makes *perfect* sense!

While the idea of 3-digit 'N11' codes is "nice", it still isn't always
going to work properly in today's telephone industry.

Payphones and PBXes aren't necessariy going to recognize 311 for the
function it's intended for. Some payphones might use 311 for their own
non-standard purposes.

The use of a toll-free ten-digit number is probably the best thing, or
even a ten-digit "POTS" telephone number, even though there could be
routing problems with 800 or 888 type numbers as well from certain
types of lines. But at least there's a better understanding of how to
handle "standard" ten-digit "POTS" and toll-free numbers by the
various members of the telephone industry when compared to novelty
codes like 311.

I've seen commercials for some local area United Way 211 numbers, and
they always semm to post a "disclaimer" on the TV or print ad,
indicating that if you can't reach the United Way on 211, instead call
this (ten-digit) toll-free 800 number. So, they're admitting that the
211 code might not always work from certain types of phone lines or
services in the community!

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

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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 17 May 2006 15:54:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 187

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Hold the Phone: Spying on Your Calls (NewsWeek May 22 Issue)
    Judge Seals Documents in NSA Spying Case (David Kravets)
    Verizon, AT&T Deny Handing Over Phone Records (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Telemarketing Law Question (Ben Schilling)
    Last Laugh! Re: Spammer With a Toll Free Number (Mr. Rick Meredith)

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: Mark Hosenball & Evan Thomas <newsweek@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Hold the Phone:  Spying on Your Calls
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 14:13:58 -0500


Big Brother knows whom you call. Is that legal, and will it help catch
the bad guys?

By Mark Hosenball and Evan Thomas
Newsweek

May 22, 2006 issue - In the difficult days after 9/11, White House
officials quietly passed the word through Washington's alphabet soup
of intelligence agencies: tell us which weapons you need to stop
another attack. At the supersecretive NSA, the National Security
Agency (also known as No Such Agency), the request came back: give us
permission to collect information on people inside the United
States. The NSA had been struggling, without much success, to listen
in on terrorists who use cheap and easily available encrypted phones,
and officials eagerly drew up a wish list, according to a participant
in the discussions. This source, who declined to be identified
discussing sensitive matters, said NSA officials did not really expect
the White House to say yes to domestic spying. After scandals over
wiretapping erupt-ed in the 1970s, the code breakers and electronic
sleuths at the NSA had been essentially restricted to eavesdrop-ping
on conversations between foreigners abroad. American residents and
even most foreign visitors to the United States were off-limits to
"Big Noddy," as NSA insiders call their giant "Ear in the Sky"
surveillance capability.

But after 9/11, president George W. Bush wanted fast action. He
believed that most Americans thought their government should do
whatever was necessary to catch terrorists before they struck
again. Though the details remain highly classified, the "National
Security Presidential Directives" issued by Bush called for an all-out
war on terrorism, including, it is generally believed, expanded
electronic surveillance. Out went the old rules-a 1980 document called
"U.S. Signals Intelligence Directive 18," which sharply limited
domestic surveillance; in came a new, still dimly understood regimen
of domestic spying.

Desperate times call for desperate measures. In times of war, open
societies have been willing to accept the need for secret spy
services. Americans now spend upwards of $40 billion a year on
intelligence. Given a hard choice between security and privacy, most
Americans would probably choose to sacrifice some of the latter to get
more of the former. The harder question is whether the techno wizards
at the NSA, overwhelmed by tidal waves of digital data, searching for
tiny poisonous fish in a giant sea, can provide true security from
another 9/11.

There can be no doubt that Bush correctly read the public mood in the
days and weeks following the 2001 attacks. And had the president sent
a bill up to Capitol Hill giving the NSA broad powers to wiretap and
eavesdrop inside the United States, in all likelihood, the lawmakers
would have shouted it through. But the president did not ask for
public support. Instead, like most chief executives charged with
running the modern national-security state, he chose the path of
secrecy. True, the administration's spymasters confidentially briefed
congressional leaders on the new eavesdropping program. But some of
the lawmakers now claim they were confused, or misled, or somehow did
not fully understand what the spooks were telling them.  Perhaps the
legislators weren't fully informed. Or perhaps they didn't really want
to hear what they were told.

In any case, the story eventually, and inevitably, leaked. Last
December, The New York Times revealed that the NSA had eavesdropped on
thousands of phone calls between people in the United States and
foreign countries without first obtaining warrants. Then, last week,
USA Today reported that the NSA had amassed a vast database of
billions of calls inside the United States-not the content of the
calls themselves, but a record of when and to which phone numbers the
calls were made and for how long. (The government did not ask the
phone companies for names and addresses, but the simplest Internet
search of a phone number can divulge that information.) The revelation
was another blow to Bush, whose approval rating in the new NEWSWEEK
Poll dipped to 35 percent, his record low in the survey, and it may
slow the administration's plan to find a CIA director who can restore
morale at the beleaguered intelligence agency. The brewing scandal is
likely to entangle the government and the phone companies that helped
in a legal morass.

Administration officials have always insisted that any eavesdropping
or "data collection" had been narrowly focused on Al Qaeda terror
suspects. It is hard to determine if the NSA goes on fishing
expeditions. A senior administration of-ficial, who declined to be
identified discussing classified matters, acknowledged to NEWSWEEK
that the NSA had crunched through vast databases to help identify
suspects who may have then been subjected to electronic eavesdropping,
either without a warrant or under court order. This official claimed
that the NSA program had helped gather evidence that had foiled
terrorist operations, though the official would not be more
specific. If the program "leads to one disruption of another 9/11,
then it would be worth it," said the official. But other
administration officials interviewed by NEWSWEEK questioned whether
the fruits of the NSA program-which they doubted, though not publicly
at the risk of losing their jobs-have been worth the cost to
privacy. And many Americans naturally wondered whether Big Brother was
watching or listening in ways that are still unknown. There are hints,
for instance, that the government has been fishing the Internet as
well as the phone lines.

In San Francisco, a privacy group called the Electronic Frontier
Foundation has filed a lawsuit based in part on the testimony of Mark
Klein, an AT&T technician for 22 years who claims he witnessed the
construction of a "secret room" for the NSA at AT&T's San Francisco
headquarters in early 2003. Later that year, Klein says, he discovered
that cables from the secret room were tapping into massive volumes of
Internet communication. Klein says he discovered similar operations in
other cities on the West Coast, and now concludes that the NSA had
created the capability of "vacuum-cleaner surveillance" of all data
crossing the Internet. AT&T says it has always obeyed the law and
worked to safeguard the privacy of its customers. The federal
government has mostly remained mum, though at a Dec. 19 White House
briefing, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales somewhat cryptically
referred to "many operational aspects" of the eavesdropping program
"that have still not been disclosed." After the USA Today story,
President Bush told reporters, "We are not trolling through the
personal lives of millions of innocent Americans."

Whether that is strictly true will likely be on the agenda this week
as lawmakers on the Senate intelligence committee grill Air Force
Gen. Michael Hayden, Bush's choice to take over the troubled
CIA. Hayden ran the NSA before and after 9/11, when the agency was
expanding its surveillance programs. "I have substantial questions
about his credibility," Senate intelligence committee member Ron
Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, told NEWSWEEK.  He points to Hayden's
public statements that the NSA monitored only international
calls. "There was never any mention of establishing a domestic
database," says Wyden.

Republicans defending Hayden's nomination can counter with some early
polls showing that most Americans support expanded electronic
surveillance to catch terrorists, even if it intrudes on their
privacy. (Much depends on the wording of a poll question, of course,
and later polls showed more skepticism. The NEWSWEEK survey found 53
percent agreed with the statement that NSA data collection "goes too
far in invading people's privacy," while only 41 percent agreed that
the collection program is "a necessary tool to combat terrorism.")
Most legal experts seemed to agree that the government could collect a
huge database of phone records without violating the Constitution's
ban on "unreasonable searches and seizures." Still, the phone
companies that cooperated with the NSA-AT&T, Verizon and
BellSouth-will be h auled into court, accused by their customers of
violating the arcane and murky restrictions of various federal
communications laws. All of them have protested that they were
complying with the law, though it has been noted that they were paid
for their cooperation, and lawyers suing the phone companies will
undoubtedly want to know if they were pressured by threats to withhold
valuable federal contracts. One much smaller phone company-Qwest,
based in the Rocky Mountain states-refused to turn over its call
records, arguing that the NSA never satisfied the company's legal
doubts about the agency's request.

Americans are not naive about the need to snoop at home and
overseas. In 1929, Secretary of State Henry Stimson shut down a secret
code-breaking operation called the Black Chamber by saying, "Gentlemen
do not read each other's mail." But America's enemies are apt to play
dirty, and during World War II and the cold war, the federal
government decided, in effect, to play dirty, too-to steal secrets and
eavesdrop, at home as well as abroad.

Washington spun a huge web of intelligence agencies with acronyms
familiar (like CIA and FBI) and obscure (like NRO-for National
Reconnaissance Office-to operate spy satellites). The attitude toward
secret or "black" operations was, at first, rather "stiff upper lip"
and British. Policymakers did not want to know too much about what the
spooks were up to. Presidents were protected by the doctrine of
plausible deniability. They were supposed to be able to say,
plausibly, that they really didn't know how that secret was stolen-or
that a journalist's phone was tapped or that a foreign government was
overthrown. If caught, American spymasters were supposed to fall on
their swords and take responsibility.

Of course, blametaking didn't quite work so stoically in
practice. During the Watergate scandal, it emerged that the Feds had
been carrying on a program of domestic spying, tapping phones and
opening the mail of real and imagined enemies of the state. At the
1975 Church Committee hearings, intelligence officials squirmed and
pointed fingers. New laws were enacted, including the 1978 Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires the Feds to get a
warrant from a secret court before eavesdropping on foreign calls in
and out of the United States.

The NSA was banned from any domestic espionage. At those 1975
hearings, Sen.  Frank Church, the chairman of the committee appointed
to investigate intelligence abuses, made a statement that today seems
ominous and possibly prescient. The Idaho senator said he was most
worried about the NSA. The secret agency's capabilities were so great
they "could be turned around on the American people, and no American
would have any privacy left, such is the capability to monitor
everything, telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn't
matter. There would be no place to hide."

The NSA does have vast capabilities. One senior U.S. intelligence
official, speaking anonymously because of the sensitivity of the
subject, told NEWSWEEK that the heat generated by the NSA's secret
supercomputers has been so great that officials have been talking
about carting in snow and ice to mask the machines from the prying
sensors of foreign spy satellites.

But increasingly, there has been talk of the agency's "going deaf."
The NSA had its best luck monitoring Soviet lines of communication-for
example, a microwave transmission from Moscow to a missile base in
Siberia. But the new enemy is more shadowy and elusive. In 2002,
General Hayden told NEWSWEEK, "We've gone from chasing the
telecommunications structure of a slow-moving, technologically
inferior, resource-poor nation-state-and we could do that pretty
well-to chasing a communications structure in which an Al Qaeda member
can go into a storefront in Istanbul and buy for $100 a communications
device that is absolutely cutting edge, and for which he has had to
make no investment for development."

According to most accounts, the NSA remains behind the
telecommunications curve. A December 2002 report by the Senate
intelligence committee noted that only a "tiny fraction" of the NSA's
650 million daily intercepts worldwide "are actually ever reviewed by
humans, and much of what is collected gets lost in the deluge of
data." Hayden told NEWSEEK that year that the NSA had been slow to
catch up to new technology, and that he was obsessed with turning the
enemy's "beeps and squeaks into something intelligible."

One of Hayden's most ambitious initiatives was called Trailblazer. It
was a program aimed at helping the NSA make sense of its many
databases-to put them to use. By more efficiently locating and
retrieving messages, Trailblazer could help the NSA "data-mine," to
find patterns in the huge volume of electronic traffic that might help
lead sleuths to a terror suspect. Instead, the program has produced
nearly a billion dollars' worth of junk hardware and software. "It's a
complete and abject failure," says Robert D. Steele, a CIA veteran who
is familiar with the program. Adds Ed Giorgio, who was the chief code
breaker for the NSA for 30 years: "Everybody's eyes rolled when you
mentioned Trailblazer."

What went wrong? The NSA apparently tried a clunky top-down approach,
trying to satisfy too many requirements with one grand solution,
rather than taking a more Silicon Valley-like tack of letting small
entrepreneurs compete for ideas. John Arquilla of the Naval
Postgraduate School at Monterey, Calif., a renowned "network"
intelligence expert, says: "The real problem Big Brother is having is
he's not making enough use of the Little Brothers"-the corporations
that have become expert at manipulating databases for commercial use.

"Data mining" has been a boon to credit-card companies that can match
customers and products. It has also helped the Feds track drug dealers
who constantly buy and throw away cell phones (the technology can
monitor frequent phone-number changes). Identifying and tracking
terrorists may be a taller order. For one thing, terrorists have
learned not to even use phones.  A computer disk or message between,
say, Osama bin Laden and Iraqi insurgent leader Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi
is hand-delivered. Some terrorists have learned to leave messages
hidden in Web sites. Others are given passwords to go on the Web sites
and find the messages. Since that process involves no electronic
communication-no e-mail or phone call-the NSA is kept in the dark.

Effective data mining might have averted 9/11, notes Philip Bobbitt,
who served as a National Security staffer in the Clinton
administration. On Sept. 10, 2001, the NSA, monitoring pay phones in
Qaeda-controlled Afghanistan, intercepted two messages, "The match
begins tomorrow" and "Tomorrow is zero hour." No one knew what to make
of these messages, which in any event weren't translated until
Sept. 12. But the CIA and FBI had the identities of two of the
hijackers, who had been linked to earlier Qaeda plotting, in the
agencies' computers. "Had we at the time cross-referenced credit-card
accounts, frequent-flier programs and a cell- phone number shared by
those two men, data mining might easily have picked up on the 17 other
men linked to them and flying on the same day and at the same time on
four flights," Bobbitt recently wrote in The New York Times.

There are doubts within the upper levels of the U.S. government that
the NSA, four-and-a-half years after 9/11, is any better equipped and
run to piece together the next "Tomorrow is zero hour"
intercept. NEWSWEEK has learned that some top government lawyers were
troubled by the NSA data collection and search program-not on legal
grounds so much, but because they doubted its efficacy. A senior
administration official who was involved in legally vetting the NSA
program but declined to be identified discussing sensitive matters
says that a crude cost-benefit analysis left him uneasy.  The NSA
program ran a risk of intruding on the privacy of Americans. There are
always "false positives." National Journal's Shane Harris conjured up
the example of a book agent who represents a journalist who once
interviewed Osama bin Laden. A faulty pattern analysis could make him
a terror suspect.  To justify the risk of dragging such innocents into
government investigations, there needs to be evidence showing a high
probability of return on the investment-the prospect of actually
catching a terrorist.

So far, the best catch the Feds have offered up is a truckdriver named
Iyman Faris, who conceived a rather farfetched plot to cut down the
Brooklyn Bridge with a blowtorch. (Faris was apparently identified by
a captured Qaeda leader; it's not clear the NSA played any role.) Of
course, intelligence services do not always brag about their
successes, and one U.S.  official privy to the intelligence tells
NEWSWEEK that another attack on an urban area in the United States was
averted as well. The official would not discuss the plot for fear of
revealing NSA listening methods.

There has been at least some debate inside the administration over how
much license to give the NSA. In the spring of 2004, senior Justice
Department lawyers objected to warrantless eavesdropping. For several
months, until new rules to safeguard privacy were adopted, the program
was suspended. It is not clear whether the NSA's data-collection
program was also put on hold or altered in some way.

The administration is not eager to air its internal debates. At the
Justice Department, an internal watchdog, the Office of Professional
Responsibility, began an investigation into whether DOJ lawyers had
behaved unethically by interpreting the law too aggressively-by giving
a legal green light to coercive interrogations and warrantless
eavesdropping. But the OPR lawyers had to drop their investigation
last week when the administration refused to give them the necessary
security clearances.

Catching Al Qaeda or some shadowy terrorist offshoot before it strikes
again will take all the tools of spy tradecraft-old-fashioned human
intelligence (HUMINT) as well as signals intelligence (SIGINT) like
electronic eavesdropping. It is frustrating to think how close the CIA
and FBI came to stopping 9/11. After Al Qaeda bombed the American
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, local police managed to catch
one of the would-be bombers who had decided not to commit suicide in
the blast. The conspirator was turned over to American intelligence
officials, who persuaded the man to give up the phone number of a
Qaeda safe house in Yemen. The NSA began listening in on the phone
line of the safe house. American agents were tipped to a Qaeda terror
summit in Kuala Lumpur in January 2000. Two of the 9/11
hijackers-Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid Almihdhar-were at that summit.
Somehow, the CIA failed to hand over the identities of these two
terrorists to the FBI in time for the slow-moving bureau to track them
before they flew into buildings on 9/11.

That was a human error, but it was caused in part by the culture of
secrecy that permeates the national-security state. The CIA and FBI
are renowned for their turf wars and unwillingness to share
secrets. It's hoped that intelligence reform and the shame of failure
have prodded the intelligence agencies to share a little more. As the
late senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan observed, during the cold war
excessive secrecy did more to hurt national security than to help
it. In an overly secretive world, assumptions go untested and rigorous
thinking is stifled. The CIA, for instance, failed to predict the
collapse of the Soviet Union, in part because agency analysts refused
to reach out to outside economists and experts.

It is true, as the old World War II saying goes, that "loose lips sink
ships." But by refusing to tolerate an open discussion of new rules
post-9/11, the Bush team lost a chance to gain public support for the
necessary trade-off between security and privacy. Figuring out how to
track and find Internet-savvy terrorists is a daunting
task. Government officials-even the superspooks of the NSA-need all
the help they can get.

With Michael Hirsh, Michael Isikoff, Daniel Klaidman, Richard Wolffe, Holly
Bailey and John Barry


Copyright 2006 MSNBC.com
Copyright 2006 Newsweek

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12779087/site/newsweek

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: David Kravets <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Judge Seals Documents in NSA Spying Case
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 14:10:09 -0500


By DAVID KRAVETS, Associated Press Writer

Secret documents that allegedly detail the surveillance of AT&T
Inc. phone and e-mail lines under the Bush administration's domestic
spying program can be used in a lawsuit against the telephone giant, a
federal judge ruled Wednesday, but the records will remain sealed.

U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker rejected a bid by AT&T to return the
records given to the privacy advocate Electronic Frontier Foundation
by a former AT&T technician. But Walker said the records would remain
under seal until it can be determined whether they reveal trade
secrets.

"The best course of action is to preserve the status quo," Walker
said.

The hearing is the first in a lawsuit challenging the administration's
secretive domestic surveillance program.

The suit, filed by EFF in U.S. District Court here, accuses AT&T of
illegally cooperating with the National Security Agency to make
communications on the company's networks available to the spy agency
without warrants.

"They are asking this court to suppress evidence of AT&T's criminal
activity," EFF lawyer Maria Morris said in arguing that the records
remain part of the case.

"I thought it was unfortunate counsel chose to use the terms 'criminal
activities' and 'crimes,'" AT&T lawyer David Anderson said as he
argued that the records should be returned to the company.

The goal of the lawsuit is to dismantle warrantless eavesdropping on
Americans in the United States, a practice the Bush administration
confirmed in December. EFF's case would have been weakened if the
records provided by the whistleblower were taken from the case.

The case is Hepting v. AT&T Inc., 06-0672.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 13:47:21 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Verizon, AT&T Deny Handing Over Phone Records


USTelecom dailyLead
May 17, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDAcfDtutegXxdqfYY

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Verizon, AT&T deny handing over phone records
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Cablevision offers flat-rate plan for international calls
* Nortel CEO maps out long-term plan
* Verizon unveils VoIP solutions for enterprise customers
* BT Group to roll out U.K. Wi-Fi plan
* Moto hopes to launch Q next week
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Selecting the Best Wireless Architecture
* Learn more about wireless at the Telecom Bookstore
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* SK Telecom launches HSDPA network
* Fox hit "24" is set in real time, but watched on TiVo
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Venture capitalists back nationwide wireless Internet firm
* Sen. McCain set to unveil a la carte incentives

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dDAcfDtutegXxdqfYY

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

From: Ben Schilling <Ben.Schilling@oci.state.wi.us>
Subject: Re: Telemarketing Law Question
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 13:39:59 -0500


mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote:

> What legal penalties apply to a telemarketer who autodials all the
> numbers in town that are not on the do-not-call list (without checking
> whether they are homes, businesses, hospitals...)?

> Our whole university was hit with a recorded ad for a local business
> this morning.  Receptionists with rollover systems got, of course,
> numerous multiple copies.

If the numbers aren't on a do-not-call list the only penalties would
be those that apply to sending a record message.  Check your state
law.  I don't know where you are located, but in Wisconsin only
residential numbers can be placed on the do-not-call list.

Ben Schilling
Telecomm Manager, Wis Insurance Comm
608-266-1615 ben.schilling@oci.state.wi.us

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

From: Mr RICK MEREDITH <meredith29@verizon.net>
Subject: Last Laugh! Re: Spammer With a Toll Free Number
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 14:03:07 -0400


I got the same message. Has anyone tried to claim their prize? I think
I'm going to give him a try -- screw around with his head a little.
The following is what they sent me:

Rick,

Please call me at 1-866-677-4100.  I previously tried to contact you
at 1-813-9x-xx##, but was unable to reach you.  This is reference to
an entry form you filled out, either on-line or at a major mall or
movie theater.

I actually have some decent news in regards to the Worldwide
Destination contest.  I have an address, claim number, and further
details for you.  Since all prizes are well over $500, I will need a
few moments of your time to cover all related lottery-type information
from procuring your prizes due to any tax issues on them.

Sincere congratulations!

The Prize Claim Coordinators

P.S. For your convenience, we are available 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM Central
Standard Time, Monday to Friday

65.132.78.141 Dec 14 2005 10:20AM

Please follow url below to stop further emails
http://www.u-r-a-winner.net/cgi-bin/frame1.cgi?email=m

Sender:
 The Prize Claim Coordinators
 105 South River Rd
 North Aurora, IL, 60542

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I know someone else who _attempted_
(without success, need I add) to collect the 'valuabl, over five
hundred dollars' prize. They will talk your head off when you call
if you allow them to do so. But, have some fun!  You all know the
routine by now!  PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #187
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu May 18 13:38:04 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #188
Message-Id: <20060518173803.EDC08159D4@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:38:03 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 18 May 2006 13:33:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 188

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Why Emails are so Easily Misunderstood (Christian Science Monitor)
    Yahoo Roving Reporter Thrives in 'Hot Zone' (Carly Mayberry)
    Yahoo Sees No Boost From Ad System Until Next Year (Eric Auchard)
    Net Neutrality Provision Rejected (Grant Gross)
    Cellular-News: Wednesday 17th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Cellular-News: Thursday 18th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    Free Calls With Skype??? (Michael Muderick)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Difficulty Finding Needed Information (EL2006)
    Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call! (Thor Lancelot Simon)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Linc Madison)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (Thomas Daniel Horne)

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: Christian Science Monitor <csm@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Why Emails are so Easily Misunderstood
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 19:34:39 -0500


      from the May 15, 2006 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0515/p13s01-stct.html

By Daniel Enemark | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

Michael Morris and Jeff Lowenstein wouldn't have recognized each other
if they'd met on the street, but that didn't stop them from getting
into a shouting match. The professors had been working together on a
research study when a technical glitch inconvenienced
Mr. Lowenstein. He complained in an e-mail, raising Mr. Morris's
ire. Tempers flared.

"It became very embarrassing later," says Morris, when it turned out
there had been a miscommunication, "but we realized that we couldn't
blame each other for yelling about it because that's what we were
studying."

Morris and Lowenstein are among the scholars studying the benefits and
dangers of e-mail and other computer-based interactions. In a world
where businesses and friends often depend upon e-mail to communicate,
scholars want to know if electronic communications convey ideas
clearly.

The answer, the professors conclude, is sometimes "no." Though e-mail
is a powerful and convenient medium, researchers have identified three
major problems. First and foremost, e-mail lacks cues like facial
expression and tone of voice. That makes it difficult for recipients
to decode meaning well. Second, the prospect of instantaneous
communication creates an urgency that pressures e-mailers to think and
write quickly, which can lead to carelessness. Finally, the inability
to develop personal rapport over e-mail makes relationships fragile in
the face of conflict.

In effect, e-mail cannot adequately convey emotion. A recent study by
Profs. Justin Kruger of New York University and Nicholas Epley of the
University of Chicago focused on how well sarcasm is detected in
electronic messages. Their conclusion: Not only do e-mail senders
overestimate their ability to communicate feelings, but e-mail
recipients also overestimate their ability to correctly decode those
feelings.

One reason for this, the business-school professors say, is that
people are egocentric. They assume others experience stimuli the same
way they do. Also, e-mail lacks body language, tone of voice, and
other cues -- making it difficult to interpret emotion.

"A typical e-mail has this feature of seeming like face-to-face
communication," Professor Epley says. "It's informal and it's rapid,
so you assume you're getting the same paralinguistic cues you get from
spoken communication."

To avoid miscommunication, e-mailers need to look at what they write
from the recipient's perspective, Epley says. One strategy: Read it
aloud in the opposite way you intend, whether serious or sarcastic. If
it makes sense either way, revise. Or, don't rely so heavily on
e-mail. Because e-mails can be ambiguous, "criticism, subtle
intentions, emotions are better carried over the phone," he says.

E-mail's ambiguity has special implications for minorities and women,
because it tends to feed the preconceptions of a recipient. "You sign
your e-mail with a name that people can use to make inferences about
your ethnicity," says Epley. A misspelling in a black colleague's
e-mail may be seen as ignorance, whereas a similar error by a white
colleague might be excused as a typo.

If you're vulnerable to this kind of unintentional prejudice, pick up
the phone: People are much less likely to prejudge after communicating
by phone than they are after receiving an e-mail. Kruger and Epley
demonstrated this when they asked 40 women at Cornell to administer a
brief interview, 20 by phone and 20 by e-mail. They then asked a third
group of 20, the "targets," to answer the phone interviewers'
questions. They sent a transcription of the targets' answers to the
e-mail interviewers.

The professors then handed each interviewer what they said was a photo
of her subject. In reality, each got a picture of either an Asian or
an African-American woman (in reality, all were white).

E-mail interviewers who thought the sender was Asian considered her
social skills to be poor, while those who believed the sender was
black considered her social skills to be excellent. In stark contrast,
the difference in perceived sociability almost completely disappeared
when interviewer and target had talked on the phone.

E-mail tends to be short and to the point. This may arise from the
time pressures we feel when writing them: We know e-mail arrives as
soon as we send it, so we feel we should write it quickly, too. On the
other hand, letters depend on postal timetables. A letter writer feels
he has a bigger window of time to think and write.

Psychologists Massimo Bertacco and Antonella Deponte call this
characteristic "speed facilitation," and they believe it influences
our episodic memory -- our ability to recall events. They found that
e-mailers wrote shorter messages and were less likely to "ground their
communications" in memories of shared experience than letters writers
were.

The brevity of e-mail and the absence of audiovisual cues can endanger
business and personal relationships unless e-mail is supplemented with
the rapport that comes from more personal communication.

"Rapport creates a buffer of positive regard," says Professor Morris,
"and when it's not there negotiation becomes brittle, vulnerable to
falling apart."

Morris, who studies negotiation at Columbia, led a study that found
that negotiators exchange more than three times the information in
face-to-face interactions as they do via e-mail. Though Morris and his
colleagues concluded that e-mail lets negotiators make "more complex,
multiple-issue offers," they ultimately built less rapport, thereby
increasing tensions and lowering the average economic value of the
agreements.

Rapport "is an interpersonal resonance of emotional expression,"
Morris says, "involving synchronous gesture, laughing, and smiling
together.  Once this rapport exists, it's a buffer against a moment in
the negotiation when there's some friction." This buffer is hard to
develop without speaking over the phone or in person. Those who
negotiated by e-mail in Morris's study trusted each other less and
weren't as interested in working together again.

But the pitfalls of e-mail interaction were easily overcome by a
single phone call. Morris ran a second round of negotiations, all
conducted via e-mail, but made half of the corresponding pairs chat on
the phone before negotiating -- "just for five or 10 minutes," Morris
explains, "and the key thing is we told them, 'Don't get into the
issues. It's just an icebreaker.' " The result was dramatically
improved agreements.

So if you want to buy something on Craig's List, Morris says, "make a
brief phone call, even if it's not practical to do the whole
negotiation by phone. You can establish a favorable bias with someone
and then proceed in a less rich medium, but it's very hard to just get
right into the negotiation on a medium that isn't rich."

www.csmonitor.com | Copyright 2006 The Christian Science Monitor.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news from Christian Science Monitor, New York
Times and NPR, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

From: Carly Mayberry <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Roving Reporter Thrives in 'Hot Zone'
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 19:28:18 -0500


By Carly Mayberry

As a backpack journalist traveling solo across the world in dangerous
regions, Kevin Sites' load just got a little lighter.

Not that the 60 pounds of digital equipment he totes on his back has
lessened any. But Sites has made it to the halfway point of a global
trek that has found him documenting the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and the Syrian government -- and in the process helped make Yahoo's
news site consistently ranked No. 1 in online news coverage.

"Kevin has gotten stories that receive very little coverage by
traditional news outlets but that are important and told them in a way
that never has been done before or could have been done before in
terms of technology," says Scott Moore, Yahoo Media Group's vp content
operations. "He's made news cool and relevant to younger audiences
with original content that has no spin, no filter."

 From the beginning, the goal of Yahoo's "Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone"
has been to put a human face on global conflict through the kind of
intrepid reporting that can't be done with a conventional TV news
crew.

"I saw an incredible need to cover these places in a way that wasn't
just about the body count -- but what happens in terms of
victimization and environmental destruction," says Sites, who has
worked for the likes of CNN and NBC, gaining notoriety in 2004 when he
videotaped a U.S. Marine shooting a wounded Iraqi insurgent in a
Fallujah mosque. "People won't be interested in a conflict if it seems
obscure to them."

So when Sites joined Yahoo after returning from a long stint covering
the war in Iraq and saw more and more online news sites cropping up,
he knew Yahoo needed to carve out a niche beyond conflict reporting.

"There are many layers between us and a story, and what I wanted to do
was pull back those layers by simply getting to a person," says Sites,
who uses the latest in mobile and Internet technologies to report in
real time. "The world is huge, but if we parachute in to enough of
these tiny little slivers of countries -- even for a short time --
people should get a much more fully dimensional look."

Sites already has compiled multimedia reports for Yahoo's 400 million users
from 14 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Europe.

"When I first started in Somalia and the Congo and I was reporting 12
hours a day, trying to write and transmitting all night we were having
equipment problems and I remember thinking, Are we really gonna do
this for a whole year?" he recalls. But eventually Sites found a
rhythm and credits his "mission control team" of producer Robert
Padavick and researcher Lisa Liu at Yahoo's Santa Monica offices.

"I feel like an astronaut and I'm doing a space walk. They're the ones
that keep me tethered in," Sites says of Padavick and Liu.

As Sites embarks on the final leg of his round-the-world journey, he
says certain moments resonate more powerfully for him than others --
like witnessing a mother in Sudan singing a rebel lullaby to her
child, the time he shot basketball hoops with young boys in Iran and
the experience of covering a child bride tortured in Afghanistan. His
coverage of the girl's plight drew 14,000 responses and became
Yahoo!'s most e-mailed story that week.

Still, the journalist, who was once accustomed to the huge audience of
the evening news, remains amazed by the interactive nature of the
Internet platform and the Yahoo site itself with its various links,
which provide a built-in account of the history behind each story.

"It allows for this multilayer storytelling, but what's really cool is
that the nature of the Web allows people on the news site to give us
story ideas or correct someone else's posting with their own
information to in essence move the story forward in this revolutionary
endeavor of storytelling on the Web," he says.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
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For more news and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Eric Auchard <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Sees No Boost From Ad System Until Next Year
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 19:26:03 -0500


By Eric Auchard

Internet media giant Yahoo Inc. plans to introduce its revamped Web
search advertising system in the third quarter, but expects no
financial contribution in 2006, executives said on Wednesday.

"We don't expect a financial contribution this year," Chief Financial
Officer Sue Decker said at the company's annual analyst meeting
here. "We are looking more toward 2007."

"It would be premature to try and put numbers around that," Decker
said in response to a question on the potential financial
contributions of the advertising system to Yahoo results.

Executives originally said they would release details of how and when
the much-anticipated ad service would make money at the meeting.

Decker said she was making no change to the company's prior outlook
for 24 percent to 31 percent growth this year. Longer term, she
expects Yahoo to grow faster than the Internet industry as a whole,
mentioning a target of 25 percent to 26 percent rate.

"It would be an aspirational growth rate to double that to 25 percent
to 26 percent," Decker said in response to one analyst's question, but
shied away from his more aggressive 30 percent long-term revenue
growth calculation.

"I wouldn't take that so literally -- but faster than the industry
growth rate," Decker said.

Industry growth is expected to slow from around 30 percent presently
to annual growth rates around 22 to 24 percent over time, analysts
predict.

In April, the company said its 2006 year revenues would range between $4.6
billion and $4.85 billion.

Tim Cadogan, vice president of Yahoo's search business, said a redesigned
software console used by ad buyers, along with the back-end technology will
be put in the hands of advertisers by the third quarter in the United
States.

International advertisers will gain access to it during the first-quarter of
2007, he said.

However, the system's revised advertising ranking and pricing mechanisms
will only become available in the fourth-quarter of this year in the United
States and some time in the first-quarter of 2007 for international clients,
Cadogan said.

Yahoo began, earlier this month, to test the paid search ad system that aims
to compete with market leader Google Inc. by offering advertisers an easier
way to manage placing ads alongside consumers' keyword Web search results.

Microsoft Corp., previously a major customer of Yahoo's search advertising
system, recently unveiled its own Web search advertising system, setting up
a three-way battle in the online advertising market.

Decker said Yahoo's margins have stabilized in recent years at around 40
percent, as the company balances advertising growth against the need to
invest to fuel further growth, to fend off competition from other major
Internet companies.

At least half of future revenue growth will come from existing users
spending greater amounts of time on its network of Internet media and
e-commerce sites, rather than relying on new users, Decker said.

"More than 50 percent of our revenue growth will come from (increased)
revenue per user," she said.

Drivers of this growth reflect the increasing availability of
broadband Internet connections, mobile phone access to the Internet,
Web search improvements and new products.

Some analysts expressed disappointment that the company did not set
any aggressive new targets for its revamped search business.

But Morgan Stanley analyst Mary Meeker said the mood of Yahoo
executives appeared upbeat, despite the lack of news at the
meeting. "Their outlook appears positive for the short-term and the
long-term," said Meeker, who rates Yahoo "overweight."

Yahoo closed down 86 cents, or 2.78 percent, to end the day at $30.11
on Nasdaq.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Grant Gross <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Net Neutrality Provision Rejected
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:34:12 -0500


Committee votes down a provision that would prohibit ISPs from
blocking or slowing customers' connections.

                  Grant Gross, IDG News Service
                  Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Internet companies and consumer groups calling for a new
U.S. law that would prohibit broadband providers from blocking or
degrading some connections lost a major battle this week when a
U.S. House of Representatives committee voted down such a provision.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee, during debate on a
telecommunications reform bill, rejected an amendment that would write
so-called net neutrality provisions into U.S. law. Backers of a net
neutrality law want Congress to prohibit U.S. broadband providers from
blocking or slowing their customers' connections to Web sites or
services that compete with services offered by the providers.

The committee rejected the amendment, on a vote of 34-22, largely
along party lines, with all but one Republican opposing the net
neutrality amendment offered by Representative Ed Markey, a
Massachusetts Democrat.

Late yesterday, the committee was still debating the full bill,
largely focused on allowing telecom carriers to offer television
services over IP (Internet Protocol) in competition with cable TV. The
bill would create a national franchising system, instead of requiring
that new television providers seek local franchises across the U.S.

Backers of the Markey amendment said it would prohibit broadband
providers from creating a new online "tax" by charging Internet
companies an extra fee for faster connections to their customers.

The telecom bill, which prohibits the U.S. Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) from making new net neutrality rules, will "put at
grave risk the Internet as an engine of innovation, job creation and
economic growth," Markey said. "This will stifle openness, endanger
our global competitiveness, and warp the Web into a tiered Internet of
bandwidth haves and have-nots."

Internet companies including Google and Yahoo, as well as
organizations such as the Gun Owners of America, the National
Religious Broadcasters, liberal group MoveOn.org, and the Consumers
Federation of America, have called for a strong net neutrality
law. Backers of a strong net neutrality law say it's needed after the
FCC last August deregulated DSL providers, allowing them to no longer
share their lines with competitors.

The committee's wide-ranging telecom reform bill, sponsored by
Chairman Joe Barton, a Texas Republican, would allow the FCC to
investigate complaints about the blocking or impairing of Internet
content by broadband providers only after the fact.

Markey's amendment would have required broadband providers that set
aside faster connections for new services such as video over IP to
offer the same speeds to competing services. It also would have
required the FCC to create an expedited process to deal with
complaints.

Large broadband providers, including AT&T, Verizon Communications, and
Comcast, have opposed efforts to write net neutrality requirements
into law, saying they're unnecessary. There have been few examples of
broadband providers trying to block competing services, they say.

The amendment would have created new regulations for the Internet,
Barton said. "I don't think all the Draconian things will happen that
they think will happen," he said of amendment backers.

Despite support from some consumer groups, the amendment could have
hurt consumers, who now bear most of the cost of new networks built by
broadband providers, added Representative Charles Gonzalez of Texas,
one of five Democrats who voted against the Markey amendment.
E-commerce companies should pay more for broadband because they profit
from those networks, he said.

The bipartisan SavetheInternet.com Coalition accused the committee of
"selling out the Internet." The group, which says it gathered more
than 250,000 signatures on petitions supporting net neutrality in less
than one week, said it will continue to fight for a new law as the
telecom reform bill moves forward.

After being approved by the committee, the telecom reform bill would
have to pass the full House and repeat the same process in
Senate. Congress is scheduled finish its work for the year about
October 6.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more high-tech news reports, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Wednesday 17th May 2006
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:11:15 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

3G Kit Being Shipped to New Zealand
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17407.php

Econet Wireless New Zealand says that network equipment worth US$36
million is expected to arrive this week as the company prepares to
accelerate construction of its network initially in Auckland. Chief
Project Director Tex Edwards said in a statemen...

[[ Financial ]]

SmartTrust looks south for LatAm growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17399.php

US mobile services company SmartTrust expects sales in Latin America
to grow 20% this year, mostly boosted by sales in the recently created
Spanish South America region, SmartTrust regional director for Latin
America and the Caribbean, Alexander Dann...

Telemig reports net loss of US$13.7mn, down 9.8%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17401.php

Minas Gerais state's largest mobile phone operator Telemig Celular has
recorded a first quarter net loss of 30.2mn reais (US$13.7mn), down
9.8% compared to the 33.46mn reais in the same quarter last year,
Brazilian news service AgÃªncia Estado r...

Russia's MTS files bid for Serbia's Mobi 63 mobile operator
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17403.php

Russia's largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) has filed a
bid in the tender for a stake in Serbia and Montenegroen mobile
operator Mobi 63, a spokesperson with MTS told Prime-Tass Tuesday. ...

Russia's MegaFon RAS net profit up 32.4% on year in 2005
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17404.php

The net profit of Russia?s third largest mobile operator MegaFon rose
32.4% on the year to 4.144 billion rubles in 2005, as calculated under
Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), the company said in a report
Tuesday. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Nokia Confirms Google Talk Tie-Up
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17406.php

As had been previously reported, Nokia has confirmed that its Nokia
770 Internet Tablet will now come pre-installed with Google Talk,
which is Google's free instant messaging service that enables people
to chat and make calls through the Internet. Ad...

Hurricanes Lead to Tax Rebates on Cellphone Accessories
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17410.php

To help Florida residents better prepare for the 2006 hurricane
season, mobile phone batteries and chargers will for the first time be
available tax-free during the state's hurricane preparation sales tax
holiday, May 21 to June 1....

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Consumers Excited by Mobile TV but Remain Unconvinced on Usability
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17409.php

New research shows that whilst consumers are excited by the latest
mobile TV offerings, they remain unconvinced of its usability. This is
one of the findings of a report by WaveMetrix, who specialise in
monitoring online discussion to gauge and inter...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Nokia Gets Unified Device Management Contract From Elisa
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17397.php

Nokia, Tuesday said it has received a unified device managment
contract with Finnish operator Elisa. ...

[[ Network Operators ]]

T-Mobile Moves Up Customer Satisfaction Index
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17405.php

After nudging upwards last quarter, the American Customer Satisfaction
Index (ACSI) rose to 74.1 in the first quarter 2006, its largest jump
since 2003. Both consumer spending and Gross Domestic Product had
significant increases in the first quarter,...

[[ Statistics ]]

Conatel: Mobile base grows 56% in Q1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17398.php

Venezuela's mobile telephony sector grew 55.5% in the first quarter of
2006 compared to the year-ago period, reaching a total of 13.6 million
subscribers, telecoms regulator Conatel said in a statement. ...

Indotel: Telephony penetration reaches 53.7%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17400.php

Telephony penetration in Dominican Republic reached 53.7% in the first
quarter of 2006, with 4.8 million fixed and mobile lines in service,
according to the country's telecoms regulator Indotel. ...

Brazil Mobile Phone Ownership Reaches 90.6 Million In April
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17402.php

Brazilian mobile-phone ownership reached 90.6 million at the end of
April, up 28% on the year and 1.2 million higher than at the end of
March, according to preliminary figures released by telecommunications
regulator Anatel on Tuesday. ...

[[ Technology ]]

Corn Cobs into Mobile Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17408.php

Fujitsu says that it has developed a new bio-based polymer which has
been used in developing a prototype mobile phone chassis made from
corn starch. In collaboration with Toray Industries, Fujitsu developed
the bio-based polymer that features high im...

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Thursday 18th May 2006
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 07:13:29 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

[[ 3G ]]

Business Users Dominate 3G Card Sales - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17422.php

2006 has seen an explosion of sales of equipment allowing Nomadic
wireless data usage by consumers, according to figures released today
by leading market research firm GfK. Sales of equipment for nomadic
usage within the UK, allowing Internet access ...

[[ Financial ]]

Portugal Competition Authority Sends PT Bid To Phase II
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17411.php

SonaeCom's EUR11.1 billion bid for its much-larger rival Portugal
Telecom requires further study by the domestic competition authority,
an AdC spokeswoman said Tuesday. ...

Vivendi Rejects Group Breakup, Hikes Outlook
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17416.php

Vivendi, Wednesday said it has rejected a shareholder's proposal to
break up the company, adding that its conglomerate strategy should
generate higher earnings this year than previously forecast. ...

Sale Or IPO Of Permira's Debitel May Be Delayed -Sources
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17419.php

The planned sale or flotation of Permira's majority stake in German
mobile phone company Debitel may be delayed, two people familiar with
the matter told Dow Jones Newswires Tuesday. ...

RadioShack Has Opportunity For CEO Update At Meeting
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17420.php

RadioShack Corp.'s shareholders will gather for the consumer
electronics retailer's annual meeting Thursday amid questions of who
will lead the troubled company as it carries out a turnaround
plan. ...

Russia's SMARTS aggregate RAS revenue up 9.4% on yr in Jan-Mar
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17421.php

The aggregate revenue of Russia?s SMARTS group of companies rose 9.4%
on the year to U.S. $46.1 million in January-March, as calculated
under Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), the company said in a press
release Wednesday. ...

[[ Legal ]]

Court rejects ruling that gave Telenor, Storm equal votes on Kyivstar brd
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17417.php

Ukraine's Kiev Court of Appeals has overturned a previous court ruling
that gave Norwegian telecommunication company Telenor and Russia's
Storm company equal votes on the board of directors of Ukraine's
largest mobile operator Kyivstar, a source clos...

[[ Messaging ]]

TIM offers Blackberry 8700g to individuals, SMEs
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17412.php

Brazilian mobile operator TIM has started to offer the Blackberry
8700g handset to individual customers, TIM said in a statement. ...

Blackberry to Tie in with Lotus Notes
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17418.php

International Business Machines (IBM) and Research In Motion plan to
undertake new initiatives to drive growth in the mobile industry by
providing greater integration between IBM Lotus Domino and the
BlackBerry Enterprise Solution. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Vodafone Improves GPRS Monitoring
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17429.php

Vodafone Germany has switched on GeoProbe and Advanced Performance
Monitoring (APM) from the Tektronix Unified Assurance (UA) suite for
its network-wide, real-time GPRS and UMTS monitoring system. 
Furthermore, the Tektronix solution, which is now ful...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Movistar to expand coverage with 1,000 base stations
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17414.php

Mobile operator Movistar Argentina plans to increase GSM coverage and
network capacity by deploying 1,000 new radio base stations
nationwide, the company said in a statement. ...

Commercial HSDPA Network Live
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17428.php

South Korea's SK Telecom has launched a fully commercial HSDPA (High
Speed Data Packet Access) service. SK Telecom has introduced the
first-ever HSDPA handset and announced the launching of the world's
first handset-based commercial HSDPA network. Th...

[[ Offbeat ]]

A Phone Stolen Every 12 Seconds
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17426.php

Mobile phone thieves in the UK are costing the UK some US$734 million
each year according to new figures issued by Halifax Home
Insurance. Incidents of the crime are happening so frequently that one
mobile phone is stolen every twelve seconds in the ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Ministry restricts public VoIP to PC-PC calls
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17413.php

Colombia's communications ministry has officially clarified that
operators without a long distance license may only offer Voice over IP
services for PC to PC calls, local daily La RepÃºblica reported. ...

Additional GSM Spectrum for Poland
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17427.php

Poland's telecoms regulator has awarded some additional GSM 1800
spectrum to operators in the country. Three frequency reservations
were subject to tender, each including 33 channels. Each of the
tenderers could submit one, two or three offers. The f...

[[ Reports ]]

Customer Care Vital To Keep Business Customers Happy - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17424.php

American business wireless users who have an assigned dedicated
channel to contact for service issues record significantly higher
satisfaction ratings than customers at companies that do not,
according to the J.D. Power and Associates 2006 Business W...

[[ Statistics ]]

Report: Mobile client base up 22% at end 1Q05
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17415.php

The number of mobile users in Chile increased 22% at the end of the
first quarter of 2006 compared to end-1Q05, reaching 11.6 million
subscribers for the three local operators, according to local
newspaper La Tercera. ...

Canadian Wireless Penetration Reaches Two-Thirds
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17423.php

A new Decima Research study commissioned by the Canadian Wireless
Telecommunications Association (CWTA) reveals that two-thirds (64%) of
Canadian households report owning or having access to a wireless
phone. This result represents a significant incr...

Cost Cutting Helps CDMA Handset Sales in China
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17425.php

China's Analysys International says total sales volume of mobile
phones reached 22.38 million units in China in the first quarter of
2006, increasing 7.32% over the previous quarter. According to the
research report, China's GSM handset market contin...

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

Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 19:07:13 -0400
From: Michael Muderick <michael.muderick@verizon.net>
Subject: Free Calls With Skype???


I have a Skype account, and when I try and dial the number, it tells me I 
have to buy Skype credits.  What's the secret? BTW, to dial a + I held down 
the "operator" key with the left mouse button.

Michael Muderick

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Date: 17 May 2006 19:59:32 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


In article <telecom25.186.6@telecom-digest.org>, <john@mayson.us>
wrote:

> It's been reported here that Skype is allowing users to make free
> calls to the US and Canada during 2006.  I have a Skype account, but
> never used it.  I tried it last night and it works well.  I used my
> iPod earbuds and built-in mic on my iBook and the call was clear.

What wasn't clear to me from the announcement was whether the call is
free if it's placed within the US and Canada, or whether it terminates
whithin the US and Canada. The former implies originating in the
targeted area, whereas the latter could originate anywhere.

I would expect that the latter would apply, since it's just IP network
traffic until it actually transfers onto the traditional phone network
somewhere. But I don't know.

I'm curious, though, because I know someone in Afghanistan who uses
Skype to communicate with relatives in the US. It would make a huge
difference to him.

John Meissen                              jmeissen@aracnet.com

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

From: EL2006 <elf_ever@hotmail.com>
Subject: Difficulty Finding Needed Information
Date: 17 May 2006 15:53:25 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


This is my first time to use Newsgroup ... I find it difficult to find
info that I need.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Exactly what type of information are
you seeking?  Please be specific. Maybe someone here can help you.
PAT]

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

From: tls@panix.com (Thor Lancelot Simon)
Subject: Re: Dialing 311? Hold That Call!
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 20:03:11 +0000 (UTC)
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.
Reply-To: tls@rek.tjls.com


In article <telecom25.186.12@telecom-digest.org>, Anthony Bellanga
<no-spam@no-spam.no-spam> wrote:

> Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> posted Kenneth Pogran of Lexington MA's
> comment to the Boston Globe:

> http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/05/14/dialing_311_hold_that_call/

>>> I believe that using 311 as the telephone access code for the
>>> centralized request line is not a good idea in 2006. 311 works
>>> only if all callers in the city can reach it -- if it's "routable"
>>> in telecom industry lingo.

> and then Thor Lancelot Simon (tls@panix.com) replies:

>> This is nonsense.  311 is used in some of the most competitive
>> telephone markets in the country, including New York City --
>> and customers of all carriers can reach it just fine.

> It's NOT nonsense!

> Just because 311 apparantly works "fine" in New York City among
> various carriers and service providers doesn't necessarily mean that
> it will work just as fine everywhere else it has been implemented.

If it wasn't implemented by idiots, it does.  You could make the exact
same complaint about 911 -- why don't you?

Hint: it's easy to spread Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt if you don't
know what you're talking about.  I've spent enough time staring at
enough switchgear and enough protocol analyzers in my career to have a
pretty good idea how routing for N11 calls works.  Have you?

Thor Lancelot Simon	                              tls@rek.tjls.com

  "We cannot usually in social life pursue a single value or a single moral
   aim, untroubled by the need to compromise with others."      - H.L.A. Hart

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

Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 17:27:06 -0700
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Reply-To: lincmad@suespammers.org
Organization: California resident; nospam; no unsolicited e-mail allowed


In article <telecom25.186.7@telecom-digest.org>, Gordon Burditt
<gordonb.bkvq0@burditt.org> wrote:

> [quoting someone else]

>> You'll never see it but you can bet that all kinds of pattern
>> analysis is taking place to discover which of us are communist err
>> ah I mean Democrats.  

> Can't they get that kind of information much more simply by looking
> at voter registration records?  Legally, even?  Is the fact that I
> voted in the Republicrat primary rather than the Demican one public
> information?  When primary time comes around, I get a lot more
> propaganda from candidates in the party primary that I last voted in
> than ones from the other party.

That specific information, yes, they can get much more easily from
voter records, which are public information. In fact, if you put your
unlisted telephone number on your voter registration -- at least in
California -- your telephone number is now in the open public record.
Very few people seem to realize that the phone number is optional on
the voter registration form. I changed my registration to show my
number as 415-555-1234, but the bastards matched my registration to
other records and called me anyway. I'll save the rant about how the
supposed "do not call" registry exempts political campaigns for
another day, though.

Anyway, there are much more nefarious things the current
administration in power -- whether that's the Republicans right now or
the Democrats at some point in the future -- can hunt for in this kind
of data. I heard a sound bite yesterday about trying to track down who
is leaking information to journalists by analysing this kind of
calling data. The Bush administration would not hesitate to claim such
a purpose as "fighting al Qaeda," but I and others disagree.

The government has a history of abusing precisely this kind of
ability.  They ask me to trust that they will only use it for the
common good, and I say no way.


Linc Madison  *  San Francisco, California  *  lincmad@suespammers.org
<http://www.LincMad.com> * primary e-mail: Telecom at LincMad dot com
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
DO NOT SEND UNSOLICITED E-MAIL TO THIS ADDRESS.  You have been warned.

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

From: Thomas Daniel Horne <hornetd@mindspring.com>
Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 21:27:50 GMT
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net


USAGordon Burditt wrote:

>> But in his weekly radio address on Saturday, Bush rushed to assure the
>> public the secret program did not target innocent private citizens.

>> Cheney did not "target" a fellow hunter either.  Funny how that
>> person injured anyway.

>> Specially designed computer programs watch for patterns in these
>> contacts and analyze them to make sure no terrorist cell is operating
>> within the United States.

> I'd like to see the output of such a program analyzing contacts
> between members of Congress and lobbyists made public, to ensure that
> no bribing of congresscritters is taking place.

> Gordon L. Burditt

You'll never see it but you can bet that all kinds of pattern analysis
is taking place to discover which of us are communist err ah I mean
Democrats.


Tom Horne

"people willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve 
neither and will lose both"  Benjamin Franklin

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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 18 May 2006 14:28:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 189

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay (Mark Trevelyan)
    AOL Purchases Video Ads Company (Anick Jesdanun)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 18, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Vonage IPO Clouded by Complaints (USTA Daily Lead)
    Re: Telemarketing Law Question (John Levine)
    Re: Telemarketing Law Question (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query ? (B. Wright)
    Re: Calling the USA while traveling in Europe Query ? (John Levine)
    Re: Antispam Firm Blue Security Says Victim of Attack (shrike@cyberspace)
    Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Free Calls With Skype??? (Mark Crispin)
    Re: Free Calls With Skype??? (John Levine)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (John Levine)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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               ===========================

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

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

From: Mark Trevelyan <reuters@telecom-digest.org) 
Subject: World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:28:29 -0500


By Mark Trevelyan

Soccer fans who missed out on the official World Cup draws will run a
big risk if they buy unauthorized tickets via online auction house
Ebay, a German official said on Thursday.

For security reasons, tickets for the month-long tournament starting
June 9 are personalized with the buyer's name, and are not
transferable except under special circumstances. But that has not
stopped a lively market from developing on the Internet.

Asked what advice he would give to a prospective Ebay buyer, German
soccer chief Theo Zwanziger said: "I would just warn him he's running
a risk. He's going to the stadium under a false name ... and he runs
the risk he will be turned away."

He dismissed a reporter's suggestion that stadium officials would in
practice only be able to check a small proportion of fans' identities.

"Why are you so sure? We have a lot of stewards on the spot,"
Zwanziger said.

"If we have indications, firstly that the security situation is
critical, and secondly that people are coming to the stadium without
officially issued tickets, there will be intensive checks.

"And then those who don't have (official tickets) will be spotted, and
they'll have paid a lot of money and they'll be sent home. So I'd
advise them to spare themselves the frustration."

On Ebay's German Web site, www.ebay.de, the top bid for a ticket for
Brazil versus Australia on June 18 was 431 euros ($551) on Thursday
afternoon, while a seat for Germany versus Poland on June 14 was
fetching 445 euros, in both cases several times the official price.

World soccer's governing body FIFA has criticized the German
organizers over the ticketing arrangements, with president Sepp
Blatter expressing concern last week that ID checks would lead to
excessive queues and could mean there are many empty seats.

Zwanziger told a conference in Berlin: "We did it because we believe
this is an additional security factor."

He added that the organizers could have charged 50 percent more for
all tickets and still sold out, but had kept prices reasonable because
"we have a responsibility to the fans."

Separately, Germany's organizing committee announced on Thursday that
42,495 tickets had been returned by their holders for resale. The
tickets were returned by FIFA from various federations that did not
use sell their full allotted amount.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Anick Jesdanun <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: AOL Purchases Video Ads Company
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:30:48 -0500


AOL Buys Company That Inserts Video Ads
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

AOL LLC, signaling the importance online video will play in drawing
visitors to its ad-supported Web sites, has purchased a small company
that specializes in inserting advertising into video clips.

With the technology from Lightningcast Inc., AOL would be able to run
targeted ads within video and even change ads from time to time
without replacing the entire video file. Lightningcast's technology
also can insert ads into audio clips.

Financial terms of the deal, announced Thursday, were not disclosed.

AOL already has been using Lightningcast's platform since 2002. By
acquiring the company, AOL can better integrate sales and operations
with Advertising.com, the online ad business AOL bought in June 2004.

"This acquisition will provide a huge infusion of talent, technology
and publisher relationships for Advertising.com at a time when
streaming video is growing at a blistering pace," Mike Kelly,
president of AOL Media Networks, said in a statement.

Last month, AOL won the first Daytime Emmy presented for content
delivered via the Internet, cell phones and other small-screen
devices. Last July's "Live 8" concert special -- delivered in seven
separate feeds, all without the meltdowns common with early online
video events -- was widely seen as a milestone in Internet video.

AOL later launched with Warner Bros. the "In2TV" broadband network
featuring free viewing of dozens of old television shows like "Welcome
Back Kotter," "Sisters" and "Growing Pains." AOL and Warner Bros. are
both units of Time Warner Inc.

And earlier this month, AOL quietly opened its test of UnCut Video, a
site where users can share clips they made with camera phones and
camcorders, competing with the likes of Google Inc.'s video service
and YouTube Inc.

Lightningcast's technology works with all types of video - live,
on-demand streaming and downloads.

The development comes as AOL intensifies efforts at driving traffic to
free, ad-supported sites to compensate for declines in its traditional
business of Internet access subscriptions.

But AOL faces immense competition.

Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes Music Store and Google Video offer clips
for sale, generally $1.99 for an episode of a television show.

CBS Corp. recently launched an ad-supported broadband channel,
"innertube," with specially created Web series and material that has
already run on television.

The Walt Disney Co.'s ABC is experimenting with making popular shows
available for free on its Web site, complete with ads that cannot be
skipped.

Time Warner shares were down 6 cents to $17.47 in morning trading
Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. Lightningcast was privately
held before AOL's acquisition closed Wednesday.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:34:11 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Thursday, May 18, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 18, 2006
********************************

New Barriers for VoIP
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/18017?11228

     The state public utility commissions have traditionally had the
     reputation of being in the hip pockets of the telephone and
     electric companies that they regulate. While some state
     commissions have changed that perception and are now viewed as
     pro-competition and pro-consumer, others have perpetuated it. As
     I write this column, the...

Barton-Rush Bill Not 'An Elegant Solution'
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18016?11228

     The piecemeal approach to a rewrite of the '96 Telecom Act took a
     controversial turn with the proposal of the Communications,
     Promotion and Enhancement Act of 2006 in late March. The work of
     House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton, R-Texas,
     and Bobby Rush, D-Ill., the bill makes way for a national video
     franchising...

No Hope Yet for Vodafone to Grab SFR
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18012?11228

     Vivendi has rejected a shareholder proposal to break up the
     company in what would have created an opportunity for Vodafone to
     buy the shares it does not already own in French mobile operator
     SFR. Vodafone owns 44% of the firm, which holds about 36% of the
     French mobile market, while Vivendi controls a 56% stake. Vivendi
     shareholder...

China Mobile in Talks with Google
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/18005?11228

     HONG KONG -- China Mobile (Hong Kong) Ltd., China's largest
     cell-phone carrier by subscribers, said Thursday it's in talks
     with Google Inc. to launch an Internet search engine for mobile
     services in China.  China Mobile is keen to explore mobile data
     services to offset declining revenue from the traditional voice
     services.  ''I...

RIM, IBM Collaborate on Mobility
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18001?11228

     Research In Motion (RIM) and IBM see a collective opportunity to
     enhance mobility in the enterprise space by further integrating
     RIM's BlackBerry Enterprise Solution with IBM Lotus Domino.
     Initially, the companies plan to offer IBM Lotus Domino directly
     to BlackBerry devices. The goal, according to the companies, is
     to give customers...

BT Ready To Mesh The Masses
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/17997?11228

     BT, stepping up its plans to create "wireless cities" across the
     U.K., says it's reached agreements with a dozen jurisdictions to
     blanket those municipalities with a Wi- Fi mesh, with work on the
     first six to start imminently.  The project will, unsurprisingly,
     be the largest mesh deployment in the U.K.  BT is working with
     Intel as its...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:55:45 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Vonage IPO Clouded by Complaints


USTelecom dailyLead
May 18, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dEnsfDtutehCudvopQ

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Vonage IPO clouded by complaints
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Embarq begins journey as a separate company
* Demand for broadband drives revenue growth at BT
* Lucent's Russo says traditional telecoms well-positioned to compete
* Broadband will renew debate about in-flight phone service
* Moonves: Traditional broadcast still big moneymaker
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* What You Need to Know About IPTV
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Sprint introduces backup system
* Smartphones a hit with business owners
* Study: Worldwide mobile phone sales to jump 23% in 2006
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Experts: Telecoms unlikely to face penalties in privacy suits

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dEnsfDtutehCudvopQ

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

Date: 18 May 2006 02:53:34 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Telemarketing Law Question


In article <telecom25.186.4@telecom-digest.org> you write:

> What legal penalties apply to a telemarketer who autodials all the
> numbers in town that are not on the do-not-call list (without checking
> whether they are homes, businesses, hospitals...)?

Check 47 USC 227.  That sounds like a whole bunch of violations of the
telemarketing law.  You can't robocall a residence or hospital, and
you can't robocall more than one line of a business at a time.  The
penalty is $500 per violation.

> Our whole university was hit with a recorded ad for a local business
> this morning.  Receptionists with rollover systems got, of course,
> numerous multiple copies.

Your university should sue them.

R's,

John

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Telemarketing Law Question
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 14:54:10 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.186.4@telecom-digest.org>,
mc  <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote:

> What legal penalties apply to a telemarketer who autodials all the
> numbers in town that are not on the do-not-call list (without checking
> whether they are homes, businesses, hospitals...)?

> Our whole university was hit with a recorded ad for a local business
> this morning.  Receptionists with rollover systems got, of course,
> numerous multiple copies.

Under 47 USC 227 the only restriction that applies to calling
businesses (which would include your University) is that the caller is
not allowed to simultaneously engage two or more numbers at the
university.  Now, if the logs from your switch can establish that the
marketer was calling two (or more) extensions at the same time, you
can sue him.  It's worth $500 for each call he originated _while_ he
had another line in use.  Note: 'ringing', but not answered, *does*
count as 'in use' for that 'multiple lines' test.

The marketer was presumably acting as 'agent' for the business being
promoted -- this would make the business liable for the damages, as
well as the marketer.

Calling residences with a recorded message is illegal *except* for a
few special cases (prior express consent of the called party, bona
fide emergency situation, etc.).  This restriction applies
*REGARDLESS* of whether the residence number is listed on the
Do-not-call list.

Calling 'emergency telephone numbers' -- '911', crisis lines, poison
control centers, etc. -- with a recorded message is similarly
forbidden.

As is calling "the telephone line of any guest room or patient room of
a hospital, health care facility, elderly home, or similar
establishment"

*OR* cell-phones, or any other  'called-party pays' number.

"Businesses" enjoy _only_ the protection against multiple
*simultaneous* calls.  One *might* be able to pursue a 'harassment'
action, but the outcome is far from certain.

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

From: B. Wright <bmwright@xmission.com>
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 00:59:00 UTC
Organization:  XMission Internet http://www.xmission.com
Subject: Re: Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query 


donhdoyle@yahoo.com <donhdoyle@yahoo.com> wrote:

> I'm going to be travelling in Europe this summer and need to be able
> to talk periodically to people in the US.  I will have my portable
> computer with a wireless card.  Can I load Skype softward on my
> computer and then use Skype from an internet connection in the hotel?

Where are you going to be staying?  If the answer is "sometimes
hostels", then you might want to think twice about taking a laptop.
Even if you're always staying in hotels I'd leave the laptop home
unless yoh have an absolute need for it, it's just something to worry
about getting stolen/broken during your travels.  If you need
safe/secure internet access just bring along a bootable Linux CD find
an internet cafe that will let you boot that on their machine (instead
of using some potentially trojan infested public Windows machine).

> What better ways might you suggest for inexpensive voice communication
> back to the US from Europe?

It might be a lot less trouble for you just to buy some of the local
pre-paid calling cards.  You can find these all over the news agents
there, they are cheap, and if you make sure to read the terms closely
you can find really good rates.  If you won't be making many calls
then it might make sense to just buy one of the GSM chips that work
worldwide and put that in an unlocked GSM phone (make sure it does
900/1800Mhz at least).  There are also some pre-paid calling cards
that offer local access numbers throughout Europe, usually the rates
are higher than the ones you buy at the local shops, but if you use it
infrequently it could pay off in convenience.

Here are some links, the rates vary and these aren't neccessarily the
best, but good enough to give you an idea.  You should look around and
compare on your own:

http://www.prepaidgsm.net/ (some global GSM chip info + comparisons)
http://www.hiayh.ekit.com/ (one example of global calling card w/local
toll free access numbers)

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

Date: 18 May 2006 03:07:01 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query


> to talk periodically to people in the US.  I will have my portable
> computer with a wireless card.  Can I load Skype softward on my
> computer and then use Skype from an internet connection in the hotel?

Sure, although you may reconsider when you see what some European
hotels charge for wifi access.  Skype has a promotion so that all
calls to the US are free (not just to 800 numbers which always were)
but if you have to pay $10/hr for wifi, it's not much of a bargain.

> What better ways might you suggest for inexpensive voice communication
> back to the US from Europe?

Get a decent calling card.  For example, I have Cognicall's card which
is 14.5 cpm from France or 11.6 cpm from the UK, works from payphones
or the hotel room phone, and doesn't need any extra hardware.

If you're going to be spending a while in one country, see what the
local calling cards cost.  Friends in the UK tell me that you can get
cards to call the US for under 5 cpm.

> While I'm at it, I gather that I will need some kind of headset/micro-
> phone in order to use Skype.  I'm considering the Logitech 350; any
> opinions on this or a better solution?

I have a little generic USB handset I bought on ebay.  Works fine.

R's,

John

Note to Pat: Back when I had Vonage, I lugged my TA around on some
trips, and it wasn't so great.  I had to use my laptop as a router
since the TA doesn't speak wifi, and even at places with wired access,
you invariably had to log in from a web browser first.  The TA and the
cables took up a lot more space in my suitcase than my USB handset.

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

From: shrike@cyberspace.org
Subject: Re: Antispam Firm Blue Security Says Was Victim of Attack
Date: 17 May 2006 19:47:59 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


>> With black-holing, an ISP essentially removes the advertised path to a
>> particular Web site or IP address -- making it completely inaccessible to
>> the outside world.

This is completely incorrect. Black-holing is the process of
announcing a more specific route for the host pointing it at a null0
interface. In effect they superceded the DOS, and at that moment
became the progenitor of a larger scale DOS against Blue
Security. Been there, done that, many times. They mitgated bad
traffic, but also denied good traffic.

Blue Security, (which should have considered a name that didn't
acronym as BS) should have considered the response they were going to
get. To redirect the traffic really shows these guys as ameatures in
the Internet business. All that aside it is time for some ISP's to
step up and offer the bandwidth to liquidate this problem. If these
guys want to go to war with spam, more power to them. ISP's deal with
router-crashing DOS loads nearly every day. Having one that is
predictable shouldn't be an issue.

-psy

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: A Storm is Brewing Over Phone Record Collection
Date: 18 May 2006 10:37:15 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Linc Madison wrote:

> I'll save the rant about how the supposed "do not call" registry
> exempts political campaigns for another day, though.

I got a total of 15 (fifteen) calls during this year's primary season.
All recorded messages.  In the presidential election they tried to
call my mother repeatedly even though she's off the rolls as she is
no longer with us.

As it turned out, in my area they do not have access to the voter
rolls.  They are allowed to sit in the polling place (as poll
watchers) and note the names of those voting and they make up their
lists that way.  Obviously if someone is deleted from the rolls they
have no way of knowing it and they'll keep trying to reach the person
even if they're gone or have moved.

> I heard a sound bite yesterday about trying to track down who
> is leaking information to journalists by analysing this kind of
> calling data.

Some years ago a large corporation was upset about leaks to
journalists and demanded and received from the Bell in the HQ toll
records to search for whoever was calling the journalists.  Both the
company and Bell got into trouble and bad publicity for that antic.  I
can't help but wonder with deregulation and hungry non-regulated
carriers that that sort of thing still goes on under some loophole.

As to the NSA research, frankly at this point I don't have an opinion
because there are good arguments on both sides.

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

From: Mark Crispin <mrc@CAC.Washington.EDU>
Subject: Re: Free Calls With Skype???
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 10:37:40 -0700
Organization: University of Washington


On Wed, 17 May 2006, Michael Muderick wrote:

> I have a Skype account, and when I try and dial the number, it tells
> me I have to buy Skype credits.  What's the secret? BTW, to dial a +
> I held down the "operator" key with the left mouse button.

As the announcement on
http://share.skype.com/sites/en/2006/05/free_calls_to_all_landlines_an.html
says:

 	If you're in the US or Canada, you can use SkypeOut to call
 	any landline or mobile number in both the USA and Canada for
 	free.

 	If you're in the US or Canada and calling any other country,
 	OR if you're in any other country and calling landline or
 	mobile numbers in the US or Canada, the standard SkypeOut
 	rates apply.

So no, this does not give free calling to the US and Canada from overseas.

My guess is that Skype uses your IP address to validate that you are
in the US and Canada, and their list of US/Canadian IP networks isn't
quite accurate.  It works for me.

They may be doing something silly like checking the country in your
Skype profile, but I doubt that since it's easy for anyone to set that
to whatever they want.

-- Mark --

http://panda.com/mrc
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.

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

Date: 18 May 2006 18:06:28 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Free Calls With Skype???


> I have a Skype account, and when I try and dial the number, it tells me I 
> have to buy Skype credits.  What's the secret? BTW, to dial a + I held down 
> the "operator" key with the left mouse button.

To dial a plus, I'd press the plus key on my keyboard.

Where are you trying to call?  If it's outside the US and Canada, you
do need to buy credits because it costs real money.

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

Date: 18 May 2006 18:12:12 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers


> What wasn't clear to me from the announcement was whether the call is
> free if it's placed within the US and Canada, or whether it terminates
> whithin the US and Canada. The former implies originating in the
> targeted area, whereas the latter could originate anywhere.

The latter, calls to US and Canada numbers are now free.  (You would
already know this if you had spent 10 seconds pointing your browser at
http://www.skype.com .)  Skype has only the vaguest idea of where
you're located.

> I'm curious, though, because I know someone in Afghanistan who uses
> Skype to communicate with relatives in the US. It would make a huge
> difference to him.

Since the rate used to be about two cents a minute, he must be making
some impressively long calls.

R's,

John

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

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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 18 May 2006 16:06:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 190

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    US Demands Colleges be Wiretapped Also (Spam Daily News)
    Police Officers Warned About Cell Phone 'Guns' (Associated Press News Wire)
    Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists' (Media Matters)
    Qwest Gets Customer Praise for Holding Back Records (Tom Zeller, Jr.) 
    Political Telemarketers (John Mayson)
    Sprint Finishes Spin-Off of Local Companies (Jeffrey Bartash)
    KDDI lets Mobile Phone Customers Use Google Search (Reuters News Wire)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (jmeissen@aracnet.com)
    Re: Free Calls With Skype??? (john@mayson.us)

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and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest.  

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

From: Spam Daily News <spam@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: US Demands Colleges be Wiretapped Also
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:43:52 -0500


 From Spam Daily News

"This is totally ridiculous. I can't believe you're making this
argument," Judge Harry T. Edwards told Jacob Lewis, an associate
general counsel with the Federal Communications Commission.

A U.S. appeals court panel challenged the Bush administration Friday
over new rules making it easier for the police and the FBI to wiretap
phone calls made over the Internet.

One of the three judges hearing the case told the government that its
courtroom arguments were "gobbledygook" and suggested its lawyer
return to his office and "have a big chuckle."

Judge Edwards criticized the U.S. government's demand that
universities install wiretapping capabilities in their computer
networks, saying he sees no evidence that Congress intended the
intrusion.

FCC officials last year indicated that their requirement would lead to
the installation of new switches throughout university networks to
monitor individual computers, said Terry Hartle, senior vice president
of the American Council on Education. That would cost colleges an
estimated $7 billion.

The FCC recently clarified its position, saying universities only need
to establish points where police can monitor messages coming in and
out of the campus network, as long as the equipment includes
authentication technology that reliably identifies each computer user,
Hartle said.

That alternative may be just as costly, since no such authentication
technology yet exists, said Douglas Carlson, executive director of
computing services at New York University, who is advising the
American Council on Education in its case.

"Depending on the data that needs to be collected at the gateway, it
could still require major changes at the university networks and
systems," he said.

Aside from the costs, the universities don't accept that they are
subject to the 1994 law or want an outcome that would find otherwise,
Hartle said.

The FCC has set a May 14, 2007 deadline for compliance.

The FCC decision prompted an appeal by universities and libraries. The
groups, including the American Library Association and Association of
American Universities, challenged the agency's authority to extend
such requirements to high-speed Internet services.

Judge Edwards has taught at the Michigan, Harvard, Duke, Pennsylvania,
Georgetown, and New York University law schools. His most important
publication, "The Growing Disjunction Between Legal Education and the
Legal Profession," from Michigan Law Review in 1992, has been the
source of extensive comment, discussion, and debate among legal
scholars and practitioners in the United States.  Critics said the new
rules were too broad and inconsistent with the intent of Congress when
it passed the surveillance law, which excluded categories of companies
described as information service providers. They say the FCC has long
included broadband Internet in that category.

Judge Edwards agreed. And he scoffed at the FCC's argument that
broadband Internet services included a separate telecommunications
"component" that made it subject to the wiretapping requirements.

"Your argument makes no sense," Edwards told Lewis.

"I'm sorry I'm not making myself clear," Lewis said.

"You're making yourself very clear. That's the problem," Edwards
replied.

"Congress intended to cover services that were functionally
equivalent" to traditional telephones, Lewis said.

"There's nothing to suggest that in the statute," Edwards replied.
"Stating that doesn't make it so."

The panel appeared to be more willing to support the FCC's argument
that Internet-phone services - which allow Internet users to make and
receive calls from fixed-line phones - might be covered under the law.

One of the other two justices on the panel, David Sentelle, expressed
more sympathy for the government's argument, especially regarding the
idea of extending the surveillance requirements to Internet phone
service. But Sentelle also sounded skeptical about the FCC's position
on broadband services.

The third judge, Janice Brown, did not question the lawyers.

The court's decision is expected within several months.

Federal agencies foretell a dark world of evil benefiting from limited
wiretapping laws. The Department of Justice said leaving out VoIP would
deliver "a surveillance safe haven for criminals and terrorists who make use
of new communications services."

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <newsday@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Police Officers Warned About Cell Phone 'Guns'
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:56:37 -0500


NEW YORK (AP) _ The New York Police Department has warned officers to
watch out for a type of rare custom-made pistol, disguised as a cell
phone.

Federal authorities have been issuing warnings about the specially
made .22 caliber handgun since at least 2000, when several were
recovered by law enforcement authorities in Europe.

The weapons, which use a spring-wound percussion system to fire up to
four .22 caliber bullets, have continued to surface occasionally
overseas.

The NYPD issued a warning to its commanders about the weapon in a
directive on May 11, the New York Post reported.

The memo included pictures of the weapon and a description of how it
works. It asked police conducting security screening at police
headquarters or borough courthouses to be cautious handling cell
phones during searches.

Video of the pistol in action has circulated widely on the Internet.

Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
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For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Media Matters <mediamatters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists'
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:54:45 -0500


Kondracke denounced Qwest as "basically helping terrorists" for not
giving customers' phone records to NSA.

On Fox News' Special Report, Roll Call executive editor Morton
Kondracke said the telecommunications company Qwest was "basically
helping terrorists" because "to its discredit, [it] said it was not
cooperating with the NSA [National Security Agency] and specifically
decided not to cooperate" by providing the NSA with the phone call
records of its customers. 

According to The New York Times, a lawyer representing Qwest's former
CEO has said that the company "[[Qwest]] turned down requests by the
National Security Agency for private telephone records because it
concluded that doing so would violate federal privacy laws."  During
the "All-Star panel" on the May 17 edition of Fox News' Special Report
with Brit Hume, Roll Call executive editor Morton M. Kondracke said
the telecommunications company Qwest was "basically helping
terrorists" because "to its discredit, [it] said it was not
cooperating with the NSA [National Security Agency] and specifically
decided not to cooperate" by providing the NSA with the phone call
records of its customers. "Now, you know, if we're fighting a war on
terrorism," Kondracke said, "you'd think the telephone companies would
want to cooperate, and I would hope that they would be
cooperating. And for a company to opt out and say, 'No, no, no, we're
too privacy-minded for this,' you know, it's basically helping
terrorists."

A May 11 USA Today report that NSA has been collecting and analyzing
records of phone calls made by millions of Americans since 2001 stated
that, according to its sources, "[a]mong the big telecommunications
companies, only Qwest has refused to help the NSA." According to a May
12 New York Times article, former Qwest CEO Joseph N. Nacchio has
stated that "Qwest turned down requests by the National Security
Agency for private telephone records because it concluded that doing
so would violate federal privacy laws," although the company itself
has not commented on the USA Today article. The Times article noted
that Nacchio left Qwest in 2002 and that he was indicted in December
2005 on 42 counts of "insider selling."

 From the May 17 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume:

  KONDRACKE: Well, these statements are very carefully worded, and it
took six days for them to come out. And in the beginning, Qwest, this
other company, to its discredit, said that it wasn't cooperating with
the NSA, and it, you know, it specifically decided not to
cooperate. Now, you know, if we're fighting a war on terrorism, you'd
think the telephone companies would want to cooperate, and I would
hope that they would be cooperating. And for a company to opt out and
say, "No, no, no, we're too privacy minded for this," you know, it's
basically helping terrorists. I think Senator [Pat] Roberts [R-KS] is
absolutely right. I mean, what's going on now is shocking.  People are
treating the Constitution of the United States as a suicide pact.
Here we have Al Qaeda -- I mean, everybody has been watching [the
film] United 93, and everybody should watch United 93 just to remind
us of what we're dealing with. They would slam a plane into the
Capitol, they would blow up an atomic bomb if they possibly could, and
we're acting as though people who are trying to protect us are
criminals.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Does any person with half a brain, or
an IQ higher than the outside temperature on a fall day give any 
attention at all to what Fox News has to say?  PAT]

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

From: Tom Zeller, Jr.  <nytimes@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Qwest Gets Customer Praise for Holding Back Records
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 14:03:15 -0500


By Tom Zeller Jr.
The New York Times

The 1974 Privacy Act was aimed at preventing the government from
piling up data on Americans precisely because it could not be
trusted. The act did not envision giant commercial databases, or that
one day, the government could simply buy its way around the law.

Before last week's report that Qwest Communications was apparently the
lone holdout among the four largest U.S. telecommunications companies
secretly supplying the National Security Agency with Americans'
phone-call records, online grumblers often called Qwest by a different
name: "Qworst."

Whether or not that reputation has been healed by the company's
unexpected, and perhaps overstated, turn as a defiant protector of
consumer privacy is unclear. A hastily conducted Washington Post-ABC
News poll did suggest on Friday that 63 percent of Americans thought
that the security agency's program was "an acceptable way to
investigate terrorism."

What is clear is that news of the agency program, particularly in this
fiercely polarized political climate, has turned a beleaguered
regional phone company with a somewhat lackluster customer service
record into a gleaming political touchstone and beacon of consumer
protection.

"Qwest: NSA-Free," exclaims an image button making the rounds on
liberal blogs at the end of last week. "Who are you with?"

Compare that to typical online commentary before last week:

"I have had a problem with my home phone line for over a year!" reads
a rant at the Useful Fools blog. "I pay for service that I don't get!
Down with Qwest! I will never use them again!"

To be fair, it is equally easy to scan consumer complaint sites and
find irate customers berating, for example, Verizon in the plainest of
terms -- "Can you hear me now?!"

Lousy Service With a Backbone?

Even as Qwest jockeyed in the late 1990s to become one of the first
U.S.  telecommunications companies to offer bundled services --
telephone, Internet, television, wireless all on one bill -- its
reputation for poor customer service, confusing billing and corporate
misdeeds has overshadowed its ambitions, making its sudden turn as
champion of consumer interests all the more incongruous.

The company, which is based in Denver, settled a Securities and
Exchange Commission fraud inquiry in 2004 for US$250 million. An
additional $400 million was agreed to in October as a partial
settlement with angry investors.

"They've always had the worst service record in terms of getting
things installed and keeping them working," said James Hood, founder
of Consumeraffairs.com, a consumer advocacy and complaint site.

AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth had all been providing the NSA with call
records under a contract, USA Today reported. Only Qwest had refused,
according to the report, citing the "legal implications of handing
over customer information to the government without warrants."

Instant Payoff!

"Thank you Qwest! It's nice to see someone following principle over
profits," wrote a user named Terra at ThankyouQwest.org, a Web site
hastily erected by the purveyors of the liberal blog Empire
Burlesque. "When will you have cell service in Ohio?"

At Americablog.com, Melissa said: "I just switched to Qwest. It took
two minutes."

Of course, some of the praise was more grudging -- particularly among
Qwest customers who nonetheless oppose what they considered to be
government snooping.

"Good for Qwest, but, ugh, an otherwise horrible phone company," Craig
Randall wrote at Americablog.

A current, and unhappy, Qwest customer from Iowa reported, "We have
only recently had an option to switch local providers in this rural
area, and I have planned to leave Qwest and go with a smaller outfit
built by my town."  No longer.

Government Buying Its Way Around the Law?  "Just when I thought I was
done with them they go and do something terrific," the customer
said. "I'll write and tell them why I'm staying."

Not exactly a ringing endorsement of the company's core products, but
a customer is a customer.

It is worth noting that telephone companies and banks, and shoe
warehouses, magazines, courts, video rental stores and online
retailers are buying and selling and sharing our personal information
all the time.

Much of it is gobbled up by large data warehouses, which in turn
peddle access to the government.

ChoicePoint, the world's largest data broker, recently signed a
five-year, $12 million contract with the FBI -- another end-run,
consumer advocates contend, around the 1974 Privacy Act, which was
aimed at preventing the government from piling up data on Americans
precisely because it could not be trusted.

The act did not envision giant commercial databases, or that one day,
the government could simply buy its way around the law.

Copyright 2006 New York Times. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For headlines and news from New York Times, Christian Science Monitor
and National Public Radio with no login nor registration requirements,
please go to http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Political Telemarketers
Date: 18 May 2006 12:46:36 -0700


I posted a query/rant along these lines about a month ago, but my NNTP
isn't talking to comp.dcom.telecom.

I know politicians exempted themselves from the federal telemarketing
law (and also the state law here in Texas).  Are they completely and
totally exempt or do they have some restrictions also?  Here's my
point ...

I don't belong to any political party.  Texas has open primaries
(anyone can vote in either primary on election day).  I haven't voted
in a primary in Texas because a) I almost always vote third-party and
b) the major party I hate the least had a presidential candidate from
Texas, so what was the point?  Still, the Republican Party got a hold
of my name and number and call me continually begging for my vote.

About 75% of the the time I get a pre-recorded message from our
Republican governor or his wife asking I vote for this candidate or
that amendment.  Every call except for one showed up in my caller ID
as "Unknown Name/Unknown Number".  The one that did come through came
from the 248 area code which is Michigan, not Texas.  When I get a
human I stop them and ask that a) I be removed from their list b) If
they continue to ignore my request I will vote against their candidate
automatically.  They almost always argue that they have the right to
call me because they're exempt from the "Do Not Call" list.

They're totally missing the point!

I specifically requested not to receive telemarketing calls.  Why
would they think I would welcome calls from them?  If a candidate
stood up and said, "While I'm not legally obliged to do so, I will not
call people on the 'Do Not Call' list during my campaign", I would
strongly consider voting for that person.  Having someone tell me "Oh,
sorry, no it's our RIGHT to call you and pester you at home twice a
day the week before an election!" is outrageous!

Here are my questions:
1.) Can politicians block their caller ID information?  Regular
telemarketers can't.
2.) If I specifically request they not call, are the obliged to stop
calling?

I emailed the campaign of Rick Perry (our Republican governor) stating
that if I got one more call from his campaign I would vote against
him.  The email bounced.  And I continued getting calls.  So
Gov. Perry ...  you have lost my vote and you can never earn it back.

John Mayson

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

From: Jeffry Bartash <dowjones@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Sprint Finishes Spin-Off of Local Comapnies
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 13:59:32 -0500


UPDATE: Sprint's Embarq Starts New Independent Life
By Jeffry Bartash

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones) -- Embarq Corp., a local-phone company spun off
by Sprint Nextel Corp., is slated to begin trading Thursday as an
independent company.

The spinoff was completed late Wednesday. Under the transaction, each
Sprint (US-S) stockholder on record as of May 8 received one share of Embarq
(EQ) for every 20 shares of Sprint.

By spinning off Embarq, Sprint will be able to focus on almost
entirely on its fast-growing wireless business, though the company
also operates the nation's third-largest long-distance network.

Embarq, for its part, may not have received the attention it needed
from Sprint executives as they concentrated on wireless. Independence
brings new challenges, but it gives Embarq a greater chance to chart
its own course. The company, with 20,000 employees and more than $6
billion in annual sales, operates in 18 states.

While Embarq has been losing customers for years to competitors or
alternative technologies such as wireless, the local-phone business
still generates plenty of cash and could attract investors in search
of high dividend yields.

The new company also expects gains in high-speed Internet subscribers
to partly offset losses in local access lines.

As Sprint reported earlier this month, Embarq's revenue is projected
to decline to $6.4 billion to $6.5 billion in 2006 from $6.7 billion a
year earlier, on a pro forma basis. Pro forma results assume that the
spinoff had occurred on Jan. 1, 2005, thereby allowing for financial
comparisons.

Similarly, adjusted operating income is seen falling to $1.45 billion
to $1.55 billion in 2006 from $1.76 billion a year earlier. And Embarq
would start off with about $7.2 billion in debt.

The number of access lines -- each line is basically the equivalent of
one phone line -- is expected to decline by 5.5% to 7.5% in 2006. The
local unit had 7.26 million access lines in service at the end of the
first quarter.

Yet Embarq is also expected to increase its number of DSL high-speed
Internet users by 40% year over year. In the first quarter, the local
unit added 84,000 DSL customers to end with 777,000.

Embarq plans to spend more money to sign up high-speed Internet
customers -- the unit's primary growth segment -- and to launch its
own Embarq-branded wireless service via a wholesale agreement with its
former parent company.

Like other local phone companies, Embarq is trying to sign up local
phone customers for high-speed service to prevent them from fleeing to
rival providers. Subscribers who receive DSL are less likely to leave,
market studies have shown.

To achieve its goal, the local unit offers discounted packages of
services -- local, long-distance, DSL and soon wireless.

"Our goal is to make our services easier to use by integrating
technologies in ways that enhance our customers' lives and
businesses," Chief Executive Dan Hesse said in a statement.

While competition in the phone business remains fierce, Embarq would
be partly shielded by its concentration in second-tier or rural
markets that offer a sanctuary of sorts.

Still, some investors argue that competition will continue to siphon
off customers, force the company to scale back dividend payments and
ultimately undermine its stock price.

To avoid that outcome, executives of Embarq have indicated they plan
to pursue acquisitions more aggressively once the separation is
complete.  Bigger phone carriers are looking to sell some of their
access lines and smaller rural carriers might be available at
reasonable prices.

By acquiring fresh assets, the company could obtain more net access
lines, boost revenue and cash flow and generate greater savings by
combining network operations.

In gaining independence, Embarq becomes the No. 1 "pure-play" provider
of local phone service in rural America, surpassing CenturyTel
Inc. (CTL) and Citizens Communications (CZN) .

Within a few months, Alltel Corp. (AT) also plans to spin out its
local-phone business, making it No. 2 behind Embarq in the rural
market.

Embarq is listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

http://www.smartmoney.com/bn/ON/index.cfm?story=ON-20060518-000690-0906

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: KDDI lets Mobile Phone Customers Use Google Search
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 14:07:27 -0500


KDDI Corp., Japan's No.2 telecom firm, said on Thursday it had agreed
a deal with Google Inc. enabling users of its Internet services via
"au" mobile phones to use Google's Web search engine.

The first adoption of the world's most popular search service in
Japan, starting in July, will make Internet searches easier while
enabling direct access to information sought by users, the company
said.

Users will also be able to view content aimed not only at mobile
phones but also at PCs through the new search service, the first of
its kind in Japan, and also text advertisements which meet the needs
of users based on search terms, KDDI said.

The announcement comes at a time when Japan's $78 billion mobile phone
market is preparing for a possible increase in competition as a new
government rule this autumn will make it easier for customers to
switch services by letting them keep their existing phone numbers.

The industry also faces a challenge from Softbank Corp., which
recently bought Vodafone Group Plc's Japan operations, allowing the
aggressive high-speed Internet provider to offer a combination of
fixed-line, broadband and mobile services.

Softbank unveiled a new strategic move on Thursday as it said it would
set up a mobile phone handset and content joint venture with Vodafone
to buy phones at lower costs and offer innovative services to users.

But KDDI sees little direct impact from the new service on its
earnings, a company spokesman said.

"Our main target from this is to improve usefulness of services to our
existing users," he said.

KDDI declined to comment on further details, including the value or
period of the contract.

Last month KDDI forecast its group operating profit to rise 7 percent
in the year to March, 2007, slightly above market expectations.

But KDDI said operating profit at its mobile phone business, which
contributes 82 percent of total sales, would be flat this year as it
sees the unit's average revenue per user drop and the percentage of
customers leaving the service rise.

au is KDDI's main mobile phone brand with over 20 million subscribers,
tracking behind that of NTT DoCoMo Inc., Japan's No. 1 mobile phone
operator.

It has enjoyed strong demand in recent years thanks to aggressive
pricing plans, attractive phones and innovative services such as music
downloads.

The news, announced on Thursday afternoon, helped KDDI shares rise 4
percent to 731,000 yen, compared with a 0.14 percent fall in the
information and telecommunications sector subindex.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: jmeissen@aracnet.com
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Date: 18 May 2006 18:38:12 GMT
Organization: Aracnet Internet Services


In article <telecom25.189.13@telecom-digest.org>,
John Levine  <johnl@iecc.com> wrote:

>> What wasn't clear to me from the announcement was whether the call is
>> free if it's placed within the US and Canada, or whether it terminates
>> whithin the US and Canada. The former implies originating in the
>> targeted area, whereas the latter could originate anywhere.

> The latter, calls to US and Canada numbers are now free.  (You would
> already know this if you had spent 10 seconds pointing your browser at
> http://www.skype.com .)  Skype has only the vaguest idea of where
> you're located.

Well, I did. And the precise wording on the Skypeout page (which is the
service that changed) states:

 "But remember, you can make free calls within the US and Canada to both
  landlines and mobile phones until the end of the year."

It also goes on to say,

 "If you're in the US or Canada and want to call local numbers (these
 are US and Canadian landlines and mobile phones) then all you need to
 do is open up Skype, enter a phone number, hit the big, green, friendly
 call button and start talking. And best of all these calls are entirely
 free until the end of the year."

Also, their rate page says, "Calling within the US/Canada", not
"Calling to the US/Canada"

To me that seems to indicate that the free calls only apply to calls
made from the US/Canada to the US/Canada.

Given the nature of VOIP I would expect that the country of origin
wouldn't make a difference. But I don't proclaim to know the specifics
of their proprietary protocols.

>> I'm curious, though, because I know someone in Afghanistan who uses
>> Skype to communicate with relatives in the US. It would make a huge
>> difference to him.

> Since the rate used to be about two cents a minute, he must be making
> some impressively long calls.

OK, maybe "huge" was the wrong word. :-) He's a friend of a friend,
and all I really know is that he's been using Skype-to-Skype calls to
save money.


John Meissen                                  jmeissen@aracnet.com

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Free Calls With Skype???
Date: 18 May 2006 11:48:58 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The PC version of the software has that notice.  The Mac version does
not.  I use the "+" key on the "main" part of the keyboard (SHIFT-=).
I type in "+1 212 123 4567" and the call goes through.

John Mayson

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

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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 18 May 2006 21:57:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 191

Inside This Issue:                           Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    EU Internet Proposals Intended to Protect Society (David Lawsky)
    Internet Gamblers Getting Indicted (Ben Ames)
    Outsourced IBM Workers Will Get Unemployment Benefits (Paul McDougall)
    Skype Seeks Bulk to Avoid Being Blocked (Nancy Gohring)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (john@mayson.us)
    Re: World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay (jsw)
    Re: Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists' (john@mayson.us)
    Re: Political Telemarketers (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Political Telemarketers (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Telemarketing Law Question (harold@hallikainen.com)
    Re: Difficulty Finding Needed Information (john@mayson.us)
    Re: Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query ? (Sidney Zafran)
    Aftermath of 2002 New Hampshire Phone Jamming (Carl Moore)

Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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               ===========================

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

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

From: David Lawsky <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: EU Internet Proposals Intended to Protect Society
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 15:25:16 -0500


EU Internet proposals to protect society
By David Lawsky

EU proposals to regulate content on the Internet are aimed at
protecting society not undermining free speech, European Union Media
Commissioner Viviane Reding said on Thursday.

Reding spoke at a news conference after a group of European Union
culture ministers met to discuss extending rules restricting
television content to cover telephones and the Internet as well as
over-the-air broadcasts.

She said the proposed regulations reflected "basic societal values" --
the protection of young children and restrictions on incitement to
hatred.

She said there is wide agreement on the restrictions against content
that "goes too far and ... destroys our society."

"That has nothing to do with free speech, that has to do with the
freedom to protect your society on the basis of laws which have been
accepted by national and European parliament," she said.

She and others said it will take years to reach agreement.

Reding said without an EU-wide regulation there would be different
rules in each of the 25 EU member nations, providing a barrier to the
television industry, which would face a patchwork of rules.

She pointed to the example of a French court's decision to bar
Lebanon's al-Manar TV from French satellites because it found that the
television station broadcast hate speech.

The television station has also faced action against it in the United
States, even though the U.S. defines freedom of speech more broadly
and will not allow the banning of so-called hate speech.

However, the U.S. Treasury froze the assets of al-Manar satellite
television, al-Nour Radio and their parent company, the Lebanese Media
Group in March.

At the time, the State Department said al-Manar facilitated the
activities of Hizbollah, which the State Department considers a
terrorist organization.

Despite that, the television station said it would still be able to
beam its programs to U.S. and Canadian homes.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Ben Ames <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Internet Gamblers Getting Indicted
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 15:30:16 -0500


Internet Gambling Operators Indicted
Ben Ames, IDG News ServiceThu May 18, 9:00 AM ET

The fugitive owners of a gambling Web site based on the Caribbean
island of Antigua have laundered $250 million in profits, according to
charges brought by the U.S. Department of Justice.

WorldWide Telesports (WWTS) and its former owner, William Scott, and
employee Jessica Davis have been charged with 12 counts of conspiracy,
money laundering, and failure to disclose foreign financial accounts,
according to an indictment unsealed this week by the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia.

Justice Department investigators said Scott and Davis are fugitives
who have been on the run since being charged in a separate federal
money laundering case in New York in March 1998.

In January 2003, Scott sold WWTS to Betcorp, in Melbourne, Australia,
a publicly-traded company. Betcorp did not respond to requests for
comment in time for this article.

According to Betcorp, WWTS still offers Internet, telephone, and
wireless wagering to customers worldwide. In 2003, it accepted more
than $800 million in wagers and reporting earnings of $12.5
million. Over the company's lifetime, WWTS has paid out $6 billion to
winning bettors, according to Betcorp.

Facing Charges

According to the Justice Department charges, American sports fans used
the WWTS Web site and toll-free numbers to bet on baseball,
basketball, football, hockey, and other sports. Between April 1998 and
October 2004, WWTS made $250 million from those wagers.

Scott and Davis are charged with laundering that money through a
series of shell corporations and foreign banks, and with violating the
Wager Wire Act, which prohibits using the Internet, telephone, and
U.S. mail for interstate and foreign gambling.

Since filing the case on April 7, 2005, Justice Department
investigators have been able to freeze $7 million of those funds after
seizing an account at a bank in Guernsey, located off the coast of
France.

According to the indictment, Scott founded WWTS in Antigua and Barbuda
in 1995. He immediately began depositing the company's profits in
foreign bank accounts, for $37 million in 1999 and $49 million in
2000.

He renounced his U.S. citizenship in 2004 and moved from Ohio to his
homes on the Caribbean islands of Antigua and St. Maarten in the
Netherlands Antilles. Davis was a WWTS employee.

They kept the money in 11 accounts at banks scattered through Antigua,
St.  Kitts, St. Maarten, Singapore, Canada, Australia, and the Channel
Islands.  The indictment seeks to seize those accounts, as well as
WWTS property, computers and control of the Web site.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

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

From: Paul McDougall <infoweek@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Outsourced IBM Workers Will Get Unemployment Benefits
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 15:32:25 -0500


By Paul McDougall
InformationWeek

The federal government says a former IBM programmer whose job in New
Jersey was outsourced to Canada is eligible to apply for the same
employment benefits typically extended to manufacturing workers who
lose their jobs to lower-cost offshore competition.

Under a ruling handed down by the Department of Labor, the former IBM
staffer-who helped develop billing software for businesses-can seek
benefits under the Trade Adjustment Act. The Act provides for extended
unemployment payments, federally funded retraining, and relocation
allowances for workers hit by foreign competition. In the past, IT
workers have been shut out from claiming TAA benefits.

In a written ruling dated May 11, DOL official Elliot Kushner noted
that "a shift in production of software like, or directly competitive
to, that produced at the subject facilities to Canada contributed to
the total or partial separation of a significant number or proportion
of workers at the subject [IBM] facilities" in New Jersey.

The former IBM worker, James Fusco, took the DOL to trade court after
he was initially denied TAA benefits. The DOL's May 11 ruling in favor
of Fusco applies to all workers at IBM centers in Piscataway, New
Jersey and Middletown, New Jersey whose jobs were outsourced after
November 13, 2001.  It was not immediately clear how many IBM workers
that would affect.

The ruling comes on the heels of similar decisions recently handed
down by the DOL that granted TAA status to former tech workers at
Computer Sciences Corp. and Land's End. Those decisions came after the
U.S. Court of International Trade ordered the DOL to review a policy
under which it declined to grant TAA status to programmers because
they do not produce a tangible good. The trade court characterized the
DOL's previous thinking on the issue as "arbitrary and capricious."

Copyright 2006 CMP Media LLC.

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

From: Nancy Gohring <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Skype Seeks Bulk to Avoid Being Blocked
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 15:28:26 -0500


Nancy Gohring, IDG News Service

STOCKHOLM -- The larger Skype's user base grows, the less likely it is
that telecommunications operators or regulators will successfully
block the voice over IP service, said the head of Skype's European
operations, during an interview at the VON Europe conference here.

An experience in Brazil makes a good example, said James Bilefield,
general manager of Skype in Europe. About a year ago, one of the
largest telecom operators in Brazil blocked Skype. The reaction from
Skype users was so strong that after a week, the operator
relented. "The community has the power to change things," he said.

Some operators, particularly the incumbents, may seek to block Skype
because Skype's low-cost voice service can steal market share from
them and thus eat into their most significant source of revenue.

Incumbent operators speaking at VON Europe didn't hide the fact that
the VoIP players are a threat.

"Our existing cash flow is being challenged," said Joacim Damgard,
vice president for broadband and fixed services at TeliaSonera.

Harder to Block

With the introduction of the most recent version of Skype came news
that the application does a better job of hiding its traffic on
networks, making it harder for service providers or third party
applications to block it. While Bilefield couldn't explain how the
application does that, he did say that Skype has a mission to make
sure that customers can use the software.

"Our goal is that consumers who want to use it should be able to,"
Bilefield said. "They shouldn't have anything in their way."

If the issue of blocking Skype gets heated, Skype thinks that
regulators will be on its side. "Overall, regulators want to provide
choice. Skype does that," he said.

Mobile operators have most recently begun to ban VoIP services. Last
week, T-Mobile in the U.K. said that subscribers to a new data card
service are forbidden to use VoIP services. Bilefield said that some
operators have chosen to work with Skype because their customers want
the service.

In the near future, some mobile operators may find it harder to
challenge Skype. Skype has been working on creating a client that is
compatible with Symbian, the operating system from Symbian used in
smart phones manufactured by Nokia and Sony Ericsson Mobile
Communications. A Skype client is already available to users of phones
running Microsoft's Windows Mobile OS.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Date: 18 May 2006 12:57:38 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I assumed anyone on the Skype network can call any +1 number for free.
I'll find out first-hand next month in Mexico.  In the meantime
perhaps someone outside of the NANP could give it a try.

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

From: jsw <jsw@ivgate.omahug.org>
Subject: Re: World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 14:59:32 -0500 (CDT)


> Soccer fans who missed out on the official World Cup draws will run a
> big risk if they buy unauthorized tickets via online auction house
> Ebay, a German official said on Thursday. 

For the upcoming College World Series in Omaha in June, tickets have
become a very hot commodity. As of this time, all reserved seat
tickets are sold, and the Powers That Be have stated that a good
percentage of them are now held by scalpers.

Ticket prices are controlled by the NCAA and other PTB, and are kept
quite low for such a sporting event, typically starting $18-ish for
reserved seats and $6-9 for general admission (as in outfield stands).

However, many tickets are appearing on Ebay, other auction sites, and
unauthorized ticket brokers for many times face value.

Despite city ordinances against ticket scalping, and NCAA regulations
against it, the regulations are almost impossible to enforce.

Omaha City Prosecutors and CWS officials are scouring online sites and
taking action where they can, such as revoking any season tickets or
faculty or promotional tickets that get into the scalping market.

Time will tell if these methods will be effective against online
scalping.

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists'
Date: 18 May 2006 13:32:29 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I burst out laughing when I read that headline ... but then I realized
it's actually kinda scary.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Political Telemarketers
Date: 18 May 2006 13:18:57 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


john@mayson.us wrote:

> I specifically requested not to receive telemarketing calls.  Why
> would they think I would welcome calls from them?

Because the campaign people they're stubborn, very aggressive, and
arrogant.  Note that these calls aren't really from the -candidate-
but rather his/her campaign staff The staff figures a few offended
voters are outweighed by people they do reach.

> 1.) Can politicians block their caller ID information?  Regular
> telemarketers can't.
> 2.) If I specifically request they not call, are the obliged to stop
> calling?

I don't know the laws and state laws vary from state to state.

Unfortunately, even if what you question is indeed against the law, it
doesn't matter because:

1) A political campaign is a temporary activity.  Once the election is
over the campaign shuts down.  So if they did something wrong they can
say "well, we're done so we won't do it again" and go ahead and do it
again next time.  As to future elections, they're too far away to
worry about.  So if they block their caller-id or keep calling you (or
call restricted places like cell phones or nursing homes), too bad.

In a prior campaign, I got 111-111-1111 as the number.  Someone said
that was a VIOP source which wasn't sending ANI as yet.  I don't think
that's the canddiate's fault.

I've been telesolicited by private firms claiming to have done
business with me in the past.  I know that was B/S since it was stuff
I couldn't have used.

2) Tele-solicitors who violate the law know they can get away with it
because 99.999% of recipients won't bother with the bureacracy to file
and keep on top of a complaint.  Even if one persistent person pushes
it through the fine will be relatively modest and they write it off as
a cost of business.

3) All the candidates use this process, so singling one out as an
abuser won't do any good.

4) I was getting flooded with calls from generic unions but the actual
specific source wasn't clear.  I think that's illegal but too bad for
me.

5) I plan to send a certified letter of complaint to the state party
HQ.  I doubt it will do any good, but I'm curious as to the response
they give me.

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Political Telemarketers
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 23:33:52 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.190.5@telecom-digest.org>, <john@mayson.us>
wrote:

> I posted a query/rant along these lines about a month ago, but my NNTP
> isn't talking to comp.dcom.telecom.

> I know politicians exempted themselves from the federal telemarketing
> law (and also the state law here in Texas).

Politicians are not specifically mentioned in the Federal law, or the
'rules' implementing it.

There are two exemptions that -may- be applicable:
  1) "tax exempt nonprofit organizations"
  2) "calls not made for a commercial purpose"

> Are they completely and totally exempt or do they have some
> restrictions also?  Here's my point ...

> I don't belong to any political party.  Texas has open primaries
> (anyone can vote in either primary on election day).  I haven't voted
> in a primary in Texas because a) I almost always vote third-party and
> b) the major party I hate the least had a presidential candidate from
> Texas, so what was the point?  Still, the Republican Party got a hold
> of my name and number and call me continually begging for my vote.

> About 75% of the the time I get a pre-recorded message from our
> Republican governor or his wife asking I vote for this candidate or
> that amendment.

BOTH of the above exemptions allow pre-recorded calls to residences.
47 CFR 1200, 47 USC 227

> Every call except for one showed up in my caller ID as "Unknown
> Name/Unknown Number".  The one that did come through came from the
> 248 area code which is Michigan, not Texas.  When I get a human I
> stop them and ask that a) I be removed from their list b) If they
> continue to ignore my request I will vote against their candidate
> automatically.  They almost always argue that they have the right to
> call me because they're exempt from the "Do Not Call" list.

> They're totally missing the point!

Yup.  in that conversation _agree_ with them that they have the 'legal
right' to continue calling.  Ask them if they understand that you have
'preferences' about such matters, _regardless_ of 'what the law
allows'.  Ask them if they want you to do *them* the favor of voting
for 'their' candidate/proposition?  Admit that you "are inclined to do
so, at _this_ _time_", but then ask them if they understand that
failure to honor your 'preferences' about future calls will
*guarantee* that you will vote _against_ their candidate/proposition.
Then ask them "do you want that to happen?"  Then ask them "what steps
they will take to _prevent_ that from happening".

> I specifically requested not to receive telemarketing calls.  Why
> would they think I would welcome calls from them?

"bad judgment".      <wry grin>

> stood up and said, "While I'm not legally obliged to do so, I will not
> call people on the 'Do Not Call' list during my campaign", I would
> strongly consider voting for that person.  Having someone tell me "Oh,
> sorry, no it's our RIGHT to call you and pester you at home twice a
> day the week before an election!" is outrageous!

> Here are my questions:
> 1.) Can politicians block their caller ID information?  Regular
> telemarketers can't.

Parties engaged in a "telemarketing campaign" must display callerID.
(except for tax-exempt non-profits.)  47 CFR 1601 Unfortunately,
"calls made without a commercial purpose" are _not_, by definition,
part of a telemarketing campaign.  47CFR 1200

Thus, they are _not_ required to display CallerID.

They _are_, however, required to provide their phone number, and other
contact info, either at the beginning or end of the recorded message.

> 2.) If I specifically request they not call, are the obliged to stop
> calling?

Nope.  Only 'telemarketing' callers (except for tax-exempt
non-profits) must maintain an in-house Do-not-call list.  47 CFR 1200
Since political calls are 'not made with a commercial purpose',
they're not 'telemarketing', as defined, and they are not required to
maintain a Do-not-call list.

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

From: harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com>
Subject: Re: Telemarketing Law Question
Date: 18 May 2006 12:58:49 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The FCC rules on telemarketing are available at
http://www.hallikainen.com/FccRules/2006/64/1200/

Harold

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Difficulty Finding Needed Information
Date: 18 May 2006 13:01:17 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


PAT has a good point.  What are you looking for?  If you're looking
for specific information from a specific newsgroup, you can visit
http://groups.google.com and search it using a wide array of criteria.

You can browse the list of groups in your newsreader and find just
about ANYTHING.  And I mean ANYTHING.

I prefer to use Google Reader http://www.google.com/reader.  I can
type in a topic and find both USENET and other sources for whatever it
is I want to read.

John Mayson

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

From: Sidney Zafran <sidsandy@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: Calling the USA While Traveling in Europe Query ?
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 21:19:09 GMT
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net


On 16 May 2006 10:08:06 -0700, donhdoyle@yahoo.com
<donhdoyle@yahoo.com> wrote:

> What better ways might you suggest for inexpensive voice communication
> back to the US from Europe?
 
OneSuite has inexpensive rates for calling back to the USA. You are
given a toll free number to call in Europe depending upon the country
that you are visiting. We used their services on our recent trip
overseas.

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

Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 18:07:12 EDT
From: Carl Moore <cmoore@ARL.ARMY.MIL>
Subject: Aftermath of 2002 New Hampshire Phone Jamming


A news story today said a former Republican National Committee
official was sentenced to 10 months in prison for his part in jamming
of New Hampshire Democrats' phones on election day in 2002.  The
jammed phones were part of a get-out-the-vote effort, and the judge
who handed down the sentence said we'll never know if the wrong people
got into government posts (i.e. won election) because of this.

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri May 19 16:51:56 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #192
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TELECOM Digest     Fri, 19 May 2006 16:53:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 192

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Activists Challenge AOL's Bulk Email Fees (Yinka Adegoke)
    USA Not Prepared, but Bird Flu _IS_ on the Way (Reuters News Wire)
    Few USA Companies Prepared for Bird Flu Outbreak (Del Jones)
    BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today (
    Cellular-News: Friday 19th May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 19, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Telecom Update #530, May 19, 2006 (Angus TeleManagement Group)
    BellSouth Presses USA TODAY For Retraction (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Analog PBX Extender for Home Based Worker (DavidK)
    Re: Antispam Firm Blue Security Says Was Victim of Attack (Barry Margolin)

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: Yinka Adegoke <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Activists Challenge AOL's Bulk Email Fees
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 13:18:28 -0500


By Yinka Adegoke

Four years ago, a small e-mail campaign saved a struggling coffee shop
in Portland, Oregon.

Today proprietor Becky Bilyeu is among the thousands of people
fighting to preserve the free flow of electronic mail.

Bilyeu contacted the MoveOn.org political advocacy group earlier this
spring when she heard that Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, the largest
U.S. Internet service provider, planned to start charging for
guaranteed delivery of certain types of bulk e-mail.

The fee -- a small fraction of a cent per e-mail -- took effect two
weeks ago. AOL says it will help stop spam, or junk messages, from
clogging their customers' inboxes.

But many say e-mail should move freely so that people can build and
maintain large communities over the Web. Nearly 500 organizations,
from the Electronic Frontier Foundation to the Gun Owners of America,
have joined together to create a coalition called DearAOL.com
(http://www.dearaol.com).

The coalition predicts Internet service providers could effectively end up
taxing nonprofit organizations and charities for e-mail in the same way that
businesses now are by AOL.

AOL vigorously disputes the claim.

"There will be no requirement, ever, for not-for-profits who deliver e-mail
to AOL members to pay for e-mail certification and delivery," spokesman
Nicholas Graham said.

Still, the controversy prompted California state Sen. Dean Florez, a
Democrat, to hold a hearing on the fee structure in early April. A Senate
committee plans to monitor the AOL program and could take the company and
its vendor to task if nonprofit groups start experiencing widespread
delivery problems.

Meanwhile, Bilyeu, 39, says small businesses should also be exempt from the
new policy.

In 2002, she turned to the 50 subscribers of her weekly e-mail newsletter to
let them know that financial troubles could force her coffee shop to close.
Over the next four days, they donated more than $3,000 -- enough to keep her
business afloat.

Facing off against formidable competitors like Starbucks Corp., she still
relies on her e-mail list to keep her customers coming back.

"I don't make any money so I can't afford to pay to send out e-mail," she
said. " ... I don't want to have to pay to guarantee (that customers) get my
little newsletter when I'm already paying AOL $15 a month."

CIRCUMVENTING SPAM

For e-mail providers like AOL, the challenge is stopping spam and
phishing e-mails, which trick users into revealing passwords and
financial information, without preventing legitimate bulk messages
from getting through. The company believes the answer is e-mail that
it authenticates in return for a fee from the sender.

AOL worked with a company called Goodmail to offer certified
e-mail. The service ensures the delivery of images and hyperlinks on
most high-volume mailings.

Graham, the AOL spokesman, said the program was going well, and the
company expected more senders to use it to transmit important e-mails,
such as financial information, to its members.

Yahoo Inc. is also testing Goodmail, strictly for what it calls
"transactional" messages, such as bank statements and purchase
receipts. The Web portal company said it had no plans to charge
customers to send and receive such e-mails.

Consumer activists, however, say any move to charge for e-mail will
eventually lead to a two-tier system that would stifle communication
in organizations that have benefited from free delivery.

The Association of Cancer Online Resources, which sends out more than
1.5 million e-mails a week to patients around the world, has been a
prominent supporter of DearAOL.com. Founder Gilles Frydman said he was
driven by a desire for "open standards" on the Web as e-mail has
helped patients and health officials access free medical research on
cancer treatments around the world.

Frydman said free e-mail had helped the association, which relies on
private donations, to "do tremendous work for very little."

Kay Barre, pastor of St Paul's United Methodist Church in Tarzana,
California, said she sometimes sent up to a dozen messages a week to
her parishioners.

"Some church organizations have thousands of members on their
e-lists," she said. "How can they ever afford these kinds of fees? In
the first place, how does having a company pay a fee to bypass spam
filters solve the spam problem?"

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, an activist body for the
protection of consumers' digital rights, acknowledges the challenge of
coping with spam while maintaining free e-mail. But activism
coordinator Danny O'Brien doesn't see the new fees as a solution.

In fact, he said Internet service providers could establish the fees
as a revenue stream and not work so hard on their spam filters.

"If people paid Goodmail and not the ISPs," O'Brien said, "then you'd
have this separation of powers because the ISPs would still be
incentivized to reduce the amount of spam they're getting."

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Let's see now ... a 'fraction of a
penny' per each piece of email might cost all of a dollar or so on
a large mailing such as a church. It _might_ (not sure of the figures
here) cost this Digest all of a dollar per day. Oh my goodness, that
is really going to bankrupt me! (sarcasm mode). I wonder why the
coffee shop owner mentioned or the pastor are not placing the blame
where it really belongs, on the spammers/scammers who made it all
a reality?  Why are they choosing to blame AOL?  Is it an easier
target? AOL is just flowing with the times, the way things are these
days. I can tell you that if the spam is not cut back it is going to
make it very difficult to continue this Digest. I would be glad to
pay a buck or two to have the spam eliminated or greatly cut back.
PAT]

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: USA Not Prepared. but Bird Flu _IS_ on the Way
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 13:22:33 -0500


WASHINGTON (AP) - Bird flu will hit the United States -- it's only a
matter of time -- and not all states are ready to respond to the deadly
virus, the Homeland Security Department's top doctor warns.
Dr. Jeffrey Runge, homeland security's chief medical officer, said
"it's not a matter of if, but when" bird flu enters the country. But
it won't pose a critical threat until the virus can spread
consistently between people, he said.

In an interview Thursday with The Associated Press, Runge said states
with experience in dealing with hurricanes or terrorist attacks are
more ready to face bird flu.

He did not identify those that have been slow to prepare, but said
state and local governments must carry most of burden of planning for
an outbreak, including readying emergency medical workers, providing
hospital beds and setting up treatment centers outside of immediate
disaster areas.

"Some states still have the idea that if it makes people sick, it's
simply a health event," Runge said. "And others are much more forward
reaching, and understand that they have to prepare for things like
civil unrest, or interruption of the supply chain, or the failure of
critical infrastructure to keep going, to keep the nation going in the
event of some catastrophic event. And those are the ones that we think
are the best prepared."

Gov. Mike Huckabee, R-Ark., who leads the National Governors
Association, said states have "pretty much been told to prepare to row
their own boat" in responding to bird flu.

Federal health officials "were pretty candid with us," Huckabee said
in an interview. "The federal government simply does not have the
resources themselves to deal with this on a mass level. And if a
pandemic does occur, it will overwhelm their resources, just like it
will overwhelm ours."

Scientists believe the flu most likely would be carried into the
United States by a wild bird migrating from a country that has had an
outbreak.

Runge credited agriculture inspectors and poultry producers with
adopting tough security standards to prevent visitors from exposing
fowl to the virus. He recalled hearing from an inspector that "it was
tougher to get into a chicken coop than it was to get into our DHS
headquarters."

Runge's department is responsible for blocking potentially infected
birds and bird products from entering the U.S. at airports, seaports
and international borders. Unions representing U.S. Customs and Border
Protection officers have complained they have not been trained to
identify bird smugglers or to quarantine birds arriving from countries
that have had flu outbreaks.

Runge expressed some frustration with the level of training so far. "I
wish I could say it had all already been done," he said. "Right now
the planning is coordinated, but the education is not as coordinated
as we'd like. That having been said, everybody around here's gotten a
lot smarter about it."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

      Find this article at:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-19-bird-flu_x.htm?csp=34

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from the Associated Press please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html
For USA Today headlines, go to: 
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

From: Del Jones <usatoday@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Few USA Companies Prepared for Bird Flu Outbreak
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 13:30:46 -0500


By Del Jones, USA TODAY

In Asia, where the bird flu threat is real and people have more to
fear than in the USA, companies have taken to putting out bowls of bleach,
ammonia or chlorine to make the office smell clean and put employees at
ease.
      Such measures seem borderline comical to U.S. companies where
high-level teams have started to brainstorm about what they would do if bird
flu mutates into a global nightmare and begins to spread from person to
person. The problem is, if a pandemic breaks out, the majority of solutions
U.S. companies have come up with will seem almost as cosmetic as the
aromatherapy in Bangkok.

Just 15% of large U.S. companies have any bird-flu plan, according to
a survey in March by human resources consultant Watson Wyatt
Worldwide.  That's starting to change:

      .Corning started its corporate pandemic preparedness team in mid-2005.

      .Best Buy has a bird flu team under orders to report to company
       leadership by October.

      .Mutual of Omaha's plan includes flexible hours to reduce building
       population. It just launched Germ Buster, CEO Dan Neary says, 
       an employee education campaign focused on hygiene.

One of the more extreme examples is biotechnology company Biogen Idec,
which says it formed a bird-flu team in September that meets every two
weeks. Recommendations include a "3-foot rule" that prohibits
handshaking, head-count restrictions on elevators, stations with
alcohol-based hand-cleaning gel, and more frequent cleaning of
bathrooms.

"Obviously, we view this as a work in progress," says Jose Juves, one
of 11 on the Biogen avian-flu steering committee.

The real issue is absenteeism, which the World Health Organization
(WHO) predicts could climb above 40% and last for weeks. Boeing is
trying to determine if it can operate with 30% of its 160,000
employees out.

"We usually don't share specifics, because it's a security issue,"
says Boeing spokeswoman Kelly Donaghy. "Can you plan for everything?
Absolutely not. We're going to be prepared the best we can. Shame on
us if we don't at least think about it ahead of time."

Emcor Group, a commercial-building management company, feels secure in
that only 100 of its 27,000 employees work at corporate headquarters
in Norwalk, Conn. Likewise, Xerox has only 350 of its 30,000
U.S. employees working at Stamford, Conn., headquarters, and even the
8,000 employees concentrated in Rochester, N.Y., are scattered among
several buildings.  Telecommuting is an option, says Patricia Calkins,
Xerox vice president of environment, health and safety. But she did
not readily know what percentage of employees have company-issued
laptops with secure IDs that would let them remotely access the Xerox
system.

More than 200 companies paid $1,800 each in registration fees to send
a representative to a two-day conference on business planning for bird
flu in December sponsored by the University of Minnesota Center for
Infectious Disease Research and Policy and the Minnesota Chamber of
Commerce.

Those representatives come back reciting the wonders of sterilized
doorknobs, brown-bag lunches, windows open to the fresh air, larger
meeting rooms and an employee population educated enough to refuse to
shake hands or crowd onto elevators. They also speak of telecommuting,
videoconferencing, flexible hours and relying on e-mail and
BlackBerrys for conversations across the room, all examples of what is
known as "social distancing" among the growing ranks versed in
flu-speak.

      Few absolute solutions

But when pressed, companies say there is little they will be able to
do if H5N1 avian flu morphs into a highly contagious and deadly virus
like the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918-19. It killed about 50 million
people, more than 500,000 in the USA. But this time, the flu would
leap across oceans in hours to be transmitted by people who won't feel
symptoms for up to four days.

The WHO calls this worst-case scenario Phase 6. Consumers and
employees alike would hunker down at home, costing the global economy
$1 trillion, the World Bank estimates. Health and Human Services
Secretary Michael Leavitt says 92 million Americans could get sick.

The good news is that Phase 6 is far from certain. So far, there have
been 205 confirmed cases of bird flu in humans who contracted the flu
because they lived among and came in contact with diseased birds,
mostly in Asia. The latest came Thursday when it spread to an
8-year-old girl in China. But if the virus one day begins to spread
from human to human and the mortality rate is anywhere near 50%, it's
easy to imagine unprecedented consumer fear and employees who value
their lives more than their jobs. That could cripple the global
economy and make corporate doorknob cleaning and catchphrases such as
social distancing seem absurdly shallow.

Bird flu might never morph into human-to-human transmission, or if it
does, it could be a less deadly strain that can be controlled like the
2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).  In that
case, articles such as this one were destined to be thrown onto the
bonfire of whipped-up scares. Remember Y2K hysteria? Trade association
websites are rife with warnings about how the media can be expected to
overreact if there is a pandemic, which could lead to irrational
behavior.

"Most clients we're working with are still relatively confident that
life will go on," says Bob Wesselkamper, practice director of
international consulting for Watson Wyatt.

      Planning for the worst

But disaster planning by definition requires planning for the worst.
Consultants that are positioning themselves for bird flu mania,
including Deloitte & Touche and Mercer Human Resource, advise
companies to use their imaginations. It's easy to imagine corporate
buildings as ghost towns; it's just not easy to imagine how to avoid
it. Would a pool of retirees be of any help when older people would be
the most vulnerable to fatalities? There isn't much a company can do
to prepare, says Fred Crosetto, CEO of Ammex, maker of the N95 face
masks that protect people from the spread of the virus.

Popeyes Chicken & Biscuits CEO Ken Keymer says a 1918-like pandemic is
highly unlikely, and his company is focused more on its contingency plans
for Phases 1 to 5. But what if the worst becomes reality? Keymer pauses on
the phone. "I'm not even sure. That scenario would shut down all commerce,"
he says. He starts to envision a business opportunity for home food delivery
as people cocoon. But he all but dismisses it as too labor-intensive and
impossible if Popeyes employees are home sick, home because they are afraid
to get sick or home with their children because schools are shut down. Some
employees would die. Others would be devastated with grief.

Sales of the N95 mask made by Ammex are up 500% in a year to 5 million
a month, and the company will soon double its capacity. Ammex
employees are among the best-informed about bird flu. Even so,
Crosetto says, his company could suffer 40% absenteeism. It would be
the same for most companies and would cripple just-in-time supply
chains, causing shortages, and could lead to Hurricane Katrina-like
panic and looting.

Some companies can likely operate with nearly half their employees
gone. Most could operate for a short time by doing the 20%
most-critical activities, says Robert Dyson, a business continuity
specialist at management consulting firm Accenture. But it can't be
pulled off without planning, he says.

Even those that plan must worry about their suppliers. "Our business
is not an isolated entity," says Biogen's Juves. "Involving people
from outside the company will be essential if avian flu risk
escalates."

Emcor manages 1 billion square feet of office and industrial space for
clients including British Airways, JPMorgan Chase and the U.S. State
Department. Most companies are thinking about how to alleviate fears
enough to get employees to come to work. But Emcor CEO Frank MacInnis
says that in a worst-case scenario, companies will be trying to keep
non-critical employees out of buildings so that essential workers can
work safely and spread out one or two to a floor. Even then,
ventilation systems will need to be adjusted to bring in outside air
through ultraviolet filtration, MacInnis says.

      Long absences would hurt

Most companies could survive absenteeism if it doesn't last long. But
it could drag on. Xerox says it has been advised by government
officials to plan for 30% to 50% absenteeism for up to six weeks. "If
governments tell us to shut down, we'll do that," Calkins says.

The pandemic could even last in waves up to 18 months as it comes to a
city, leaves for a while, then returns. Hit first and hard would be
airlines, despite assurances by the Air Transport Association that
fliers could be safer on a plane than in an enclosed room because of
better air circulation and filtration. The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention will soon have quarantine rooms set up at 25 airports
staffed by 100 employees.

Next will be shopping malls, movie theaters, sports arenas, casinos,
restaurants and labor-intensive industries, which might explain why
AMC and Regal theaters, shopping mall operator Macerich, turkey
processor Hormel Foods and Air Japan were among the companies that
declined comment.

"At this time, we won't be sharing any details of our plans," says
Wal-Mart's Sharon Weber. "Needless to say, whatever happens, the
safety and well-being of our customers and associates will be at the
top of our priority list."

Popeyes has more reason than most to stay silent, which is why CEO
Keymer says it's better to talk. Chicken sales have plummeted in Asia
and dropped off in Europe even though the flu can't be spread through
cooked poultry. The lesson learned is to aggressively educate
consumers and employees to ease fears, Keymer says.

Another lesson is to sell something other than chicken. Popeyes won't
be introducing hamburgers or lasagna, Keymer says, but it will promote
the seafood it already has on the menu if the public avoids anything
with feathers.

MacInnis, 58, says he's old enough to remember when swimming pools
were closed down during the polio scare. Few companies have come to
grips with the possibilities of avian flu, he says.

The starting gun will be with the first person-to-person fatality
followed by wall-to-wall news reports and Google map mash-ups tracking
the flu's spread from ZIP code to ZIP code. Or sooner.

"Just imagine the situation that is going to break loose when the
first duck, swan or fowl is found floating in some Midwest lake,"
Crosetto says. "If it makes the jump to human-to-human, then it is
going to get crazy."

      Find this article at:

http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/management/2006-04-30-avian-flu-usat_x.htm

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

From:
Subject: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 11:45:08 -0500


By Jim Drinkard, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON - BellSouth asked USA TODAY on Thursday to "retract the
false and unsubstantiated statements" about the company that it
contends were in a May 11 story about a database of domestic calling
records maintained by the National Security Agency.  In a letter to
the newspaper's publisher, Craig Moon, the company noted that the
story said BellSouth is "working under contract with the NSA" to
provide "phone call records of tens of millions of Americans" that
have been incorporated into the database.

"No such proof was offered by your newspaper because no such contracts
exist," stated the letter, portions of which were read by spokesman
Jeff Battcher. "You have offered no proof that BellSouth provided
massive calling data to the NSA as part of a warrantless program
because it simply did not happen."

Steve Anderson, a USA TODAY spokesman, said "We did receive the letter
this afternoon. We are reviewing it, and we will be responding."

BellSouth and two other companies named in the story, Verizon and
AT&T, have since been sued in federal court for $200 billion by
plaintiffs alleging violations of privacy, telecommunications law and
the Constitution.  BellSouth and Verizon have denied providing
information to the NSA. AT&T has said it won't comment on national
security matters.

USA TODAY first contacted BellSouth more than five weeks ago. On the
night before the story was published, the newspaper described the
story in detail to BellSouth, and the company did not challenge the
newspaper's account. The company's official response at that time:
"BellSouth does not provide any confidential customer information to
the NSA or any governmental agency without proper legal authority."

BellSouth first raised questions on Monday. It said, "Based on our
review to date, we have confirmed no such contract exists and we have
not provided bulk customer calling records to the NSA."

      Find this article at:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-18-bellsouth-nsa_x.htm?csp=34

Copyright 2006 USA Today

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from USA Today, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Friday 19th May 2006
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 08:13:34 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

Alcatel Testing HSPA in France
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17446.php

Alcatel has announced that Orange France launched the initial phase of
their live HSDPA services in the Paris area with Alcatel's radio
access solution. At first, Orange friendly users located in
Issy-les-Moulineaux and Boulogne-Billancourt, two majo...

[[ Financial ]]

Portugal Tel 1Q Net +16%; Domestic Operations Weak
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17433.php

Portugal Telecom, Thursday reported a 16% rise in first-quarter net
profit, helped mainly by a lower tax provision as its domestic
operations continued to weaken. ...

EBRD provides Russia's MTS $250 million in long-term funds
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17435.php

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has made a
new 8-year loan of U.S. $112 million to Russia?s largest mobile
operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) and extended the maturity of $138
million of an outstanding $150 million loan dis...

KPN: No Major Effect From PrePay Dispute Seen
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17436.php

Dutch telecommunications operator Royal KPN, Thursday said it doesn't
expect major revenue losses to stem from a dispute it has with one of
its large distributors of mobile prepaid telephony cards in The
Netherlands. ...

Sprint Spins Off Embarq As It Focuses On Wireless
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17437.php

Sprint Nextel late Wednesday completed the spinoff of its local
telephone business, Embarq, as the company streamlines its business
for growth. ...

CEO sees MTS as active player in consolidation of mobile mkt
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17443.php

Russia's largest mobile operator Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) is likely to
become an active player in the consolidation process of the global
mobile telecommunications market, MTS' acting President Leonid Melamed
said in an interview with Prime-Tass. ...

Venezuela Approves Sale Of Cellular Co Digitel
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17444.php

Venezuela approved the US$425 million sale of cellular company Digitel
and its merger with two other cellular operators into a company with
national reach, government regulators said Thursday. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

The Million Dollar Cellphone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17445.php

A new company, GoldVish has been set up in Switzerland to create
seriously exclusive mobile phones that will be coated in gold and
diamonds. The GoldVish cell phone is designed by Emmanuel Gueit, who
manages not only the design department of GoldVish...

Four New Handsets from Sony Ericsson
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17451.php

Sony Ericsson has announced four new handsets. The evolution of Sony
Ericsson's successful Walkman phone range takes another step forward
today with the announcement of the UMTS enabled W850....

Global Wireless Handset Market Grows 23% in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17452.php

The market for wireless handsets was US$110 billion in 2005 reports
In-Stat, who also predict that it will grow 23%, to exceed US$136
billion in 2006. It will continue to grow but at a slower rate,
according to the high-tech market research firm, exc...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

KDDI Partners With Google For Mobile Phone Search Service
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17432.php

Japanese mobile telephone network operator KDDI Corp. said Thursday it
would incorporate Google's search engine into its internet mobile
phone service from July. ...

China Mobile, Google Hold Talks On Mobile Search Engine
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17434.php

China Mobile said Thursday it is in talks with Google to launch an
Internet search engine for mobile services in China. ...

Telcel launches TV over mobile
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17441.php

Mexico's largest mobile operator Telcel has launched TV over mobile
services for postpaid clients with select handsets, the company said
in a statement. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Russia's MegaFon seeks to provide mobile services at G8 summit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17442.php

Russia's third largest mobile operator MegaFon has filed an
application to participate in the tender to choose a provider of
mobile services for the summit of the Group of Eight (G8) leading
industrialized countries, the company's Press Secretary Mar...

Alcatel Wins Angolan GSM Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17447.php

Alcatel has signed a US$53 million GSM expansion contract with
Angola's Unitel. The project will enable Unitel to increase the
capacity and coverage of its GSM network across the country, thus
giving people in previously underserved areas access to m...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Vodafone Japan To Change Name To Softbank Mobile Oct 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17431.php

Softbank said Thursday its recently acquired mobile phone unit will
change its name to Softbank Mobile from Vodafone Japan K.K. as of
Oct. 1. ...

Telmex to launch fixed wireless services in 4Q06
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17438.php

The Peruvian unit of Mexican telephony giant Telmex plans to launch
fixed wireless services in Lima and Callao in the fourth quarter of
2006. ...

Claro ends "1 real" handset promotion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17440.php

Brazilian mobile operator Claro ended its 1 real (US$0.45) promotion
for handsets on May 16, Claro said in a press release. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Phone Cos Can Easily Break Out Call Data From Content
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17430.php

As more people react to reports the U.S. government may be monitoring
people's telephone calls, focus has increased on how long-distance
calls are handled by telecom companies. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Report: LatAm mobile users up 33%, but no VAS growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17439.php

The number of mobile users in Latin America grew 33% in 2005 compared
to 2004, but users have yet to increase adoption of value added
services, which represent the largest revenues for operators,
according to a new study by Fitch Ratings. ...

Power Amplifier Suppliers Take Advantage of Handset Market Growth
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17448.php

Four handset power amplifier (PA) suppliers below the top three gained
share in 2005, according to findings in a recent Strategy Analytics
report. According to this report, second-tier suppliers, Anadigics,
Avago, Mitsubishi and TriQuint, grew by con...

Don't Neglect Voice Revenues - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17449.php

Mobile operators in Japan and South Korea have consistently led the
world in the development of innovative mobile handsets, services,
content and pricing. They generate significant non-voice revenues
beyond text messaging and they are the only market...

Ericsson Leads WCDMA/HSPA Deployments - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17453.php

WCDMA/HSPA infrastructure revenue will grow three times faster than
the market and account for over 32% of the US$68.5 billion vendor
revenue to be generated in 2006, says Telecom Trends International in
a report on next-generation mobile wireless ne...

WiMAX Vendors Must Think About Qualcomm Royalties
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17454.php

WiMAX equipment vendors should begin now to factor royalties into
their planning and pricing activities, according to ABI Research. The
firm's newly-launched "Mobile Broadband Research Service" pinpoints a
potential ongoing cost that is being widely ...

[[ Technology ]]

Fuel Cells for Mobile Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17450.php

Samsung is investing in Fuel Cells for its mobile phones, after the
company signed an exclusive agreement with Fuel Cell developer, MTI
Micro. Mobion, MTI Micros patented direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC)
technology, has been chosen to power a series...

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

Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 11:33:40 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, May 19, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 19, 2006
********************************

Deutsche Telekom, pay-TV operator seal Bundesliga Internetbroadcast pact
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/18030?11228

     BERLIN -- Deutsche Telekom AG and pay-TV operator Premiere AG
     announced a partnership Friday that will allow them to broadcast
     German first-division soccer matches over the Internet.  Premiere
     lost the live television rights to the Bundesliga last December
     to a rival consortium of cable television operators.  Germany's
     biggest phone...

Upbeat BT Tweaks Critics, Rivals
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18026?11228

     BT Group plc executives struck out at its critics, doubters, and
     rivals as the carrier reported better than expected financials
     and an upbeat outlook. (See BT Reports Q4 Prelims).  The
     carrier's fourth-quarter revenues were up 7 percent year-on-year
     to GBP5.1 billion (US$9.6 billion), and full...

Europe Loves Carrier Ethernet
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/18023?11228

     NEW YORK -- The rapid growth of carrier-class Ethernet data
     services is transforming the economic and technology
     underpinnings of telecom network services throughout Europe,
     according to a major new study released today by Heavy Reading,
     the market research division of Light Reading Inc.  Ethernet
     Services Carrier Scorecard: Europe...

What Game Is This, Anyway?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/18020?11228

     Last week's Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) brought with it
     the inevitable announcements, promises, forecasts and
     pulse-taking for the mobile games market. Like TV, music, film,
     and print, gaming is suffering some consumer ennui and severe
     platform shifting, and so this is one more media platform
     that...Read...

Largent Calls Again for National Wireless Rules
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/18018?11228

     WASHINGTON -- An emerging telecommunications reform bill should
     be the perfect vehicle for Congress to use to reaffirm a national
     regulatory framework for the wireless industry, said CTIA leader
     Steve Largent at a hearing on telecom reform today.  Largent
     sounded a familiar call to Senators considering a sweeping
     telecom reform bill,...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 10:36:00 -0700
Subject: Telecom Update #530, May 19, 2006
From: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>
Reply-To: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE 
************************************************************
published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group 
http://www.angustel.ca

Number 530: May 19, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous 
financial support from: 
** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca 
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/ 
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.com/canada/telecom/
** MITEL NETWORKS: www.mitel.com/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions 
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE: 

** Telcos Appeal Local Forbearance Decision 
** Policy Review Recommendations Gathering Steam? 
** Bell to Pay $100 Million in Equity Dispute 
** 64% of Households Have Cellular Access 
** Aliant Shareholders Okay Income Trust 
** ISP Wants Deferral Account Ruling Stayed 
** CRTC Rules on WNP Issues 
** Aliant Customers to Get Rebates 
** Former Cygnal Exec Joins Multi-Vision 
** World Telecom Day 
** AT&T Offers Net Integration in Canada 
** Orion Adds Backup Link to Ontario's North 
** Telus Mike Intros Bluetooth Phone 
** Minacs Founder Dies of Cancer 
** Skype Offers Free Computer-to-Phone Calling 
** CSI Wireless Founder Resigns 

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

TELCOS APPEAL LOCAL FORBEARANCE DECISION: Aliant, Bell, SaskTel, and
Telus have asked the federal Cabinet to refer CRTC Telecom Decision
2006-15 (the "local forbearance" decision) back to the Commission for
reconsideration, in light of the recommendations of the Telecom Policy
Review panel. (See Telecom Update #524)

** The telcos have also asked the Federal Court for leave to appeal
   this decision, arguing that its restrictions on winback activities
   violate commercial freedom of speech guarantees under the Charter
   of Rights and Freedoms. The CRTC previously denied a similar
   application. (see Telecom Update #524)

POLICY REVIEW RECOMMENDATIONS GATHERING STEAM? Industry Canada has
reportedly begun consulting with provincial governments on the Telecom
Policy Review report (see Telecom Update #522). Such consultation,
among other steps, would be required if the federal government plans
to change the Telecom Act or issue a policy directive to the CRTC, as
recommended in the report.

BELL TO PAY $100 MILLION IN EQUITY DISPUTE: Bell Canada has agreed to
pay $100 million to about 5,000 female operators to settle their claim
that they received less pay than male colleagues. Bell's agreement
with the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union ends a 14-year
legal battle.  (See Telecom Update #348, 389)

64% OF HOUSEHOLDS HAVE CELLULAR ACCESS: A new study conducted by
Decima Research for the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications
Association reports that 64% of Canadian households own or have access
to a cellphone. 8% of those households (5% of all households) have
eliminated wireline service entirely.

** Wireless penetration is highest in Alberta (79%) and 
   lowest in Quebec (51%).

www.cwta.ca/CWTASite/english/pdf/DecimaStudy%202006.pdf

ALIANT SHAREHOLDERS OKAY INCOME TRUST: Aliant says 97% of its
shareholders have voted to approve creation of an income trust that
will combine Aliant's wireline operations with Bell Nordiq and parts
of Bell Canada.  The deal is expected to close by September. BCE owns
53% of Aliant. (See Telecom Update #520)

ISP WANTS DEFERRAL ACCOUNT RULING STAYED: New Brunswick-based Barrett
Xplore has asked the federal Cabinet to stay implementation of the
CRTC's recent deferral account decision. The broadband service
provider says that allowing incumbent telcos to use deferral account
money to extend broadband service will undermine the business of other
providers that offer broadband in rural and remote areas. (See Telecom
Update #517, 522)

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-9.htm

CRTC RULES ON WNP ISSUES: The CRTC has ruled on a number of issues
relating to implementing wireless number portability in March
2007. Among others: there will be no winback restrictions, and
customers with unpaid bills cannot be prevented from moving their
number to another carrier unless their service has been suspended or
terminated.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-28.htm

ALIANT CUSTOMERS TO GET REBATES: CRTC Telecom Decision 2006-27 orders
Aliant to issue credits to customers by June 16, compensating them for
the telco's failure to meet several quality of service standards
during 2004 and 2005. Aliant received a 50% exemption for the periods
affected by the 2004 strike.

** Commissioner Andree Noel dissented, saying Aliant should 
   be 100% exempted from quality standards during the strike 
   period.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-27.htm

FORMER CYGNAL EXEC JOINS MULTI-VISION: Todd Rutherford, who resigned
from Cygnal Technologies last month, has been named President of
Multi-Vision Communications, a Toronto-based developer of contact
centre, collaboration, and messaging software. (See Telecom Update
#524)

WORLD TELECOM DAY: Did you celebrate? Wednesday was World
Telecommunication Day, marking the founding of the International
Telecommunication Union on May 17, 1865.

AT&T OFFERS NET INTEGRATION IN CANADA: As part of a global expansion
of its Network Integration Services unit, AT&T Inc. has begun offering
network and vendor consolidation, data center moves and consolidation,
outsourced telecom management, and other services, to Canadian
businesses.

ORION ADDS BACKUP LINK TO ONTARIO'S NORTH: Ontario's research network,
ORION, has added a backup fibre link to northern Ontario, after
several service outages on its existing route. CANARIE contributed
$400,000 of the half-million-dollar cost.

http://www.orion.on.ca

TELUS MIKE INTROS BLUETOOTH PHONE: Telus has introduced a Mike
push-to-talk phone from Motorola that can exchange data with Bluetooth
devices located within 10 metres.

MINACS FOUNDER DIES OF CANCER: Elaine Minacs, who founded the call
centre service bureau Minacs Worldwide in 1981 and was CEO until last
year, has died of cancer. The company's Board voted earlier this year
to seek a buyer for the 5,000-employee organization. (See Telecom
Update #516, 520)

SKYPE OFFERS FREE COMPUTER-TO-PHONE CALLING: Skype Technologies now
allows users to make free "SkypeOut" calls from their computers to any
wireline or cellular phone in Canada and the U.S. The offer expires at
the end of 2006.

CSI WIRELESS FOUNDER RESIGNS: Stephen Verhoeff, founder of CSI
Wireless, has resigned as CEO, President, and Board member. Chairman
Michael Lang becomes interim CEO. The Calgary-based supplier of GPS
products reports first-quarter income of $15.5 million, up 59%. (See
Telecom Update #527)

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

HOW TO SUBMIT ITEMS FOR TELECOM UPDATE

E-mail ianangus@angustel.ca and jriddell@angustel.ca

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

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE (OR UNSUBSCRIBE)

TELECOM UPDATE is provided in electronic form only. There 
are two formats available:

1. The fully-formatted edition is posted on the World Wide Web late
   Friday afternoon each week at http://www.angustel.ca

2. The e-mail edition is distributed free of charge.
   To subscribe, send an e-mail message to:
      join-telecom_update@nova.sparklist.com 
   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send 
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===========================================================

COPYRIGHT AND CONDITIONS OF USE: All contents copyright 2006 Angus
TeleManagement Group Inc. All rights reserved. For further
information, including permission to reprint or reproduce, please
e-mail jriddell@angustel.ca.

The information and data included has been obtained from sources which
we believe to be reliable, but Angus TeleManagement makes no
warranties or representations whatsoever regarding accuracy,
completeness, or adequacy.  Opinions expressed are based on
interpretation of available information, and are subject to change. If
expert advice on the subject matter is required, the services of a
competent professional should be obtained.

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

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

Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 14:27:01 EDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: BellSouth Presses USA TODAY For Retraction


USTelecom dailyLead
May 19, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dFakfDtuteiDkhLTcY

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* BellSouth presses USA TODAY for retraction
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T ramping up Internet TV plans
* Good times for managed service provider M5 Networks
* France's Iliad scores with quadruple-play device
* Analysis: Bundled services mean higher profits
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* What Happened to SS7? Tuesday, May 23, 1:00 p.m. ET
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* The technology behind seamless roaming
* Linksys chief spotlights home integration
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Bandwidth.com targets larger customers with VoIP solutions
* Verizon broadens European VoIP plans
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Denver panel approves Qwest's pay TV plan

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/dFakfDtuteiDkhLTcY

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

From: DavidK <davidknollhoff@yahoo.com>
Subject: Analog PBX Extender for Home Based Worker
Date: 19 May 2006 08:48:00 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Other then the MCK and Nortel product, does anyone know of any cheap
analog PBX extenders to stick in a home office without DSL?  I'm just
looking to get calls faster to the home worker so I don't have to dial
them over the POTS line which the connect imes are way to high.

The home worker has a phone line and an analog phone, that's it.

Thanks for any help.

David

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Antispam Firm Blue Security Says Was Victim of Attack
Organization: Symantec
Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 22:21:27 -0400


In article <telecom25.189.9@telecom-digest.org>, shrike@cyberspace.org 
wrote:

>>> With black-holing, an ISP essentially removes the advertised path to a
>>> particular Web site or IP address -- making it completely inaccessible to
>>> the outside world.

> This is completely incorrect. Black-holing is the process of
> announcing a more specific route for the host pointing it at a null0
> interface.

Doesn't that "make it completely inaccessible to the outside world"?

> In effect they superceded the DOS, and at that moment
> became the progenitor of a larger scale DOS against Blue
> Security. Been there, done that, many times. They mitgated bad
> traffic, but also denied good traffic.

But by blackholing the host's IP, they stopped saturating the
connection to the site.  This allows all the other systems at the same
site to use the Internet.  So they reduced an attack that was
affecting all the systems that shared the link to one that just
impacted a single host.

Blue Security was already effectively unusable, so it couldn't really
get much worse for them.  But they made it better for everyone else in
the same data center.


Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
unications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in
addition to various telecom forums on a variety of networks such as
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TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational
service offered to the Internet by Patrick Townson. All the contents
of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in
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and that of the original author.

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*************************************************************************
*   TELECOM Digest is partially funded by a grant from                  *
*   Judith Oppenheimer, President of ICB Inc. and purveyor of accurate  *
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*   Views expressed herein should not be construed as representing      *
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Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA.

              ************************

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Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as
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is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars
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Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #192
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat May 20 21:53:46 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #193
Message-Id: <20060521015345.BA21F156EE@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Sat, 20 May 2006 21:53:45 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Sat, 20 May 2006 21:55:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 193

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Ex-Head of Cass Tel in Missouri Gets Prison Term (Associated Press)
    Tim B-L Sees Web Ready For Next Big Leap (Lucas van Grinsvan)
    Radio-Frequency Chips Coming to Cattle (Brian Bergstein)
    Phone Switches (Dave Garland)
    Help! Anyone Know of Online Phone Service (honestperson6@hotmail.com)
    My Observations Regards Pay Phones (Andrew F.)
    Re: World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay (Mr Joseph Singer)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (Mr Joseph Singer)
    Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report From USA Today (Ken Stox)
    Last Laugh! Advertiser With a Toll-Free Number (Mark Crispin)

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: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Ex-Head of Cass Tel in Missouri Gets Prison Term
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 16:21:22 -0500


By Associated Press
May 19, 2006, 3:19 PM EDT

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- In a government fraud case prosecutors linked to
the mob, a judge on Friday sentenced the former president of a small
rural Missouri telephone company to 15 months in prison for defrauding
two federal program of $8.9 million.

Kenneth Matzdorff admitted inflating expenses by millions of dollars
to draw money from the Universal Services Administrative Co., which
subsidizes rural phone companies, and the National Exchange Carriers
Association, which collects and distributes money phone companies pay
for using other companies' systems.

Prosecutors say he conspired in 1998 with brothers Richard T. and
Daniel D. Martino, controlling owners of a business that owned
Matzdorff's Cass County Telephone, or CassTel.

Richard Martino is alleged by the government to be a "made" member of
the Gambino organized crime family in New York.

Both brothers pleaded guilty to mail and wire fraud in the case.
Richard Martino, of Tuckahoe, N.Y., was sentenced to four years and
nine months; Daniel Martino, of Hawthorne, N.Y., was sentenced to five
years.

Matzdorff, 49, of Belton could have received five years but cooperated
in the investigation.

Matzdorff and Richard Martino also are among those who pleaded guilty
last year in what federal prosecutors in New York said was a scheme
that charged consumers hundreds of millions of dollars for
unauthorized phone services and Internet pornography. Matzdorff's
six-month sentence in that case will run concurrently with the one he
received this week.

In a brief statement Thursday, Matzdorff apologized to his family,
friends, and employees of the phone company. "I know my actions were
wrong and I wish to apologize. I'll regret this for the rest of my
life," he said.

CassTel, which had about 8,000 customers in Cass County, south of the
Kansas City suburbs, and some across the state line in Kansas, has
since been sold.  

Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Lucas van Grinsven <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Tim B-L Sees Web Ready For Next Big Leap
Date: Sat, 20 May 2006 19:21:15 -0500


Web inventor sees his brainchild ready for big leap
By Lucas van Grinsven, European Technology Correspondent

The World Wide Web is on the cusp of making its next big leap to
become an open environment for collaboration and its inventor said he
has not been so optimistic in years.

Still, Tim Berners-Lee, the Briton who invented and then gave away the
World Wide Web, warns that Internet crime and anti-competitive
behavior need to be fought tooth and nail.

A lot of new technology to make the Web smarter and easier to use is
becoming available after many years, he said.

"My personal view is that a lot of it is coming together now. That is
very gratifying to see. We're moving into another mode with
established technology. I'm very optimistic at this moment,"
Berners-Lee said in a telephone interview ahead of the annual World
Wide Web conference, which will be bigger than ever before when it
opens in Edinburgh, Scotland on Monday.

"The whole industrial environment is more exciting. We had the bubble
and the burst, but now you see a low of young companies again. There's
renewed enthusiasm among VCs (venture capitalists) to invest in
start-ups. I get a feeling of upsurge in activity."

Roughly twice as much money is being invested in European Internet
start-ups compared with two years ago, according to venture capitalist
community Tornado-Insider.

The man who in 1990 designed the key ingredients of the Web, while at
the European Particle Physics Laboratory CERN in Geneva, to let his
fellow scientists work together even when in other parts of the world,
is more upbeat than a few years ago.

"Four years ago, the patent problems were getting in the way. A lot of
us were worried, because it looked like the whole thing could get
bogged down," he said, referring to attempts by private companies to
patent key software ingredients needed on Web sites and charge
royalties for usage.

Thanks to the help of many, royalty free licences are now available,
said the man who never saw a cent of royalties for his invention which
set off an industry that is now generating hundreds of billions of
euros (dollars) a year.

REALISING A VISION

Currently the director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) which is
a U.S.-headquartered forum of companies and organizations to improve
the Web, Berners-Lee is only now realising his early vision of a
two-way Web where people can easily work together on the same page and
where the content on a page can be recognized by computers.

Google Maps, whose geographic maps turn up on other sites combined
with services, and photo sharing site Flickr, where members comment on
each other's postings and developers can use the pictures to create
new applications, are early examples of how Web sites can combine data
from different sources.

"Several years ago we said: 'What a shame that we can't go to that
website and find all that stuff in there.' We had a loose roadmap 5
years ago.  Steadily we've been making progress," said Berners-Lee,
adding that most of the work had been done.

"Of course there are people who say: 'Why didn't Tim do that from the
start?' But it's more complicated," he said.

Elements are already filtering through, such as web sites that do not
have to be refreshed entirely when only parts are being updated.

A new query language, SPARQL (pronounced "Sparkle"), is designed to
make Web pages easier for machines to read, allowing all sorts of
different data to be put to work on the Web.

"SPARQL will make a huge difference," Berners-Lee said.

Other targets on his list are to expand the Web to mobile devices and
to access it with mouth and ear.

"You can see so many ways the Web is taking off in so many different
directions," Berners-Lee said.

CONCERNS

He is no fan, however, of fenced-off Web areas specially designed for
mobile devices such as the new ".mobi" suffix. He wants websites and
devices to be smart enough to figure out what the best way is to
present information to consumers.

He is also concerned about how some Internet providers in the United
States have started to filter data, giving priority to premium data
for which the operator receives an additional fee. They can do this,
because they own the cables, the service, the portals and other key
applications.

"The public will demand an open Internet," he said.

On his blog, at http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/blog/4,
Berners-Lee pays hommage to the democratic principles of the designers
of the Internet who decided that all data packets were created
equal. "I tried then to make the Web technology, in turn, a universal,
neutral, platform."

"It is of the utmost importance that, if I connect to the Internet,
and you connect to the Internet, that we can then run any Internet
application we want, without discrimination as to who we are or what
we are doing."

Another element of concern to Berners-Lee is "spam in general and
particularly phishing," referring to criminals trying to fish for
credit card details and other private data.

Web sites have to be much clearer in showing consumers that they are
safe, he said.

"Now, if a website exchanges a certificate a little lock appears but
it does not tell you that. A consumer is not aware of it, and may be
at a site that looks official but may not be his bank at all. What you
need is a browswer that knows what you're connecting to and tell you."

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Brian Bergstein <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Radio-Frequency Chips Coming to Cattle
Date: Sat, 20 May 2006 19:23:24 -0500


By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer

After growing up on a cattle ranch, John Hassell became an electrical
engineer specializing in wireless technology. So he feels doubly
qualified to offer this warning about the system taking shape to track
cattle across America: It won't work.

To be sure, he doesn't quibble with the logic of the system. It stems
from the Bush administration's plan to give agriculture inspectors the
ability to pinpoint the origins of mad cow and other diseases within
48 hours.  Livestock facilities and individual animals will get
identifying numbers, which owners will use to document the beasts'
movements in industry databases.

The system isn't expected to be fully online until 2009, but already
it's clear that in the sprawling U.S. beef and dairy industries - home
to 100 million cattle - many producers will automate data gathering
with radio-frequency chips attached to cattle ears.

And that's what has Hassell worried. He contends most of the
radio-frequency chips making their way onto cattle ears are a terrible
fit.

Those chips -- based on the same radio-frequency identification (RFID)
technology being integrated for inventory control by large retailers
such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. -- are known as "passive" tags that
broadcast identifying numbers for only a short range, generally just a
few feet.

While cattle may be considered docile creatures, they are a lot more
mobile and skittish than cases and pallets in Wal-Mart
warehouses. Hassell believes only "active" tags, which broadcast
identification data for up to 300 feet, will consistently work for the
multiple owners and many environments that cattle pass through, from
pastures to stockyards, feed lots and slaughterhouses.

Hassell is so convinced that he's launched his own company, ZigBeef
Inc., to sell long-range tags. The name is a play on the "ZigBee"
wireless standard employed by his tags.

"I really don't think ... on a mass scale that short-range, passive
devices are going to be practical," he said. "The Betamax of the
industry is the short-range tags."

That makes Hassell sound like many other startup technologists -
pooh-poohing a rival standard at the expense of his own. But something
makes this situation a bit unusual: Even beef producers who are using
the passive flavor of RFID don't seem thrilled with it either.

The Joplin Regional Stockyards in Carthage, Mo., began using passive
RFID to identify some cattle in 2001. But co-owner Steve Owens
believes the technology "hinders the speed of commerce."

That's because the thousands of cattle that go through his facility
wouldn't always naturally line up and orderly proceed past devices
that can read electronic ID tags at short range. Most often, cattle
quickly move through his yard in groups.

And if a cow has lost a tag or comes to him without one, "you've got
to catch that animal in a head chute and hold it still so you can put
the tag in an ear," he said. That can take 30 seconds each - which
adds up when you've got thousands of mooing creatures to deal with.

These factors are big because human contact and other stresses can
hurt a cow's ability to gain or maintain weight. That's costly because
beef is, after all, sold by the pound - and generally with slim profit
margins.

"I'm sure hoping and open to other technologies that might be able to
solve some of our problems," Owens said.

Even so, he and other people in the industry figure that passive tags
will carry the day.

For one thing, passive tags are cheaper, about $2 each versus roughly
$10.  Passive tags don't require batteries, because they get their
power by induction from the electromagnetic energy sent by the reader.

And perhaps most importantly, most of the estimated 5 percent of
cattle owners who are using RFID have passive tags. Changing that
would be hard, since it's important for all players along the complex
chain of cattle ownership to be on the same technical page.

"Despite its warts, I think (passive tagging) is the technology that's
going to be brought to play initially," said Dale Blasi, a Kansas
State University professor researching the challenges of RFID in
cattle. "We're innovative, we'll learn how to work around these
issues."

Still, Hassell holds out hope for ZigBeef. While he's not the first to
suggest active tags for livestock, he's encouraged that the
U.S. Department of Agriculture has funded the company with an $80,000
grant. Soon he will be eligible for a $300,000-plus extension.

That makes this a crucial year. He has to attract potential customers
while still fine-tuning his system. Part of his pitch is that while
active tags cost more, their readers can run as low as $50, instead of
hundreds or even thousands of dollars for passive RFID. The active
readers' range could be dialed up or down to register multiple cows or
just one at a time.

Hassell says his tags' batteries can last five to seven years, well
beyond the 15-month life of typical beef cattle. And he asserts that
most of the cost of the tags comes from their plastic housing, not
their circuitry - so ZigBeef tags could easily include both passive
and active chips, soothing producers' fears about choosing the wrong
technology.

There are still other methods for recording that an animal crossed a
certain link in the food chain, including retinal scans for
identifying cattle. And there are a spate of old-school record-keeping
practices, which often rely on brands, veterinary papers or visually
spotting numbers on plastic ear tags and writing them down.

Many producers would love to stay that course, fearing the added cost
of more detailed tracking. Some also fear that new databases would
reveal private business information to rivals, regulators or
animal-rights activists.

Meanwhile, pork and poultry producers tend not to have such
worries. Pigs are unlikely to need RFID because the nation's 60
million hogs generally remain in large, easily identifiable lots, said
Bobby Acord, a former USDA administrator who chairs the Swine
Identification Implementation Task Force.  Chickens follow a similar
pattern -- and are too numerous to tally individually, anyway, with 9
billion in the U.S. alone.

Early adopters of RFID in cattle have done so largely to better track
sick animals and to document organic, grass-fed or other high-value
beef and dairy. But holdouts note that premiums for RFID-equipped
cattle would likely vanish as more cows get the tags.

Because of such hesitation, the cattle industry widely expects that the
database system -- which is technically voluntary for now -- will become
mandatory to ensure widespread participation.

Once that happens, old methods simply could become too difficult, said
Allen Bright, animal ID coordinator for the National Cattlemen's Beef
Association.  For example, he notes that people are prone to error as
they write down ear-tag numbers. It's not exactly easy in auctions
teeming with 10,000 head of cattle.

"Just from a practicality standpoint, you need to automate those
tags," said Bright, who owns a feed lot in Nebraska.

Kevin McGrath, chief executive of Digital Angel Corp., which has sold
6 million passive RFID tags for livestock in North America, contends
that the U.S. beef industry has lost more than $3 billion because
Japan and other Asian markets have been closed since the nation's
first mad cow scare in 2003. If an automated ID system can persuade
officials in those markets to resume accepting American beef, the
technology would more than pay for itself, he argues.

Even so, McGrath says he understands the skepticism. Consequently,
Digital Angel plans to test other tag frequencies in hopes of making
the chips easier to read on moving animals.

"I think we still have to convince the industry that this is the right
solution," McGrath said. When it was suggested to him that cattle RFID
seems an experiment in progress, he agreed. "And it will be for a long
period of time."

On the Net:

USDA page on ID system:

http://www.usda.gov/nais

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Phone Switches
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 23:32:07 -0500
Organization: Wizard Information


For those who are interested, there is an active thread in
alt.folklore.computer about telephone switches.  The subject
(obviously having suffered severe drift, a characteristic of a.f.u.)
is "5963 (computer grade dual triode) production dates?"

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

From: honestperson6@hotmail.com
Subject: Help! Anyone Know of Online Phone Service (With a Chosen Area Code)
Date: 20 May 2006 06:43:42 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I used to use http://glophone.com service but it seems to have stopped
offering such service.I already have spent hours searching
around. Anyone, please tell me a site that I can get a phone number
(extension ok) with my chosen area code and receive calls online from
any real phone in US?

If it costs several bucks a month, it is fine. Free is better.

Thanks a lot in advance.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There is a service operating out of the
state of Washington which hands out _for free_ -- totally no charge --
one-way incoming phone numbers which translate into VOIP numbers. Even
though I had a couple numbers from them for several months, I have
forgotten the name. I am sure someone will remember it. If you are
willing to pay a few dollars each month then there are several VOIP
services around which do what you want. Use your search program to
look for 'VOIP' or 'Voice Over Internet Protocol' to find them.  PAT]     

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

Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 03:21:28 +1000
From: Andrew F <xzzyx@hotmail.com>
Subject: My Observations With Pay Phones 


>> I'm sorry to say it, but my experience using US payphones was not a
>> happy one.

> The combination of deregulation and cell phone providers who compete
> on price has been lethal for pay phones.  I just got back from
> Ottawa where ILEC pay phones are still all over the place, offer
> local calls for a quarter, and don't surcharge 800 numbers.

Mostly the same here except Telstra is cutting back and there is some
competition from other payphone vendors. Untimed calls have recently
gone up to AUD0.50 from AUD0.40. The Telstra public payphone accepts a
smart card containing prepaid credit and also offer SMS.

> I think that's partly because the're more regulated, and partly
> because the smaller number of cell carriers don't compete much on
> price.

We have some regulations that are keeping some unprofitable phones
arounds too.  Still many are profitable.

Do you have any idea why some phones won't accept coins for
international calls? Is it that tourists don't vote? I remember being
in a hotel that had some Verizon phones and one will work and the
adjacent one will. Different LD carriers apparently which doesn't make
sense. Anyway isn't PhoneOne owned by Verizon?

That was the most annoying thing. The next was the FCC surcharge. The
2nd biggest pay phone vendor here is lobbying for something like
that. In the meantime they are charging a local call charge for
accessing 800 numbers except ones they get a kickback on.

Really, if I had change I wouldn't be calling my own (shared) 800
number (actually I would, it used to save me money) Oh, yes forgot to
tell you, every residential customer of Telstra can get access to an
800 number that allows them to call their own phone without additional
cost other than the call cost charged at the standard payphone
rate. It's seems to be shared with any number of people who have the
same last fours digits of your phone number and have the service
enabled. A 4 digits PIN serves to selects your line and is the only
(weak) security provided.

The card operators are really good at screwing you. Even buying name
cards from reputable vendors the information at point of sale is
incorrect. I can't see why they can't pass the surcharge on at cost -
that would be almost tolerable.  At least the smart operators are
offering local call access.

Next after that: finding a working phones in SFO airport and Union
Station in LA. I think Teleco makes more money from phones that don't
work that ones that do. Honestly, I must have tried every phone in the
station.

> On the other hand, Canadian cell users had nationwide roaming that
> worked long before we did.  We have little roaming here but then
> again our 2 largest operators have good nationwide coverage.

Andrew

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

Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 13:38:01 PDT
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: World Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay


Mark Trevelyan <reuters@telecom-digest.org) Thu, 18 May 2006 11:28:29
-0500 wrote:

> Subject: Word Cup Fans Warned Against Buying Tickets on Ebay

So, is this Word Cup some big spelling contest or a competition to see
who can use Microsoft Word the best? :)

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Unfortunatly, "Word Cup" was a
typographical error for "World Cup". You should blame your Esteemed
Editor for that one. Actually, it was caught mid-way through the
delivery of that issue and changed from 'Word' to 'World' so that
about half the readers got it correct; the first batch of readers got
it the wrong way.  Sorry about that!  Blame it on my diseased brain.
PAT]

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

Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 13:42:58 PDT
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers


18 May 2006 18:12:12 -0000 John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> srote:

> What wasn't clear to me from the announcement was whether the call
> is free if it's placed within the US and Canada, or whether it
> terminates within the US and Canada. The former implies originating
> in the targeted area, whereas the latter could originate anywhere.

> The latter, calls to US and Canada numbers are now free.  (You would
> already know this if you had spent 10 seconds pointing your browser at
> http://www.skype.com .)  Skype has only the vaguest idea of where
> you're located.

If you'll read the notice it's for people *in* the US and Canada to
make free calls.  It's not for people calling into the US.  And indeed
Skype can indeed determine where you're calling from by the IP address
used to access the service.  It's the same deal that when I'm in
Israel and access my yahoo mail which is on the US Yahoo service I get
served Hebrew adverts in Israel.  They know where you are really they
do!!  What I get is determined by my originating IP address.

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

From: Kenneth P. Stox <ken@stox.org>
Organization: Ministry of Silly Walks
Subject: Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today
Date: Sat, 20 May 2006 05:19:29 GMT


The real question is: Can we possibly trust anything a Company says
anymore if national security is involved?

http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/01jan20061800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2006/06-4538.htm

http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode15/usc_sec_15_00000078---m000-.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You know, that is a good point. How can
we tell whether a company is telling the truth or lying these days?
PAT]

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

From: Mark Crispin <mrc@CAC.Washington.EDU>
Subject: Last Laugh! Advertiser With a Toll-Free Number
Date:  Fri, 19 May 2006 20:23:36 -0700
Organization: University of Washington


"Publishers Billing Emporium Inc", at PO Box 1787 Provo UT 84603-1787
has a toll-free number of 1-800-834-4181.

They send out postal solicitations touting "one of the lowest available 
rates we can offer for your regular subscription".  This "one of the 
lowest available" rate was 3 years of Alaska magazine for $60.99.

These clowns evidentally think that anyone who is interested in Alaska
must have flunked third-grade arithmetic.  You can order a one-year
subscription on Alaska magazine's web page for $18/year, or in the
most recent magazine there's a subscription card for $16.95 for one
year and $29.95 for two years.

With such a valuable offer, they may need some help in testing their
toll-free number.

-- Mark --

http://panda.com/mrc
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I shouldn't be surprised if they spam 
a lot also ... so many magazine subscription outfits are pretty loose
with the volume of email they send out. Oh well, most everyone around
here knows the routine by now, I am sure.   PAT]

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

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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 21 May 2006 14:50:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 194

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Time Warner Works to Repair AOL (Karen Jacobs)
    Retailers Plow Ahead With RFID Chips (Brian Bergstein)
    Verizon's 'Free Gift' to Customers: Share Info and Numbers (Jessica Taylor)
    Girl Abucted After Making Random Cell Phone Call (john@mayson.us)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (john@mayson.us)
    Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report From USA Today (G. Berger)
    Re: Help! Anyone Know of Online Phone Service (harold@hallikainen.com)
    Re: Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists' (Jessica Taylor)
    Re: Analog PBX Extender for Home Based Worker (William Warren)

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: Karen Jacobs <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Time Warner Works to Repair AOL
Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 13:10:29 -0500


By Karen Jacobs

Time Warner Inc. is committed to turning around its AOL Internet
business even as the unit loses customers at a faster than expected
pace, the media conglomerate's chief executive said on Friday.

AOL's dial-up subscribers have been defecting to high-speed services
largely provided by cable and phone companies as it works to revamp
its business as an online provider of entertainment and other services
supported by advertising revenue.

"We are committed to completing the transformation of AOL," CEO
Richard Parsons told Reuters at the close of Time Warner's annual
shareholder meeting in Atlanta.

Some investors, including one who spoke at Friday's meeting, have
asked whether AOL might be spun off as its results weigh on overall
earnings at the world's largest media company.

AOL "is in a space that the marketplace thinks is contracting and
needs to migrate its business to another part of the Internet
landscape where the market is growing," Parsons said, referring to
efforts to move AOL from a subscription model to an advertising
supported operation.

"Our plans are to see that journey through," he said. "I think that if
we do that, the market and the stock will react very very positively."

AOL's future was one key point of contention between Time Warner
management and billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who challenged the
company to break up into four divisions. The two sides reached an
agreement in February after a bitter six-month battle over how to
boost Time Warner's share value.

Earlier this month, Time Warner reported quarterly results that
disappointed Wall Street forecasts, particularly the loss of 835,000
subscribers at AOL compared with a figure closer to 550,000 expected
by analysts. AOL accounted for about 20 percent of Time Warner's $10.5
billion in revenue.

Company executives expect to see better subscriber trends and
advertising at the unit in the second half of 2006.

Shortly afterward, AOL said it would cut 7 percent of its work force,
mostly from customer call centers. On Thursday, the Internet company
said it bought Lightningcast, which specializes in inserting ads into
online video, in a bid to expand its ad network.

Time Warner shares are nearly flat since the start of the year and
have underperformed the Standard & Poor's 500 Index by about 2 percent
in that time.

Parsons noted the weak sentiment afflicted most top media companies as
investors question how they will preserve growth amid an explosion of
competing media options, particularly from Internet leaders Google
Inc. and Yahoo .

But he said he believed continued growth in Time Warner businesses,
particularly its cable operations, and a $20 billion share buyback
will help eventually boost company stock.

Shareholders approved Time Warner's slate of 11 directors and bid
farewell to media mogul and CNN founder Ted Turner, who decided in
February to step down from the board.

Shareholders also approved a proposal not endorsed by the board to
accept a simple majority rule on shareholder votes wherever
possible. Parsons said the company would review its stance in light of
nearly 80 percent approval for the proposal.

Time Warner shares were unchanged at $17.40 in afternoon trading on
the New York Stock Exchange.

(Additional reporting by Michele Gershberg in New York)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Reuters, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Brian Bergstein <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Retailers Plow Ahead With RFID Chips
Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 13:12:22 -0500


By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer

The roots of radio-frequency identification technology stretch at
least as far back as World War II, when transponders helped
distinguish between Axis and Allied aircraft. Over the years the
concept has been greatly miniaturized, landing RFID technology in such
settings as animal tags, toll-collection devices, passports, keyless
entry systems for cars and wireless credit cards.

But perhaps none of these projects will have as much impact for
consumers as the adoption of RFID in the supply chains of huge retail
stores.

Mega-retailers led by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. have gotten their biggest
suppliers to add RFID chips to pallets and cases shipped to
stores. Now, rather than having people with bar-code scanners walk
around to take inventory, RFID readers in warehouses can automatically
tally items on the fly.

RFID is expected to yield substantial savings largely by reducing the
frequency of the following scenario: A customer goes to a store for an
item, only to find its shelf empty, even though replacement stock
lurks somewhere in the back. It's one of the costliest problems in
retail.

Simon Langford, Wal-Mart's director of logistics, distribution and
replenishment systems, explains that a bar-code scanner can register
that certain items have entered a store's back room. But not until one
of the items gets scanned at checkout does the store typically get an
update. In between, the item might be on a store shelf or still
sitting among back-room clutter.

In the more than 500 stores where Wal-Mart has integrated RFID, radio
tags give additional insight -- they inform employees when supplies
enter the storeroom, when they leave it for the sales floor and when
their emptied cartons are taken to the trash.

A University of Arkansas study last year determined that these stores
saw a 16 percent reduction in the times that products were missing
from shelves.  But Langford said that figure understated RFID's true
power, because the study included popular items that sales staffers
already were sure to replenish. When the research examined only items
that Wal-Mart sold less than 15 times a day, the out-of-stock
reduction was 30 percent.

Wal-Mart hopes to see even greater improvement soon by giving employees
handheld RFID scanners that will direct them precisely to cartons of
products they need to bring from the storeroom.

Eventually, individual products in Wal-Mart and other stores are
expected to get their own RFID tags to give stores even clearer views
of their inventory.

"That's really where the supply chain gets most messy," said Kevin
Ashton, who helped drive RFID development at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and now heads marketing for ThingMagic LLC, a
maker of RFID readers.

Some high-value items like TVs and pharmaceuticals already have their
own tags. But most item-level tagging is a decade away.

First, tag prices must drop below their current 5-to-7 cent
range. Work also still needs to be done to master wireless
interference issues that can arise in RFID-dense environments. And
developers have to assure the public and retailers that data on the
tags are secure and not invasive.

"We're seeing the RFID industry get a little bit more mature every
day," Ashton said. "We don't view the RFID market as some overnight
sensation."


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 12:26:07 -0400
From: Jessica Taylor <jess_taylor@spam.free>
Subject: Verizon's 'Free Gift' to Customers: Share Info and Numbers 


Verizon is sharing payment history with credit bureaus.  This may not
be any more extraordinary than a bank doing so.  But Verizon uses
your telephone number as your account number, even if it is
"non-published."

Verizon's 'free gift' to customers

Boston Globe published 21 May 2006  Author: B Mohl

Verizon Communications Inc. has begun reporting to the nation's three
credit bureaus which Massachusetts customers pay their bills on time
and which ones don't, a practice a company spokesman described as 'a
free gift to the public.'

The telecommunications giant says its reports to Equifax, Experian,
and TransUnion will help consumers with limited credit histories build
a payment record that can be used to secure lower rates on mortgages,
credit cards, and car loans.

But there's a flip side to this 'free gift' from Verizon. Those who
don't make their phone payments on time will end up with a black mark
on their credit history. A Verizon spokesman acknowledged the idea of
sharing payment data originated with the company's bill collection
people as a way of spurring customers to pay on time.

"It's not a very big stick, but it's a stick," said spokesman James
Smith.

Consumers with unlisted phone numbers are also upset their numbers are
being shared with credit bureaus. A check of my credit reports showed
that TransUnion identifies Verizon customers by their complete phone
number. Reports from Experian and Equifax identify Verizon customers
by their phone numbers minus the last digit.

One Stoneham resident, who asked not to be identified because his
identity had previously been stolen, said he was shocked to see his
unpublished phone number, minus the last digit, on his Equifax report.

"It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what that last number 
is," he said. "I'm paying them $5 a month to maintain a nonpublished 
number. Who else has access to this database?"

Link to full article:  http://tinyurl.com/mctqd
  or
http://www.boston.com/business/personalfinance/articles/2006/05/21/verizons_free_gift_to_customers_giving_payment_data_to_credit_bureaus?mode=PF

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Girl Abducted After Making Random Cell Phone Call
Date: 20 May 2006 19:03:58 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/05/20/police_girl_abducted_after_making_random_cell_phone_call/?rss_id=Boston.com+--+Massachusetts+news

"BROCKTON, Mass. --A 12-year-old Brockton girl dialing random numbers
on her cell phone was lured from her home by a stranger and taken to
Rhode Island, where she was repeatedly molested, police said."

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

From: john@mayson.us
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Date: 20 May 2006 19:20:25 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> If you'll read the notice it's for people *in* the US and Canada to
> make free calls.  It's not for people calling into the US.  And indeed
> Skype can indeed determine where you're calling from by the IP address
> used to access the service.  It's the same deal that when I'm in
> Israel and access my yahoo mail which is on the US Yahoo service I get
> served Hebrew adverts in Israel.  They know where you are really they
> do!!  What I get is determined by my originating IP address.

According to their website: "Calling people on Skype is totally free.
It's also free to call landlines and mobiles within the US and Canada
until the end of the year. International calls are pretty cheap too."

I guess I'll find out first-hand next month from Mexico.  I will be
VPN'ed into my company's network, so that might not be the best test.
I'll also bring my personal laptop (I planned to anyway) from a
hotspot if I can find one.

John

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

From: George Berger <gberger@his.com>
Subject: Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today
Date: Sat, 20 May 2006 22:25:31 -0400
Organization: Heller Information Services


> The real question is: Can we possibly trust anything a Company says
> anymore if national security is involved?

In this case, I'd be more likely to believe Bell South. The incident
has too much publicity and too many responders for Bell South to risk
getting caught in a lie. The negative publicity and subsequent
litigation that would most certainly follow could easily force them
into Chapter 11, if not worse. DOJ prosecutors are salivating at the
chance to bring one more "Rogue Corporation" to its knees and to jail
the CEO.

If you'll remember, even the New York Times got caught with its pants 
down when a couple of its reporters "made up" sensational stories. 

I'd like to wait until the facts are known - - not the "factoids."

George (The Old Fud)

In article <telecom25.193.9@telecom-digest.org>, Kenneth P. Stox
<ken@stox.org> wrote:

> The real question is: Can we possibly trust anything a Company says
> anymore if national security is involved?

I know that you believe that you understood what you think I said, but
I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.
       -- Robert McCloskey, State Department spokesman (attributed)

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

From: harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com>
Subject: Re: Help! Anyone Know of Online Phone Service (With Chosen Area Code)
Date: 21 May 2006 09:29:10 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The company in Washington is http://www.ipkall.com .
http://www.sipphone.com has access numbers around the world that are
free to use. They also have "virtual numbers" that assign a specific
number to you for a few dollars a month. See
http://www.sipphone.com/virtual/ for paid numbers and
http://www.sipphone.com/access/  for free access numbers. 

Harold

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

Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 12:43:00 -0400
From: Jessica Taylor <jess_taylor@spam.free>
Subject: Re: Fox News Slams Qwest for 'Cooperating With Terrorists'


Media Matters wrote:

> Kondracke denounced Qwest as "basically helping terrorists" for not
> giving customers' phone records to NSA.

> On Fox News' Special Report, Roll Call executive editor Morton
> Kondracke said the telecommunications company Qwest was "basically
> helping terrorists" because "to its discredit, [it] said it was not
> cooperating with the NSA [National Security Agency] and specifically
> decided not to cooperate" by providing the NSA with the phone call
> records of its customers. 

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Does any person with half a brain, or
> an IQ higher than the outside temperature on a fall day give any 
> attention at all to what Fox News has to say?  PAT]

Yes.  A person with at least half a brain and a normal IQ would want to 
hear many differing viewpoints, many of which are only now available on 
the mainstream media because of networks such as Fox News.  But then 
again a person with at least half a brain would understand the 
difference between the remarks of a single person commentator and the 
full reporting of an entire Network!

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

Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 13:43:10 -0400
From: William Warren <william_warren_nonoise@speakeasy.net>
Subject: Re: Analog PBX Extender for Home Based Worker


DavidK wrote:

> Other then the MCK and Nortel product, does anyone know of any cheap
> analog PBX extenders to stick in a home office without DSL?  I'm just
> looking to get calls faster to the home worker so I don't have to dial
> them over the POTS line which the connect imes are way to high.

> The home worker has a phone line and an analog phone, that's it.

> Thanks for any help.

> David

David,

You need to think about the connection before the end points: how much
is it going to cost you to get an extension-off-premise line instaled?
How much is the monthly charge?

You'll probably find that Message Units are cheap by comparison.

HTH.


William Warren

(Filter noise from my address for direct replies)

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #194
******************************

    
    
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #195
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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 22 May 2006 12:50:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 195

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Malware Gives Out New, Bogus Browser (Jeremy Kirk)
    Southeast Asian Cyber Attacks Still Way Off (Reuters News Wire)
    Verizon's 'Free Gift' to Customers: Giving Data to Bureaus (Monty Solomon)
    Cellular-News: Monday 22nd May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 22, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers (Barry Margolin)
    Re: Radio-Frequency Chips Coming to Cattle (A User)
    Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report (Thor Lancelot Simon)

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: Jeremy Kirk  <idg@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Malware Gives Out New, Bogus Browser
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 11:04:42 -0500


IM Worm Installs Bogus Browser
Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service

Malware writers have created a new worm that installs a new browser
and plays screeching music.

The annoyance starts with a link apparently sent by a friend in
Yahoo's instant messaging program.

Instant messaging security company FaceTime Communications described
the malware, which it calls "yhoo32.explr", as "insidious" in a
security advisory.

When the link is clicked, a worm installs the so-called "Safety
Browser," a program that leads the user to pages mined with adware and
viruses, FaceTime said. The Safety Browser uses an Internet Explorer
logo to make it look more legitimate.

New Type of Attack

Malware spread through instant messaging programs is on the
rise. However, FaceTime said this malware appeared to be the first to
install a browser without the user's permission.

The bug also hijacks Internet Explorer's home page, directing users to
the Safety Browser's Web site.

After it is launched, the worm sends itself to others on the user's
instant messaging contact list.

The malware is engineered to overwrite instant messages typed by a
user, FaceTime said. The infected message can also be changed
on-the-fly, the company said.

The screeching music, however, is blocked by Microsoft's Windows XP
Service Pack 2, FaceTime said.

FaceTime has posted screenshots of the infection process on its blog.

Copyright 2006 PC World Communications, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For other news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Southeast Asian Cyber Attacks Still Way Off
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 10:47:42 -0500


Southeast Asian extremist groups have turned to the Internet to
recruit people and raise funds but they have not yet been able to
mount cyber attacks, a security expert said on Monday.

Rohan Gunaratna, head of the political violence and terrorism center
at Singapore's Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, said
regional militant network Jemaah Islamiah (JI) used the Internet
extensively to spread its propaganda.

"It will take a very long time for Southeast Asian groups to develop
the capability to attack the Internet," he said. "Instead of attacking
the Internet, they are using the Internet."

He was in Malaysia to address Southeast Asian security officials on
U.S.-backed training on counter-terrorism, including cyber-terrorism
and suicide bombing.

A Malaysian counter-terrorism official told the meeting that the
threat from cyber attacks in the region was real but offered no
information of any specific threat.

"The threat is real. It's not the question of how or what, but it is
only of when," said Yean Yoke Heng, deputy head of the Malaysian-based
South East Asia Regional Center for Counter Terrorism.

"We need a better coordination ... to be better prepared to face any
cyber attacks by hackers, by terrorist groups," he said.

Malaysia announced recently that it would set up a center that
provides an emergency response to cyber attacks on the economy or
trading system of any country.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said companies such as Symantec
Corporation of the United States, Japan's Trend Micro and Russia's
Kapersky Lab have agreed to be key partners.

Gunaratna, who has written books on al Qaeda and JI, played down the
possibility of such attacks by regional militant groups.

"There are no groups in Southeast Asia that are capable of attacking
the Internet at this point of time," he told reporters.

"But there are a number of terrorist groups that are using the
Internet very effectively to distribute propaganda, to recruit, to
raise funds and to coordinate terrorist attacks," he said.

They include JI, al Qaeda's franchise in Southeast Asia, he said.

Noordin Mohammad Top, a Malaysian suspected of masterminding bombings
on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali last year, is currently
leading JI's operations.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from the daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 20:27:27 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon's 'Free Gift' to Customers: Giving Data to Credit Bureaus


By Bruce Mohl, Globe Staff  |  May 21, 2006

Verizon Communications Inc. has begun reporting to the nation's three
credit bureaus which Massachusetts customers pay their bills on time
and which ones don't, a practice a company spokesman described as 'a
free gift to the public.'

The telecommunications giant says its reports to Equifax, Experian,
and TransUnion will help consumers with limited credit histories build
a payment record that can be used to secure lower rates on mortgages,
credit cards, and car loans.

But there's a flip side to this 'free gift' from Verizon. Those who
don't make their phone payments on time will end up with a black mark
on their credit history. A Verizon spokesman acknowledged the idea of
sharing payment data originated with the company's bill collection
people as a way of spurring customers to pay on time.

"It's not a very big stick, but it's a stick," said spokesman 
James Smith.

Consumers with unlisted phone numbers are also upset their numbers are
being shared with credit bureaus. A check of my credit reports showed
that TransUnion identifies Verizon customers by their complete phone
number. Reports from Experian and Equifax identify Verizon customers
by their phone numbers minus the last digit.

http://www.boston.com/business/personalfinance/articles/2006/05/21/verizons_free_gift_to_customers_giving_payment_data_to_credit_bureaus/

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Monday 22nd May 2006
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 07:20:14 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[3G News]]

Xfera Preparing 3G Launch But No Deadline Fixed
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17461.php

The Xfera consortium, holder of Spain's fourth license for
third-generation mobile telephony, is still preparing a launch, a top
shareholder said Friday, without providing a fixed deadline. ...

3G Used for Medical Diagnosis
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17465.php

Apoplectic strokes can be recognised via VideoTelephony with a mobile
phone. These are the results of the apoplectic stroke study 'Fast
UMTS' that the University of Twente has held together with Vodafone
and a number of doctors and neurologists in th...

[[Financial News]]

Iusacell extends US$350mn debt restructuring deadline
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17459.php

Mexican mobile operator Iusacell has extended until June 1 the
deadline for holders of its 14.25% bonds due this year to accept an
exchange offer for 10% notes due in December 2013, Iusacell said in a
statement. ...

Belgacom Core Earns Down 5% As Competition Bites
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17462.php

Belgian telecommunications incumbent Belgacom, Friday posted a 5.2%
fall in core earnings for the first quarter of 2006 as fixed-line
revenues continue to fall and competition in the mobile sector
intensifies. ...

Econet Buys Burundi GSM Network
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17472.php

The pan-African telecommunications group Econet Wireless says that it
has acquired a controlling interest in ST Cellular, formerly Spacetel
Burundi, one of the four licensed operators in Burundi and has
embarked on a major program to expand the mobil...

[[Legal News]]

Former CEO: BrT contracted Kroll, but no illegal acts
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17460.php

The former management of Brazil's third largest telecoms operator
Brasil Telecom has confirmed that it hired risk management and fraud
prevention company Kroll, but denies illegal acts, local news agency
Agencia Estado reported. ...

[[Network Contracts News]]

Nokia Expands Contract With Sichuan Unicom In China
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17455.php

Finland's Nokia, Friday said it has had a GSM contract extended with
Sichuan Unicom, a unit of China Unicom. ...

China Selects GSM-R for Railway Communications
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17466.php

China's Ministry of Railways (MOR) and Nortel have signed a framework
agreement for Nortel to provide GSM Railway (GSM-R) switching centers
to enable digital mobile signaling and operational communications
along passenger lines spanning 20 of China's...

[[Network Operators News]]

Armed Gunmen Attack Jawwal Headquarters in Gaza
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17463.php

A gang of 20 armed gunmen attacked the headquarters of the Palestinian
GSM network operator, Jawwal last week. The gunmen terrorized Jawwal
employees, expelled them by force and caused wide-spread property
damage as they fired their weapons within th...

DoCoMo Mandating GSM in all Japanese Handsets
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17469.php

Japan's ...

[[Offbeat News]]

Mobile phone cos under pressure to block signals in prisons
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17457.php

Brazil's government plans to submit a bill for a law forcing mobile
operators to install equipment that will block signals inside prisons,
Brazilian newspapers quoted communications minister Holio Costa as
saying. ...

[[Regulatory News]]

Committee postpones decision on Cofetel candidates
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17458.php

The permanent committee of Mexico's congress has postponed until
Wednesday, May 24, its approval of the candidates nominated to form
the new board of telecoms regulator Cofetel, local daily El Financiero
reported. ...

No Worries from Base Station Radiation - report
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17471.php

Speculation regarding health issues and mobile telecommunications base
stations is ignoring a huge body of local and international health
research which has found no proven link between base stations and
adverse health impacts, says the Australian Mo...

Largent Calls for National Wireless Regulatory Framework
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17474.php

The USA's Wireless Association President and CEO Steve Largent
appeared before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation
Committee last week and urged its members to support language that
would create a strong and consistent national regulatory...

[[Reports News]]

Fixed Mobile Convergence Could Increase Churn
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17464.php

A recent research study, conducted by ORC International in the UK, has
revealed that consumers are willing to change mobile network provider
and/or their Internet service provider (ISP) in order to move to a
supplier offering a fixed-mobile convergen...

[[Statistics News]]

China Mobile Adds 4.33 Million Users in April Vs 4.30 Million in March
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17456.php

China Mobile (Hong Kong), the largest mobile carrier in China in terms
of subscribers, said Friday it added 4.33 million customers in April,
up from 4.30 million new subscribers in March. ...

Global Mobile Subscriptions to Exceed 2.6bn by Year End 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17470.php

Pyramid Research estimates there will be 2.6 billion mobile
subscribers worldwide by year-end 2006, up from 2.3 billion in
2005. Between 2006 and 2010, it expects total mobile subscribers to
increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.7%, t...

[[Technology News]]

Wind-Up Phone Charger Distribution Deal
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17467.php

Freeplay Energy has signed a five year agreement with WP Phones to
sell at least one million of their wind-up chargers per year,
primarily in Africa. WP Phones will have exclusive distribution rights
in sub Saharan Africa over the period....

No More Shaky Camera Phone Photos
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17468.php

InvenSense says that it has developed a miniature image stabilization
system, due out in the second half of this year, which can be used in
mobile phones to stabilize shaky photo images. Consumers accustomed to
digital still cameras (DSCs) are often ...

Iris Scanning in a Mobile Phone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17473.php

The UK based, xVista says that it has developed a portable iris
scanning and verification system which could be built into a mobile
phone. Developed through a US$3.4 million, six year partnership with
the University of Sussex, the xVista system is de...

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

Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 11:44:13 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Monday, May 22, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 22, 2006
********************************

Network Software Protects Data Confidentiality
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18059?11228

     As banks, businesses, government agencies and other enterprises
     interconnect their computers in ever greater numbers, there's a
     growing need for software that can provide seamless data links
     while ensuring data security. In an effort to ensure security
     while maintaining a free and speedy enterprise data flow, a
     research team has...

NTT DoCoMo to Make All Mobile Handset Models Globally Compatible
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18056?11228

     NTT DoCoMo, Japan's largest mobile operator, plans to be the
     first mobile operator in Japan to make all its mobile handset
     models compatible with the GSM networks in more than 130
     countries in two years, in order to enable easier roaming for
     travellers, Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper reports. Under the
     new system, DoCoMo's mobile...

EU Wants More Cross-Border Telecoms Competition
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18053?11228

     The European Commission has urged greater cross-border
     competition in the European telecommunications market, according
     to reports from the Associated Press (AP). While acknowledging
     the benefits of its year-old push for better exploitation of
     digital technologies, the Commission said that stronger
     investment and more effective...

Bite GSM Delays 3G Launch
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18052?11228

     Latvia's newest mobile operator Bite GSM is to postpone the
     launch of its UMTS services, according to Baltic Business
     Weekly. The operator's 3G operations had been due to begin in
     June 2006, but have now been delayed until September 2006, in
     order to facilitate the introduction of a faster Internet
     service....

KDDI, Sony to Develop Walkman Cell Phone
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18050?11228

     TOKYO -- A Walkman brand cell phone enabling users to download
     music onto their handsets will go on sale in the Japanese market
     next month in a joint project between KDDI and Sony, KDDI
     Corp. announced Monday.  KDDI Corp., Japan's second-largest
     mobile phone company, scheduled a news conference Monday morning
     to announce details ...

Microsoft Makes Way to Pay for PC Hourly
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/18048?11228

     SEATTLE -- Microsoft Corp. has developed technology for people to
     pay by the hour to use a computer in their own homes, similar to
     the way many people use pre-paid cards for cell phones.  The
     technology, called FlexGo, will be used as part of efforts to
     sell computers to lower-income consumers in developing countries,
     where Microsoft is...

Nokia Lands GSM Expansion Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18045?11228

     A China Unicom subsidiary has tapped Nokia to expand its GSM
     network in China. The companies did not disclose the financial
     terms of the agreement.  As part of the deal, Nokia will deliver
     radio and core networks, including MSC Server mobile softswitch
     and services to Sichuan Unicom. The expanded network will serve
     four cities in the...

House Committee Unwraps Net-Neutrality Act
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18042?11228

     Confirming earlier reports (Telecom Policy Report, May 1),
     members of the House Judiciary Committeeintroduced a bill to
     codify network neutrality among the Internet's broadband access
     and backbone providers in response to a growing debate among
     federal lawmakers and lobbyists on the issue.  The five-page
     Internet Freedom and...

Wireless Firms Ring Up More VC Bucks
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18039?11228

     Of the $543 million in venture capital investment dollars
     received by digital media companies during April, a whopping $303
     million went to wireless-related businesses, according to San
     Francisco-based research firm Rutberg & Co.  Rutberg says 40
     companies announced new VC funding last month; and 11 of those
     are making a business of...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: Using Skype to Call NANP Numbers
Organization: Symantec
Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 15:36:11 -0400


In article <telecom25.194.5@telecom-digest.org>, john@mayson.us wrote:

>> If you'll read the notice it's for people *in* the US and Canada to
>> make free calls.  It's not for people calling into the US.  And indeed
>> Skype can indeed determine where you're calling from by the IP address
>> used to access the service.  It's the same deal that when I'm in
>> Israel and access my yahoo mail which is on the US Yahoo service I get
>> served Hebrew adverts in Israel.  They know where you are really they
>> do!!  What I get is determined by my originating IP address.

> According to their website: "Calling people on Skype is totally free.
> It's also free to call landlines and mobiles within the US and Canada
> until the end of the year. International calls are pretty cheap too."

Don't look for details on the front page hype.  If you search further
in the support knowledge base, you'll find the statement:

As of May 15, 2006, and until the end of 2006, all US and
Canadian-based Skype customers can now make free calls to any landline
and mobile phones in the US and Canada.

Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***

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

From: A User <other-news@usa.net>
Subject: Re: Radio-Frequency Chips Coming to Cattle
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 07:53:34 +1000
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com


On Sat, 20 May 2006 19:23:24 -0500, Brian Bergstein
<ap@telecom-digest.org>  wrote:

> By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer

> That makes Hassell sound like many other startup technologists -
> pooh-poohing a rival standard at the expense of his own. But something
> makes this situation a bit unusual: Even beef producers who are using
> the passive flavor of RFID don't seem thrilled with it either.
 ...
> The Joplin Regional Stockyards in Carthage, Mo., began using passive
> RFID to identify some cattle in 2001. But co-owner Steve Owens
> believes the technology "hinders the speed of commerce."
 ...
> That's because the thousands of cattle that go through his facility
> wouldn't always naturally line up and orderly proceed past devices
> that can read electronic ID tags at short range. Most often, cattle
> quickly move through his yard in groups.
 ...
> And if a cow has lost a tag or comes to him without one, "you've got
> to catch that animal in a head chute and hold it still so you can put
> the tag in an ear," he said. That can take 30 seconds each - which
> adds up when you've got thousands of mooing creatures to deal with.
 ...
> These factors are big because human contact and other stresses can
> hurt a cow's ability to gain or maintain weight. That's costly because
> beef is, after all, sold by the pound - and generally with slim profit
> margins.
 ...
> That makes this a crucial year. He has to attract potential customers
> while still fine-tuning his system. Part of his pitch is that while
> active tags cost more, their readers can run as low as $50, instead of
> hundreds or even thousands of dollars for passive RFID. The active
> readers' range could be dialed up or down to register multiple cows or
> just one at a time.
 ...
> Hassell says his tags' batteries can last five to seven years, well
> beyond the 15-month life of typical beef cattle. And he asserts that
> most of the cost of the tags comes from their plastic housing, not
> their circuitry - so ZigBeef tags could easily include both passive
> and active chips, soothing producers' fears about choosing the wrong
> technology.
 ...
> Once that happens, old methods simply could become too difficult, said
> Allen Bright, animal ID coordinator for the National Cattlemen's Beef
> Association.  For example, he notes that people are prone to error as
> they write down ear-tag numbers. It's not exactly easy in auctions
> teeming with 10,000 head of cattle.
 ...
> Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

(Above article greatly abridged from original publication here in
Digest last week.)

It's been available in Australia for quite some time. You have been
able  to track the product in the food chain for quite some time.

Cattle don't seem to mind at all.

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

From: tls@panix.com (Thor Lancelot Simon)
Subject: Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 01:10:35 UTC
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.
Reply-To: tls@rek.tjls.com


In article <telecom25.194.6@telecom-digest.org>, George Berger
<gberger@his.com> wrote:

>> The real question is: Can we possibly trust anything a Company says
>> anymore if national security is involved?

> In this case, I'd be more likely to believe Bell South. The incident
> has too much publicity and too many responders for Bell South to risk
> getting caught in a lie. The negative publicity and subsequent
> litigation that would most certainly follow could easily force them
> into Chapter 11, if not worse. DOJ prosecutors are salivating at the
> chance to bring one more "Rogue Corporation" to its knees and to jail
> the CEO.

Uh.  Sure.

I'd just like to know whether you mean the same employees of the same
Department of Justice which went to court to kill the ACLU's lawsuit
over the same, quite likely illegal, NSA surveillance of American
citizens by asserting the state secrets privilege?

Lost in all this is, I think, the simple fact that it's entirely
possible that both what some of the telephone companies and the
whistleblowers who tattled on them are saying is true: that records of
Americans' telephone calls are in fact being provided automatically to
the NSA from within the telco's networks, and that the telcos are not,
in fact, providing those records directly to the NSA, thus giving them
a fig leaf to hide behind.

After all, all that's needed for that to be true is the involvement of
any other government agency, a single shell corporation, or a defense
contractor used as an intermediary to receive the data.

  Thor Lancelot Simon	                         tls@rek.tjls.com

"We cannot usually in social life pursue a single value or a single
moral 
aim, untroubled by the need to compromise with others."  - H.L.A. Hart

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

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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 23 May 2006 13:36:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 196

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    File Sharers Hit With Criminal Charges (Adam Pasick)
    School District to Monitor Student Blogs (Associated Press News Wire)
    Thieves Steal Personal Data on 26 Miillion Vets (Reuters News Wire)
    Vast Data Cache About Veterans Has Been Stolen (Monty Solomon)
    Microsoft Tells Contract Workers to Take a Week Off to Lower Costs (H Yen)
    Background on Leslie Cauley, USA Today Reporter on NSA Spy Story (crp)
    U.S. at the Forefront of Wireless Home Technology (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News: Tuesday 23rd May 2006 (Cellular-News)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 23, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Analog T1 line vs. Digital T1 line (l0200100@yahoo.com)
    New Spyphones and Interceptors Available Now (john@wireless-multimedia.net)

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

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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: Adam Pasick <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: File Sharers Hit With Criminal Charges
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 11:11:06 -0500


German file-sharers hit with criminal charges
By Adam Pasick

German police have filed criminal charges against 3,500 people accused
of using the eDonkey file-sharing network to share copyrighted music
illegally, the recording industry's trade group said on Tuesday.

The music industry has filed thousands of lawsuits in its fight
against online piracy, but criminal prosecutions have been relatively
rare. Users could face a maximum penalty of five years in prison if
the music files were shared for commercial purposes.

"No one should be surprised that we are stepping up our campaign in
this way," said John Kennedy, chairman and chief executive of the
International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. "Internet
piracy has hurt the whole music community in Germany, with legitimate
sales falling by a third in just five years."

Global music sales have been on the decline for years, but the rate of
decline slowed to about 1 percent last year due to crackdowns on
piracy and the growth of legitimate online music services like Apple's
iTunes. The world's top music companies have voiced hopes that the
Internet will eventually offset continued declines in physical formats
like CDs.

The charges announced in Germany are aimed at people who upload music
to file-sharing networks, not those who solely download music to their
computers.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from the daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: School District to Monitor Student Blogs
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 11:13:06 -0500


High school students are going to be held accountable for what they
post on blogs and on social-networking Web sites such as MySpace.com.

The board of Community High School District 128 voted unanimously on
Monday to require that all students participating in extracurricular
activities sign a pledge agreeing that evidence of "illegal or
inappropriate" behavior posted on the Internet could be grounds for
disciplinary action.

The rule will take effect at the start of the next school year,
officials said.

District officials won't regularly search students' sites, but will
monitor them if they get a worrisome tip from another student, a
parent or a community member.

Mary Greenberg of Lake Bluff, who has a son at Libertyville High
School, argued the district is overstepping its bounds.

"I don't think they need to police what students are doing online,"
she said. "That's my job."

Associate Superintendent Prentiss Lea rebuffed that criticism.

"The concept that searching a blog site is an invasion of privacy is
almost an oxymoron," he said. "It is called the World Wide Web."

The social networking Web site MySpace.com allows its nearly 80
million users to post pictures and personal information while
communicating with others.

District 128, in Lake County north of Chicago, has some 3,200
students, about 80 percent of whom participate in extracurricular
activities, according to school officials.


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Hope Yen <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Thieves Steal Personal Data on 26 Miillion Vets
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 21:06:08 -0500


By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer

Thieves took sensitive personal information on 26.5 million
U.S. veterans, including Social Security numbers and birth dates,
after a Veterans Affairs employee improperly brought the material
home, the government said Monday.

The information involved mainly those veterans who served and have
been discharged since 1975, said VA Secretary Jim Nicholson. Data of
veterans discharged before 1975 who submitted claims to the agency may
have been included.

Nicholson said there was no evidence the thieves had used the data for
identity theft, and an investigation was continuing.

"It's highly probable that they do not know what they have," he said
in a briefing with reporters. "We have decided that we must exercise
an abundance of caution and make sure our veterans are aware of this
incident."

Veterans advocates expressed alarm.

"This was a very serious breach of security for American veterans and
their families," said Bob Wallace, executive director of Veterans of
Foreign Wars.  "We want the VA to show leadership, management and
accountability for this breach."

Ramona Joyce, spokeswoman for the American Legion, agreed that the
theft was a concern. "In the information age, we're constantly told to
protect our information. We would ask no less of the VA," she said.

Nicholson declined to comment on the specifics of the incident, which
involved a midlevel data analyst who had taken the information home to
suburban Maryland on a laptop to work on a department project.

The residential community had been a target of a series of burglaries
when the employee was victimized earlier this month, according to the
FBI in Baltimore. Local law enforcement and the VA inspector general
were also investigating.

"I want to emphasize there was no medical records of any veteran and
no financial information of any veteran that's been compromised,"
Nicholson said, although he added later that some information on the
veterans' disabilities may have been taken.

Nicholson said he does not know how many of the department's 235,000
employees go through background investigations. He said employees who
have access to large volumes of personal data should be required to
undergo such checks, but he does not believe the VA employee was
involved in the theft.

"We do not suspect at all any ulterior motive," he said.

The department has come under criticism for shoddy accounting
practices and for falling short on the needs of veterans.

Last year, more than 260,000 veterans could not sign up for services
because of cost-cutting. Audits also have shown the agency used
misleading accounting methods and lacked documentation to prove its
claimed savings.

"It is a mystifying and gravely serious concern that a VA data analyst
would be permitted to just walk out the VA door with such
information," Illinois Rep. Lane Evans (news, bio, voting record), the
top Democrat on the Veterans Affairs Committee, said in a statement
signed by other Democrats on the panel.

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., who is a Vietnam veteran, said he would
introduce legislation to require the VA to provide credit reports to
the veterans affected by the theft.

"This is no way to treat those who have worn the uniform of our
country," Kerry said. "Someone needs to be fired."

The VA said it was notifying members of Congress and the individual
veterans about the burglary. It has set up a call center at
1-800-FED-INFO and Web site, http://www.firstgov.gov, for veterans who
believe their information has been misused.

It also is stepping up its review of procedures on the use of personal
data for many of its employees who telecommute as well as others who
must sign disclosure forms showing they are aware of federal privacy
laws and the consequences if they're violated.

Deborah Platt Majoras, chair of the Federal Trade Commission, said her
task force has reached out to the three major credit bureaus to be
alert to possible misuse.

On the Net:

Information for veterans suspecting identity theft:
http://www.firstgov.gov or 1-800-FED-INFO

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 00:51:29 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Vast Data Cache About Veterans Has Been Stolen


By DAVID STOUT and TOM ZELLER Jr.
The New York Times

WASHINGTON, May 22 - Personal electronic information on up to 26.5
million military veterans, including their Social Security numbers and
birth dates, was stolen from the residence of a Department of Veterans
Affairs employee who had taken the data home without authorization,
the agency said Monday.

The department said that there was no evidence any of the information
had been used illegally and that whoever stole it, in a burglary of
the employee's home this month, might be unaware of its nature or how
to use it. The stolen data do not include any health records or
financial information, the agency said.

But it was immediately clear from the sheer numbers involved, as well
as the tone of the announcement and the steps taken in the aftermath
of the theft, that the breach was deeply embarrassing to the agency.

"As a result of this incident, information identifiable with you was
potentially exposed to others," Jim Nicholson, the secretary of
veterans affairs, wrote in a letter being sent to the veterans who
might be affected.

As measured by the number of people potentially affected, the data
loss is exceeded only by a breach last June at CardSystems Solutions,
a payment processor, in which the accounts of 40 million credit card
holders were compromised in a hacking incident.

But in that breach, any exposure could be addressed by simply
canceling those accounts. In the latest incident, three crucial keys
to unlocking a person's financial life - name, Social Security number
and date of birth - may have been set loose. Those cannot be canceled,
and a clever thief can use them to begin trying to open new accounts,
secure loans, buy property and otherwise wreak havoc on the victim's
credit history.

 ...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/23/washington/23identity.html?ex=1306036800&en=eb1c02a63fedca31&ei=5090

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Microsoft Tells Contract Workers to Take Week Off to Lower Costs
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 21:08:42 -0500


Microsoft Corp. told more than 1,000 contract workers doing software
development and testing to take seven business days off without pay to
lower costs during this quarter, the company said on Monday.

Earlier this month, Microsoft asked half of the technology vendors it
uses for software development to defer seven business days worth of
work including this week, to the coming fiscal year starting July 1,
said company spokesman Lou Gellos.

The software giant emphasized it was not over-budget, but certain
divisions needed to pare back some costs in order to stay on
budget. Microsoft said these types of cut-backs are a common way for
technology companies to manage costs.

"It is fairly common within the industry, but not that common for
Microsoft," said Gellos, who declined to be more specific about what
areas of the company were involved except to say that the development
was "not critical."

Microsoft shares have fallen 16 percent since the company said
earnings would be hurt by increased spending next year. Analysts
estimated it will spend $2 billion more in fiscal 2007 than
expected. The stock rose 32 cents to $22.88 on Monday.

Microsoft employs over 63,000 workers worldwide, but it would not
comment on the number of contract workers it uses.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

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

From: Center For Responsive Politics <crp@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Background on Leslie Cauley, USA Today Reporter on NSA Phone Spy Story
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 12:03:52 -0500


Leslie Cauley, the USA Today reporter who last week "broke" the news
that three major U.S. telecommunications companies were assisting the
National Security Agency in building a database to more easily track
any communications by potential terrorists, is listed as a donor to
former House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, according to a search
of The Center for Responsive Politics Web site. A search found a
listing for "writer and journalist" Leslie Cauley, indicating she gave
$2,000 to Gephardt on June 30, 2003, when Gephardt was running for the
Democratic presidential nomination. Before Cauley joined USA Today,
she teamed up with former AT&T and Global Crossing executive Leo
Hindery to write a book on business deals, Biggest Game of All. But
Hindery is not just a businessman -- he's listed as a major donor to
Democratic candidates and the Democratic Party, and was even mentioned
by The Hill newspaper as a possible DNC chairman in late 2004.

The home page for the Center for Responsive Politics:
http://www.opensecrets.org

[This item, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, was posted Friday morning on the
MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

Cauley's link to a Democratic campaign seems likely to further cloud
the credibility of her story. Two of the three phone companies Cauley
fingered, BellSouth and Verizon, have since denied the accuracy of the
May 11 USA Today story, and BellSouth yesterday went so far as to
demand the newspaper "retract the false and unsubstantiated
statements" made by Cauley in her piece. There have also been
questions about the timing of the story, which was given huge play on
USA Today's front-pages shortly before the former head of the National
Security Agency, General Michael Hayden, was due to face confirmation
hearings to be the next CIA director, and given the fact that many of
the key points of the story were actually reported last December by
the New York Times.

Cauley's Democratic campaign contributions seem not to be her only tie
to liberal politics. Before Cauley joined USA Today, she teamed up
with former AT&T and Global Crossing executive Leo Hindery to write a
book on business deals, Biggest Game of All. But Hindery is not just a
businessman -- he's listed as a major donor to Democratic candidates
and the Democratic Party, and was even mentioned by The Hill newspaper
as a possible DNC chairman in late 2004. See: www.thehill.com

The two were apparently close, at least at one point. According to a
2005 write-up in Broadcasting and Cable, "Cauley and Hindery developed
a close relationship during their book project, giving her access to
his insights and many documents from that period." The magazine,
however, notes that "their collaboration apparently ended very badly,"
with Cauley trashing Hindery in a later book, End of the Line: The
Rise and Fall of AT&T.

According to B&C: "She [Cauley] calls him a 'carnival barker,' 'a
junk-food addict with a waistline to match' and, in a particularly
cheap shot, a 'Queer Eye for the Straight Guy makeover just screaming
to happen.'"  For the B&C article: http://www.broadcastingcable.com

Friday's USA Today carried BellSouth's demand of a retraction on page
4A, below a more prominent story headlined "Senators challenge Hayden
on surveillance," with partial transcripts of General Hayden being
asked Thursday about the claimed NSA database program.

According to Friday's USA Today:

"BellSouth asked USA Today on Thursday to 'retract the false and
unsubstantiated statements' about the company that it contends were in
a May 11 story about a database of domestic calling records maintained
by the National Security Agency.  

"In a letter to the newspaper's publisher, Craig Moon, the company
noted that the story said BellSouth is 'working under contract with
the NSA' to provide 'phone call records of tens of millions of
Americans' that have been incorporated into the database.  "'No such
proof was offered by your newspaper because no such contracts exist,'
stated the letter, portions of which were read by spokesman Jeff
Battcher. 'You have offered no proof that BellSouth provided massive
calling data to the NSA as part of a warrantless program because it
simply did not happen.'  "Steve Anderson, a USA Today spokesman, said
'We did receive the letter this afternoon. We are reviewing it, and we
will be responding.'..."

For the May 19 USA Today story: http://www.usatoday.com

The paper also included this background that seemed designed to justify
their earlier publication:

"USA Today first contacted BellSouth more than five weeks ago. On the
night before the story was published, the newspaper described the
story in detail to BellSouth, and the company did not challenge the
newspaper's account. The company's official response at that time:
'BellSouth does not provide any confidential customer information to
the NSA or any governmental agency without proper legal authority.'"

Since the story broke, Cauley herself has made the rounds. The
Washingtonian magazine's Harry Jaffe wrote a gushing profile
applauding her "victory for beat reporting." He quoted Cauley as
saying her USA Today "scoop" demonstrated the usefulness of unnamed
sources:

"Like any reporter," she says, "one thread leads to another leads to
another" in the "messy process of reporting."

"Part of the messy process was clearing the use of anonymous sources,
on which the story was based.

"Says Cauley: 'This further validates the use of confidential, unnamed
sources. They have a real value in our business.'"

For the May 16 Washingtonian magazine posting: http://www.washingtonian.com

With the phone companies demanding a retraction and her own Democratic
connections now revealed, the "value" of her unnamed sources seems
increasingly dubious. Could Leslie Cauley may be on her way to
becoming a print version of CBS's disgraced Mary Mapes?

END of Friday NewsBusters posting by Rich Noyes.

On Saturday, I posted the following update:

An editorial in Saturday's Washington Times highlighted the Noyes item
first posted on NewsBusters. The May 20 editorial, "Spinning, Spying
and USA Today," recounted: "With Verizon and BellSouth both
challenging USA Today's report on their alleged participation in NSA's
surveillance programs, it's not yet clear whether or to what extent
the claims in the Gannett daily's much-discussed article are
true. What's clearer is that USA Today reporter Leslie Cauley has ties
to the Democratic Party, which the Media Research Center's
'NewsBusters' Web site unearthed yesterday. Searching through
campaign-filing records, Rich Noyes discovered that Miss Cauley gave
$2,000 to then-Democratic presidential hopeful Dick Gephardt in
2003. That's the type of activity that journalists normally avoid if
they wish to be perceived as objective..."

The Washington Times also relayed another part of the Noyes item,
noting "Cauley's collaboration with Democratic fund-raising
heavyweight Leo Hindery, with whom she coauthored a 2003 book."

For the editorial in full: www.washingtontimes.com

Near the end of Friday's show, Rush Limbaugh briefly mentioned
Cauley's donation and the http://RushLimbaugh.com home page over the
weekend featured a link to the Noyes item on Cauley. Right under the
picture of liberal Senator Patrick Leahy holding up Cauley's front
page story, Limbaugh had a link to NewsBusters: "USA Today Writer Has
Ties to Democrat Campaign." Limbaugh's home page:
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, it would seem no one has their
hands completely clean, does it?  I only spent so much of last week
printing articles about this incident because of its implications and
relevance to telecom. Those of us who have _some little bit_  (or
more) knowledge of the workings of ESS were not surprised to hear that
producing telephone records these days is so relatively easy. But I
did not expect this incident to have the political overtones which
have developed.  But then, why should that be such a surprise?  PAT]

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

Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 13:14:49 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: U.S. at the Forefront of Wireless Home Technology


USTelecom dailyLead
May 22, 2006
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dFrMfDtutejSbtpuXj

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* U.S. at the forefront of wireless home technology
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Cable companies experiment with TV set-top boxes
* Digital age here for networks
* S. Korea's SK Telecom launches wireless service in U.S.
* Microsoft develops mobile OS with IM capabilities
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* What Happened to SS7?  Tomorrow at 1:00 p.m. ET
HOT TOPICS
* Vonage IPO clouded by complaints
* Qwest buys OnFiber Communications
* Internet takes TV in a whole new direction
* Verizon, AT&T deny handing over phone records
* Nortel CEO maps out long-term plan
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* The phone free-for-all
* Australia's telecom future depends on optical fiber
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Voice encryption faces regulation questions in U.S.

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dFrMfDtutejSbtpuXj

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Tuesday 23rd May 2006
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 07:18:40 -0500
From: cellular-news <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

Mobilkom Optimizing its 3G Network
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17492.php

Mobilkom Austria sasy that it is now using the optimization tool,
Capesso from Symena. The ability to optimize mobile technologies UMTS,
EDGE and GSM through this software is beneficial to mobilkom austria
in fulfilling its pact with Carinthia, Burge...

[[ Financial ]]

Authorities approve Cisneros Digitel acquisition
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17481.php

Venezuela's telecoms regulator Conatel and antimonopoly watchdog
Procompetencia have approved the sale of GSM operator Digitel to the
Cisneros media group, Conatel said in a statement. ...

AMX aims for 150 million clients by end-2008
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17482.php

Mexico's America Movil expects to grow its client base in Latin
America by 50% over the next 30 months to reach 150 million users at
end-2008, Reuters quoted AMX finance director Carlos Garcia as
saying. ...

Altimo says talks with Telenor over VimpelCom in deadlock
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17484.php

The negotiations between Russia's Altimo and Norwegian
telecommunication company Telenor over the merger of Russia's second
largest mobile operator VimpelCom and Ukraine's largest mobile
operator Kyivstar have reached a deadlock, Altimo said in a pre...

[[ Handsets ]]

KDDI, Sony To Sell Walkman-Brand Mobile Phone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17475.php

KDDI Corp. said Monday it will start selling mobile telephone handsets
with built-in "Walkman" music players made by Sony Corp. in late
June. ...

Euroset says has 200 phone shops in Kazakhstan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17486.php

Russia's largest mobile handset retailer Euroset has opened 200 outlets in Kazakhstan since the start of its operations in the country in 2004, Euroset said in a press release Monday. ...

Motorola Q Handset Launch Confirmed
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17494.php

The USA based, Verizon Wireless has finally confirmed that the highly
anticipated Motorola Q will be available starting on May 31. The Moto
Q -- which runs Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 software -- delivers a
mobile experience in an all-in-one handhel...

[[ Legal ]]

PRESS: Russian company claims US' Motorola violates patent rights
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17477.php

A Russian company, RussGPS, has filed a complaint with Russian law
enforcement bodies accusing U.S. mobile handset producer Motorola of
violating patent rights, RussGPS' spokesperson Pavel Panov said,
Kommersant business daily reported Monday. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Siemens In CNY1.4 Billion China Pact For Mobile Network Gear
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17476.php

Siemens's communications unit said Monday it will supply CNY1.4
billion ($174.42 million) worth of second-generation mobile network
equipment and maintenance services to China's two mobile-phone
operators this year. ...

Turnkey Infrastructure Contract Extended
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17490.php

LCC International has announced the 12 month extension of its turnkey
services agreement with Algerie Telecom Mobiles, a fully owned
subsidiary of Algerie Telecom. This US$19 million contract extension
aims at providing full turnkey services to suppo...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Entel PCS plans US$150mn investment in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17483.php

Chilean mobile operator Entel PCS plans to invest US$150mn this year,
a similar amount to previous years, local newspaper Diario Financiero
quoted the company's general manager Hernon Mariel as saying. ...


Cellphone Coverage On Disputed Spratly Islands
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17488.php

By end of June or early July, the Vietnam Telecom Services Company
(GPC) says that it will complete installation of BTS in the contested
Truong Sa Archipelago (also known as Spratly Islands) to bring mobile
service to this island town. Presently, GPC...

Huge Telecoms Investment for Sri Lanka
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17489.php

Dialog Telekom - Sri Lanka's largest mobile communications operator
announced last week, the signing of a hall mark investment agreement
with the Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (BoI) to invest a further
US$150 million in the country's telecommunica...

Manx Accredited for Mobile and Landline Billing Services
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17491.php

Manx Telecom, which operates on the Isle of Man next to the UK, says
that it has become the first telecommunications company in the world
to gain BABT accreditation for both its fixed and mobile billing. BABT
 -- British Approvals Board of Telecommunic...

[[ Personnel ]]

PRESS: 2 Vodafone Directors To Stand Down Shortly
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17479.php

Two of Vodafone Group's longest-serving directors, Paul Hazen and
Penny Hughes, are expected to stand down shortly, The Sunday Times
reported, without citing sources. ...

[[ Statistics ]]

Moldovan mobile operators' combined user base up 4% in Jan-Mar
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17478.php

The combined user base of Moldovan mobile operators rose 4.1% in
January-March to 1.134 million subscribers as of April 1, Moldova?s
National Agency for Telecommunications and Information Regulation said
Monday. ...

Osiptel: Mobile penetration reaches 22.3% at end 1Q06
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17480.php

Mobile penetration in Peru reached 22.3% at the end of the first
quarter of 2006, with 6.09 million lines in service, compared to 21%
at end 1Q05, a source at the telecoms regulator Osiptel told
BNamericas. ...

Foreign investment in Russian telecoms at $339 mln in Jan-Mar
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17485.php

Foreign investment in the Russian telecommunications sector amounted
to $339 million in January-March, the Federal State Statistics Service
said Monday without providing comparisons. ...

Verizon Gains While Rivals Churn
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17487.php

A new analyst report from Merrill Lynch has reported that Verizon
Wireless remains the USA market leader and exceeded estimates across
the board in 1Q06. At an industry level, subscriber growth and
revenues were in line to better than expected, but m...

CDMA2000 Achieves Subscriber Milestone
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17493.php

The CDMA Development Group has announced that the number of CDMA2000
3G subscribers worldwide surpassed 250 million in the 1Q 2006. The CDG
says that CDMA2000 operators added more than 25 million new users in
the first three months of the year, drive...

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

Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 12:03:21 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Tuesday, May 23, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 23, 2006
********************************

Regulator Bans Deutsche Telekom's Wholesale DSL Fee Model
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/18081?11228

     Germany's telecoms regulator, the Bundesnetzagentur, has banned
     incumbent Deutsche Telekom's wholesale DSL pricing model, which
     enables rival operators to resell broadband internet access to
     customers. The Bundesnetzagentur claims that Deutsche Telekom's
     DSL NetRental model is a discount-model that favours larger ISPs
     over smaller rivals...

Internet Telephone Pioneer Vonage Heads for Internet-Size IPO
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18075?11228

     NEW YORK -- Vonage, the company that popularized the idea of
     using broadband Internet connections for phone calls, is set to
     go public this week at a price that appears to be drawing in
     plenty of investors, but skeptical glances from some analysts.
     As a small but well-funded company, Vonage Holdings Corp. has set
     the pace in the...

Motorola Unveils 'Q' Cell Phone
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18074?11228

     NEW YORK -- Motorola Inc. unveiled its highly anticipated ''Q''
     cell phone Monday, joining other manufacturers in aiming for
     businesspeople who want their e-mail to go.  The Q, which has a
     QWERTY keyboard and runs a version of Microsoft's Windows, enters
     a crowded field dominated by Research in Motion Ltd.'s BlackBerry
     and Palm...

AT&T Expands European Wi-Fi Reach
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18069?11228

     AT&T forged a new deal with WeRoam to extend its Wi-Fi footprint
     in Europe. The deal brings AT&T's European Wi-Fi to more than
     10,000 hot spots.  The company was attracted to a deal with
     WeRoam because it gives AT&T the ability to work with several
     wireless Internet service provider (WISP) networks. In France,
     for instance,...

Before the Deluge
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18066?11228

     As mobile email providers expand their market to "the next 100
     million" users, beyond the 5 million to 6 million corporate users
     today, systems that automatically send all incoming emails to a
     mobile device could overwhelm employees and may actually reduce
     productivity, according to recent user surveys by research firm
     Strategy Analytics...

FCC Delays 3G Spectrum Auction
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18065?11228

     The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has delayed the
     bidding process for third-generation (3G) Advanced Wireless
     Services (AWS) by about six weeks, primarily to allow more time
     for discount-qualifying small businesses to prepare themselves.
     After our deadline last Friday, the agency disclosed a new
     schedule that moves the Auction...

Report: QOS Fees Could Net Billions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/18063?11228

     Broadband providers could raise billions by charging for
     differentiated levels of IP services and charging quality of
     service (QOS) fees, according to the latest Light Reading
     Insider. (See Net Neutrality Dollars and Sense.)  "There is money
     there for broadband network operators to capture, but they have
     to follow the right strategy,"...

Media Home Networking Growing, But PVRs Still King
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18061?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Although media networking is growing, many
     owners of Media Center PCs or PCs with TV tuners are still not
     using them for recording TV broadcasts, reports In-Stat. Analysis
     shows that many of these owners are not recording TV programs on
     those devices, and opting instead to use their Personal Video
     Recorder or...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: l0200100@yahoo.com
Subject: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line
Date: 22 May 2006 16:12:53 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


An analog T1 line for us is about $250 US and can get us 23 voice
lines.

Does anyone know what the capacity for a digital T1 line is?  Also,
what is the approximate cost?

Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

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

From: john@wireless-multimedia.net
Subject: New Spyphones and Interceptors Available Now
Date: 22 May 2006 11:54:17 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Hello all.

We sell spyphones and Interceptors. It is also possible to make one
yourself.

Find out on : http://www.wireless-multimedia.net/enter.html

Worldwide E-mail and voice support.

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

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TELECOM Digest     Tue, 23 May 2006 17:22:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 197

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Google Reinvents TV Ads With Pay-per-Click Video (Eric Auchard)
    2.8 Million Defrauded in Latest Schemes (Reuters News Wire)
    Advice to Prevent ID Theft (Dan Goodin)
    Internet Searches: Librarians do it Better (Megan Rauscher)
    Anti-Spyware Leader Unfazed by Microsoft (Catherine Tsai)
    Eircom Accepts Takeover Bid From Australia's Babcock (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: File Sharers Hit With Criminal Charges (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Vast Data Cache About Veterans Has Been Stolen (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)

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

Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be
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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: Eric Auchard <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Google Reinvents TV Ads With Pay-per-Click Video
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 15:41:28 -0500


By Eric Auchard

Google Inc. said on Monday the company is ready to help Web sites run
video advertisements, putting the Web search leader into competition
with television for the biggest chunk of ad spending.

Google is seeking to take the pay-per-click model it refined for text
ads and apply the approach to video, cleaning up a nascent market
where irritating splash ads distract users and limit advertisers'
desire to spend money on the medium.

Google video ads first appear on Web pages as static screenshots in
small television-screen like boxes. Only when a consumer clicks on the
screen does the ad begin running inside the box -- instead of jumping
off the page as many video ads do -- giving users control over how
much or how little they view.

"We are offering a very, very non-intrusive ad product," said Gokul
Rajaram, product manager for Google AdSense, which runs advertising
campaigns across affiliated Web sites. "Only users who click on the ad
see the video."

Google's AdSense network generates nearly half of Google's revenue,
with most of the rest coming from Google's own sites.

The new "click to play" video ads complement Google's existing line-up
of text, static image, banner and flash animation ads that run on the
edges of Web pages of sites that use Google to deliver advertising for
them. Google aims to make video advertising as simple to buy as these
existing formats.

Video ads will be introduced this week, Rajaram said.

To make it easy for advertisers to use the format, Google will host
video advertisements on its own computer servers instead of forcing
customers to contract out with a third-party supplier as many video
advertisers must now do.

Click to play video ads differ from the scattershot approach of
broadcast TV advertising in that Google promises to measure the
duration of how long customers, on average, watch any particular ad on
a site before moving on to another page.

"It is very good for advertisers because they now know the user is
engaged," Rajaram said in a phone interview.

"The targeting is more powerful than traditional broadcast TV," said
Greg Sterling, an industry analyst with Sterling Market Intelligence
in Berkeley, California.

For example, Sterling said one way Google plans to promote the service
as a way for advertisers to test-market TV ads on the Web to determine
the best ad for broadcast TV campaigns.

The Internet ad market grew 30 percent in 2005 to $12.5 billion. But
that represents only 5 percent of the budget U.S. marketers spend on
all media, including newspapers, radio and TV, according to Internet
Advertising Bureau data. U.S. ad spending on cable TV alone totaled
$18.9 billion last year.

But analyst Safa Rashtchy of broker Piper Jaffray estimates that major
advertisers in categories such as autos, finance, entertainment and
consumer goods are shifting a growing amount of their spending -- 10
to 20 percent so far -- online.

Such brand name advertisers favor using richer graphical or video
based elements in their advertising. This part of the market is where
rival Yahoo Inc. has long dominated.

"Brand marketers will take notice. This is going to cause others like
Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL to develop some of the same targeting,"
Sterling said. "We will see an acceleration of video advertising from
here," he predicted.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: 2.8 Million Defrauded in Latest Schemes
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 15:39:20 -0500


Hundreds arrested in international fraud schemes.

More than 565 people on three continents have been arrested over the
past year as part of an international operation targeting
mass-marketing fraud schemes, the U.S. Justice Department said on
Tuesday.

The department said about 2.8 million people had fallen victim to the
fraud schemes that were carried out through the Internet, and by
telemarketers.

Through "Operation Global Con," police in countries across North and
South America and Europe have uncovered a number of scams and have
arrested 565 people since March 1, 2005. The majority of the arrests
were made in Spain, followed by the United States, Canada and the
Netherlands.

Some of the schemes included sweepstakes fraud, when a victim is told
he or she has won a large amount of money in a sweepstakes but must
first pay bogus "fees" or "taxes" on the winnings. Once the victim
sends the payment, no sweepstakes winnings are ever received.

Other scams include fake offers of "pre-approved" credit cards and
loans, offers of nonexistent investments and tax fraud schemes.

About 2.8 million victims have suffered losses totaling more than $1
billion in relation to these fraud scams.

Officials said elderly people were often targets of the fraud because
they are perceived to be more vulnerable and willing to believe the
mail or telephone offers.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news of interest, and to listen to news radio, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/TDNewsradio.html

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

From: Dan Goodin <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Advice to Prevent ID Theft
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 15:43:11 -0500


By DAN GOODIN, AP Technology Writer

Consumer advocates have some advice for the 26.5 million veterans
whose personal information was stolen from the home of a Veterans
Affairs employee: Don't panic.

Identity theft may be a growing problem that affected 9.3 million
Americans last year, according to Javelin Strategy and Research. But
consumer advocates say a few precautions can lessen the chances of
becoming a victim, even for people whose personal information has been
stolen.

The first thing to do if you think your Social Security number, birth
date or other sensitive data has fallen into the wrong hands is to
place an initial fraud alert on your credit reports. There are three
major credit reporting agencies, but a call to one -- for instance,
Equifax at 800-525-6285 -- will ensure the other two are notified.

A fraud alert entitles you to a free copy of your credit report from
each of the three companies. Order one from each and scrutinize them
carefully for accounts you didn't open or debts you don't
recognize. Also, make sure that information such as your Social
Security number and employer are correct on each report.

If you discover accounts or transactions you didn't authorize, call
and speak with someone in the fraud department of each company
involved. Keep a log of each person contacted, along with the date,
time and topics discussed on each call.

An initial fraud alert also requires businesses to take additional
steps to confirm your identity before issuing loans or opening
accounts in your name.  Be prepared for loan and credit card
applications to take slightly longer to be processed.

It's important to understand that an initial fraud alert, as the name
implies, is only a temporary fix. That's because it remains in effect
for only 90 days. To prevent becoming a victim after the three months
are up, you'll need to take additional steps.

Next, fill out an identity theft report with your local, state or
federal law enforcement agency. It's unclear if the mere loss or theft
of personal information constitutes identity theft, but filing a
report may offer additional protections. The FTC makes an affidavit
available at http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/pdf/affidavit.pdf.

Ask each of the three credit reporting companies to place a freeze or
extended alert on your account. Seventeen states have enacted laws
that require the reporting companies to block access to your files in
most instances. Check with the Consumers Union Web site or attorney
general in your state to see if this is available where you live.

Even if your state doesn't offer this protection, ask Equifax,
TransUnion and Experian to give you an extended alert anyway. This
option will entitle you to two free credit reports per year, and it
will also require the credit reporting companies to remove you from
lists marketers use to send prescreened credit offers for five years.

To qualify for an extended alert, the reporting companies will require
you to prove you've been the victim of identity theft, even though it
is not always clear how the law defines a victim in this case. Be sure
to include the FTC affidavit or other law enforcement report you
filed. It is legal documentation that your personal identification has
been stolen.

Finally, recognize that safeguarding your privacy is a never-ending
task, even for people who have no reason to believe their personal
information has been stolen. A little education and prevention, say
consumer advocates, can go a long way.

"You need an ongoing vigilance," says Paul Stephens, a policy analyst
with the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego. "We want people to
be proactive, to be vigilant, but we also don't want to have people
panicking."

On the Net:

http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/idtheft.htm
http://privacyrights.org
http://www.consumersunion.org/campaigns/learn_more/002355indiv.html

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Megan Rauscher <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Internet Searches: Librarians do it Better
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 21:31:15 -0500


By Megan Rauscher

Cancer patients seeking timely, accurate, unbiased information on the
Internet about a disease and its treatment might do well to enlist the
help of a professional librarian.

According to a study reported today at the Medical Library
Association's annual meeting in Phoenix, cancer patients are more
likely to find what they are looking for with a librarian-mediated
search instead of "going it alone."

Over the last five years, Ruti Volk, a professional librarian and
manager of the Patient Education Resource Center (PERC) at the
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, and colleagues
have done about 2,100 searches for cancer patients. After each
mediated-search, patients are asked to complete an evaluation on the
information provided to them.

Results from 513 evaluations revealed several interesting findings,
Volk noted in an interview with Reuters Health. "One of the most
interesting was that 65 percent of patients said they were not able to
obtain the information that we sent to them from any other
source. They were not able to get it by themselves by using the
Internet; they didn't get it from a healthcare provider or from a
cancer organization."

An additional 30 percent of PERC visitors said the librarian provided
some new information. Only 4 percent said they found all the same
information on their own.

"This demonstrates," said Volk, "that even though the information is
supposedly so accessible and everything is on the web, people still
need the help of a professional to find information that is relevant
to them that is current and accurate and authoritative."

Librarians have access to resources sometimes unavailable to the
public such as subscription-based databases. But the biggest
advantage, Volk said, is expertise in searching. "I do this every day,
I should do it better than other people," she said.

Most comprehensive cancer centers have patient resource centers, but
not all of them are staffed by trained librarians skilled in finding
pertinent healthcare information, Volk also noted.

"If people want to gain an in-depth understanding of their condition
or they have a complex question, it is wise to enlist the help of a
professional librarian," she said.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

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

From: Catherine Tsai <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Anti-Spyware Leader Unfazed by Microsoft
Date: Mon, 22 May 2006 21:33:09 -0500


By CATHERINE TSAI, AP Business Writer

For millions of PC users, the privacy-snatching programs known as
spyware have been nothing but a headache as they swipe personal
information, slow systems to a crawl and crash computers. For Webroot
Software Inc., the annoying programs have been the foundation of
success.

Thanks to its market-leading anti-spyware software, Spy Sweeper, sales
have soared 20-fold since 2002, and last year the privately held
company raised an eye-popping $108 million in venture capital.

Though there's little chance of spyware ever going away, Webroot is
facing a significant challenge in the coming years: Microsoft Corp.'s
upcoming Windows Vista operating system will include its own
spyware-squashing tools.

Vista could put Webroot in the same shoes as RealNetworks Inc.,
Netscape Communications Corp. and others whose businesses have
suffered after Microsoft bundled more features into its ubiquitous
operating system.

Still, Webroot CEO David Moll seems unfazed.

"The taking of a second-best product in this space is akin to locking
half the doors in your house," he said. "Vista will not solve the
spyware problem. It may change the vector of attack, but it will not
solve this problem. And I'll bet the company on it."

Some analysts say the company should broaden its focus -- and Moll,
without divulging details, said that's in the plans.

"Ultimately they need to offer more than just an anti-spyware
package," Yankee Group senior analyst Andrew Jaquith said. "To do
that, they need access to more money, or be part of a bigger company."

Moll said he expects 20 percent revenue growth this year, while
Jaquith estimates current overall annual revenue at $75 million to
$110 million.  Jaquith said an initial public offering is more likely
than a buyout because, he estimates, it could take $500 million to
acquire the company -- a sum he figured few rivals would be willing to
pay.

Although an initial public offering isn't imminent, Moll said, Webroot
is implementing some of the financial controls required for public
companies.

Even before Vista ships to businesses later this year and to consumers
in early 2007, Webroot faces formidable competition.

Anti-spyware programs from companies like Tenebril Inc., Lavasoft AB, McAfee
Inc. and others all target the software that gets downloaded and installed
onto PCs -- often without users' knowledge -- to monitor keystrokes or capture
personal data and send it back to a third party.

Some of the rival programs are free, while others are included with
broader security programs. Webroot charges $29.95 for the software and
a year of updates and customer support.

Spy Sweeper, which was first released in 2003, has received strong
reviews and it had 75 percent of the U.S. retail market last year for
anti-spyware, besting both McAfee and Computer Associates
International Inc., according to the NPD Group Inc., a market research
firm.

For its part, Microsoft said customers should choose spyware
protection that works best for them. In fact, Vista users will be able
to turn off Windows Defender, if they choose, said Mike Chan, senior
product manager for the anti-spyware program.

Many anti-spyware vendors set traps, or "honey pots," with algorithms
that do the screening. Webroot's differentiator is Phileas, a computer
system that actively hunts down spyware with the aim of catching new
threats the day they are released.

To spark further innovation, Webroot employees who think of ideas that
earn patents get bonuses of up to $2,000. Every so often, the company
holds the "Spyware Smackdown," a game in which researchers act as
spyware writers trying to avoid Spy Sweeper.

The company also invested $500,000 on a usability lab, in which
cameras monitor volunteers as they use Webroot's software. That
research then goes into improving the software's interface.

Webroot's efforts have paid off. Besides huge revenue growth helped by
the release of Spy Sweeper in 2003, the company has grown from about a
dozen employees to 300 in a purple-walled headquarters that look out
on the Rocky Mountains. Its conference rooms are named for dead rock
stars such as Jerry Garcia.

Though Vista raises a cloud around Webroot's continued success, the
company is no stranger to escaping threats.

The company was launched in 1997 by Steve Thomas and then-girlfriend
Kristen Talley. Thomas was a state chess champion at age 10 who landed
on an FBI watch list at age 14 after he hacked into a supercomputer at
the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Moll said.

After the couple's relationship soured and sales plateaued at a few
million dollars, Thomas and Talley in April 2002 hired Moll, a Duke
University dropout who once worked at a screw machine factory in
Cleveland to pay his way through night school.

At the time, Webroot sold a program for cleaning up unnecessary files
on PCs, and revenues came evenly from Internet sales, AOL's Shop
Direct and retail.

Just months after Moll joined, AOL went through a management change
and strategy shift and it shut down sales through Shop Direct. Moll,
Thomas and Talley stopped taking paychecks, but by then Webroot was
developing Spy Sweeper. The program came to market in February 2003.

More than three years later, Moll is confronted with another major
challenge.

"I really do not see consumers going out to buy a best-of-breed
anti-spyware product when they're being handed it for free," said
Natalie Lambert, a security analyst for Forrester Research Inc.

She said business customers may choose to stick with one vendor for
all security software, so offering anti-viral software would be a
natural move for Webroot.

Moll said Webroot soon will do just that.

"We don't see customers satisfied with all their vendors," he
said. "That creates tremendous opportunity for us."

On the Net:

http://www.webroot.com

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

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

Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 12:26:33 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Eircom Accepts Takeover Bid From Australia's Babcock


USTelecom dailyLead
May 23, 2006
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dFAMfDtutekvbhYYBG

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Eircom accepts takeover bid from Australia's Babcock
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Vonage preps for IPO amid growing cable competition
* Motorola takes on BlackBerry with the new Q
* AT&T expands European hotspot service with WeRoam deal
* Report: Revenues from VoIP top $1B in '05
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* VoIP, VoIP and More VoIP
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Google's next big thing? Video ads
* S.F. company aims to improve Wi-Fi networks
* New dot-mobi domain expected to grow mobile Web
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Free, nationwide Internet via radio spectrum?
* Seattle mayor urges private partnerships for fiber network
* Cablevision's Charles Dolan renews call for a la carte

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dFAMfDtutekvbhYYBG

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: File Sharers Hit With Criminal Charges
Date: 23 May 2006 11:49:04 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Adam Pasick wrote:

> German police have filed criminal charges against 3,500 people accused
> of using the eDonkey file-sharing network to share copyrighted music
> illegally, the recording industry's trade group said on Tuesday.

This is a good thing.

This issue was discussed recently on the rec.arts.tv newsgroup.
Almost all posters were against such prosecutions and lawsuits because
they felt the music industry was "greedy", copyright laws were too
strict, or they did not respect the concept and laws of intellectual
property (some refused to even recognize the concept).  Some claimed
the music industry was doing illegal things to sniff out piracy which
in fact is technically impossible to do at this time.

I didn't agree with them.  I think the concept of intellecutal
property is extremely important and inventors, authors, and artists
have a right to retain ownership of their works (as provided in the
U.S.  Constitution).

The music industry is going after high volume pirates, not individual
stealing one or two songs.  Today's technology makes it possible to
easily reproduce and distribute high quality free duplicates of the
original in high volumes.  This wasn't possible years ago.

As to the issue of U.S. copyright rules being too strict, stealing is
not the answer.  Those who feel that way should get off their butt and
write congress saying so.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Vast Data Cache About Veterans Has Been Stolen
Date: 23 May 2006 11:56:04 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Monty Solomon wrote:

> WASHINGTON, May 22 - Personal electronic information on up to 26.5
> million military veterans, including their Social Security numbers and
> birth dates, was stolen from the residence of a Department of Veterans
> Affairs employee who had taken the data home without authorization,
> the agency said Monday.

> The department said that there was no evidence any of the information
> had been used illegally and that whoever stole it, in a burglary of
> the employee's home this month, might be unaware of its nature or how
> to use it. The stolen data do not include any health records or
> financial information, the agency said.

While this incident is a problem, I think they unnecessarily worried
people.  It is important to emphasize that the thief did not steal the
_data_, but rather, stole the contents of someone's house.  Such
thieves likely have no idea how to utilize data and usually just want
a quick sale of the hardware (TV set, jewelry), tossing away any
software.  Of course, with the publicity, _now_ a thief knows he has
something extremely valuable.

> As measured by the number of people potentially affected, the data
> loss is exceeded only by a breach last June at CardSystems Solutions,
> a payment processor, in which the accounts of 40 million credit card
> holders were compromised in a hacking incident.

This is the thing that is much more frightening.  In that, it was a
technically proficient hacker who was out to get the data and likely
knew what it was and how to make use of it.

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #197
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed May 24 14:40:10 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #198
Message-Id: <20060524184009.B6EA91553A@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 14:40:09 -0400 (EDT)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
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TELECOM Digest     Wed, 24 May 2006 14:40:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 198

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Internet is a Lawless Territory (Kate Holton)
    Cannes Sex Films Question Role of Porn and Internet (Kirsten Gehmlick)
    Cellular-News: Wednesday 24th May 2006 (cellular-news)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 24, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Bible College Student Charged in Phone Fraud Sex Case (AP News Wire)
    Fastest Internet Ever Coming Your Way (Barry Levine)
    When Will Blue Security be Back? (rakeshMT)
    Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line (Robert Bonomi)
    Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line (Vcc Ground)
    Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line (DLR)
    Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line (Raqueeb Hassan)
    Re: School District to Monitor Student Blogs (mc)
    Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today (DLR)

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: Kate Holton <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Internet is  a Lawless Territory
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 12:10:31 -0500


"Lawless" Internet proving costly for gamblers
By Kate Holton

The Internet is a "lawless land," easily accessed 24 hours a day
without stepping out of the house, and for gamblers that can be a
costly and irresistible temptation.

A recent study published in Britain suggested almost three quarters of
the population engage in some form of gambling at some point during
the year, handing the gaming industry an annual turnover of 53 billion
pounds ($99.38 billion).

The biggest growth area in gambling is online, through the Internet's
estimated 2,300 gaming sites, which generate around $12 billion a
year.

The Internet is also helping fuel a substantial rise in gambling
addiction.

"You can basically do it from your home or your work place, and you
can gamble for 24 hours, seven days a week, 365 days of the year,"
Mark Griffiths, a professor of gambling, told Reuters in an interview.

"If you are a vulnerable individual, the ease of online gambling --
the instant access and convenience of use -- is likely to fuel those
addictive tendencies you have already."

The government says 0.8 percent of the population have some sort of
addiction to gambling.

But sophisticated new software can be used to spot the unusual betting
patterns of gambling addicts, says eCOGRA, an online gaming auditor
set up by firms like 888 Plc, Ongame and software maker Microgaming.

"There are self-exclusion buttons the players can hit, and operators
will sometimes contact players to suggest a cooling-off period," said
an eCOGRA spokesman.

MASSIVE DEBTS

GamCare, a charity for gambling addicts, said those who contacted them
had average debts of over 25,000 pounds, and just under 5 percent of
callers had run up debts of over 100,000 pounds.

In Britain, the government has created the independent Gambling
Commission, which from 2007 will regulate the British companies who
run gaming sites.

Under the new Gambling Commission rules, gambling Web sites will have
to train employees to spot possible problem gamblers and offer help
and advice on their sites.

Online operators must also make sure customers are aware of how much
time and money they have spent.

But with most companies operating from offshore jurisdictions like
Gibraltar, Cyprus, Antigua and Costa Rica, complete regulation is
impossible.

"It's basically a lawless land," Gamcare's Teresa Tunstall told
Reuters. "We urge betters to use regulated and well known Web sites."

Bookmaker Ladbrokes says that while it is too early to decide whether
to bring its online gaming operations onshore, it is keen to see UK
gambling regulation extending as far as possible.

Analysts and GamCare say the circumstances of online gambling -- the
speed with which people can bet and its solitary nature -- removes a
layer of protection that is present in betting shops and casinos.

"How does anyone operating an online gambling site know if a player
has learning disabilities?" said professor Griffiths.

"How do they know if the player has had too much to drink or taken
drugs?  The point is that they don't.

"Even if one online site is responsible and says we're not going to
have that problem gambler, you are just a click away from finding
another online betting site that isn't."

(additional reporting by Pete Harrison)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

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

From: Kerstin Gehmlich and Mike Collett-White <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Cannes Sex Films Question Role of Porn and Internet
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 12:14:47 -0500


By Kerstin Gehmlich and Mike Collett-White

Directors at the Cannes film festival this year say they are using
radical images of sex to challenge mainstream pornography and its
widespread availability on the Internet.

A series of filmmakers say Internet porn alone now shapes many young
people's perception of sex and, in many cases, replaces the experience
of real physical relationships.

"There are kids who have seen pornography from a very early age,
before they are ever gonna have sex," said Larry Clark, one of the
directors of the eccentric "Destricted" -- a compilation of explicit
sex-centered stories.

In his own short film, Clark interviews young men about their sexual
preferences and then allows one candidate to appear with his favorite
porn-star.

"When I was a kid no one told me anything. Now you can go onto the
Internet and find out anything ... every other URL is sex. (Young
people) are looking at pornography and they are thinking that this is
the way to have sex," Clark said, noting his film was educational.

U.S. director John Cameron Mitchell, who has brought "Shortbus" to
Cannes, agrees that young people are increasingly using the Internet
to replace real sex.

In Shortbus, he has collected an ensemble of non-professional actors
who engage in real on-screen sex and masturbation in an attempt to
de-mystify the subject. He does not consider his film to be
pornography.

He said that the United States had a puritanical view of sex which
turned it into an issue in young people's minds. In one particularly
provocative scene in his film, three gay men engage in a sex session
while singing "The Star-Spangled Banner."

"I really believe our country specifically needs to take a look at
that stuff. You crush something, it pops up somewhere else, it comes
back to haunt you," he said.

UNEROTIC SEX

Journalists watching the film generally agreed that Mitchell had
succeeded in taking much of the eroticism out of the sex.

Film critics in Cannes say risque images, which would be considered
distasteful by many were they to be shown in a mainstream movie
theater, are unlikely to shock a film festival audience, and in any
case are not necessarily new.

Michael Winterbottom used real sex, for example, in his 2004 film "9
Songs."

"When you have run the whole gamut of sexual positions, you've lost
the power to shock," Screen magazine wrote. "When so many URLs on
the web are devoted to sex, there is little more one can say 
which will shock or offend a nation's sensibilities."

Danish director Anders Morgenthaler reverted to animation to hit out
at the porn industry in his film "Princess," which disturbed some by
portraying child abuse and violence.

Morgenthaler tells the story of a priest who is determined to destroy
all films of his deceased porn star sister and to take care of her
five-year old daughter, a traumatized child.

"I chose animation for the obvious reason that if I had made it a live
action piece you would have probably left the theater. It would have
been too terrifying to see a girl go through that," Morgenthaler told
Reuters.

"I decided to make a film about porn influence in society because I
saw porn seeking its way into everything, into clothes or toys. There
is a 'porn way' of selling things because it sells very well. I got
very angry at the role of porn, and now the Internet is becoming
increasingly pornographic."

Digital sex will feature in the British-Norwegian co-production "Free
Jimmy," while ex-porn star HPG shows a porn actor trying to get into
regular films in "We Should Not Exist."

(Additional reporting by Mike Davidson and Claudia Doerries)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news reports and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Wednesday 24th May 2006
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 07:18:35 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

Sri Lanka's TRC Offers 3G Licenses To Mobile Phone Cos
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17495.php

Sri Lanka's Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, or TRC, Tuesday
invited expressions of interest from mobile phone operators for 3G
network licenses. ...

Georgia's Telecom Invest Georgia gets licenses for 3G services
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17502.php

Georgian company Telecom Invest Georgia has won at an auction
frequencies for third generation (3G) mobile services, an official
with the National Communications Commission told Prime-Tass
Tuesday. ...

Anonymous 3G Video Calls
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17514.php

Mobestar says that it has launched the first inter-country anonymous
3G video call service. The first anonymous mobile video call supported
by Mobestar's Flexible Anonymous Communications Engine (FACE) took
place yesterday between Germany and the UK....

[[ Financial ]]

Reiman says CPP launch to cut mobile operators' revenue
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17498.php

The introduction of the Calling Party Pays (CPP) principle will
decrease the revenue of mobile operators, Russian IT and
Telecommunications Minister Leonid Reiman told a news conference
Tuesday during the meeting of telecommunications officials from ...

Verizon CFO Doesn't See Vodafone Deal In Near Term
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17501.php

It's unlikely that Verizon Communications will buy out Vodafone
Group's stake in its U.S. wireless business, Verizon Chief Financial
Officer Doreen Toben said Tuesday. ...

[[ Legal ]]

Russian Minister Laundered Money To Buy Mobile Operator
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17496.php

The Arbitration Tribunal in Zurich has ruled that Russian Information
Technology and Communications Minister Leonid Reiman used money
laundering schemes to attempt to buy a 25% stake in mobile phone
network operator Megafon, LV Finance Group said in ...

Motorola says accusations of patent right violation "groundless"
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17497.php

US mobile handset producer Motorola considers accusations that the
company is violating patent rights "groundless," Motorola said in a
press release Monday, citing Greg Estell, corporate vice president for
Motorola's Mobile Devices Europe. ...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Italy VIA Advisors To Manage Ecuador Mobile Co Telecsa
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17508.php

Italian consulting firm VIA Advisors Corporate Finance on Wednesday
will start a two-year contract to manage Ecuador's state-owned mobile
telephone operator Telecsa, Julio Garcia, Telecsa's corporate
development vice president, told Dow Jones Newswir...

New Billing Platform for Trinidad and Tobago
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17515.php

Redknee has announced that Telecommunications Services of Trinidad and
Tobago (TSTT) has deployed it's Turnkey Converged Billing
Solution. Redknee's Converged Billing provides TSTT flexible rating
across voice, messaging, data and content services wh...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Anatel: Signal blocking to cost US$430k per prison
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17504.php

Brazilian cell phone companies will have to fork out 1mn reais
(US$430,000) to install signal blocking equipment in each of SÃ£o
Paulo's 144 prisons, local newspapers quoted staff at the telecoms
regulator Anatel as saying. ...

Network Failure in South Africa
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17509.php

A verbal battle has emerged in South Africa between the newest entrant
Cell C and incumbent Vodacom which provides a national roaming service
for the operator. Last Friday, Cell C customers roaming onto the
Vodacom network found that all voice calls ...

Preparing Networks for the Football World Cup
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17510.php

Andrew Corp has been deploying indoor coverage services and capacity
improvements at Germany's football (soccer) stadiums in preparation
for the upcoming World Cup tournaments. The 2006 World Cup matches in
Germany, one of the world's biggest multina...

Another Digicel Launch in Netherlands Antilles
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17513.php

Digicel, the pan-Caribean operator has re-launched its recent
acquisition in Curacao as Digicel Curacao. Since the company entered
the Curacao market through its acquisition of Curacao Telecom last
year, Digicel has committed an investment of in exce...

[[ Personnel ]]

Vodafone: Appoints John Buchanan As Deputy Chairman
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17499.php

Vodafone Group said Tuesday that John Buchanan will become Deputy
Chairman of the Board of Directors and the Company's Senior
Independent Director, in succession to Paul Hazen who has decided to
retire from the Board. ...

Two executives from Altimo elected to Turkey's Turkcell board
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17507.php

Two executives of Russia's Altimo, a part of Alfa Group, were elected
to the board of directors of Turkey?s leading mobile operator,
Turkcell, Altimo said in a press release Tuesday. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Govt approves single concession law
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17503.php

The Peruvian government has approved a law that allows operators to
provide fixed, mobile, cable and internet services under a single
concession, the transport and communications ministry (MTC) said in a
statement. ...

Regulator begins publishing prepaid rates, updating monthly
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17505.php

El Salvador's telecom regulator Siget has begun publishing monthly
listings of mobile operators' on and off-net prepaid call rates, the
watchdog said in a news release. ...

New GSM Operator for Afghanistan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17517.php

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) based, Etisalat says that it has
secured a GSM license in Afghanistan for a license fee of US$40
million. The agreement was signed by HE Amirzai Sangin, Minister of
Communication, Afghanistan, and Mohammad Hassan Omran,...

[[ Reports ]]

One Hundred Million Mobile VOIP Users in 2011
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17511.php

As more consumers carry their iPods with them everywhere, they are
hoping Apple will add WiFi and VOIP for the killer converged mobile
entertainment device, according to a new study from ON World....

Mobility Infrastructure Sales Drop to Lowest Level in Six Quarters
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17512.php

Dell'Oro Group has reported that the total mobility infrastructure
equipment market contracted 15% on a sequential basis in the first
quarter of 2006, due mostly to seasonal weakness plus sluggish CDMA
sales. The report indicates that CDMA users have...

Market in Central and Eastern Europe to reach EUR58.4 billion in 2011
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17516.php

The Central and Eastern European mobile market is forecast to grow by
more than 10% per year to reach EUR58.4 billion in 2011, according to
a new report published by Analysys. Rising mobile phone penetration
and the increasing adoption of mobile broa...

US Customer Complaints Falling
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17518.php

The USA industry trade body, TheWireless Association's President and
CEO Steve Largent has trumpeted the publication of yet another report
showing wireless consumers to be increasingly satisfied with their
innovative service. Late last week, the Fede...

[[ Statistics ]]

Agency says WAP, mobile Internet users in Moldova at 222,500
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17500.php

The number of subscribers to Wireless Access Protocol (WAP) and mobile
Internet services in Moldova amounted to 222,500 people in
January-March, Moldova's National Regulatory Agency in
Telecommunications and Informatics (ANRTI) said Tuesday. ...

Study: Southern Cone mobile penetration reaches 58.7%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17506.php

The mobile market in Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay has
reached 58.7% penetration, with TelefÃ³nica MÃ³viles leading the way
with a 38.3% share, according to a new study from Signals Telecom
Consulting. ...

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 11:57:35 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 24, 2006
********************************

Picking your Spots
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18106?11228

     Merchants spend tens of billions of dollars on advertising in the
     U.S.  Cable operators are of the opinion that they deserve a
     bigger piece of that pie, but until they can more accurately
     target potential customers, advertisers aren't going to be very
     accommodating.  Most of the major cable operators last year
     implemented a way to target...

IMS: 'Softening' the Hardships of IP Architecture
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18104?11228

     The beauty of the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) architecture is
     that it enables "hard" switches to take on a "softer" nature
     through software-based technologies. An IP network is a dumb
     network comprised of generic switches that handle only
     transport. With IMS, the services that run on top are implemented
     via software rather than...

Broadband Market Share Reaches 70% in U.K.
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18101?11228

     Broadband connections now account for nearly 70% of all internet
     connections in the United Kingdom, according to figures from the
     National Statistics Office (NSA). In its Internet Connectivity
     March 2006 report, the NSA said that broadband connections formed
     69.2% of all connections, up from 65.1% in December 2005. Dial-up
     now accounts...

FCC Says it Cannot Investigate Phone Companies' Alleged Privacy Violations
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/18097?11228

     WASHINGTON -- The federal agency that regulates
     telecommunications has declined to look into allegations that
     phone companies broke laws by sharing customer records with the
     government's biggest spy agency.  Federal Communications
     Commission Chairman Kevin Martin said in a letter that the agency
     does not have the power to review...

MetroMesh: A Hacker's Paradise?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18096?11228

     Wireless MetroMesh technology promises a new era in anytime,
     anywhere public access Internet for the masses.  So-called mesh
     technology -- in case you've been living under a rock for the
     last year -- allows 802.11 wireless access points to pass data
     amongst themselves over the air, removing the need for multiple
     wired connections back...

Alcatel Scores A Double Triple
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18094?11228

     Alcatel set into motion a series of collaborative efforts with
     computer-industry vendors to accelerate its systems-and-software
     offerings for triple-play voice, data and video service
     providers, signing one deal with IBM and Microsoft and another
     with Hewlett-Packard (HP) and Microsoft.  According to Alcatel,
     the IBM/Microsoft...

Hybrid Hard Drives Heading to Mobile Devices
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18089?11228

     What's not to like about a mobile storage technology that offers
     more capacity, faster boot-up times and conserves power? Nothing,
     of course. That's why a new generation of hybrid hard drives
     (HHDs) will soon begin appearing in notebook computers, and
     possibly other mobile products, as soon as next year.  HHDs are
     designed to...

MEMS in Mobile Handsets Will Top $1 Billion by 2010
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/18085?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- MEMS consumption in mobile handsets reached
     US$157 million in 2005, and by 2010, consumption will exceed US$1
     billion, reports In-Stat. In addition to the microphones and bulk
     acoustic resonators that have dominated the MEMS market to date,
     there are emerging opportunities for inertial sensors
     (principally...

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

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Bible College Student Charged in Phone Fraud Sex Case
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 17:53:38 -0500


A student at Pillsbury Baptist Bible College was charged in the theft
of his roommate's debit card, which was used to pay for more than
$2,300 worth of calls to phone sex lines, prosecutors allege in court
papers.

Shane Erin Mack, 20, of Belt, Mont., was charged with the gross
misdemeanors of identity theft and theft by false representation. He
made his first court appearance on Monday. Bail was set at $2,500. He
remained in jail Tuesday afternoon.

Steele County prosecutor Scott Schrener said investigators only had
documentation in hand for about $500 worth of calls, but the victim
reported that $2,350 worth of calls had been made. Schrener said the
criminal charges will be upgraded in the future, as new statements
 from the bank arrive.

The calls were made from March 23 to May 13, according to court
papers.

Mack allegedly told investigators he admitted taking the debit card
out of his roommate's wallet and using it to make up to 30 calls to
adult phone lines from public phones on campus, the criminal complaint
said.

College spokesman Tom Lawson said Mack would not be allowed to return
to the school when classes resume in the fall. According to the
college Web site, the college offers a Christian "education program
which imparts a biblical worldview."

A call to the public defender who represented Mack in court on Monday
was not immediately returned.

Mack's next court appearance was scheduled for June 1.

Information from: Owatonna People's Press, http://www.owatonna.com
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

From: Barry Levine <newsfactor@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Fastest Internet Ever Coming Your Way
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 12:12:59 -0500


by Barry Levine, newsfactor.com

Someday, we might conquer the vast distances of space and visit the
stars.  But right now, on this planet, we are on the verge of
eliminating distance itself. And the vehicle for eliminating distance
is the next generation of the medium you are now using: the Internet.

The current Net has little to impede you as you search for
information. If you want to find the exact height of the Eiffel Tower,
for example, and also see a small video or a photo of it, you can,
within seconds.

But if you want to have a live conversation with someone standing in front
of the Eiffel Tower, at night, as if they were on the other side of a clear
window -- with the tower shimmering in more realistic detail than you can
absorb -- you have two choices. You can either fly there right now, or you
can use a PC hooked into the next-generation Internet.

That's right: An Internet that leaves the current Internet in the dust
is within reach. Some lucky individuals have already seen the
possibilities thanks to the next-gen Net's major research network, a
consortium of more than 300 universities, research labs, government
agencies, and corporations called Internet2.

The Other Side

In 2005, at a conference in San Diego, a team from the University of
Washington showed two high-definition screens. On one screen were
small head shots of seven people, stacked in a "Hollywood
Squares"-style grid. On the other was a single head shot of a
different person, who was talking. All of the people were in different
physical locations, meeting together live via uncompressed
high-definition video transmitted over Internet2.

"It was a lot different from what we have been calling a
'videoconference,'" says Michael Wellings, engineering director for
streaming media and broadcast at UW.

"Some of the people held up sheets of paper to the camera, for the
others to see on their screen, and the writing on the papers could be
read," he remembers. "It was literally like seeing someone else on the
other side of a glass window."

The demonstration in San Diego was one answer to the big question of
next-gen Net: What would people do if transmission speeds were
practically unlimited on the Internet, if delays were not an issue?

As it turns out, most of the answers involve eliminating the distance
between people.

To make video transmission and personal interaction so immediate that
the remoteness of the participants is erased, you need lots and lots
of bandwidth. Bandwidth is the speed at which information -- text,
pictures, video, and other data -- is carried over the Internet. You
can visualize the now-vanishing dial-up Internet, with modem speeds of
up to 56 Kbps, as a leisurely country lane. Broadband Internet, such
as DSL or cable (1 to 5 Mbps), might be a regular street that you
travel to get to work.

But the next generation of the Internet, with bandwidth starting
between 100 Mbps and 1 Gbps and climbing from there, is a
superhighway.

There are many high-speed networks that, collectively, can be
considered the next-generation Internet. But central to the
development of new applications is Internet2.

Founded in 1996, Internet2 is and will remain a research test bed.
"Internet2 will never become part of the public Internet," says Lauren
Rotman, a spokesperson for the Internet2 consortium. "Internet2 is a
stepping stone between the lab and the commercial marketplace, and
will always be a testing ground. But we hope the technologies we
develop will make it to the public."

Assemble the Musicians

Much of the research is based around Internet2's high-performance
backbone, called Abilene, that currently runs at up to 10 Gbps. But
Internet2 is planning to upgrade Abilene to 80 separate channels of 10
Gbps each, using different wavelengths transmitted over fiber-optic
cable. These channels could produce a mind-boggling 800 Gbps of
bandwidth.

With so much speed and so little delay, unthinkable projects become
possible. You could send high-definition video uncompressed to
heighten it to a hyper-realistic level; use multichannel digital
sound; display real-time-generated 3D graphics; control remote devices
with no latency; or harness separate, powerful computing facilities
into one mammoth virtual machine.

Or you could transport an orchestra.

In 2001, famed conductor Michael Tilson Thomas stood on a podium at
the New World Symphony, a postgraduate music school in
Miami. Simultaneously, in New York, a 40-piece student orchestra and a
student conductor were at the Manhattan School of Music. During an
entire master class transmitted over Internet2, Thomas conducted and
instructed the students as they played Beethoven's Seventh Symphony in
a way that the composer never imagined -- across hundreds of miles, in
real time and in high-definition video and audio.

The New World Symphony has plans to build a $100 million Frank
Gehry-designed facility in which all practice rooms and performance
spaces will have Internet2 connections.

"Internet2 is essential to us," says Tom Snook, New World Symphony's
chief technology officer. "It actually removes all spatial boundaries
between individuals, allowing people to be in the same space. When we
have our musical fellows in an Internet2 room, within about five
minutes they totally forget about distance and act like they're in the
same space with the other person."

Doctors Without Borders

Sharing physical space with another person would seem to be a basic
requirement for some kinds of interaction -- like, say, surgery. But,
amazingly, the next-gen Net is removing that prerequisite.

On September 7, 2001, less than a block away from the World Trade
Center in New York, Dr. Jacques Marescaux conducted the first
"telesurgery" in history. Using robotically controlled laparoscopic
tools and a network connection of up to 40 Mbps, he removed the gall
bladder of a 68-year-old woman in a hospital in Strasbourg, France.

The "minimally invasive" laparoscopic tools used by Marescaux have a
video camera and surgical instruments at the tips. Watching a live
video feed from inside the patient, the surgeon performs the operation
with the instruments inserted into a series of small
incisions. Compared to a large incision, the smaller cuts reduce pain,
recovery time, and risk.

This historic operation was performed as a "proof of concept," says
Dr.  Timothy Broderick, director of the Advanced Center for
Telemedicine and Surgical Innovation of the University of
Cincinnati. Telesurgery has many applications for NASA and the
military, and could improve emergency medical procedures in remote
areas. Other doctors were in the operating room in France, but the
procedure itself was conducted across the Atlantic Ocean, with only
video and audio guiding the surgeon.

Although this medical turning point was lost in the events of
September 11, it broke a barrier. Since then, more than two dozen
successful telesurgeries have been performed, including colon removals
and hernia repairs.

"On a network with sufficient bandwidth and quality-of-service,"
Broderick says, "it's like you're operating on a patient in the same
room."

One experimental project, still in the development stage, is the
Defense Department-funded "Trauma Pod," a portable operating room that
would allow telesurgery on the battlefield. There would be at least
one major difference from the first telesurgery, however: The patient
would be the only human in the operating room. All of the other
operating-room personnel would be robots.

Plumbing the Depths

The next-gen Net not only can save airfare or enable remote-controlled
surgery, but also can become an underwater portal.

Robert Ballard is one of the most famous explorers alive. He
discovered the wreckages of the Titanic, the German battleship
Bismarck, the aircraft carrier Yorktown, and John F. Kennedy's
legendary PT-109.

In 2004, Ballard and crew revisited the Titanic, nearly 20 years after
his initial discovery. Using Internet2, he broadcast live video from
12,000 feet below the North Atlantic. This real-time sharing is a key
part of Ballard's vision to make "telepresence" intrinsic to his
expeditions.

In 2005, a remotely operated vehicle made its way underwater as part
of Ballard's expedition to explore hydrothermal vent fields in the
mid-Atlantic Ocean. Back in a lab at the University of Washington,
Associate Professor Deborah Kelley steered the craft, as if she were
playing a video game, over Internet2. Live video feeds went to
classrooms across the U.S.

"We can't do this with the commodity Internet, because of latency,"
says Tom Dudchik of Immersion Presents, an after-school
science-education program founded by Ballard. "Commodity Internet" is
researcher-speak for the regular Internet. "With Internet2, there is
no latency, no delay, no need to wait for the vehicle to react or to
overcompensate. I push it (remotely), it goes."

Immersion's underwater television schedule includes a host with the
appropriate name of Ernie Kovacs. But this Ernie Kovacs, in contrast
to his early-TV pioneer namesake, performs in such locations as 60
feet below the ocean's surface, in an underwater kelp forest off
Monterey Bay, California.

Exploring the ocean floor, the diver Ernie Kovacs answers live
questions from schoolchildren around the country, who watch his live
video program in their classrooms over Internet2.

Galaxies and Gridirons

When the Next Gen Net removes barriers of distance, it often removes
barriers to cooperation as well.

Take astronomers, for example. In the old days, when they wanted to
use one of the remotely situated, massive observatories, they had to
pack their bags and hope that their chosen telescope, high on some
mountain top, would bag a celestial treat.

But with the arrival of Internet2, astronomers can now sit in the
comfort of their own homes or offices and remotely control massive
telescopes -- like the Gemini Observatory telescopes in Hawaii and the
Chilean Andes, or the legendary telescope at Arecibo in Puerto Rico.

More important, Internet2 is also enabling scientists to combine
collections of massive amounts of data from these and other facilities
worldwide and analyze them in real time -- essentially creating
extremely powerful, virtual telescopes.

Or take football teams. About 110 NCAA schools regularly exchange
videos so they can see their next week's opponent without sending
scouts. They used to send films; now, hard drives or DVDs of
broadcast-quality video are shipped.  "By the last week in the season,
about one-quarter terabyte's worth of video is FedEx'd," says Chris
Thomas, a network engineer at UCLA.

Using the regular Internet for sending this video is possible, but
highly inefficient. "It would take forever," said Thomas. "Plus, we
would have the (excess) download charges."

By taking advantage of a California high-speed regional network,
however, athletic departments now exchange videos easily, quickly, and
inexpensively.  This kind of high-capacity network "is the opposite of
the commodity Net," Thomas says. "It says 'send as much as possible.'"

The Waiting Game

With these high-capacity networks practically asking to be used "as
much as possible," when will the general public see the next-gen Net?

In part, we already are. According to the Internet2 consortium, there
are about four million people -- including students in grade schools
and colleges, and researchers in university, corporate, or government
labs -- using extremely high-speed networks. The students in
particular are expected to hasten the technology's mainstream
adoption. "They're going to graduate and move into the world, and
that's going to drive demand in the marketplace," says Internet2's
Rotman.

Many of the next-gen Net projects are accessible to the public in
formats that allow viewing on DSL or cable modem. The University of
Washington, for instance, runs ResearchChannel, a consortium of 30
universities and organizations. Immersion Presents regularly makes
taped videos of its expeditions available at its Web site.

Commercial uses of the next-gen Net are beginning as well. For
example, Ruckus Networks in Herndon, Virginia, uses high-speed local
area networks to deliver legal versions of movies and music from
college-situated servers to students. Recently, it began using
Internet2 to deliver new offerings to the University of Idaho.

But when will we have, say, 40 to 100 Mbps or more in the home?
"Internet speed is only as good as the last mile," notes Sowmyanarayan
Sampath, an analyst at the Boston Consulting Group, a technology
research firm. The main backbones of the old, familiar Internet are
already fiber optic; it's that last leg to your home that's the
problem, as transmission usually comes over on slower phone or cable
lines.

"It will be three to four years before very high speed connections
start really moving into homes in the U.S.," he says, as either fiber
or as new upgrades of DSL or cable. He expects that fiber itself will
probably add between one and two million homes each year.

The More Things Change

Regardless of when the next-gen Net makes it to your home, get
prepared to watch a high-definition version of "The Matrix," on a
whim, while sitting on a park bench.

"I expect that we will see downloadable high-definition video to cell
phones with heads-up, high-resolution glasses within the lifetimes of
the people reading this article," says Michael Wellings, engineering
director at the University of Washington. According to Laurie Burns,
director of member and public relations at Internet2, the consortium
is using wireless in several projects.

In the meantime, it's useful to remember what's changed and what has
not.  Our everyday Internet has become an information and
communications pipeline, encompassing mail, text conversations,
dictionaries, libraries, telephony, even videoconferencing and
television. But more than a decade after the first Web browser became
commonplace, we still have movie theaters, paper birthday cards, and
meetings between people in the same building.

The next-generation Internet, as a window, might change forever the
need for travel, shipping, surgeons in the same city, or standalone
observatories.  But it is likely that we will still go to conferences,
use overnight delivery services, and be operated on by people who are
standing in front of us.

Even when physical distance is dissolved by bandwidth, we'll likely
find new reasons to get together in real space. As the New World
Symphony's Shook notes: "We'll never replace live interaction in the
same room with other people."

But we're getting pretty close.

Copyright 2006 NewsFactor Network, Inc.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more tech news from the daily media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: rakeshMT <rakeshinnovation@gmail.com>
Subject: When Will Bluesecurity Return?
Date: 24 May 2006 09:05:22 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The idea has been great and I need the members to tell is there any
possibility of Blue Frog coming back.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Yes, it was a good scheme, but it is
not likely the Enablers will allow it to continue, because, as one
Enabler stated, "The spammerscammers may decide to sue you for
disrupting their service." The idea was each person recieving one or
more items of spam makes a complaint to the _bonafide, clearly
demonstrated_ sender of the spam. People made these complaints through
an authorized agent -- Blue Security -- which also made an
investigation as to the true sender before releasing the emails of
complaint. Needless to say, the Enablers flew into a rage about this,
with complaints about how the scheme was (a) an illegal DDoS, upon the
'victims' (really the senders) of the spam, and (b) it was not very
well thought out and quite inefectual and accomplished nothing.  It
must have been pretty well thought out and not that big of a waste of
time since the spammers retaliated with a massive attack on Blue
Security; really banged it up pretty bad. And since I have yet to see
any Sheriff banging on or kicking in my door to place me under arrest,
apparently the 'illegal DDoS' did not hold water either. So, I do
not know if the Frog will be back or not; obviously not if the
Enablers have their way.   PAT]

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 23:43:07 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.196.10@telecom-digest.org>, <l0200100@yahoo.com>
wrote:

> An analog T1 line for us is about $250 US and can get us 23 voice
> lines.

> Does anyone know what the capacity for a digital T1 line is?  Also,
> what is the approximate cost?

> Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

A T-1 is 1.544 mbit/sec.  It is a digital service, by definition.

How many voice channels you can cram onto it is a matter of how you do
it.

IF you're using it as your link to the telco:

  You can treat it as an ISDN PRI , which gets you 23 B channels
  (voice or data at 64kbit/sec) plus 1 D channel (shared).

  You can treat it as a "DS-1", which gives you 24 DS-0 (56kbit/sec)
  digital voice channels.  Which can be converted to analog by a 'D-4'
  type "channel bank", or equivalent.

IF you're using it for a private point-to-point link, you can use
various kinds of compression on the link -- as long as you have
compatible equipment on both ends of the link -- you can get 24, 48,
64, 96, 128, or even 192 voice circuits over one such link.  The
fidelity of the voice reproduction goes down as the number of 'lines'
on the T-1 goes up.  At 48 voice 'lines', quality is 'to the ear',
virtually indistinguishable from a regular phone line.

'Cost' is whatever that whomever you're buying from says it is.

And things vary tremendously depending on where you are located.  A
difference of a few tens of kilometers can make a tremendous
difference in cost.  A difference of 'across the street' can make a
50% difference in the cost of a 'bare' circuit (i.e. not including the
'value' of the service provided by 'whatever it is connected to'.
(e.g., the actual telephone network services -- dial-tone, phone
number, etc.)

In the U.S., ISDN PRI is frequently more expensive than a DS-1, the
telco figures that they're providing extra/advanced services with PRI,
so it should be worth more to the customer.  And have priced it
accordingly.  But a few telcos do it differently -- wanting to
encourage the high-tech use.

Either IDSN PRI, or DS-1 requires 'CPE' (equipment _at_ your location)
to utilize it.  This takes he form of a PBX with the appropriate kind
of 'trunk' line card in it, and the corresponding software, *or* (for
a DS-1 only) a 'channel bank' to convert things to POTS analog lines
 -- into which you can plug any kind of 'standard' telephone appliance.

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

From: Vcc Ground <vccground@yahoo.co.in>
Subject: Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line
Date: 24 May 2006 04:14:18 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


T1 is a 1.544 Mbit/s "digital" signal consisting of 24 "digital"
channels. When used to carry voice calls, one channel is reserved for
maintenance/synchronisation, leaving 23 channels for the
customer. Each such channel only carries a digital signal: ISDN
telephone signal or a "digitised" analogue telephone conversation.

VG

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 08:53:53 -0400
From: DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
Subject: Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line


l0200100@yahoo.com wrote:

> An analog T1 line for us is about $250 US and can get us 23 voice
> lines.

> Does anyone know what the capacity for a digital T1 line is?  Also,
> what is the approximate cost?

> Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

By definition a T1 line is digital. Apparently you're being quoted
with a box to convert the end point to 23 POTS lines/circuits.

Each circuit on a T1 has 64KB of data bandwidth. How much it's costs
to get it as data vs POTS varies by state, vendor, "deal of the week",
etc...

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

From: Raqueeb Hassan <wideangle@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Analog T1 Line vs. Digital T1 Line
Date: 24 May 2006 10:04:26 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> Does anyone know what the capacity for a digital T1 line is?

<snip>

I thought all T1s are digital. Well, is that because, how that T1 is
configured at the service provider end to carry 23 bearer (B) channels
and 1 data (D) channel for analog voice? Or 1.544-Mbps of data
bandwidth for point to point connectivity?

Or is that just a tech talk on the basis of service it offers?

Raqueeb Hassan
Bangladesh

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: School District to Monitor Student Blogs
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 18:58:52 -0400


> "The concept that searching a blog site is an invasion of privacy is
> almost an oxymoron," he said. "It is called the World Wide Web."

I agree that a school has a perfect right to *watch* students' public
behavior outside of school, such as posting blogs.  The difficulty
arises only if they want to impose a punishment for something done
outside of the school and not directly affecting it. This in turn
depends partly on to what extent the school can be trusted to
administer justice fairly.

Frequently, public schools make the headlines for imposing a totally
unreasonable penalty on a student; it's as if they don't know how to
back down after making a mistake.  I'm afraid that might happen here:
a school administrator completely misunderstands something on a web
page and lowers the boom.

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 09:13:35 -0400
From: DLR <news22@raleighthings.com>
Subject: Re: BellSouth Demands Retraction of NSA Report from USA Today


Kenneth P. Stox wrote:
> The real question is: Can we possibly trust anything a Company says
> anymore if national security is involved?

> http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/01jan20061800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2006/06-4538.htm

> http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode15/usc_sec_15_00000078---m000-.html

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: You know, that is a good point. How can
> we tell whether a company is telling the truth or lying these days?
> PAT]

"These Days"

How could you ever?

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, because in the past, companies
mainly had their customers to worry about and attempt (or not) to
please. Now, given the present political administration, they will
often as not have the government on their case as well. PAT]

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

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TELECOM Digest     Thu, 25 May 2006 16:00:00 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 199

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Hit-and-Miss at Google (Jonathan Berr)
    Honda Says Brain Waves Control Robot (Yuri Kageama)
    TiVo Statement on Developments in Lawsuit Against EchoStar (Monty Solomon)
    TiVo Seeks to Block EchoStar DVR Service (Monty Solomon)
    EchoStar Statement in Response to Recent Developments In Tivo (M Solomon)
    Microsoft, Alcatel, HP Form Alliance (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Treasury Ends Excise Tax on Phone Services (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Cellular-News: Thursday 25th May 2006 (cellular-news)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 25, 2006 (Telecomdirect_daily)
    Telephone to Modem (yahooshua@gmail.com)
    MOS Reading (mike7411@gmail.com)
    Using Cell Phone For Frequency Calibration Reference (Richard Eldon BARBER)
    Re: School District to Monitor Student Blogs (Lisa Hancock)

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-
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               ===========================

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: Jonathan Berr <thestreet@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Hit-and-Miss at Google
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 22:43:09 -0500


Internet Hit-and-Miss at Google
By Jonathan Berr
TheStreet.com Senior Writer

URL: http://www.thestreet.com/tech/internet/10286988.html

Many Google users aren't bothering to check out some of the company's
newest and most-hyped features.

Google Calendar, Google Finance and Google Talk each account for less
than one half of 1% of the traffic to the Google network of Web sites,
according to a review of the top 20 Google domains by the market
research firm Hitwise.

Google Calendar was introduced last month, and Google Finance debuted
in March. The company introduced Google Talk, an instant-messaging
platform, last year. Hitwise did its analysis during the week ending
May 13.

Not surprisingly, even with all the new Google products out there,
Hitwise found the most popular feature on Google is still search. It
accounts for 80% of the company's traffic. Google has become
synonymous with Internet search, mostly through word of mouth, also
known as viral marketing.

"Google has to realize that viral marketing happens to only a handful
of companies or products and cannot be relied on," says Garrett
Rogers, who writes the Googling Google blog. "Just because Google
search got very lucky with its rapid adoption rate in the past doesn't
mean its other services will."

Nonetheless, the product announcements outside of search show no signs
of letting up. Google says it isn't worried about their slow adoption.

"We've been very happy with how Google Calendar and other products
have been received by users, and we continue to work to make them
better based on the feedback we receive from those users," a Google
spokeswoman says.

In any case, Google is trying to leverage its supremacy in search into
other areas dominated by Microsoft, Yahoo! and other rivals.

This year, Wall Street has been buzzing about the growing competition
faced by the company. Google's shares have dropped 10% -- they fell
$2.02 Friday to $368.97 -- though Yahoo! and Microsoft are both off
more. Of course, Google's stock has more than quadrupled off its
August 2004 initial public offering level.

Google's shares aren't going to move to the $500 level Wall Street
analysts target unless the company can find a way to top itself. The
Hitwise data illustrate that any upside surprise probably isn't going
to come from outside Google's core search business.

Less than 1% of traffic on Google went to Google Maps, the Froogle
shopping site and Google Video Search. Google Base, the free listing
service that some analysts say is a potential threat to eBay
(EBAY:Nasdaq) , didn't make the top 20 list, Hitwise says.

Expectations about the performance of Google Finance may have been
overblown. Hitwise estimates that Yahoo! Finance got the most traffic
of any financial news site during the study period, while Google
Finance ranked 39th.

"It seems like the primary way people are getting there is searching
for stock symbols," says Bill Tancer, Hitwise's general manager of
global research of Google Finance. "It does not have the customizeable
functionality that you have in Yahoo! Finance."

To be sure, plenty of people continue to flock to Google. Unique
visitors to the company's network of sites rose 38% to 105.8 million
in April, according to comScore Networks. Google also continues to
have a stranglehold on the search market that shows no signs of
weakening.

In fact, Google emphasized its commitment to search during its recent
open house for members of the press and industry analysts. The company
also told the crowd that an internal audit found that its employees
weren't meeting their requirements to devote 70% of their time to
search.

If Google is slacking off in search, its competitors don't seem to be
benefiting. Google once again gained market share in April, while
rivals such as Yahoo! and MSN lost it, according to comScore. However,
Yahoo! has questioned comScore's claims that it is losing market
share.


NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news headlines and stories, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Yuri Kageyama <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Honda Says Brain Waves Control Robot
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 22:44:43 -0500


By YURI KAGEYAMA, AP Business Writer

In a step toward linking a person's thoughts to machines, Japanese
automaker Honda said it has developed a technology that uses brain
signals to control a robot's very simple moves.

In the future, the technology that Honda Motor Co. developed with ATR
Computational Neuroscience Laboratories could be used to replace
keyboards or cell phones, researchers said Wednesday. It also could
have applications in helping people with spinal cord injuries, they
said.

In a video demonstration in Tokyo, brain signals detected by a
magnetic resonance imaging scanner were relayed to a robotic hand. A
person in the MRI machine made a fist, spread his fingers and then
made a V-sign. Several seconds later, a robotic hand mimicked the
movements.

Further research would be needed to decode more complex movements.

The machine for reading the brain patterns also would have to become
smaller and lighter -- like a cap that people can wear as they move
about, said ATR researcher Yukiyasu Kamitani.

What Honda calls a "brain-machine interface" is an improvement over
past approaches, such as those that required surgery to connect
wires. Other methods still had to train people in ways to send brain
signals or weren't very accurate in reading the signals, Kamitani
said.

Honda officials said the latest research was important not only for
developing intelligence for the company's walking bubble-headed robot,
Asimo, but also for future auto technology.

"There is a lot of potential for application to autos such as safety
measures," said Tomohiko Kawanabe, president of Honda Research
Institute Japan Co.

Asimo, about 50 inches tall, can talk, walk and dance. It's available
only for rental but is important for Honda's image and has appeared at
events and TV ads.

At least another five years are probably needed before Asimo starts
moving according to its owner's mental orders, according to Honda.

Right now, Asimo's metallic hand can't even make a V-sign.


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news reports from Associated Press please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 15:32:40 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: TiVo Statement on Developments in Lawsuit Against EchoStar


     TiVo Statement on Developments in Lawsuit Against EchoStar
     - May 24, 2006 10:18 AM (PR Newswire)
     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=58742129

ALVISO, Calif., May 24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- TiVo Inc. (Nasdaq:
TIVO), the creator of and a leader in television services for digital
video recorders (DVR), today offered the following comment on the
recent developments in the lawsuit against EchoStar Communications
Corporation:

    "The level of misleading spin that EchoStar is putting out with
    respect to our patent case against them is quite extraordinary.
    We are pleased to state that the USPTO issued its first Office
    Action in the reexamination.  The USPTO reexamined all 61 claims
    set forth in the Barton patent confirming the validity of most of
    the claims, including two of the claims that EchoStar has been
    found to have willfully infringed.  In the Office Action, the
    USPTO expressly rejected the invalidity arguments put forward by
    EchoStar.  While certain of the patent claims were rejected by the
    patent office, this should in no way impact the jury verdict.  We
    will now be given an opportunity with the patent office to discuss
    our claims which we believe should result in a reaffirmed and
    strengthened patent.  We will provide a real understanding of how
    this process works on our earnings call after close of market
    today."

Founded in 1997, TiVo pioneered a brand new category of products with
the development of the first commercially available digital video
recorder (DVR).  Sold through leading consumer electronic retailers,
TiVo has developed a brand which resonates boldly with consumers as
providing a superior television experience. Through agreements with
leading satellite and cable providers, TiVo also integrates its full
set of DVR service features into the set-top boxes of mass
distributors. TiVo's DVR functionality and ease of use, with such
features as Season Pass(TM) recordings and WishList(R) searches, has
elevated its popularity among consumers and has created a whole new
way for viewers to watch television. With a continued investment in
its patented technologies, TiVo is revolutionizing the way consumers
watch and access home entertainment. Rapidly becoming the focal point
of the digital living room, TiVo's DVR is at the center of
experiencing new forms of content on the TV, such as broadband
delivered video, music and photos. With innovative features such as,
TiVoToGo(TM) and online scheduling, TiVo is expanding the notion of
consumers experiencing "TiVo, TV your way." The TiVo(R) service is
also at the forefront of providing innovative marketing solutions for
the television industry, including a unique platform for advertisers
and audience measurement research. The company is based in Alviso,
Calif.

SOURCE  TiVo Inc.
    -0-                             05/24/2006
    /CONTACT:  Jeffrey Weir of Sloane & Company, +1-212-446-1878/
    CO:  TiVo Inc.; EchoStar Communications Corporation
ST:  California
IN:  ENT TVN CPR CSE
SU:  LAW PLW

CM
 -- NYW116 --
1519 05/24/2006 10:18 EDT

http://www.prnewswire.com

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 15:34:11 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: TiVo Seeks to Block EchoStar DVR Service


NEW YORK (AP) -- The ongoing patent dispute between TiVo Inc. and
EchoStar Communications Corp. flared up again this week as TiVo filed
an injunction seeking to ban EchoStar from making or selling its
digital video recorder product.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=58745632

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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 15:37:30 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: EchoStar Statement in Response to Recent Developments In Tivo Case


     EchoStar Statement in Response to Recent Developments In the Tivo
     Inc. v. EchoStar Communications Corp. Lawsuit
     - May 24, 2006 07:00 AM (BusinessWire)
     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=58736290

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

ENGLEWOOD, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 24, 2006--EchoStar
Communications Corporation (Nasdaq:DISH) has issued the following
statement regarding recent developments in the Tivo Inc. v. EchoStar
Communications Corp. lawsuit:

"We are pleased that the United States Patent and Trademark Office
yesterday rejected many of Tivo's patent claims as invalid. That
reexamination ruling, together with the favorable decision from the
Court of Appeals earlier this month (finding that the Texas court
abused its discretion in connection with key trial evidence withheld
from the jury), are steps in the right direction as we prepare our
response to Tivo's recently filed injunction motion. Similarly, the
favorable U.S. Supreme Court decision last week in the Ebay patent
injunction case will be considered as part of the long process ahead."

About EchoStar

EchoStar Communications Corporation (Nasdaq:DISH) serves more than
12.2 million satellite TV customers through its DISH Network(TM), the
fastest growing U.S. provider of advanced digital television services
in the last five years. DISH Network offers hundreds of video and
audio channels, Interactive TV, HDTV, sports and international
programming, together with professional installation and 24-hour
customer service.

CONTACT: EchoStar Communications Corporation
             Kathie Gonzalez, 720-514-5351

press@echostar.com

SOURCE: EchoStar Communications Corporation


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

Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 12:38:28 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Microsoft, Alcatel, HP Form Alliance


USTelecom dailyLead
May 24, 2006
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dGlYfDtuteluxNgsvU

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Microsoft, Alcatel, HP form alliance
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Comverse snaps up Netcentrex
* StreamCast sues eBay, other defendants over VoIP technology
* China Mobile close to Millicom acquisition
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Shopping for or selling telecom equipment?
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Cavalier rolls out MPEG-4 video service via fiber network
* Study: Mobile VoIP to cross 100M users in five years
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Martin: FCC won't probe NSA matter
* S.C. governor signs statewide franchise plan; N.J. advances franchise bill
* Net neutrality debate: Craig versus McCurry

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dGlYfDtuteluxNgsvU

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

Date: Thu, 25 May 2006 12:35:59 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Treasury Ends Excise Tax on Phone Services


USTelecom dailyLead
May 25, 2006
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dGzgfDtutemfglXZVa

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* Treasury ends excise tax on phone services
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T's new satellite broadband service gets off the ground
* AOL strikes broadband deal with Covad
* Cablevision faces lawsuit over network DVR service
* Hurdles may lie ahead for Google's wireless projects
* Vonage shares slip in debut
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* USTelecom applauds IRS move to end telephone tax
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Yankee: FMC to shake up communications market
* Analysis: The market for 3G embedded modems
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Senator calls for states to assume franchise duties

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dGzgfDtutemfglXZVa

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Thursday 25th May 2006
Date: Thu, 25 May 2006 07:25:35 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News - http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ 3G ]]

NEWS SNAP:Telenor To Boost 3G Phone Sales In Scandinavia
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17523.php

Norwegian telecommunications operator Telenor, Wednesday said it will
step up efforts to sell 3G mobile phones and services to its customers
in Scandinavia in a bid to offset falling voice revenues. ...

[[ Financial ]]

Telenor: Sees 06 Revenue Growth Around 30%
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17519.php

Norwegian telecommunications company Telenor, Wednesday said at its
capital markets day it expects to have revenue growth of around 30% in
2006. ...

Telenor: Turnaround Of Swedish Mobile Ahead Of Schedule
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17521.php

Norwegian telecom operator Telenor is proceeding well with the
turnaround of its recently acquired Swedish mobile operation from
Vodafone Group, a senior executive said Wednesday. ...

PRESS: Azeri minister says govt plans to sell stake in Azercell
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17522.php

The Azeri government plans to sell its 35.7% stake in the country's
largest mobile operator Azercell by year-end, the country's IT and
Communications Minister Ali Abbasov said, Vedomosti business daily
reported Wednesday. ...

China Mobile Near $5.3 Billion Deal To Buy Millicom
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17528.php

China Mobile Communications Corp. is reportedly on the verge of
acquiring Millicom International Cellular in a US$5.3 billion deal
that would expand the Chinese company's footprint into a slew of
emerging markets around the world. ...

Vodafone Signs Concession Deal With Turkey Telecom Board
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17529.php

U.K. wireless operator Vodafone Group, Wednesday said it signed a
concession contract with the Turkish telecommunications board,
overcoming one of the last hurdles to finalize the buy of Telsim Mobil
Telekomunikasyon. ...

Official says Russian mobile operators put pressure on smaller cos, regulators
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17530.php

The recent announcement by Russia's two largest mobile operators that
they plan to increase interconnection tariffs for other operators puts
"pressure on other market participants and regulatory bodies," Vitaly
Slizen, a department director with the ...

[[ Handsets ]]

Motorola challenges Russian handling of handsets seizure
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17520.php

Senior representatives of Motorola, Tuesday criticized the way Russian
authorities handled the seizure and subsequent destruction of its
handsets on the grounds they were unsafe. ...

Ancel signs agreement with IXI Mobile to launch new devices
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17525.php

Uruguayan state-run mobile operator Ancel has become the first Latin
American telco to use the Ogo range of devices made by US telecoms
manufacturer IXI Mobile, IXI said in a statement. ...

2GB Memory Cards for Mobile Phones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17539.php

Toshiba has announced an expanded line-up of large capacity miniSD
memory cards with the introduction of a 2GB capacity card which can be
used in mobile phones. The new Toshiba-branded miniSD card will be
available from mid-June 2006. At just 20.0mm ...

[[ Legal ]]

PRESS: Russia's Reiman denies affiliation with IPOC fund
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17524.php

Russian IT and Telecommunications Minister Leonid Reiman "has never
been the beneficiary of IPOC International Growth Fund or of companies
affiliated with the fund," the minister said in a statement, Vedomosti
business daily reported Wednesday. ...

Qualcomm Sues Nokia - Again
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17536.php

Qualcomm says that it has commenced patent infringement litigation in
the UK against Nokia. The proceedings, issued in the Patents Court of
the High Court of England and Wales, allege infringement of two
patents by Nokia in the United Kingdom in rela...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Mobile TV Subscribers Grow to More Than 2 Million in the USA
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17537.php

Telephia has announced the launch of a mobile television user panel in
the USA. This longitudinal research panel will provide the mobile
industry with detailed measurement of the attitudes and behaviors
among the rapidly growing mobile TV audience. T...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Entel to deploy WiMax national network with Alvarion
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17527.php

Chilean telco Entel has awarded Israeli wireless systems provider
Alvarion a contract to deploy the country's first WiMax network for
voice and data services, Alvarion said in a statement. ...

US Military Orders Cingular Kit
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17538.php

The United States Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM) has ordered wireless
voice and data communications services from Cingular Wireless through
the federal FISC contracting vehicle. Norfolk, VA-based USJFCOM
already has ordered nearly 700 mobile phones, ...

[[ Network Operators ]]

Claro to offer push-to-talk to consumer market
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17526.php

Brazilian mobile phone company Claro, part of Mexico's AmÃ©rica
MÃ³vil, is to offer a push-to-talk mobile service (PoC) to the
consumer market, reported local newspaper Gazeta Mercantil. ...

[[ Reports ]]

Cell Phones Take 30% Slice of Navigation Market by 2010
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17532.php

A new Strategy Analytics report has concluded that at the right price
points, cellular phone companies and traditional automotive system
suppliers are now well-positioned to present a serious competitive
response to the low cost, well branded navigat...

Why Japan and South Korea Lead the World in Contactless Payments
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17533.php

Japan and South Korea lead the world in adopting contactless payment
solutions says a new report from ABI Research. Both countries have
implemented nationwide services on a commercial scale. Mobile
operators and issuers address a varied range of mark...

Korea Faces Eroding High-Tech Competitiveness
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17535.php

Once a rising power in the high-tech business, South Korea now is
facing mounting competitive pressure that is slowing or even reversing
its advances in key product areas, according to Derek Lidow, president
and chief executive officer of the market-...

[[ Statistics ]]

85 million Arab Cellular Subscribers in 2005
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17531.php

A new report from Arab Advisors Group says that with the advent of new
operators and increased competition in 2005, subscribers for 39
examined cellular operators in 18 Arab countries reached 84.844
million. Al Jawal and Maroc Telecom sustained their...

[[ Technology ]]

Nokia Releases Open Source Mobile Browser
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17534.php

Nokia has decided to release the source code for its Series 60 web
browser to the open source software community. The web browser source
code released by Nokia comes under the terms of the open source BSD
License, a highly permissive software license...

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

Date: Thu, 25 May 2006 11:37:23 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Thursday, May 25, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 25, 2006
********************************

E911 Wrestles with VoIP
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18126?11228

     As IP-based technology and continuing wireless location-based
     technology complexities converge, some E911 professionals say the
     evolution of E911 systems is proving a little more of a headache
     than was imagined a few years ago.  VoIP could be both a boon and
     a curse for local emergency service providers and wireless
     carriers that are...

Yahoo, eBay To Join Forces in Partnership
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/110/18117?11228

     SAN FRANCISCO -- Internet powerhouses Yahoo Inc. and eBay
     Inc. are joining forces in an alliance that appears aimed at
     thwarting the recent expansions of online search engine leader
     Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp.  Under the multiyear partnership
     announced Thursday, the Silicon Valley companies will draw upon
     each other's strengths...

Boingo To Buy Concourse Communications
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18115?11228

     LOS ANGELES -- Wi-Fi access provider Boingo Wireless Inc. has
     reached a deal to acquire Concourse Communications Group LLC,
     which operates wireless access networks in a dozen major North
     American airports.  Financial terms of the deal were not
     disclosed.  Wi-Fi hot spots enable travelers at the airports to
     access the Internet...

Qualcomm Files Suit Against Nokia
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18113?11228

     Qualcomm is once again battling Nokia in the legal arena. The
     company filed a patent infringement lawsuit claiming Nokia is
     violating two of its patents in the United Kingdom. Nokia says it
     is disappointed Qualcomm is once again turning to the courts. The
     complaint was filed in the Patents Court of the High Court of
     England and...

KPN Buys Enertel
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18108?11228

     Continuing its shopping spree, Dutch telco KPN is paying $12.85
     million to buy rival broadband and telecom service provider
     Enertel from Greenfield Capital Partners.  The deal to acquire
     Enertel is one of a series of acquisitions that KPN has made
     during the last year as it looks to boost its position in the
     Dutch market. Its most high-...

Alcatel Under Fire Down Under
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18107?11228

     A multibillion-dollar contract awarded to Alcatel (NYSE: ALA -
     message board; Paris: CGEP:PA) by Telstra Corp. has come under
     scrutiny after questions were raised about alleged favoritism and
     the vendor's previous performance for the Australian incumbent.
     In November 2005, Alcatel was awarded a $2.55 billion contract as
     a lead...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: yahooshua@gmail.com
Subject: Telephone to Modem
Date: 25 May 2006 05:53:09 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I was wondering why with the advent of VoIP and Skype Vonage and all
of this stuff; someone hasn't come up with software that can activate
your modem in such a way that you plug your handset telephone into
your modem and then use one of these services.

Does anyone know if this would work? Why or why not?

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

From: mike7411@gmail.com
Subject: MOS Reading
Date: 25 May 2006 07:37:50 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Is there any software that I can feed an input WAV file into and an
output WAV file into to get an MOS reading for a VOIP comm system?

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

Date: Thu, 25 May 2006 07:58:29 PDT
From: Richard Eldon BARBER <piano.tuner@yahoo.com>
Subject: Using Cell Phone For Frequency Calibration Reference?


Some piano tuners calibrate electronic tuning devices using their cell
phone.  Is this a good idea?  Calling up NIST on the cell phone, you
can have 440Hz played to you.  Is using a cell phone going to be a
stable frequency reference?  Will the cell phone network actually be
able to preserve the frequency, say as 440.0000 Hz? or will there be
frequency domain quantization errors due to wavelet compression, thus
affecting the freq stability of the transmitted tone?  Please post and
email ...


Thanks,
Richard Barber
piano.tuner@yahoo.com
http://pianoregulation.com

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: School District to Monitor Student Blogs
Date: 25 May 2006 11:12:58 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Associated Press News Wire wrote:

> The board of Community High School District 128 voted unanimously on
> Monday to require that all students participating in extracurricular
> activities sign a pledge agreeing that evidence of "illegal or
> inappropriate" behavior posted on the Internet could be grounds for
> disciplinary action.

A critical issue not made clear here is whether the postings involve
any school owned facility.  That is, if someone uses a school
computer, school internet service, or school website, then the school
district has every right and a duty to set standards and monitor
traffic.  Kids can be quite nasty on the Internet and the school could
be held liable for malicious postings that hurt another kid.  The
school could also be liable if a kid gets hurt as a result of posting
too much personal data.

On the other hand, if school facilities are not involved in any way,
then it is not the school's business.  If two student get into a fight
at the movies or the mall on a weekend, then it is not the school's
business.

I can understand the school's concern for inappropriate posting,
especially those that might bring risk to a student (e.g. publicly
posting a provacative personal picture and personal info, or malicious
gossip about other kids).  But the most the school can do for non
school facilities IMHO is notify the parents and advise such postings
aren't a good idea.

If I were a school administrator, the last thing I'd want to do is
worry about what my kids did outside of school hours and property*.
If I were a student, I'd feel my rights were being violated and the
school is snooping on me.

*Perhaps if a student was arrested for a serious crime the school has
a right to be involved.

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

From: Patrick Townson <editor@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Repeat of an Old Last Laugh!
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 20:30:25 -0500


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This Last Laugh! was first posted here
in the Digest a decade ago; it came to us from the person who
moderated the humor department on Usenet. I discovered it when
rummaging around through some old archives yesterday and thought it
might be good for a repeat.  PAT]

  From: Maddi Hausmann Sojourner <madhaus@genmagic.com>
  Subject: Tormenting Telemarketers!
  Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
  Date: Wed, 23 Oct 1996 21:23:39 +0000
  Organization: General Magic, Inc.
  Message-ID: <telecom16.565.5@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
  Sender: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
  Lines: 113

  I recently posted on the limitations of Caller ID as implemented by Pac
  Bell.

  Our biggest disappointment with the service was that many phone calls
  were tagged "OUT OF AREA" rather than giving a phone number.  In
  particular, banks of phones behind switchboards or in a Centrex are
  marked that way, which covers most of those pesky telemarketers that
  make our lives so miserable.

  We've found a way to work around that which others with Caller ID may
  also wish to use.

  When we get calls marked OUT OF AREA, especially at the prime
  telemarketer time (6-8 pm), we now answer the phone "KDNA, you're on
  the air!"  Usually the telemarketer will be a bit befuddled, and ask
  for one of us by name.  We will repeat that we are a radio station,
  that the caller is on the air, and is, in fact, the twenty-fifth
  caller.

  Here's a dialog with one telemarketer who bit real hard:

  Me: (seeing OUT OF AREA on Caller ID, using bouncy DJ voice) KDNA,
  you're on the air!

  Telemarketer: May I speak to Mad-uh-LEEN So...So...So-johr-NOHR?
  M: This is KDNA, and you are ON THE AIR!  You've just won your choice of
     a new Ford Explorer or $25,000 in cash!!!
  T: I have?
  M: You certainly have.
  T: Oh my god!
  M: Happy?  Which will it be, the Explorer or the money?
  T: I don't know!  Let me get my supervisor!
  M: You don't need your supervisor, it's your prize.  Are you calling us
     from work?
  T: Yes I am.  (background voices)  My boss says to take the money.
  M: The money!  So you listen to KDNA while you're working?
  T: I didn't even know we were calling you!
  M: Well, where are you calling us from?
  T: (some place thousands of miles from us)
  M: My, my!  I guess you can't pick us up all the way out there!  So
     what's your name?
  T: Sherry.
  M: Sherry, tell us here on KDNA what kind of music you like.
  T: I'm so nervous I can't even think!  Nothing like this has ever
     happened to me!
  M: Sherry, if you like the kind of music that we play here on KDNA,
     we'll play one just for you!
  T: But I wouldn't be able to hear it.  Where's your radio station,
     anyway?
  M: We're broadcasting out of Silicon Valley, California, at 106.6 FM.
     [obviously telemarketer isn't smart enough to know FM stations don't 
     end in even decimals.]
  T: This is just so great!
  M: Sherry, how old are you?
  T: I'm 20.
  M: And what do you do?
  T: I'm a business student at <some college>.
  M: What will you do with the money, Sherry?  Start a business?
  T: Oh, I just don't know!
  M: I thought you said you were at work, Sherry.
  T: I am.  This is to help pay for college.
  M: What's your job?
  T: I'm a telemarketer.
  M: You're a WHAT?
  T: I'm a telemarketer.  I call people up and ask them if they want to
     buy <product/service/etc>
  M: Oh, that's too bad.
  T: Why?
  M: Because we here at KDNA think telemarketers are the lowest scum on
     earth, and I don't think we can give this prize to a telemarketer.  You
     folks are always interrupting people during dinner and I think that's
     rotten. So I don't think you should win.
  T: But that's not fair!
  M: Hey, it's my radio show, I get to make the rules.
  T: But you can't do that!
  M: I sure can, I'm giving this prize to the next caller.  Meanwhile, I 
     suggest you quit your job.  Today.

  (click)
  We apologize if there is a radio station actually named KDNA.  We
  picked it both for its closeness to our daughter's name, Diana, and
  because it shows our disdain for certain folks stuck in the shallow
  end of the gene pool.

  Maddi Hausmann Sojourner                    madhaus@genmagic.com
  General Magic, Inc. in beautiful Sunnyvale, CA  94088 USA
  If you like this address you will also like madhaus@netcom.com
  Visit my daughter's web page at http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~ds/

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This was pretty funny when it first
appeared here a decade ago; I thought newer readers (from less than
ten years ago) might like to see it. Take note these _old_ email
addresses may possibly not work any longer.  PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #199
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat May 27 12:24:18 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #200
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TELECOM Digest     Fri, 26 May 2006 16:51:29 EDT    Volume 25 : Issue 200

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Telephone 'Luxury' Tax Now Discontinued (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Earthlink to Build New Orleans WiFi Network (Reuters News Wire)
    Company Says MPAA Paid Hacker to Spy (Associated Press News Wire)
    Telecom Update #531, May 26, 2006 (Angus TeleManagement Group)
    Cellular-News: Friday 26th May 2006 (cellular-news)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - May 26, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    U.S. Online Population Tops 170 Million (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Telephone to Modem (AMS)
    Re: Uniden Phones Interference With DSL - Why/How How to Fix (neverfamous)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Telephone 'Luxury' Tax Now Discontinued
Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 16:50:01 EDT
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


The Treasury Department has, for many, many years, been charging a tax
on telephone calls. They have been sued many times for it, amd I guess
the decision finally came down to not only quit charging it or trying
to collect it, but also to allow the essence of a 'class action'
lawsuit so that people who have paid that tax over the years can apply
for a refund. I think the way this will work is there will be a line
on your tax form next year allowing you to deduct as a credit whatever
had been paid on the telephone tax.  I believe this tax began during
the Spanish American War, and like so many government things, it just
stayed on forever for at least a century.

Talk to your tax people about the particulars of how to apply for a
refund, etc.

Patrick Townson

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

From: Reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Earthlink to Build New Orleans WiFi Network
Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 15:29:04 -0500


Earthlink Inc., the Internet service provider, said on Friday it has
won approval from the New Orleans City Council to build a wireless
high-speed Internet network in the city.

The company said the wireless network will provide Internet access for
residents, businesses and visitors in New Orleans. It will offer a
free service for a limited time during the city's rebuilding efforts
and a faster paid-for tier service.

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.


NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more headlines and news from the media, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Company Says MPAA Paid Hacker to Spy
Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 15:30:46 -0500


Valence Media, a company accused of aiding online movie pirates, says
the group that represents Hollywood studios hired a computer hacker to
spy on it.

Valence Media, which operates the Web site http://www.torrentspy.com,
was sued in February by several movie studios for allegedly helping
people locate and download pirated copies of films.

On Wednesday, the company sued the Motion Picture Association of
America, saying the trade group paid a hacker $15,000 to break into
Valence Media's computers and obtain private information, including
e-mails, financial information and trade secrets.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, claims an
MPAA employee approached an unnamed hacker, who was not an employee of
Valence, and asked him to collect information on the company and its
three principals.

The MPAA employees offered the hacker $15,000 if the information
proved useful and said, "We don't care how you get it," according to
the lawsuit.

The MPAA denied the accusations Thursday.

"We see this as nothing more than a desperate attempt to obscure the
fact that they are knowingly facilitating piracy," MPAA spokeswoman
Kori Bernards said.

The Web site operated by Valence Media indexes files located on a
multitude of individuals' computers. Once a file is found using the
torrentspy search engine, the actual exchange is conducted by
individual computer users, without torrentspy's assistance.

The studios say torrentspy could easily prevent the piracy by not
indexing pirated files or by barring users who regularly offer illegal
copies of movies and TV shows.

A motion by Valence media to dismiss the MPAA's lawsuit was denied in
March.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. 

NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html

For more news and headlines from Associated Press, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 11:06:03 -0700
Subject: Telecom Update #531, May 26, 2006
From: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>
Reply-To: Angus TeleManagement Group <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE 
************************************************************
published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group 
http://www.angustel.ca

Number 531: May 26, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous 
financial support from: 
** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca 
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/ 
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.com/canada/telecom/
** MITEL NETWORKS: www.mitel.com/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions 
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE: 

** 96 Arrests in Telemarketing Fraud Crackdown 
** World Broadband Total Passes 200 Million 
** Vonage IPO Raises Over Half-Billion 
** Bell Intros PC-Controlled Communications 
** Glitch Hits Telus Voice Mail 
** Aastra Sharpens Focus on Enterprise Telephony 
** EVDO Reaches Cottage Country 
** MSAT Carriers Plan Next-Gen Satellites 
** Northwestel to Pay $1.4M to Central Fund 
** Bell Wants Final LD Constraints Lifted 
** CRTC Backs TBayTel in Roaming Dispute 
** Telus Expands Digital Wireless in Rural Quebec 
** Moody's Cuts BCE Rating 
** Bell: Pay for Wireline WNP from Deferral Account
** Zarlink Reports Profit Gain 
** Ascalade Expanding Production of Phones 
** Hummingbird Finds U.S. Buyer 
** U.S. to Repeal Telecom Tax 
** Consultants Call for Speakers 

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

96 ARRESTS IN TELEMARKETING FRAUD CRACKDOWN: Canadian authorities have
arrested 96 people as part of a 15-month international crackdown on
telemarketing scams that defrauded 2.8 million U.S. residents of an
estimated US$1 billion. In total, 565 people were arrested in five
countries.

** As part of this operation, the Competition Bureau has charged five
   Canadians and three companies for alleged involvement in a business
   directory scam which is said to have taken in $150 million over 10
   years.

WORLD BROADBAND TOTAL PASSES 200 MILLION: TeleGeography reports that
the number of high-speed Internet subscribers worldwide reached 221
million at the end of 2005, a 37% increase from a year earlier. Fewer
than a quarter of the lines were in North America; DSL lines made up
65% of the world total.

http://www.telegeography.com

VONAGE IPO RAISES OVER HALF-BILLION: VoIP provider Vonage Holdings
went public on Wednesday. Shares initially sold at US$17, raising
US$531 million, but then fell 12.6% over the day, closing at $14.85.

BELL INTROS PC-CONTROLLED COMMUNICATIONS: Bell Canada has begun
selling Personal Communication Manager, a PC-based soft-client that
provides mobile access to a user's office phone service and voicemail
from a laptop computer. In the office, the same software provides PC
control of a Centrex set, including presence, click-to-call from
Outlook, and other features.

** PCM, which was developed by Ottawa-based NewHeights Software, works
   with either the on-premise or off-premise version of Nortel's
   Multimedia Communications Server.

GLITCH HITS TELUS VOICE MAIL: About 250,000 Telus voice mail customers
in Alberta and B.C. were unable to retrieve messages from 3:30pm to
10pm on Tuesday, and again from 11am Wednesday until 2am
Thursday. Telus technicians reinitialized several systems and replaced
some components to restore service. The company says it is still
investigating to determine the failure's cause.

AASTRA SHARPENS FOCUS ON ENTERPRISE TELEPHONY: Aastra Technologies has
agreed to sell its digital video business unit for about US$35
million.  The Toronto-based manufacturer, which makes Intecom PBXs and
other telecom equipment, says it is "increasingly focused on
Enterprise Communications."  (See Telecom Update #490)

EVDO REACHES COTTAGE COUNTRY: Hoping to "get away from it all" at the
cottage? Think again. Just in time for your vacation, Bell Canada has
extended 2.4 Mbps EVDO wireless service to Ontario's traditional
cottage country: Lake Muskoka, Lake Joseph, western Lake Rosseau,
Bala, Port Carling and Gamebridge, Ontario.

** Since Telus and Bell share network facilities, we assume that both
   companies will encourage you to use corporate data nets from your
   dock or canoe.

MSAT CARRIERS PLAN NEXT-GEN SATELLITES: MSV Canada and Virginia-based
Mobile Satellite Ventures will launch a new U.S. satellite in mid-2009
and a new Canadian satellite early in 2010. The companies, which
already provide mobile satellite communications across North America,
say the new satellites will provide integrated satellite/cellular
service to handsets similar in size and cost to conventional
cellphones.

NORTHWESTEL TO PAY $1.4M TO CENTRAL FUND: The CRTC has directed
Northwestel to pay $1.38 million back to the Central Fund from which
it receives a subsidy to support affordable services in the
North. This is the amount by which the northern telco exceeded its
forecast long distance revenue in 2005.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-32.htm

BELL WANTS FINAL LD CONSTRAINTS LIFTED: Bell Canada has asked the CRTC
to eliminate remaining regulation of its "basic toll" schedules. When
the incumbent telcos' long distance services were deregulated in 1997,
the Commission retained some controls on basic toll service.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/PartVII/eng/2006/8661/b2_200605719.htm

CRTC BACKS TBAYTEL IN ROAMING DISPUTE: CRTC Telecom Decision 2006-33
says that Superior Wireless's use of digital roaming to provide
service within Thunder Bay Telephone's territory was not contemplated
in the two companies' roaming agreement, so TBayTel was justified in
cutting digital service to Superior's wireless customers last December
(see Telecom Update #511).

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Decisions/2006/dt2006-33.htm

TELUS EXPANDS DIGITAL WIRELESS IN RURAL QUEBEC: Telus says it will
spend $10 million this year to expand its IX digital wireless network
in the Mauricie, Gaspe, and Lower Saint-Laurence regions.

MOODY'S CUTS BCE RATING: Moody's Investors Service has cut its ratings
of about $10 billion of BCE and Bell Canada debt. BCE's senior
unsecured debt is now rated Baa2, two notches above non-investment
("junk") level.  Moody's cited concern over BCE's plan to buy back
stock rather than reducing debt.

BELL -- PAY FOR WIRELINE WNP FROM DEFERRAL ACCOUNT: Bell Canada has
asked the CRTC to allow it to recover $9.6 million per year, for six
years, to pay for the wireline component of implementing wireless
number portability. Bell wants to take the money from its deferral
account.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/PartVII/eng/2006/8661/b2_200605967.htm

ZARLINK REPORTS PROFIT GAIN: Ottawa-based Zarlink Semiconductors,
which makes chips for the telecom industry, reports net income of
US$49 million for the year ended March 31, compared with a loss of $21
million the previous year. Revenue fell 10% to $145 million.

** Zarlink has bought the Arizona-based optical communications
   business of Primarion, Inc. for US$7 million.

ASCALADE EXPANDING PRODUCTION OF PHONES: Vancouver-based Ascalade
Communications, which designs and manufactures digital wireless and
VoIP phones, is building a new factory in China that will increase its
production capacity by 40%.

** Ascalade reports first quarter revenues of $22.7 million, a 33%
   increase over a year ago, and a net loss of $723,000.

HUMMINGBIRD FINDS U.S. BUYER: Hummingbird Ltd, whose 125 Ottawa
employees make network connectivity and content management software,
is being acquired by California-based Symphony Technology Group for
US$465 million.

U.S. TO REPEAL TELECOM TAX: After years of litigation, the
U.S. Treasury Department has agreed to end a 3% excise tax on
long-distance service and to refund $13 billion to taxpayers. It was
originally imposed as a short-term luxury tax in 1898 to help fund the
U.S. invasion of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines.

CONSULTANTS CALL FOR SPEAKERS: The Canadian Telecommunications
Consultants Association will hold its Fall 2006 Conference in Ottawa
on September 29-30. Proposals for presentations are due by June
30. For information, write ctca.speakers@ctca.ca, or visit
http://www.ctca.ca.

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

HOW TO SUBMIT ITEMS FOR TELECOM UPDATE

E-mail ianangus@angustel.ca and jriddell@angustel.ca

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

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE (OR UNSUBSCRIBE)

TELECOM UPDATE is provided in electronic form only. There 
are two formats available:

1. The fully-formatted edition is posted on the 
   World Wide Web late Friday afternoon each week 
   at http://www.angustel.ca

2. The e-mail edition is distributed free of charge.
   To subscribe, send an e-mail message to:
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   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send 
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   see www.angustel.ca/update/privacy.html.

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

COPYRIGHT AND CONDITIONS OF USE: All contents copyright 2006 Angus
TeleManagement Group Inc. All rights reserved. For further
information, including permission to reprint or reproduce, please
e-mail jriddell@angustel.ca.

The information and data included has been obtained from sources which
we believe to be reliable, but Angus TeleManagement makes no
warranties or representations whatsoever regarding accuracy,
completeness, or adequacy.  Opinions expressed are based on
interpretation of available information, and are subject to change. If
expert advice on the subject matter is required, the services of a
competent professional should be obtained.

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

Subject: Cellular-News: Friday 26th May 2006
Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 07:20:05 -0500
From: Cellular-News <dailydigest@cellular-news-mail.com>


Cellular-News http://www.cellular-news.com

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

[[ Financial ]]


PRESS: MTS says mobile sector may lose $7 bln in mkt cap on CPP
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17542.php

Following the introduction of the Calling Party Pays Principle
scheduled for July 1, the Russian mobile services sector may lose
U.S. $6 billion to $7 billion of its capitalization, Mikhail Shamolin,
MTS' vice president for sales and customer service...

Ukraine's Kyivstar revenue up 60.7% on year in Jan-Apr
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17550.php

The revenue of Ukraine's largest mobile operator Kyivstar rose 60.7%
on the year to 2.725 billion hryvnas in January-April, the company
said in a report filed with regulators Thursday. ...

[[ Handsets ]]

M'shita Elec To Supply Cellphone Handsets To KDDI
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17540.php

Japan's Matsushita Electric Industrial said Thursday it plans to
supply mobile-phone handsets for KDDI's "au" phone service, as part of
efforts to broaden its range of clients. ...

Venko, Teikon prepare to launch first handset
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17546.php

Brazilian handset manufacturers Venko and Teikon expect to launch
their first mobile phone next week, reported local news service Folha
Online. ...

US Consumers Increasingly Happy with Cellphones
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17554.php

Overall satisfaction among wireless mobile phone owners has increased
4% when compared to 2005, marking the second time customer
satisfaction has increased significantly in the past three times the
study has been conducted, according to aï¿½ J.D. Power...

[[ Legal ]]

Court adjourns Telenor claim against VimpelCom's URS buy
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17549.php

The Moscow Arbitration Court adjourned indefinitely on Wednesday the
main hearings of a lawsuit filed by Norwegian telecommunication
company Telenor seeking to void VimpelCom's purchase of mobile
operator Ukrainian Radiosystems (URS). ...

[[ Mobile Content ]]

Vodafone In Talks With S Korean Mobile Application Cos
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17541.php

Vodafone Group is holding talks with some South Korean developers of
mobile-phone application technology to use their products for wireless
services in Europe, Graeme Ferguson, director of global content
development at Vodafone Group Services, told D...

[[ Network Contracts ]]

Lucent Wins Brazilian CDMA Contract
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17553.php

Lucent Technologies has announced a new agreement with Brazil's Vivo
to expand and enhance Vivo's 3G CDMA2000 1X and 1xEV-DO digital
network in Brazil. These enhancements will expand the coverage of
Vivo's network and enable subscribers to access mob...

[[ Network Operators ]]

TIM kicks off international prepaid roaming
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17544.php

Brazil's second largest mobile operator TIM has launched the first of
nine expected international roaming agreements for its prepaid users,
a TIM spokesperson confirmed. ...

[[ Regulatory ]]

Ola seeks arbitration over spectrum allocation
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17545.php

Colombian mobile operator Ola has asked the Bogota chamber of commerce
to act as arbiter in a dispute with the communications ministry over
spectrum allocation, local press reported. ...

Treasury Disconnects Tax On Long-distance Calls
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17548.php

The brief Spanish-American War ended more than a century ago, but not
the federal tax assessed to fund the victory. ...

[[ Reports ]]

No Radiation Problems at Australian University
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17552.php

Following a health scare, the Australian RMIT University has conducted
radio emission tests on the roof and several floors of a building
where a cluster of cancers had occured. However, the tests on floors
16 and 17 and the roof of RMIT University ha...

[[ Statistics ]]

Russia's VimpelCom user base in Krasnodar Reg at 1.4 mln Apr 1
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17543.php

The subscriber base of Russia?s second largest mobile operator
VimpelCom in the Krasnodar Region amounted to about 1.4 million users
as of April 1, VimpelCom's branch in the region said in a press
release Thursday without providing a comparison. ...

Study: GSM set to grow 52% in LatAm in 2006
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17547.php

The GSM mobile market in Latin America grew by 21% in 2005 compared to
2004, and is set to expand 52% this year, according to international
consultancy RNCOS. ...

[[ Technology ]]

Conformance Testing for Mobile WiMAX
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/17551.php

Centro de Tecnologia de las Comunicaciones (Cetecom), in Spain, has
just been selected by the WiMAX Forum to develop the Radio Conformance
Test Tester (RCTT) for Mobile WiMAX. Cetecom has participated,
together with other test equipment manufacturers...

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

Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 12:11:16 -0400
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com>
Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - Friday, May 26, 2006
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For May 26, 2006
********************************

Strategic Security Considerations for Mobile Enterprises
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18146?11228

     Securing business wireless applications is on everyone's minds
     these days. Employees are being equipped with laptops, mobile
     devices and wireless access to e-mail to achieve significant
     gains in productivity, but there still are major areas that are
     being neglected.  This white paper explores: --Concerns about
     business wireless...

AWS Band Blocks & Auction Insights
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18144?11228

     In a few weeks, the FCC will begin auctioning a new set of paired
     spectrum bands designated for Advanced Wireless Services AWS. The
     wireless industry and Wall Street types that follow it will be
     watching closely. Of particular interest will be which companies
     step up to bid for licenses and how high the bidding goes....

Vodafone Completes Telsim Acquisition
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18141?11228

     Vodafone has announced its completion of the acquisition of
     holdings in the second-largest Turkish operator, Telsim, from the
     Turkish Savings and Deposit Insurance Fund (TMSF). Vodafone beat
     rival bidders with an offer of US$4.55 billionin December last
     year, and received approval for the acquisition from the Turkish
     competition...

France Telecom Joins China's TD-SCDMA 3G Standard Alliance
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18140?11228

     France Telecom has joined an industry alliance promoting China's
     home-grown 3G mobile standard TD-SCDMA, making it the first
     foreign telecoms operator to join the group, the official Xinhua
     news agency reported. Wang Jing, Secretary General of the
     TD-SCDMA forum, was quoted as saying that the addition of France
     Telecom to the alliance...

Auction for In-Flight Broadband Winds Down
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18137?11228

     NEW YORK -- An auction of nationwide airwaves that could lead to
     cheaper in-flight broadband and telephone calls was winding down
     Thursday, with a small Colorado-based company as the apparent
     winner for the largest swath of radio spectrum.  The auction
     conducted by the Federal Communications Commission will resume
     Friday, but AC...

Excise Tax Repealed - Finally!
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/105/18134?11228

     This just in: The U.S. government has finally acknowledged that
     the Spanish American War is over.  The federal excise tax on long
     distance calling will be repealed and the IRS will refund three
     years worth of the taxes to consumers and businesses, the
     U.S. Treasury Department said Thursday. The tax has been around
     since 1898, when it was...

House Takes Aim At Caller-ID Spoofing
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/18130?11228

     The House of Representatives soon will receive a bill to outlaw
     and penalize caller-ID spoofing, a practice that currently
     includes online services and portable cards that allow users to
     fake caller-ID information - a tactic often associated with the
     theft of personal data and telephone records as well as
     identities.  The House Committee...

Ofcom Proposes Spectrum Sale
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/18128?11228

     In the name of advancing high-speed wireless services in the
     United Kingdom, Ofcom, the Office of Communications, initiated a
     proposal to open up new spectrum bands on a first come, first
     served basis.  Specifically, the U.K. telecom regulator is
     contemplating opening up the 71-76 GHz and 81-86 GHz bands for
     the first time for commercial...

Copyright (C) 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Fri, 26 May 2006 12:21:28 CDT
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: U.S. online population tops 170 million


USTelecom dailyLead
May 26, 2006
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dHiMfDtutemGjxnqZW

		TODAY'S HEADLINES
	
NEWS OF THE DAY
* U.S. online population tops 170 million
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* BT snags rights to Premiership soccer games
* Murdoch's high-tech custom video plan
* Telstra whacks $530 million from capital expenditure forecast
* Motorola teams with Pakistani carrier for massive mobile WiMAX deployment
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Get Important Telecom Contacts
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Will mobile IM win out over SMS?
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Analysis: Vonage in for a rocky road ahead
* Skype takes aim at wireless
* Cable phone customers happier than other VoIP customers, survey says
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Editorial: Telecoms should get second chance with TV service
* House committee approves net neutrality measure
* In-flight broadband auction nears close
EDITOR'S NOTE
* The dailyLead will not be published Monday

Follow the link below to read quick summaries of these stories and others.
http://r.rack.smartbrief.com/resp/dHiMfDtutemGjxnqZW

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

From: AMS <yo_adrianna@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Telephone to Modem
Date: 26 May 2006 01:46:05 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


yahooshua@gmail.com wrote:

> I was wondering why with the advent of VoIP and Skype Vonage and all
> of this stuff; someone hasn't come up with software that can activate
> your modem in such a way that you plug your handset telephone into
> your modem and then use one of these services.

> Does anyone know if this would work? Why or why not?

The VoSky Call Center from ActionTec connects a Windows PC to your
phone line for use with the Skype Internet calling service. The NY
Times had an article about it pros and cons that is still available
online.

To read the entire article go to:
Internet Calls Untethered From Your PC, by David Pogue
Published: April 6, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/06/technology/06pogue.html

It reads in part:

> Wouldn't it be nice if you could make and receive Skype calls from
> your home phone or any ordinary cellphone?

Enter the VoSky Call Center ($60 at actiontec.com), nicknamed the
Liberator. (All right, I gave it that nickname, but still.) It's a tiny
black box, about the size of a sandwich, that connects to a Windows PC
(with a U.S.B. cable), to your phone line and to your telephone. An
exceptionally clear instruction sheet walks you through the
installation.

As a final preparatory step, you're supposed to install Skype, if you
haven't already, fill up its buddy list with the Skype addresses of
your pals, and assign a speed-dial number to each one. Then you're
ready for the VoSky magic show.

FOR its first trick, the Call Center will let you call Skype buddies
using the telephone on your desk. You pick up the handset, dial ##
(which means, "This one's for Skype") and listen to a recorded female
voice say: "Welcome to the VoSky Call Center. Please enter your
contact's speed-dial number." (She pronounces it VOSS-key.)

Fortunately, you don't have to sit through her complete recording; you
can interrupt by dialing at any time. She's just a digital audio file,
not easily insulted.

There's a quick click, and then the call is placed. Your comrade,
perhaps thousands of miles away, hears the familiar Skype ring tone,
sits down at the PC, puts on the headset and answers. You, meanwhile,
chat cheerily on your cordless phone as you move about, do the laundry
or set the table.

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

From: neverfamous@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Uniden Phones Interference With DSL - Why or How to Fix?
Date: 26 May 2006 09:01:06 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Your posting gives me pause.  I just purchased the exact same phones
(last night) and have a very similar DSL set-up.  I haven't connected
the Uniden system yet because I guess I'm supposed to let the phones
charge overnight first, but I was planning to do so tonight.

I did look through the manual briefly this morning and I noted there
are two types of voice mail service signals and one type may require a
configuration change on the Unidens.  It may not be the culprit, but I
thought I would throw it out there as an idea.

If you do find the culprit, please post.

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #200
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