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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #401
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Date: Fri,  1 Dec 2006 11:00:48 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 1 Dec 2006 11:03:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 401

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Financial Firms Cyber Attack to Start Today (Kristin Roberts)
    New Federal Laws Require Email Tracking (Associated Press News Wire)
    Body X-Ray Scans Starting in Phoenix (Associated Press News Wire)
    DISH Network SaveMyChannels Distant Network Channels (Monty Solomon)
    Address Needed (Henry Cabot Henhouse III)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - November 30, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Tech Companies Try Show-and-Tell Concept For Stores (USTelecom dailyLead)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 09:13:03 -0600
From: Kristin Roberts <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Financial Firms Cyber Attack to Start Today


Financial firms warned of Qaeda cyber attack 
By Kristin Roberts

The U.S. government warned American private financial services on
Thursday of an al Qaeda call for a cyber attack against online stock
trading and banking Web sites beginning on Friday, a source said.

The source, a person familiar with the warning, said the Islamic
militant group aimed to penetrate and destroy the databases of the
U.S.  financial sites.

The Department of Homeland Security confirmed an alert had been
distributed but said there was no reason to believe the threat was
credible.

The U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team issued a "situational
awareness report to industry stakeholders," said Homeland Security
spokesman Russ Knocke.

The warning said the threat called for attacks to begin Friday and run
through the month of December in retaliation for the United States
keeping terrorism suspects at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba.

"Denial of service is what it called for," said a Homeland Security
official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

A person familiar with the warning said the threat came from a group
calling itself "ANHIAR al-Dollar." The effort was related to al Qaeda
and intended to avenge "Muslim brothers in the crusaders' Guantanamo
prison camp," the source said.

Reaction in the financial community was muted, with markets showing
little or no reaction.

New York Republican Rep. Peter King (news, bio, voting record),
chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Homeland
Security, said the report was "nothing to panic over, but it will be
looked at very carefully."

Robert Albertson, chief investment strategist at Sandler O'Neill &
Partners in New York, said it was unlikely al Qaeda members could do
serious harm to financial Web sites.

"I'm not saying there aren't precautions to be taken, but I just can't
fathom how there would be serious havoc," he added.

Brian Jenkins, a terrorism expert with the RAND Corp., said that such
threats were not unusual.

"There is a regular stream of Jihadist exhortations to attack various
targets," he said. "Financial organizations stay at a fairly high
level of readiness anyway because of regular assaults."

A government source said regulators were being briefed on the warning.

(Additional reporting by David Morgan, Paul Eckert and Jim Christie in
San Francisco)

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 09:00:27 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: New Federal Laws Require Email Tracking


U.S. companies will need to keep track of all the e-mails, instant 
messages and other electronic documents generated by their employees 
thanks to new federal rules that go into effect Friday, legal experts say.

The rules, approved by the Supreme Court in April, require companies
and other entities involved in federal litigation to produce
"electronically stored information" as part of the discovery process,
when evidence is shared by both sides before a trial.

The change makes it more important for companies to know what
electronic information they have and where. Under the new rules, an
information technology employee who routinely copies over a backup
computer tape could be committing the equivalent of "virtual
shredding," said Alvin F.  Lindsay, a partner at Hogan & Hartson LLP
and expert on technology and litigation.

James Wright, director of electronic discovery at Halliburton Co.,
said that large companies are likely to face higher costs from
organizing their data to comply with the rules. In addition to e-mail,
companies will need to know about things more difficult to track, like
digital photos of work sites on employee cell phones and information
on removable memory cards, he said.

Both federal and state courts have increasingly been requiring the
production of relevant electronic documents during discovery, but the
new rules codify the practice, legal experts said.

The rules also require that lawyers provide information about where
their clients' electronic data is stored and how accessible it is much
earlier in a lawsuit than was previously the case.

There are hundreds of "e-discovery vendors" and these businesses raked
in approximately $1.6 billion in 2006, Wright said. That figure could
double in 2007, he added.

Another expense will likely stem from the additional time lawyers will
have to spend reviewing electronic documents before turning them over
to the other side. While the amount of data will be narrowed by
electronic searches, some high-paid lawyers will still have to sift
through casual e-mails about subjects like "office birthday parties in
the pantry" in order to find information relevant to a particular
case.

Martha Dawson, a partner at the Seattle-based law firm of Preston
Gates & Ellis LLP who specializes in electronic discovery, said the
burden of the new rules won't be that great.

Companies will not have to alter how they retain their electronic
documents, she said, but will have to do an "inventory of their IT
system" in order to know better where the documents are.

The new rules also provide better guidance on how electronic evidence
is to be handled in federal litigation, including guidelines on how
companies can seek exemptions from providing data that isn't
"reasonably accessible," she said. This could actually reduce the
burden of electronic discovery, she 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 each day, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 09:43:23 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Body X-Ray Scans Starting in Phoenix


Phoenix airport to test X-ray screening. They'll be part of
'Secondary Inspections' at all airports soon. 

Sky Harbor International Airport here will test a new federal screening 
system that takes X-rays of passenger's bodies to detect concealed 
explosives and other weapons.

The technology, called backscatter, has been around for several years 
but has not been widely used in the U.S. as an anti-terrorism tool 
because of privacy concerns. Privacy is no longer a concern of the
government.

The Transportation Security Administration said it has found a way to
refine the machine's images so that the normally graphic pictures can
be blurred in certain areas while still being effective in detecting
bombs and other threats.

The agency is expected to provide more information about the
technology later this month but said one machine will be up and
running at Sky Harbor's Terminal 4 by Christmas.

The security agency's Web site indicates that the technology will be
used initially as a secondary screening measure, meaning that only
those passengers who first fail the standard screening process will be
escorted to the X-ray area.

Even then, passengers will have the option of choosing the backscatter
or a traditional patt-down search.

A handful of other U.S. airports will have the X-rays machines in
place by early 2007 as part of a nationwide pilot program, TSA
officials said.

The technology already is being used in prisons and by drug
enforcement agents, and has been tested at London's Heathrow Airport.

The security agency says the machines will be effective in helping
detect plastic or liquid explosives and other non-metallic weapons
that can be missed by standard metal detectors.

Some say the high-resolution images -- which clearly depict the
outline of the passenger's body, plus anything attached to it, such as
jewelry -- are too invasive.

But the TSA said the X-rays will be set up so that the image can be
viewed only by a security officer in a remote location. Other
passengers, and even the agent at the checkpoint, will not have access
to the picture.

In addition, the system will be configured so that the X-ray will be
deleted as soon as the individual steps away from the machine. It will
not be stored or available for printing or transmitting, agency
spokesman Nico Melendez 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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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






Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2006 03:56:40 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: DISH Network SaveMyChannels Distant Network Channels


Help Save Your Distant Network Channels By Supporting Pending Federal 
Legislation Today!

This website is a resource to help explain the impact of a recent
judicial action on DISH Network customers and other TV consumers. It
also provides details on how affected customers and interested parties
can help efforts to preserve distant network channels for as many DISH
Network customers as possible, but only if they act right away. To
learn more click the take action links below and then click What's At
Stake.

http://www.savemychannels.com/

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

From: Henry Cabot Henhouse III <sooper_chicken@hotmail.com>
Subject: Address Needed
Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2006 20:05:37 -0800


Does anyone have any info about an outfit calling itself "Phone
Revolution" ? The CLID shows 605-299-4105 ... calls to that number so
far get voice mail.  Need the real address and name of the idiot that
runs it.  I did a lookup of the domain, says it's in Aliso Viejo,
Calif. but seeing as 605- is South Dakota, I wouldn't trust that this
is their correct address.

They keep calling me, on my cell, even tho the number is on the Do Not
Call list AND I have demanded at least 3 times that they never call me
again. I never can get a manager and they don't return phone calls...

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - November 30, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2006 11:32:39 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For November 30, 2006
********************************

Nokia Lowers Operating-Profit-Margin Guidance on Pressures in
Infrastructure Business
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21384?11228

     Finnish telecoms equipment vendor Nokia has cut targets for its
     operating profit margin to 15% in the next two years, down from
     its previous guidance of 17%, on the back of slowing network
     infrastructure business. The company has also warned about the
     continuing price pressures in the global mobile handset
     marketplace, which could also ...

AT&T-BellSouth Merger Hits Hurdles
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21381?11228

     WITH THE FCC'S APPROVAL of the AT&T Inc.-BellSouth Corp.  merger
     in mid-October fraught by last-minute deal-brokering and
     controversy, agency Chairman Kevin J. Martin canceled
     consideration of the transaction altogether until November.  He
     said he was responding to concerns voiced by Democratic
     Commissioners Michael J.  Copps ...

Yahoo!, Nokia Extend Wireless Pact
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21375?11228

     Yahoo! is once again delving deeper into the wireless space. In
     its latest deal with Nokia, the company will make additional
     Yahoo!  services, such as e-mail and messaging, available on
     select Nokia handsets.  The service offers the ability to
     synchronize Yahoo!  contacts, tasks and calendars on the PC and
     wireless phone.  At ...

Verizon Wireless's YouTube Moment
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21372?11228

     Surprising no one, Verizon Wireless announced that YouTube clips
     will appear on its VCast multimedia service. According to
     TelecomWeb news break sister e-letter Wireless Business Forecast,
     there are two arguments to be made about the viability of a
     mobilized YouTube, pro and con, but there's only one argument to
     be made about the ...

New Tools for New Rules
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21369?11228

     With revisions to the U.S. Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
     (FRCP) set to go into effect Friday, it's no surprise we're
     seeing products aimed at facilitating e-discovery and compliance
     this week.  Today, CommVault released a potentially useful
     addition to its archiving product, and newcomer InBoxer rolled
     out a more off-beat ...

Farewell, Lucent
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21367?11228

     As Lucent Technologies Inc. finalizes its merger with Alcatel and
     its power center shifts to Paris, Lucent Technologies Inc. will,
     from today, cease to exist.  Lucent executives will likely argue
     that with Lucent CEO Patricia Russo taking the helm of the new
     company, Lucent isn't going away at all. But semantics aside, it
     ...

Nokia's Slim Pickings for 2007
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21365?11228

     Nokia Corp. is getting closer to launching new thin cellphones
     that it hopes will improve its profitability and market share in
     North America, home of its major rival, Motorola Inc. The Finnish
     vendor, however, is unlikely to see a major turnaround stateside
     before 2008, analysts predict.  Nokia has been showing off some
     of its ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2006 12:35:13 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Tech Companies Try Show-and-Tell Concept for Stores


USTelecom dailyLead
November 30, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eViYfDtusXgNzNCibuddePKz


TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Tech companies try show-and-tell concept for stores
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T rolls out U-verse in Houston
* NFL Network adds broadband to deal with Verizon
* Study: More U.K. consumers subscribe to bundled services
* Sprint expands EV-DO Rev A rollout
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Take a Stephen Shepard Crash Course in WiMAX, IMS, VoIP and Telecom
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Report: FTTH Q3 shipments down 1%
* Analysis: Verizon Wireless' mobile video strategy
* Samsung plans Mobile WiMAX push
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Republicans ask FCC to delay set-top ban

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

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #401
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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec  1 17:07:18 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 02BBE2258; Fri,  1 Dec 2006 17:07:17 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #402
Message-Id: <20061201220717.02BBE2258@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri,  1 Dec 2006 17:07:17 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 1 Dec 2006 17:10:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 402

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Romanian Hacked US Computers, Now Indicted (Associated Press NewsWire)
    Police Dislike Informant's  Web Site (Matt Apuzzo, AP)
    Yahoo Will Start Running BBC News Videos (Reuters News Wire)
    FCC Chief Proposal Seeks to Streamline Video-Franchising (USTelecomdaily)
    Telecom Update #557, December 1, 2006 (John Riddell)
    Toronto Home Telephone Providers (pstock)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 01, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 10:35:01 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Romanian Hacked US Computers, Now Indicted


A Romanian national was indicted on charges of hacking into more than
150 U.S. government computers, causing disruptions that cost NASA, the
Energy Department and the Navy nearly $1.5 million.

The federal indictment charges Victor Faur, 26, of Arad, Romania with
nine counts of computer intrusion and one count of conspiracy. He
faces up to 54 years in prison if convicted of all counts, said Thom
Mrozek, spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office.

Faur was being prosecuted by authorities in Romania on separate
computer hacking charges, Mrozek said Thursday, and will be brought to
Los Angeles upon resolution of that case. It was not known whether
Faur had retained a lawyer in the United States.

The U.S. government alleges Faur was the leader of a hacking group
called "WhiteHat Team," whose main goal was to break into U.S.
government computers because they are some of the securest in the
world.

After hacking into and taking control of the computers, Faur
programmed them to operate as chat rooms so he could communicate with
other WhiteHat members, Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Hoffstadt said.

During the break-ins, Faur searched for passwords that WhiteHat
members could use to gain unauthorized access to other computers,
Hoffstadt said.

The compromised computers were used to collect, store and analyze
scientific data -- including data from spacecraft in orbit and deep
space -- and to evaluate new technologies. The machines were located
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena; Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Md.; Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque,
N.M.; and the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington.

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

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 15:02:08 -0600
From: Matt Apuzzo, AP <apuzzo@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site


Police decry Web site on informants 
By MATT APUZZO, Associated Press Writer

Police and prosecutors are worried that a Web site claiming to identify 
more than 4,000 informants and undercover agents will cripple 
investigations and hang targets on witnesses.

The Web site, WhosaRat.com, first caught the attention of authorities 
after a Massachusetts man put it online and named a few dozen people as 
turncoats in 2004. Since then, it has grown into a clearinghouse for mug 
shots, court papers and rumors.

Federal prosecutors say the site was set up to encourage violence, and 
federal judges around the country were recently warned that witnesses in 
their courtrooms may be profiled online.

"My concern is making sure cooperators are adequately protected from 
retaliation," said Chief Judge Thomas Hogan, who alerted other judges in 
Washington's federal courthouse. He said he learned about the site from 
a federal judge in Maine.

The Web site is the latest unabashedly public effort to identify 
witnesses or discourage helping police. "Stop Snitching" T-shirts have 
been sold in cities around the country and popular hip-hop lyrics 
disparage or threaten people who help police.

In 2004, NBA star Carmelo Anthony appeared in an underground Baltimore 
DVD that warned people they could be killed for cooperating with police. 
Anthony has said he was not aware of the DVD's message.

Such threats hinder criminal investigations, said Ronald Teachman, 
police chief in New Bedford, Mass., where murder cases have been stymied 
by witness silence and "Stop Snitching" T-shirts were recently for sale.

"Every shooting we have to treat like homicide. The victim's alive but 
he's not cooperative," Teachman said. "These kids have the idea that the 
worst offense they can commit is to cooperate with the police."

Sean Bucci, a former Boston-area disc jockey, set up WhosaRat.com after 
federal prosecutors charged him with selling marijuana in bulk from his 
house. Bucci is under house arrest awaiting trial and could not be 
reached, but a WhosaRat spokesman identifying himself as Anthony Capone 
said the site is a resource for criminal defendants and does not condone 
violence.

"If people got hurt or killed, it's kind of on them. They knew the 
dangers of becoming an informant," Capone said. "We'd feel bad, don't 
get me wrong, but things happen to people. If they decide to become an 
informant, with or without the Web site, that's a possibility."

The site offers biographical information about people whom users 
identify as witnesses or undercover agents. Users can post court 
documents, comments and pictures.

Some of those listed are well known, such as former Connecticut Gov. 
John G. Rowland, who served 10 months in prison before testifying in a 
public corruption case. But many never made headlines and were 
identified as having helped investigators in drug cases.

For two years, anyone with an Internet connection could search the site. 
On Thursday, a day after it was discussed at a courthouse conference in 
Washington, the site became a subscription-only service. The site has 
also disabled the ability to post photos of undercover agents, Capone 
said, because administrators of the Web site do not want officers to be 
hurt.

Authorities disagree. In documents filed in Bucci's court case last 
month, federal prosecutors said they have information that Bucci set up 
the Web site to help intimidate and harm witnesses.

"Such information not only compromises pending or future government 
investigations, but places informants and undercover agents in 
potentially grave danger," Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter K. Levitt wrote.

While prosecutors haven't pointed to a case where a witness or officer 
was harmed because of the Web site, it has been used to shatter an 
undercover agent's anonymity. After Hawaiian doctor Kachun Yeung was 
charged with distributing narcotic painkillers this spring, a 
surveillance picture of an undercover Drug Enforcement Agent was posted 
on the site.

Federal prosecutors said they traced the posting to the University of 
Hawaii newspaper's photo department, where the doctor's son was a photo 
editor. The posting identified the names of three agents and described 
one as "a known liar and a dirty agent. He is an absolute disgrace to 
the American justice system."

Prosecutors in Boston have discussed whether WhosaRat is protected as 
free speech but have not moved to shut it down. In 2004, an Alabama 
federal judge ruled that a defendant had the right to run a Web site 
that included witness information in the form of "wanted" posters.

Earlier this month, federal judges from Minnesota and Utah urged their 
colleagues to be careful about how much information about witnesses is 
released in public files, noting that they could end up on WhosaRat.

Steve Bunnell, chief of the criminal division at the U.S. attorney's 
office in Washington, said the rules of evidence already require 
authorities to identity witnesses to the people most likely to harm 
them: the defendants. Most of the documents labeled "top secret" on the 
site are really public court records or information copied from other 
Web sites, he said.

His concern is that the site disparages the reputation of people who 
come forward to help solve crimes.

"We don't make those high-level gang and drug organization cases without 
somebody on the inside telling us what's going on," Bunnell 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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 15:05:56 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Will Start Running BBC News Videos


Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO) said on Friday that it will offer BBC News
video on its news site through an agreement with ABC News.

People who visit the Yahoo News Web site will get access to about 30
video clips of BBC News video each day.

Yahoo made the agreement with ABC News, which maintains exclusive
representation for BBC news on-demand broadband and wireless content
in North America. Financial terms were not disclosed. ABC is a unit of
Walt Disney Co.

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/technews.html

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

Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2006 12:00:26 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: FCC Chief's Proposal Seeks to Streamline Video-Franchising Process


USTelecom dailyLead
December 1, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eVsIfDtusXgQeXCibuddjXKz

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* FCC chief's proposal seeks to streamline video-franchising process
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon to acquire West Virginia Wireless
* Sprint, Cingular push into consumer e-mail
* Belgacom passes 100,000 IPTV subscribers
* Comcast's deal with Disney marks end of a long road
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* CALEA Webinars available on demand
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Cavalier Telephone deploys MPEG-4
* Juniper updates SDX platform
* Report: Wibree market could surpass $500 million by 2011
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Report: Market for VoIP, IMS equipment robust
* U.K. lags in VoIP, IPTV adoption, report says
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Markey to head telecom subcommittee

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

Subject: Telecom Update #557, December 1, 2006
Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2006 14:10:17 -0500
From: John Riddell <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE
************************************************************

published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group
http://www.angustel.ca
Number 557: December 1, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous
financial support from:

** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca/home/Home_Business.page
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.ca/communications/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions
** SHAW BUSINESS SOLUTIONS: www.shawbusinesssolutions.ca
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca
************************************************************

IN THIS ISSUE:

** Wireless Profits Surpass Wireline
** CRTC Chair -- Belisle vs Addy?
** Telus Drops Income Trust Plan
** GPS Tracking May Violate Privacy Rights
** Aliant Lets Parents Monitor Cell Use
** Deferral Account Proposals to Be Reviewed
** Alcatel, Lucent Complete Merger
** Skype Takes 4% of World Calling
** Telecom Magazine Folds
** Layoffs Follow Sitel Expansion Plan
** Vonage Expands Montreal-Area Coverage
** Montreal Messaging Developer Wins Financing
** Milne Leaves White Radio
** Celestica Names New CEO

WIRELESS PROFITS SURPASS WIRELINE: Statistics Canada reports that in
the qarter ending June 30, 2006, Canadian wireless carriers had
profits of $996 million, a 36% increase from 2005. This is the first
time that wireless profits have exceeded the incumbent telcos'
wireline profits, which were $822 million, down from $1.2 billion a
year earlier.

** Wireless subscribers at the end of June were 17.2 million,
   up 10.9% from a year earlier. Wireless revenues were $3.1
   billion, about 35% of the industry's total revenues of
   $8.9 billion.

** The incumbent wireline telcos lost 706,000 residential
   lines in the preceding 12 months, and a total of 1.2
   million residential lines in the past five years. Their
   business line counts grew by 36,000 in the past year,
   partially reversing a three-year decline (2002-2005).

** Cablecos had 750,000 telephone subscribers at the end of
   June 2006, six times more than a year earlier.

http://www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/061127/d061127c.htm

CRTC CHAIR -- BELISLE VS ADDY? The Globe and Mail says that there are
two leading contenders to replace Charles Dalfen as CRTC
Chair. Fernand Belisle (former Vice-Chair Broadcasting at the
Commission) is said to be favoured by Heritage Minister Bev Oda and
leading broadcasters, while George Addy (former head of the
Competition Bureau) is preferred by Industry Minister Maxime Bernier
and the large telcos.

TELUS DROPS INCOME TRUST PLAN: As expected, Telus has decided not to
convert to an income trust. The company says its Board of Directors
unanimously decided that Ottawa's plan to increase tax on trusts means
that "it is no longer in the best interests of the Company and its
shareholders to proceed." (See Telecom Update #553, 554)

** We expect a similar announcement from Bell, at or before
   the company's annual Business Review Conference on December 12.

GPS TRACKING MAY VIOLATE PRIVACY RIGHTS: The Office of the Privacy
Commissioner (OPC) says that GPS tracking may violate employees'
privacy rights. Responding to a complaint by drivers working for an
unnamed telecom company, the Commission said that employers may use
tracking devices to monitor vehicles, but they should not be used to
evaluate employee performance.

** A summary of the OPC's investigation and
   conclusions is available online at 
   http://www.privcom.gc.ca/cf-dc/2006/351_20061109_e.asp.

ALIANT LETS PARENTS MONITOR CELL USE: For $4.95/month, subscribers to
Aliant Mobility Family Plans can now monitor and control their
children's cellphone use. Cellular Manager lets parents control when a
child's cellphone can be used, and limit which phone numbers can call
the phone or be called from it.

DEFERRAL ACCOUNT PROPOSALS TO BE REVIEWED: Further in the apparently
never-ending process to determine how the incumbent telcos' deferral
accounts will be spent, CRTC Telecom Public Notice 2006-15 opens a
review of the telcos' proposals. (See Telecom Update #545) To
participate, notify the Commission by December 15.

** Alternative broadband providers that are, or will soon be,
   serving any of the communities proposed for broadband
   funding from the deferral accounts must notify the CRTC by
   January 19, 2007.

** The Commission is still considering Barrett Xplore's
   application to review and vary the original deferral
   account order (see Telecom Update #533), as well as other
   proceedings that could affect the amounts in the deferral
   accounts.

** The deferral account issue won't be decided anytime soon.
   The Commission will still be receiving comments in June
   2007, and the Federal Court will hear appeals of the
   original decision next year as well. (See Telecom Update
   #548)

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Notices/2006/pt2006-15.htm

ALCATEL, LUCENT COMPLETE MERGER: Alcatel and Lucent begin operations
today as a merged company. Alcatel-Lucent has 89,000 employees and
annual revenues of about $28 billion. Lucent CEO Pat Russo assumes that
post for the merged company; Alcatel CEO Serge Tchuruk becomes Chairman.
(See Telecom Update #524)

SKYPE TAKES 4% OF WORLD CALLING: TeleGeography says that Skype
computer-to-computer calls is equivalent to 4.4% of international
carrier traffic this year, compared to 2.9% in 2005. The number of Skype
users online "now regularly exceeds eight million."

TELECOM MAGAZINE FOLDS: Communications & Networking magazine will cease
publishing this month. Publisher Transcontinental Media says its
ITBusiness Group will continue to offer information on networking and
telecom in Computing Canada magazine.

LAYOFFS FOLLOW SITEL EXPANSION PLAN: On October 24, Sitel said it plans
to hire 500 people for its Kanata call centre. This week the company
announced that in April it will close its 550-person call centre in
nearby Bell's Corners.

VONAGE EXPANDS MONTREAL-AREA COVERAGE: Vonage Canada now offers local
numbers in 19 additional communities in the Greater Montreal area,
including Lachine, Laval, and Longueuil.

MONTREAL MESSAGING DEVELOPER WINS FINANCING: Montreal-based Oz
Communications, a maker of software for email and Instant Messaging on
cellphones, has raised US$34 million in financing. Oz has 230 employees,
up from 60 two years ago.

MILNE LEAVES WHITE RADIO: John Milne, President and General Manager of
telecom distributor White Radio, has resigned "to pursue other
interests." White is a subsidiary of Cygnal Technologies.

CELESTICA NAMES NEW CEO: Celestica, the Toronto-based electronics
manufacturer, has given president Craig Muhlhauser the additional
position of CEO. Former CEO Stephen Delaney has resigned "to pursue
other business interests."

How to submit items:
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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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.

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

From: pstock <midtownee@gmail.com>
Subject: Toronto Home Telephone Providers
Date: 1 Dec 2006 09:59:18 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I am researching a simple consumer article listing and comparing home
telephone service provider options for Ontario and specifically
toronto residents.  (Not VOIP or LD add-ons like Vonage or Escarpment
Telecom but the real deal, the company you pay for the basic copper
line service into your home.)

Can anyone tell me who they know of as options for home telephone
serivce hosting?  I can think of: Bell, Telus, Rogers, Primus, Wintel,
(but there might be (must be?) others

As an aside I recently switched from Bell to Primus, but that is
another story.)

Can anyone point me to any others, and does anyone have any
performance comments on any services they have used (I have discovered
since switching, for instance, that YAK LD service is mysteriously
incompatible with Primus, as are many calling cards.)

Many thanks,

Peter

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 01, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Fri,  1 Dec 2006 10:53:28 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 01, 2006
********************************

Nokia, Ericsson, Sun Create Telecoms Network Equipment Alliance
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21419?11228

     The world's top telecoms equipment vendors, Finland's Nokia and
     Sweden's Ericsson, have teamed up with the United States' Sun
     Microsystems to create an alliance for network equipment
     providers. The aim of the new organisation, named
     Telecommunications Platform Initiative (TPI), would be to assist
     telecoms operators and ...

VoIP Provider Looks for Quality Assurance
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21412?11228

     deltathree Inc., a service provider specializing in integrated
     VoIP, hosted solutions and infrastructure, had a problem: To
     expand and retain its customer base, it needed a way to achieve
     toll-quality IP voice on its network, even in remote regions of
     the globe.  deltathree's private-label platform lets other
     service providers ...

Review: 3 Smart Phones Target Consumers
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21410?11228

     NEW YORK -- In a blink of mere months, the mobile 'smart' phone
     has been transformed from pricey corporate gadget to an
     affordable alternative for ordinary folk.  In the last month
     alone, Cingular Wireless has unveiled three devices priced as low
     as $200 (after jumping through the assorted contractual hoops
     and ...

Bell Labs' History of Inventions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21403?11228

     TRENTON, N.J. -- It's the birthplace of the transistor, the
     laser, the solar cell and the fax machine. Its researchers were
     the first to hear the echoes of the Big Bang. And now this
     American legend is part of a French company.  Bell Labs was
     founded in 1925 as the research arm of AT&T' national telephone
     business ...

Cingular Polishes up the Pearl
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21396?11228

     Cingular Wireless is the latest U.S. carrier to introduce the new
     BlackBerry Pearl from Research In Motion. The carrier has wrapped
     up a few holiday surprises for Pearl shoppers, including
     push-to-talk (PTT) and GPS navigation capabilities.  The quadband
     Pearl offers a digital camera, multimedia capabilities and an
     expandable memory ...

Nortel Partnership Targets Southeast Europe
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21394?11228

     Nortel, in a move to beef up its marketing in southeastern
     Europe, plans to set up a joint venture with consulting house
     Southeast European Communications and Investments Inc. (SECI).
     The new unit, to be called Nortel SE, reportedly will open
     offices in Bulgaria, Macedonia and Serbia, and it will hire a
     sales and marketing staff of  ...

Freed From Lockdown
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21391?11228

     The new exemption allowing cellphone users to 'unlock' their
     handsets, for use on a different carrier's network, has been in
     effect now for four days, and the world hasn't ended for the Big
     4 carriers. Yet.  In general, the carriers have reacted
     cautiously, if predictably, to the ruling by the Librarian of ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

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
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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 #402
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun Dec  3 20:28:30 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 661872210; Sun,  3 Dec 2006 20:28:30 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #403
Message-Id: <20061204012830.661872210@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Sun,  3 Dec 2006 20:28:30 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sun, 3 Dec 2006 20:30:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 403

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    U.N. Agency Discusses Risks to Privacy, Security Online (Reuters NewsWire)
    My Space.com  Continues to Offend (Tom McGhee)
    MF Trunks and Caller ID (merton)
    Airplane Technology Takes Flight (Monty Solomon)
    Here's My Number (for Today) (Monty Solomon)
    FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool (Monty Solomon)
    DS3 Bandwidth Pricing Is Getting Cheaper - How To Take (FreedomFireCom)
    Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site (William Warren)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Sun, 03 Dec 2006 18:25:43 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: U.N. Agency Discusses Risks to Privacy and Security Online


Computer users who type in the same username and password for multiple
sites -- such as online banks, travel agencies and booksellers -- are
at serious risk from identity thieves, a United Nations agency said on
Sunday.

The International Telecommunication Union, a Geneva-based U.N. branch,
said businesses and regulators need to find a solution to the spread
of personal information on the Internet, possibly by developing more
streamlined identification methods.

At the moment, the ITU said the sheer number of identifiers and
passwords required from computer users made it nearly inevitable that
they repeat codes.

"This may cause security breaches, and leave them vulnerable to the
machinations of identity thieves ever increasing in number and
inventiveness," it said in its 2006 Internet report, released ahead of
a major meeting of governments and industry officials in Hong Kong.

"The lack of coordination in identification systems is a source of
growing inconvenience to users and needs to be addressed rapidly," it
said.

The agency also highlighted risks to privacy from widespread Internet
use, especially from marketers tracking the preferences and traffic of
browsers across a variety of sites.

If people have confidence in the way such information is stored and
used, the ITU said there might be no problem from the proliferation of
"cookies" and other data-capturing tools, often used for targeted
online advertising.

But it warned that a breakdown in consumer trust could impede the
future expansion of Internet-based commerce.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sat, 02 Dec 2006 00:48:40 -0600
From: Tom McGhee <denverpost@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: My Space.com Continues to Offend


By Tom McGhee
Denver Post Staff Writer
 
Photos that Melissa Lease, above, sent to her husband appeared on 
MySpace.com.
 
Parker resident Melissa Lease discovered one downside of the Internet
age when a friend told her that revealing photos she sent to her
husband were appearing on social networking site MySpace.com.

While her husband was at home from a tour of duty in Iraq, Lease said,
someone in his unit rifled through his belongings, found the pictures,
which showed her posing in a bra and panties, and posted them.

"These pictures were made for my husband and no one else. Someone
typed my name on MySpace and they popped up, and (my friend) came up
to me and said there are inappropriate pictures of me and she asked me
if I (posted) them," said Lease, a cosmetology student at Aveda
Institute in Denver. "It was just a really uncomfortable situation."

MySpace has removed the pictures.

Unwelcome attention via websites is becoming more common as social
interaction migrates to cyberspace, said Leslie Flint, legal research
associate with the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego. "In the
past, it would be gossip or note-passing. This sort of thing happened,
but it wasn't on the same scale."

No definitive numbers are available on how frequently privacy
invasions or smear campaigns occur on the Internet. But Eric
P. Robinson of the Media Law Resource Center in New York said about 60
lawsuits and criminal complaints have been filed nationwide against
bloggers, most of them in the past two years.

This year, courts have rendered judgments against individuals for
making defamatory comments on the Internet in cases in Florida,
Georgia and North Dakota. Lawsuits are pending in Colorado,
California, Texas and Utah.

Earlier this month, Tony Perri,head of Boulder's public-access TV
station, Channel 54, filed a criminal complaint alleging a former
producer at the station, Jann Scott, put up a MySpace page that
defamed him.

Scott denied the charge in a telephone interview last week.

"Perri accused me of it, but I don't know anything about it," said
Scott, who added that he had seen the Perri page before MySpace took
it down. "I understand it as parody, protected free speech, so I am
not worried about it or him."

The text on the page was vile, Perri said, accusing him of being a
"suck up," and suggesting he engaged in a sexual act with members of
the Boulder City Council.

The page went up after Perri suspended Scott for launching a campaign
of harrassment after some of his shows didn't appear in the time slots
he wanted.

MySpace, which is owned by media and entertainment giant News Corp.,
says it looked into the postings involving Perri and Lease and had
them removed.

"We take our customer service and safety procedures seriously and will
continue to investigate ways to make them as efficient as possible,"
said Hemanshu Nigam, MySpace chief of security.

Blogs, interactive websites such as MySpace and even sites that offer
book reviews such as Amazon.com can be used to publish libelous
material. But federal law meant to protect free speech on the Web
makes it difficult for victims of unwelcome or even defamatory
attention to take successful legal action against owners of a website
where it appears, said Phil Weiser, a professor of law and
telecommunications at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Federal lawmakers wanted to maximize the amount of free speech on the
Internet when they passed the 1996 Telecommunications Act, he said. So
the act protects Internet service providers and websites from libel
and other laws that govern what can appear.

"In general, the Internet is not subject to rules that encourage a
closer editing of content; it is a wide-open environment," Weiser
said.  "This is an enormous challenge in the information age that we
haven't been able to confront."

Anyone who wants to file a civil suit will have to pay a lawyer, and
even if they win, there is a good chance the judgment will be more
than they can collect, experts said.

Susan Scheff, of Weston, Fla., recently won $11.3 million in a
defamation suit against a Louisiana woman who posted messages on the
Internet accusing her of being a "crook," a "con artist" and a
"fraud."

"I never expect to collect $11.3 million," said Scheff, who took a
second mortgage on her home to pay the legal tab. "She went out there
and discredited me and destroyed me and my family on the Internet. ...
Whenever you Googled me, you saw these things."

Scheff has a business called Parents Universal Resource Experts that
helps parents of troubled children find services such as schools.

Since her case became public, Scheff has received numerous phone calls 
and e-mails from others who have been maligned on the Web.

"I am amazed at the number of people who contacted me," she said. "I
didn't realize it was such an epidemic."

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

From: merton <mcdegray@gmail.com>
Subject: MF Trunks and Caller ID
Date: 2 Dec 2006 19:21:06 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I have run into a subject that I need some clarification on. I have
always been advised that Caller ID info, such as calling number,
cannot be transmitted through an MF Trunk. Someone has now stated that
LRNs have to be sent through MF trunks ... and depending on how those
trunks are set up as to whether the calling party number will display
on the receiving end. Does anyone have a deep knowledge of how the MF
trunks function and if the calling party number can actually be
broadcast to the receiving phone? Your assistance will be deeply
appreciated!!!

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

Date: Sat, 2 Dec 2006 22:51:20 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Airplane Technology Takes Flight


http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2006/11/09/airplane-technology-takes-flight/

Airplane Technology Takes Flight

David Pogue

Greetings from 39,000 feet!

I'm writing to you on my laptop on a flight across Canada, courtesy of
something I've never encountered before: full-blown, three-prong,
U.S.-style power outlets on every seat back.

Not some wacky jack that requires a $70 adapter -- we're talking 
regular three-prong outlets. Not in first class; in coach. Free, by 
the way.

Why is it, I wonder, that Air Canada is the pioneer here? Isn't it a
sort of obvious idea -- way more obvious than putting TV screens in
everyone's seat back? I mean, if you have power, you can supply your
own entertainment: a laptop, game, portable DVD player, whatever.

Each seat back on this plane also has a touch-screen entertainment
unit with a choice of TV, radio, movies, games, and so on. Now, I've
seen TV screens on planes before (they have them on JetBlue, on
international flights and in first class) - but not like this. On this
plane, there's no set schedule for movies beginning; every single seat
has its own little TiVo. You can start, stop, pause, rewind or
fast-forward any movie at any time, completely independently of the
other passengers' showings.

It makes a huge difference. (Ever try to watch a movie on a plane
while you're traveling with young children? I rest my case.)

Oh, and Air Canada doesn't charge for any of this, either. (On the
other hand, I don't much care for the way this airline throws away 200
pairs of complimentary headphones after each flight.)

Dear U.S. Carriers: If you're really looking for a competitive
advantage, find out who's supplying Air Canada with these goodies.

You know what's weird, though? No wireless networking. We all thought
that was coming, right? We'd hear about how Lufthansa flights already
have on-board Wi-Fi high-speed wireless, and that it was only a matter
of time before it came to North American carriers.

But even as entertainment screens are developing nicely, wireless
Internet is taking a big step backward-maybe even off a cliff. Boeing
is shutting down its Connexion Wi-Fi service, which is what Lufthansa
and other airline experiments were using. Its Web site says, "The
company has decided to exit the high-speed broadband communications
connectivity market." The service is free until the end of 2006, but
at that point, it's being turned off altogether.

And why is Boeing pulling the plug? Because "the global market for the
service has not developed satisfactorily." Translation: It was losing
money hand over fist.

Evidently not enough airlines outfitted their planes with the
transmitters (at $500,000 apiece).

Surely some other company could step in and rescue the on-board Wi-Fi
industry? But no. "There are currently no plans to transition the
service to another provider."

That's a bummer. (I may be typing this at 39,000 feet, but I'll be
sending it at sea level.)

Then there's the little matter of cellphones. Turns out that there's
really not much evidence that cellphones cause cockpit interference;
no study has ever been able to establish proof. In fact, there's now a
discussion about perhaps relaxing the restrictions on cellphones on
planes.

I just hope they know what they're doing. Removing the ban means you
might be the unlucky slob who has the loudmouth yakking away next to
you for four hours. At this point, planes are the last refuge of
people who want to hear themselves think or watch movies.

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

Date: Sat, 2 Dec 2006 22:54:24 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Here's My Number (for Today)


By ANNA JANE GROSSMAN
The New York Times

THERE is no shortage of ways to reach Airin McClain, a singer who
lives in Philadelphia. She has a Web site, an instant messenger
account, a MySpace page, four e-mail addresses and two mobile phones.

Good luck getting one of those phone numbers, though. She would
sooner tell you her weight.

"Why would I give out my cell?" said Ms. McClain, 23. "I don't need a
guy I met at a bar one night calling me every day for the next two
weeks begging me to go out. I want to filter out the people I don't
need to have contact with."

In an age of information oversharing, the mobile-phone number is one
of the few pieces of personal information that people still choose to
guard. Unwanted incoming calls are intrusive and time-consuming and
can suck precious daytime cell-plan minutes. And the decision to give
out a cell number can haunt you for years, as people now hold on to
the numbers longer than their land-line numbers.

Some people have found a way to avoid compromising the sanctity of
their cellphone without committing the modern sin of being
unreachable. Instead of giving out her cell number, Ms. McClain has
recently been dispersing what has become known as a "social phone
number."

This is a free number that is as disposable as a Hotmail address. A
handful of Web sites are creating these mask numbers, which can be
obtained in nearly every area code (users can either have a number in
their own region, or make it look as if they have an office in New
York City when they are actually operating out of rural Maine).

These sites buy numbers in bulk at a discount, then generate profit by
displaying ads and getting users of the free service to upgrade to
billable plans with features like call forwarding, call blocking and
outbound calling.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/30/fashion/30numbers.html?ex=1322542800&en=509006b423704d01&ei=5090

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

Date: Sun, 3 Dec 2006 03:24:48 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool


By Declan McCullagh

Story last modified Fri Dec 01 18:46:27 PST 2006

The FBI appears to have begun using a novel form of electronic 
surveillance in criminal investigations: remotely activating a mobile 
phone's microphone and using it to eavesdrop on nearby conversations.

The technique is called a "roving bug," and was approved by top U.S.
Department of Justice officials for use against members of a New York
organized crime family who were wary of conventional surveillance
techniques such as tailing a suspect or wiretapping him.

Nextel cell phones owned by two alleged mobsters, John Ardito and his
attorney Peter Peluso, were used by the FBI to listen in on nearby
conversations. The FBI views Ardito as one of the most powerful men in
the Genovese family, a major part of the national Mafia.

The surveillance technique came to light in an opinion published this
week by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan. He ruled that the "roving
bug" was legal because federal wiretapping law is broad enough to
permit eavesdropping even of conversations that take place near a
suspect's cell phone.

Kaplan's opinion said that the eavesdropping technique "functioned
whether the phone was powered on or off." Some handsets can't be fully
powered down without removing the battery; for instance, some Nokia
models will wake up when turned off if an alarm is set.

While the Genovese crime family prosecution appears to be the first
time a remote-eavesdropping mechanism has been used in a criminal
case, the technique has been discussed in security circles for years.
The U.S. Commerce Department's security office warns that "a cellular
telephone can be turned into a microphone and transmitter for the
purpose of listening to conversations in the vicinity of the phone."
An article in the Financial Times last year said mobile providers can
"remotely install a piece of software on to any handset, without the
owner's knowledge, which will activate the microphone even when its
owner is not making a call."

Nextel and Samsung handsets and the Motorola Razr are especially
vulnerable to software downloads that activate their microphones, said
James Atkinson, a counter-surveillance consultant who has worked
closely with government agencies. "They can be remotely accessed and
made to transmit room audio all the time," he said. "You can do that
without having physical access to the phone."

Because modern handsets are miniature computers, downloaded software
could modify the usual interface that always displays when a call is
in progress. The spyware could then place a call to the FBI and
activate the microphone -- all without the owner knowing it happened.
(The FBI declined to comment on Friday.)

http://news.com.com/2100-1029-6140191.html

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

From: FreedomFireCom <melemm@cognisurf.com>
Subject: DS3 Bandwidth Pricing Is Getting Cheaper - How To Best Take Advantage
Date: 2 Dec 2006 15:22:03 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The predicted end to dropping DS3 bandwidth pricing is premature as
the downward pricing trend continues.  If DS3 will be part of your
network solution you need to know how to position yourself to take
advantage.  This article explains how:

http://ds3-bandwidth.com/archive/DS3_Bandwidth_Pricing_Cheaper.html

God Bless,

Michael Lemm
FreedomFire Communications

"Helping YOUR Business ... DO Business"
http://www.linkedin.com/in/freedomfirecom

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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 18:46:28 -0500
From: William Warren <william_warren@speakeasy.nonoise.net>
Subject: Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site


Matt Apuzzo wrote:

> Police decry Web site on informants 
> By MATT APUZZO, Associated Press Writer

> Police and prosecutors are worried that a Web site claiming to identify 
> more than 4,000 informants and undercover agents will cripple 
> investigations and hang targets on witnesses.

> The Web site, WhosaRat.com, first caught the attention of authorities 
> after a Massachusetts man put it online and named a few dozen people as 
> turncoats in 2004. Since then, it has grown into a clearinghouse for mug 
> shots, court papers and rumors.
[snip]

The URL goes to a "Suspended Site" page as of 23:46Z 01 Dec.

William

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon Dec  4 14:53:06 2006
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Date: Mon,  4 Dec 2006 14:53:05 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 4 Dec 2006 14:55:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 404

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Chat Rooms Enable Mental Illness (Michelle Nichols, Reuters)
    Yahoo Partners With Reuters on EyeWitness Pictures (Eric Auchard,Reuters)
    Ruling Leaves Dish Viewers Without Networks (Monty Solomon)
    Open-Source Spying (Monty Solomon)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 04, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Alcatel-Lucent Begins Next Phase (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: My Space.com Continues to Offend (Danny Burstein)
    Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site (Linc Madison)
    Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site (ellis@no.spam)
    Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool (ellis@no.spam)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 12:57:00 -0600
From: Michelle Nichols Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Chat Rooms Enable Mental Illness


Anorexics, bulimics learn methods online
By Michelle Nichols

Young sufferers of anorexia and bulimia who try to hide their eating
problems from their parents and doctors are turning to a growing
number of Internet chat rooms dedicated to enabling their illness.

A pilot study released on Monday of U.S. eating disorder patients aged
between 10 and 22 showed that up to a third learn new weight loss or
purging methods from Web sites that promote eating disorders by
enabling users to share tips, such as what drugs induce vomiting and
what Internet sites sell them.

But the study -- published in the American Academy of Pediatrics'
journal Pediatrics -- found that eating disorder sufferers were also
learning new high-risk ways to lose weight from each other on Web
sites aimed at helping them recover.

The survey by researchers from Stanford University School of Medicine
and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford showed a third of
patients also visited pro-recovery sites and half of them learned new
weight loss and purging methods.

"Parents and physicians need to realize that the Internet is
essentially an unmonitored media forum," said Rebecka Peebles, Packard
Children's adolescent medicine and eating disorder specialist and an
author of the study.

"It's just not possible to completely control the content of an
interactive site," she said in a telephone interview.

A wave of pro-eating disorder sites showed up on the Internet between
2001 and 2003, prompting operators of several Internet hosts to try to
remove such sites. But the study showed many pro-anorexia and bulimia
sites remain accessible, with most patients finding them and
pro-recovery sites through chance searches.

"I feel so sick eating as much as 800 calories," a teen-age girl, who
called herself "berlinium," wrote in a pro-anorexia chat room on
Monday.

"And then for some reason now when I try to purge, I can't get
anything up. I mean I am literally shoving my fingers past my tonsils,
but nothing," she said, adding that she had just bought a drug off the
Internet to induce vomiting.

Eating disorders returned to the global spotlight recently when two
models suffering anorexia died in Brazil and Uruguay.

The fashion industry has long been blamed for encouraging anorexia and
bulimia among teen-agers with its use of excessively thin catwalk
models. In September, the city of Madrid banned models below a certain
weight from its fashion week shows.

The U.S. study was based on an anonymous survey of 76 patients who
were diagnosed with an eating disorder at Packard Children's Hospital
between 1997 and 2004, as well as 106 parents of patients.

While half of the parents surveyed said they were aware of Web sites
promoting eating disorders, only 28 percent had ever discussed these
sites with their child and only 20 percent said they placed limits on
their child's Internet use.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 13:00:57 -0600
From: Eric Auchard, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Partners With Reuters on EyeWitness Pictures


By Eric Auchard

Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news), in partnership with Reuters, is
inviting the public to contribute eyewitness photos and videos of news
events, in the latest move to turn spectators into on-the-spot
journalists.

The Internet media company said it has created a news contribution
system called "You Witness" and is working with news and information
company Reuters Group Plc, which will edit and distribute selected
photos to other news outlets.

Yahoo plans to run selected images contributed by users as part of
topical packages on Yahoo News, which currently offers news from
dozens of professional news organizations including Associated Press,
CNN and Reuters.

With hundreds of millions of camera phones in circulation, consumers
are able to take high-quality photos and videos.

The South Asian tsunami, the London Underground bombings and the
impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans have showcased the power of
people who happen to be in the wrong place at the right time to
capture history as it happens.

"There is already a lot of quality amateur journalism being created by
our users," said Scott Moore, head of news and information at Yahoo
Media Group. "Yahoo needed a more efficient process for soliciting and
publishing user- contributed photos and video."

While focused initially on news, Yahoo aims to expand the You Witness
system to solicit user contributions for sports, entertainment and
other sections of its site, a spokesman for the Sunnyvale,
California-based company said.

Yahoo and London-based Reuters are working out a plan to compensate
contributors when their images are selected for commercial
syndication, the two companies said.

"We are looking at the possibility of creating photo wires and
archives to allow people to be compensated for their work and for the
images they are able to capture," said Chris Ahearn, president of
Reuters Media.

Starting on Tuesday, contributors can submit photos to You Witness via
a link off of the main page of Yahoo News (http://news.yahoo.com) or
to Reuters at http://www.reuters.com/youwitness. Yahoo is weighing
when and whether to expand the program to international sites.

Many local and national news organizations invite their readers or
viewers to contribute eyewitness news reports.

But media outlets have been wary about how to maintain quality
control, avert hoaxes and compensate contributors without fueling a
mercenary atmosphere around news events.

http://CNN.com , another top-ranked news site, invites users to
volunteer what it calls "I-Reports" -- "stories seen through your eyes
and your lens."  But it does not pay contributors.

The new undertaking by Yahoo News, the No. 1 online news site with 34
million U.S. readers in October according to comScore Networks data,
is more extensive. Yahoo also owns the photo-sharing site Flickr,
where amateur photographers often post photos of breaking news events
online.

Video news contributions will eventually be distributed under the
current deal, Yahoo and Reuters officials said.

"We want to expand the initiative to include text stories, but photos
and video were the most obvious way to begin," said Moore, who
previously was publisher of online magazine Slate.

Reuters already pays the public for hot images and that will continue,
Ahearn said. For example, in 2000, the famous photo of a Concorde
plane in flames just ahead of its crash in Paris was purchased by
Reuters from a Hungarian plane spotter.

"We have been seeking to increase the number and range of voices that
can be active in our service," Ahearn said. "This is another step in
that direction."

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 00:04:04 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Ruling Leaves Some Dish Viewers Without Networks


By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff  |  December 2, 2006

When Gardner resident James Bargnesi woke up yesterday, NBC, Fox, and
CBS channels from across the country had disappeared from his
satellite dish, disrupting his normal routine. At Satellite Video, a
satellite television installation company in White River Junction,
Vt., calls began to trickle in from customers upset that they had lost
the Manchester, N.H., ABC affiliate that provided their local news.

Yesterday, satellite TV provider Dish Network was ordered to shut off
so-called "distant network channels" to an estimated 900,000 of its
12.8 million customers, ending a nine-year legal battle with networks
over copyright violations.

Distant network channels are stations beyond the ones offered by a
local affiliate. A Florida judge found in October that Dish's practice
of offering such service where local stations are available violated
the Satellite Home Viewer Act and issued an order to stop Dish from
offering them to customers, beginning yesterday .

http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/articles/2006/12/02/ruling_leaves_some_dish_viewers_without_networks/

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

Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 00:51:56 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Open-Source Spying


By CLIVE THOMPSON
The New York Times
December 3, 2006

When Matthew Burton arrived at the Defense Intelligence Agency in 
January 2003, he was excited about getting to his computer. Burton, 
who was then 22, had long been interested in international relations: 
he had studied Russian politics and interned at the U.S. consulate in 
Ukraine, helping to speed refugee applications of politically 
persecuted Ukrainians. But he was also a big high-tech geek fluent in 
Web-page engineering, and he spent hours every day chatting online 
with friends and updating his own blog. When he was hired by the 
D.I.A., he told me recently, his mind boggled at the futuristic, 
secret spy technology he would get to play with: search engines that 
can read minds, he figured. Desktop video conferencing with 
colleagues around the world. If the everyday Internet was so awesome, 
just imagine how much better the spy tools would be.

But when he got to his cubicle, his high-tech dreams collapsed. "The 
reality," he later wrote ruefully, "was a colossal letdown."

The spy agencies were saddled with technology that might have seemed 
cutting edge in 1995. When he went onto Intelink -- the spy agencies' 
secure internal computer network -- the search engines were a pale 
shadow of Google, flooding him with thousands of useless results. If 
Burton wanted to find an expert to answer a question, the personnel 
directories were of no help. Worse, instant messaging with 
colleagues, his favorite way to hack out a problem, was impossible: 
every three-letter agency -- from the Central Intelligence Agency to 
the National Security Agency to army commands -- used different 
discussion groups and chat applications that couldn't connect to one 
another. In a community of secret agents supposedly devoted to 
quickly amassing information, nobody had even a simple blog -- that 
ubiquitous tool for broadly distributing your thoughts.

Something had gone horribly awry, Burton realized. Theoretically, the
intelligence world ought to revolve around information sharing. If
F.B.I. agents discover that Al Qaeda fund-raising is going on in
Brooklyn, C.I.A. agents in Europe ought to be able to know that
instantly. The Internet flourished under the credo that information
wants to be free; the agencies, however, had created their online
networks specifically to keep secrets safe, locked away so only a few
could see them. This control over the flow of information, as the 9/11
Commission noted in its final report, was a crucial reason American
intelligence agencies failed to prevent those attacks. All the clues
were there -- Al Qaeda associates studying aviation in Arizona, the
flight student Zacarias Moussaoui arrested in Minnesota, surveillance
of a Qaeda plotting session in Malaysia -- but none of the agents knew
about the existence of the other evidence. The report concluded that
the agencies failed to "connect the dots."

By way of contrast, every night when Burton went home, he was 
reminded of how good the everyday Internet had become at connecting 
dots. "Web 2.0" technologies that encourage people to share 
information -- blogs, photo-posting sites like Flickr or the 
reader-generated encyclopedia Wikipedia -- often made it easier to 
collaborate with others. When the Orange Revolution erupted in 
Ukraine in late 2004, Burton went to Technorati, a search engine that 
scours the "blogosphere," to find the most authoritative blog 
postings on the subject. Within minutes, he had found sites with 
insightful commentary from American expatriates who were talking to 
locals in Kiev and on-the-fly debates among political analysts over 
what it meant. Because he and his fellow spies were stuck with 
outdated technology, they had no comparable way to cooperate -- to 
find colleagues with common interests and brainstorm online.

Burton, who has since left the D.I.A., is not alone in his concern. 
Indeed, throughout the intelligence community, spies are beginning to 
wonder why their technology has fallen so far behind -- and talk among 
themselves about how to catch up. Some of the country's most senior 
intelligence thinkers have joined the discussion, and surprisingly, 
many of them believe the answer may lie in the interactive tools the 
world's teenagers are using to pass around YouTube videos and bicker 
online about their favorite bands. Billions of dollars' worth of 
ultrasecret data networks couldn't help spies piece together the 
clues to the worst terrorist plot ever. So perhaps, they argue, it' s 
time to try something radically different. Could blogs and wikis 
prevent the next 9/11?

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/magazine/03intelligence.html?ex=1322802000&en=46027e63d79046ce&ei=5090

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 04, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Mon,  4 Dec 2006 11:32:54 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 04, 2006
********************************

Parliament in Germany Approves Controversial Telecoms Legislation
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21447?11228

     The German parliament has approved a controversial amendment to
     the telecoms law, which gives the green light for the country's
     incumbent, Deutsche Telekom, to close its new high-speed VDSL
     network to rivals. The move is a success for Deutsche Telekom,
     Europe's largest telecoms group, which has been lobbying the
     government to ...

Qualcomm Builds up Bluetooth and WLAN with Two Acquisitions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21445?11228

     U.S.-based chipmaker and CDMA specialist Qualcomm has announced
     that is has made two acquisitions to enhance its presence in
     wireless networking technologies. Qualcomm is to pay US$39
     million for the majority of Bluetooth-related assets of RF Micro
     Devices Inc, which is based in San Diego. Qualcomm will also pay
     an undisclosed amount for ...

Alcatel-Lucent Says Its Space Unit Won 661 Million Order With Globalstar
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21439?11228

     PARIS -- Alcatel-Lucent said today that its space unit won a euro
     661 million contract (US$882 million) with Globalstar Inc. to
     design, manufacture and deliver 48 low-earth-orbit satellites.
     The contract also includes the provision of support services
     before and during the launches and mission operations support ...

Unblocking Laser Signals
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21437?11228

     Laser signals can be blocked by many different types of objects,
     including trees, buildings and mountains. But it's the little
     things, like fog, rain, dirt and dust, that unpredictably
     interfere with laser communications and tend to vex users the
     most. Penn State University researchers are now working on a
     solution to this problem. ...

FCC Grants License, Some Winners Talk Plans
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21436?11228

     The FCC officially awarded half of the 1,087 licenses that were
     up for sale in its August-September Advanced Wireless Services
     (AWS) auction to winning bidders late yesterday.  The agency says
     it granted 550 of the 1,087 licenses won in this past
     summer's Auction 66 of advanced wireless spectrum.  The
     licenses granted ...

TeliaSonera Goes 3G In Spain, Meets Swedish Goal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21433?11228

     TeliaSonera's 76.6-percent majority-owned Spanish mobile
     operation Xfera launched commercial services today under the
     brand name 'Yoigo' promising the cheapest 3G service in that
     country.  The operator's initial commercial tariffs see it
     offering the same prices for both contract and prepaid customers,
     an unusual ...

More About Meraki
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21429?11228

     Wireless mesh startup Meraki Networks Inc. has confirmed it's
     gotten money from Google, among others, and that it's helping the
     search giant with its WiFi plans while preparing its own commercial
     release for next year.       Recently, Unstrung revealed that
     Mountain View, Calif.-based Meraki is working to improve indoor
     coverage ...

LSI to Buy Agere for $4B
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21427?11228

     LSI Logic Corp. is buying Agere Systems Inc. in an all-stock
     deal valued at $4 billion, the two chip companies announced today.
     The transaction will create a storage, networking and
     'consumer powerhouse' that will supply chips, systems, and
     software to equipment vendors, the firms say. LSI Logic is a
     major ...

Alcatel-Lucent Stays Tight-Lipped
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21424?11228

     Alcatel-Lucent is alive and kicking, and has been showing off its
     new purple corporate logo. But today's introductory press
     conference in Paris provided little else in the way of visibility
     on staff cuts, product rationalization, or expectations for
     2007. Non-executive chairman Serge Tchuruk and CEO ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 12:20:20 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Alcatel-Lucent Begins Next Phase


USTelecom dailyLead
December 4, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eWcYfDtusXgTdfCibuddzxmC

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Alcatel-Lucent begins next phase
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon to offer FiOS near Philly
* BT launches IPTV service
* Cisco releases delivery system for digital video
* Huawei picks Sylantro for global IMS solution
* Report: Developing markets to drive telecom growth, innovation
* Analysis: Challenges remain after Sprint-Nextel merger
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* The Irwin Handbook of Telecommunications, Fifth Edition
HOT TOPICS
* AT&T to sell DSL through Wal-Mart
* Surge in VoIP patents signals market for innovation and possible litigation
* Phone and cable companies battle for customers
* FCC chief's proposal seeks to streamline video-franchising process
* High court case on patent "obviousness" has broad implications:
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* MySpace eyes mobile space
* Motorola, Nokia "unlock" handsets
* Line blurs between TV, Web
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Associated Press: FCC's Martin seeks to avert stalemate on AT&T-BellSouth
  vote

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

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: My Space.com Continues to Offend
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 02:50:18 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


In <telecom25.403.2@telecom-digest.org> Tom McGhee
<denverpost@telecom-digest.org> writes:

> By Tom McGhee
> Denver Post Staff Writer

 [ snip ]

> This year, courts have rendered judgments against individuals for
> making defamatory comments on the Internet in cases in Florida,
> Georgia and North Dakota. Lawsuits are pending in Colorado,
> California, Texas and Utah.

And I'd betcha tat the vast majority of these "judgments" came about
because the defendant never appeared and thus lost by default, and I'd
also betcha tat most of the rest (not quite all ...) would be
overturned on appeal.

Oh, and that the defendants don't have much in the way of attachable
resources, either.

> Earlier this month, Tony Perri,head of Boulder's public-access TV
> station, Channel 54, filed a criminal complaint alleging a former
> producer at the station, Jann Scott, put up a MySpace page that
> defamed him.

Criminal complaint about defamation? That's, umm, interesting.

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

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

Subject: Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site
Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 08:30:53 -0800
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>


In article <telecom25.403.8@telecom-digest.org>, William Warren
<william_warren@speakeasy.nonoise.net> wrote:

> Matt Apuzzo wrote:

>> The Web site, WhosaRat.com, ... has grown into a clearinghouse for
>> mug shots, court papers and rumors.

> The URL goes to a "Suspended Site" page as of 23:46Z 01 Dec.

It loads as of 2006-12-04 16:28 UTC, with this news blurb: "On
12/01/06 we were down for part of the day due to an overwhelming
number of hits, we apologize for the inconvenience and hopefully this
does not happen again. New Informant Profiles Are Added Daily!!! You
must be a member to view the site or submit profiles."

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

From: ellis@no.spam
Subject: Re: Police Dislike Informant's Web Site
Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 05:30:33 -0000
Organization: S.P.C.A.A.


In article <telecom25.403.8@telecom-digest.org>,
William Warren  <william_warren@speakeasy.nonoise.net> wrote:

> The URL goes to a "Suspended Site" page as of 23:46Z 01 Dec.

Are you saying WhosaRat.com is suspended? It's working just fine for
me.

http://yosemitecampsites.com/

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

From: ellis@no.spam
Subject: Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool
Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 04:48:38 -0000
Organization: S.P.C.A.A.


In article <telecom25.403.6@telecom-digest.org>,
Monty Solomon  <monty@roscom.com> wrote:

> The FBI appears to have begun using a novel form of electronic 
> surveillance in criminal investigations: remotely activating a mobile 
> phone's microphone and using it to eavesdrop on nearby conversations.

I wondered how long it'd take for that to start happening.  Will the
criminals catch on and start taking the batteries out of their phones?

http://yosemitephotos.net/

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon Dec  4 17:53:11 2006
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Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 4 Dec 2006 17:55:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 405

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Cell Phone Signal Narrows Search for Missing CNET Editor (Katz & Meyers)
    FCC Chairman Wants to Break AT&T-Bell South Lock (Roy Mark, Reuters)
    United States Leads World in Child Abuse Web Sites (Roy Mark, Reuters)
    Charities Eager for Ackermann Cash Jam Phone Lines (Reuters News Wire)
    Washington State vs. Spyware Company. $1 Million (Danny Burstein)
    Who/What is 773-874-8589 (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Phone Review: Two New Nokia Phone Models (Patrick Townson)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 14:15:29 -0600
From: Leslie Katz & Michelle Meyers <cnet@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Cell Phone Signal Narrows Search for Missing CNET Editor and Family


By Leslie Katz, and Michelle Meyers, CNET News.com

After searches in Oregon's Curry and Douglas counties, new information
on missing CNET senior editor James Kim and his family is narrowing
the search back to the Bear Camp area in Josephine County, according
to reports Monday.

A cell phone tower received a signal from one of the family's cell
phones last Saturday near Glendale, but officials say the signal is
only an indicator the family could have been within 26 miles of
Glendale late Saturday night, local news reports say.

Glendale is located off Interstate 5, south of Roseburg, where the
Kims were confirmed to have stopped at a Denny's restaurant on the
night of Saturday, November 25.

A news conference will be held Monday at 3 p.m. PST to provide an
update on search efforts. It will be held at Josephine County Search &
Rescue Headquarters in Merlin, Ore.

The search for the Kims continued through the weekend, with search-and-
rescue teams from the ground and air checking secondary rural routes 
in southwest Oregon, state police said.

Helicopter support was to be discontinued at darkness Sunday, but ground 
search crews were prepared to continue searching into the evening, 
according to a police statement.

The 35-year-old Kim, his 30-year-old wife, Kati, and daughters Penelope 
(4 years) and Sabine (7 months) left their home in San Francisco last 
week on a Thanksgiving road trip to the Pacific Northwest. Before the 
sighting at the Denny's in Roseburg, they had last been seen earlier 
that day in Portland, Ore., according to the San Francisco Police 
Department's missing persons' report.

Approximately 40 state and federal personnel were searching remote area 
roads on Sunday, according to Oregon police. Some of those roads are 
difficult to travel, described by authorities as narrow and curvy with 
steep bordering embankments. Sno-Cats are assisting with the search in 
sections covered with up to 6 inches of frozen snow.

Private resources secured by family members, including helicopters, have 
been assisting in the hunt, and friends and family have traveled to 
Oregon to join the search. Loved ones have also set up a Web site where 
the public can receive updates on the Kims and share their thoughts.

Meanwhile, hundreds of CNET readers have sent e-mails and posted notes 
of concern and support on the site's message boards. Some have mapped 
out possible routes using navigation devices, and others in the Oregon 
area have joined the search effort.

Following confirmed sightings last Saturday night of Kim and his family 
at the Denny's in Roseburg, search efforts shifted north to Douglas 
County, Oregon police said Saturday morning.

Search efforts had been busy in Curry County, the location of Gold 
Beach, the family's reported destination for last Saturday evening. But 
after a multiagency search involving snowmobiles, a Sno-Cat and a UH-60 
Blackhawk, among other helicopters, there was still no sign of the Kims' 
2005 silver Saab 9-2X station wagon with California personalized plates 
of "DOESF."

Those fruitless efforts, combined with news of the Denny's sighting in 
Roseberg at about 8 p.m. on November 25, gave Lt. Dennis Dinsmore of the 
Curry County Sheriffs' Department "no indication in any way that they 
ever reached" his county.

"We're going to start backing away from the investigation," he said, 
adding that the search will shift to roads off state Highway 42 instead 
of Highway 38. Both are common routes taken to get from Interstate 5 to 
the Oregon coast.

Officials from the sheriff's office in Douglas County, where Roseburg is 
located, could not be reached for comment. But the Denny's sighting was 
confirmed in a press statement, and Dinsmore said the family's stop at 
Denny's had been corroborated by employees and a credit card receipt.

The National Guard, California Highway Patrol, Oregon State Police and 
Coast Guard are all participating in the search. In addition to 
patrolling highways running from Interstate 5 to the Oregon coast and 
along Highway 101, Oregon State Police troopers say they are checking 
hotels and resorts on the south coast.

Douglas County sheriffs have already done an extensive search of area 
roads, including Highway 42 from the Winston area to Myrtle Point in 
neighboring Coos County, according to the statement. Further search 
options are being explored.

According to Oregon State Police, about 100 tips had come in to a 
Pacific Northwest call center in Salem, Ore., as of Sunday afternoon. 
The number for the line is 1-800-452-7888.

Ryan Lee, a longtime friend of the Kims, told the San Francisco 
Chronicle that he had brunch with the Kims in Portland on Saturday. The 
Kims told their friend they planned to stop by a clothing boutique in 
Portland before driving to Gold Beach, where they said they had a hotel 
reservation at the Tu Tu Tun Lodge for Saturday night.

The hotel reportedly received an early-evening phone call from the Kims, 
saying they would be arriving at the hotel later than expected. They 
never showed up.

Inspector Kim Lewis of the SFPD's Missing Persons Unit said the last 
call recorded from James Kim's cell phone was made to a friend in San 
Francisco at 3 p.m. and suggested that the call to the hotel may have 
been made from a landline.

While some Saab models come equipped with the OnStar vehicle security
and communications system, the model the Kims were driving did not
offer OnStar as an option, said Mike Weinstein, a detective with the
Portland Police Bureau's Missing Persons Unit, who said he also
confirmed that information with OnStar using the Kims' vehicle
identification number.  The car did not have a LoJack car security
system, either, Weinstein said.

Information provided by family members indicates that the car may have
visible recent damage extending forward from the driver's door along
the left quarter panel and wheel area, according to Oregon State
Police.  This damage was the result of a previous traffic-related
incident in which the driver's door was reportedly repaired, but the
other noted damage may still be visible.

On Saturday, the day the Kims were last seen, weather conditions in
Southern Oregon were very hazardous, according to a spokesman for the
Curry County Sheriff's Department.

At CNET, James Kim is a senior editor covering digital audio who also
co-hosts a weekly video podcast for the Crave gadgets blog. He has
been writing a book on Microsoft's Zune MP3 player. Formerly, he was
an on-air personality on the now-defunct cable television network
TechTV.

He and his wife own two stores in San Francisco -- Doe, a clothing store
in the city's Lower Haight area, and the Church Street Apothecary in
the Noe Valley neighborhood, where they live. Kati Kim also worked at
CNET from 1998 to 1999.

The family was expected to return to San Francisco on Monday, November
27. When both James and Kati failed to show up for appointments on
Tuesday, November 28, co-workers began to worry for their safety. The
Kims are known for keeping in touch daily with their friends and
co-workers, either by phone or e-mail.

Those with information about the Kim family's whereabouts are asked to 
contact the SFPD immediately -- at 415-558-5508 during normal business 
hours and at 415-553-1071 after-hours.

CNET News.com's Greg Sandoval and Jennifer Guevin contributed to this 
report.

Copyright 2006 CNET.

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 and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 14:18:35 -0600
From: Roy Mark <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: FCC Chairman Wants to Break AT&T-Bell South Lock


By Roy Mark

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Kevin Martin has
ordered agency lawyers to determine if FCC Commissioner Robert
McDowell can "unrecuse" himself from the AT&T-BellSouth merger vote.

If cleared to vote, McDowell, who holds one of the three Republican
seats on the five-person panel, could possibly cast the tie-breaking
vote to approve the merger that would create the world's largest
telecommunications company.

McDowell recused himself from the merger vote to avoid the appearance
of a conflict of interest. Prior to joining the FCC in June, McDowell
was a lobbyist for CompTel, which opposes the merger. Without
McDowell's vote, Martin and fellow Republican Deborah Taylor Tate, who
support the merger, are deadlocked with Democrats Michael Copps and
Jonathan Adelstein, who want, among other things, network neutrality
provisions attached to the deal.

Because of the deadlock, Martin has delayed the vote three times over
the last six weeks. The FCC is next scheduled to meet on Dec. 20. The
merger has been pending at the FCC for eight months. "The Commission
has reached an impasse," Martin wrote in a Friday letter to
Congressional leaders. According to Martin, FCC regulations allow a
recused commissioner to vote if the government's interest outweighs
the appearance of a conflict of interest.

"The general counsel has, in the past, used this authority to
authorize commissioners to participate in matters in which they would
otherwise be recused," Martin wrote.

It is not immediately clear when the FCC general counsel will make a
determination on McDowell. Even if allowed to vote, McDowell could
abstain.

Martin's legal maneuvering to get the merger approved, drew the
immediate ire of Public Knowledge, a Washington-based advocacy group.
"Members of Congress should make clear that having Commissioner
McDowell participate in the AT&T-BellSouth merger at this point would
deeply compromise the integrity of the Commission," Public Knowledge
President Gigi Sohn said in a statement. Sohn wrote that it would be
"unseemly" to force McDowell to violate his ethical constraints.

"A better solution would be for Chairman Martin to reconsider his
opposition to the pro-competitive and pro-consumer merger conditions
being advocated by Commissioners Copps and Adelstein," Sohn said.

The Department of Justice approved the merger with no strings attached
on Oct. 11. Martin also favors unconditional approval of the merger.
However, with Martin hamstrung by McDowell's recusal, Copps and
Adelstein have pushed for concessions. Just a day after Martin first
delayed the vote, AT&T said it is willing to adhere to the FCC's
network neutrality principles for 30 months after the official closing
of its proposed merger with BellSouth.

In August 2005, the FCC declared that consumers are entitled to access
the lawful Internet content of their choice, run applications and
services of their choice and plug in and run legal devices of their
choice.

The FCC also said consumers have a right to competition among network 
providers, application and service providers and content providers. What 
the FCC network neutrality principles do not address is the ability of 
broadband providers to charge content providers such as Google extra 
fees based on bandwidth consumption. Both AT&T and Verizon have 
announced broadband business models based on charging the extra fees to 
content providers. Copps and Adelstein want an additional FCC network 
neutrality principle that would ban the practice.

In addition to meeting the FCC's network neutrality principles, AT&T 
also pledged to offer standalone DSL for 30 months after the merger 
approval. AT&T also said it would it offer broadband to 100 percent of 
the living units in the AT&T-BellSouth market by January 2008. In order 
to promote adoption of broadband, AT&T will offer free modems throughout 
next year to residential customers who upgrade from dial-up service. For 
new Internet customers, AT&T proposes to offer broadband service at $10 
a month for an unspecified time period.

The merger would make AT&T the world's largest telecommunications
company with 70 million landline customers across 22 states. Currently
a co-owner of Cingular Wireless with BellSouth, the deal would give
AT&T full control of the nation's largest cellular company.

Combining the two companies' DSL broadband customers would give AT&T
9.1 million high-speed Internet customers, barely behind market leader
Comcast's 9.3 subscribers.

Copyright 2006 Reuters

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/newstoday.html

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 14:22:23 -0600
From: Roy Mark <reuters@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: United States Leads World in Child Abuse Web Sites


By Roy Mark

The United States overwhelmingly leads the world in hosting child
abuse Web sites, according to a new survey by the Internet Watch
Foundation (IWF).

The U.K.-based IWF claims over the last decade the U.S. is the source
of 51 percent of sites featuring examples of child abuse, followed by
Russia (20 percent), Spain (7 percent) and Japan (5 percent).

Only 1.6 percent of the reported sites over the same period were
traced to the U.K., a reflection of the different policies between the
United States and the U.K.

In the U.S., law enforcement officials tend to let child-abuse sites
exist while conducting an investigation in hopes of not tipping off
the site operators that an investigation is under way.

The U.K., on the other hand, almost immediately issues a takedown
notice when a site is discovered. Investigations are conducted after
the sites are closed.

In addition, a U.K. law passed in 2003 presumes a person downloading
child-abuse pictures is guilty until proven innocent.

The IWF also operates the U.K.'s only authorized hotline for the
public and IT professionals to report potentially illegal online
content.

In the 10 years of the IWF, U.K.-based child-abuse sites have fallen
from 18 percent to less than 1 percent.

"The government is determined to do everything it can to protect
children from the insidious use of the Internet by pedophiles," Home
Office Minister Vernon Coaker said in a statement.

"This campaign underlines the importance of the work by the IWF and
the [Internet service providers] to block UK residents from accessing
potentially illegal websites, wherever they are hosted, by the end of
2007."

Peter Robbins, the IWF's chief executive, said his organization "has
almost eradicated online child-abuse images hosted in the U.K."

Founded in 1996, the IWF said it has handled an average of 1,000
reports a month involving more than 31,000 sites found to contain
illegal child abuse content.

Copyright 2006 Reuters.

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/TDNewsradio.html

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 14:06:57 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Charities Eager for Ackermann Cash Jam Phone Lines


Dusseldorf (dpa) - A promise by a top banker in Germany to donate a
huge sum to charity to ward off conviction has led to a jammed
switchboard at the courthouse as non-profit groups vie for largesse.

A courts spokesman in the western city of Dusseldorf said Monday the
court server had also crashed as willing takers bombarded it with
e-mails or hunted online for information on where to claim the money.

Deutsche Bank chief executive Josef Ackermann and five other
defendants promised last week to pay 5.8 million euros into court,
with 40 per cent reserved for charity and the rest to go to public
funds. Charges that they misappropriated funds in 2000 were dropped.

The spokesman said hundreds of applications for the 2.3 million euros
reserved for good causes had already been received.

"We're not counting them any more now," he said, appealing to charities
to send in application by post along with proof of non-profit status. 
He said private individuals, no matter how deserving they claimed to
be, would not qualify.

Ackermann, one of Germany's best-paid employees, personally promised
3.2 million euros (4.2 million dollars) to the settlement. He and
prosecutors are allowed to nominate charities, with judges then to
decide on the recipients.

Prosecutors alleged that Ackermann, as a board member of phone company
Mannesmann, had no power to approve huge bonuses to retiring staff
when the wireless operator was taken over by Vodafone.

Copyright 2006 Reuters.

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/newstoday.html

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Washington State vs. Spyware Company. $1 Million
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 14:43:04 -0500
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


" Attorney General McKenna Announces $1 Million Settlement in Washington's
   First Spyware Suit

" Secure Computer to reimburse Washington purchasers of Spyware Cleaner
  and Popup Padlock

" SEATTLE - Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna today announced a
$1 million settlement with New York-based Secure Computer that
resolves Washington's first lawsuit under the state's computer spyware
law. An estimated 1,145 Washington residents who purchased the
company's SpywareCleaner software and, in some cases, Popup Padlock,
are eligible for refunds under the agreement filed in federal court.

rest:
http://www.atg.wa.gov/releases/2006/rel_Secure_Computer_Restitution_2006.html

____________________________________________________
Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key

 		     dannyb@panix.com
[to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

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

Subject: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: Mon,  4 Dec 2006 16:39:20 EST
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


Can anyone detirmine who this is?  They have called one of my voicemail
numbers (773-828-4212 [go ahead,anyone is free to call it anytime]) for the
past week, leaving a one second hang-up message. That's all anyone
will ever get there (voicemail) but it is a nuisance to keep erasing
all the hangup calls from 773-874-8589.


PAT

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 14:11:13 -0600
From: Patrick Townson <ptownson@cableone.net>
Subject: Phone Review: Two New Nokia Phone Models


New "talk and text" phones from Nokia
Posted: 04-Dec-2006 [Source: Nokia]

[Nokia intros two basic handsets for the "talk and text" crowd - the 
Nokia 1265 and Nokia 1325 featuring hands free speakers and voice 
recorders.]

Hong Kong -- The latest entries into the CDMA handset market from
Nokia were unveiled today at the 3G World Congress in Hong
Kong. Targeted at consumers who use their mobile phone primarily for
basic features like making phone calls voice and text messaging, the
Nokia 1265 and Nokia 1325 feature a number of desirable features such
as handsfree speakers and voice recorders.

"With the new features of the Nokia 1265 and Nokia 1325, consumers are
getting functionality along with ease of use," said Larry Paulson,
Vice President, CDMA, Nokia. "The features most of us take for granted
on our phones are front-and-center on these new products for
first-time mobile phone users. These two new products expand the range
of Nokia models consumers can choose from at an entry level."

Nokia 1325 - Intuitive design, easy-to-use functions

The new Nokia 1325 offers great functionality in a slim package, ideal
for first-time phone users in Asia-Pacific, China, Latin America, the
Middle-East and Africa. A 64k colour display brings the Nokia 1325 to
life. Consumers can personalize their mobile phones with ringtones and
wallpapers. The integrated handsfree speaker available in the Nokia
1325 means others can get involved in one call, ideal for family and
friends.  The Nokia 1325 can store up to 400 contacts and 150
messages, ensuring important messages are not deleted. With the
90-second voice recorder as a standard feature on the new Nokia 1325,
consumers can now use their phone to record those important notes
anywhere.

Weighing in at less than 71 g, the Nokia 1325 is competitively priced
and has a talk time of up to 3.5 hours, while standby time is up to
6.5 days. It is expected that the Nokia 1325 will begin shipping in
select markets within China, Asia-Pacific, Middle-East Africa and
Latin America during the 1st quarter of 2007.

Nokia 1265 - Lighter by design, heavy on features The Nokia 1265
combines mobile features such as easy text messaging with predictive
text and 32-Polyphonic MIDI capabilities with an integrated handsfree
speaker, plus a 60-second voice recorder. Essentials such as a large
contact phonebook, calendar, calculator and alarm clock are also
included in this new device.

The affordably-priced Nokia 1265 offers a black-and-white display,
talk time of up to 3.5 hours and up to 6.5 days of stand-by
capability. It is expected that the Nokia 1325 will begin shipping in
select markets within China, Asia-Pacific, Middle-East Africa and
Latin America during the 1st quarter of 2007.

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

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
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All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #405
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue Dec  5 15:25:07 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 9963D223F; Tue,  5 Dec 2006 15:25:07 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #406
Message-Id: <20061205202507.9963D223F@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Tue,  5 Dec 2006 15:25:07 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 5 Dec 2006 15:25:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 406

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    AT&T Says Won't Need Fiber to the Home (Reuters News Wire)
    US Phone Data Privacy Bill Gets Final Push From Congress (Peter Kaplan)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 05, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Alcatel-Lucent Finalizes Wireless, Satellite (USTelecom dailyLead)
    VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Korey)
    Info Request: 877-229-9776 (William Warren)
    Re: Cell Phone Signal Narrows Search for Missing CNET Editor (Rick Merrill)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (Chris Farrar)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (GlowingBlueMist)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (MB)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (Robert Bonomi)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2006 11:52:47 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: AT&T Says Won't Need Fiber to the Home


Top phone company AT&T Inc. shrugged off concerns on Tuesday that it
would need to build a more expensive, all-fiber network to handle an
expected surge in high-speed Internet and video traffic.

AT&T is currently upgrading its networks to deliver an Internet-based
video service called U-Verse to compete with cable companies.

But unlike No. 2 player Verizon Communications, which is launching a
similar service by building a "fiber to the home" network, it is
making use of existing copper lines to save costs.

"Our view at this point is that we're not going to have go 'fiber to
the home.' We're pleased with the bandwidth that we're seeing over
copper," Chief Financial Officer Richard Lindner told a Credit Suisse
conference.

"On average, at this point, we're producing about 25 megabits (per
second). But in many many locations, we're producing substantially
more than that."

Some analysts have said AT&T's method is more efficient, while others
have said it would need to upgrade its network again when more
consumers start to watch high-definition channels and download movies,
requiring increased bandwidth.

AT&T is also preparing to merge with BellSouth Corp., a move that
would consolidate its ownership of wireless venture Cingular and
reinforce its position as the biggest U.S. telecoms service provider.

Lindner said he hoped the BellSouth merger would be approved at a U.S.
Federal Communications Commission meeting on December 20.

"Certainly, from our standpoint, it would be our hope that the merger
would get approved and we can close and move on at that point," he
said.

"That's certainly our goal ... to have an approval on the 20th. If it
does not happen on the 20th, potentially it could slip into January."

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 17:07:33 -0600
From: Peter Kaplan, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: US Phone Data Privacy Bill Gets Final Push From Congress


By Peter Kaplan

WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers on Monday mounted a final
effort to pass legislation this year to ban the use of deceptive
methods to obtain consumers telephone records.

Democrats and Republicans sought a deal that would clear the way for
the Senate to approve the measure before the Republican-led 109th
Congress draws to a close, likely at the end of this week, Senate
leadership aides said.

The legislation was approved earlier this year by the House of
Representatives. Both chambers need to pass it so it can be sent to
President George W. Bush to sign into law.

If the 109th Congress expires before a final agreement is reach on the
legislation, lawmakers would have to begin anew on the effort after
the 110th Congress convenes on Jan. 4 under the control of Democrats.

"This is just one of those (bills) that we can see pass," one GOP aide
said.

The legislation is aimed at stopping the practice of impersonating
people to obtain their telephone records, also known as pretexting.

There currently is no law against the practice which was spotlighted
when Hewlett-Packard Co. <HPQ.N> admitted that its investigators
obtained telephone records of board members, employees and journalists
without their permission as the company tried to find who was leaking
sensitive information.

The latest efforts to pass the legislation came as the Republican-led
Congress began a final, week-long session.

The phone records measure is one of several that would be passed under
unanimous consent, a process by which leaders from both parties agree
to bring a bill to a vote on the Senate floor, aides said.

It was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously in March
but subsequently stalled in the full Senate.

Some Senate lawmakers had been pushing for a broader bill, which also
would have given consumers and telephone companies the right to sue
for damages.

But aides said they did not anticipate any objections to passing the
House version of the bill.

"I think people have gotten to the point where it's basically this
limited one or nothing," one Republican aide said. "People have
realized that we're almost at the end."

The measure also prohibits buying records from a data broker and sets
criminal penalties of up to 10 years in prison and fines. The bill
would not interfere with investigations by federal, state or local law
enforcement agencies.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 05, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Tue,  5 Dec 2006 11:57:52 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 05, 2006
********************************

Versatel Selects Ericsson for IP Network Upgrade
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21474?11228

     Germany's third-largest telecoms operator, Versatel, has selected
     Sweden's telecoms equipment vendor, Ericsson, for the nationwide
     deployment and integration of its all-IP next-generation access
     network. According to the terms of the two-year contract, Ericsson
     will provide a full-service broadband solution, beginning with
     all-IP ...

Nokia, Wind in 3G Radio Network Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21471?11228

     The Italian telecoms operator, Wind, has selected Nokia for a
     three-year frame agreement for the turnkey supply of the WCDMA 3G
     radio network solution. In a statement, Nokia said it will supply
     its latest Nokia Flexi WCDMA Base Station-Nokia NetAct. The deal
     also covers a range of other services and includes a managed
     services model for ...

Worries About Wireless
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21467?11228

     Despite a parade of studies, potential health risks hardly
     register as a concern.  Although wireless phones continue to
     raise health worries among scientists, those concerns don't seem
     to have much impact on consumers buying phones -- and have been
     replaced by a more prosaic set of concerns, even at some health
     agencies. ...

Innovating Through Design
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21464?11228

     In 1985 the architect Michael Graves designed his first consumer
     product -- a now famous teakettle -- for Alessi, the northern
     Italian home-furnishings manufacturer. Although Graves later
     designed a knockoff for Target that goes for one-fifth the price,
     Alessi has sold more than 1.5 million of the original version,
     which grew out of a ...

Samsung, Microsoft Launch HSDPA Smartphone
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21463?11228

     Samsung Electronics and Microsoft have joined forces to bring,
     what the companies say, is the first smartphone supporting
     high-speed downlink packet access (HSDPA) technology to the Asian
     and European markets.  The Samsung Ultra Messaging i600, which is
     powered by Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0, supports Web
     applications such as ...

Alcatel-Lucent's First Acquisition: Nortel Finalizes UMTS Exit Plan
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21456?11228

     Nortel yesterday said it has now inked a definitive agreement to
     sell its selling its money-losing UMTS access business to the
     newly merged Alcatel-Lucent combine, creating what suddenly
     becomes a major number three player in the market, ready to
     challenge Ericsson and Nokia/Siemens.  The acquisition will most
     likely be the first ...

Colubris's Vertical Takeoff
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21454?11228

     Colubris Networks Inc. looks for more enterprise action, the
     BlackBerry Pearl gets pushy, and one-touch assistance comes to
     phones in this week's tech-roundup.  Colubris's niche itch:
     Colubris Networks Inc. has unveiled a bundle of new products that
     it says will help it break further into niche enterprise markets
     such as ...

Cisco Catches Integration Fever
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21450?11228

     Repeating the mantra of 'more stuff in routers', Cisco
     Systems Inc. is packing more features into the 7600 router
     (giving it more of a broadband-services flavor) and into its
     integrated services routers (ISRs) for the enterprise.
     Specifically, Cisco is adding a session border controller and B-RAS
     to the 7600, giving ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2006 11:43:48 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Alcatel-Lucent Finalizes Wireless, Satellite


USTelecom dailyLead
December 5, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eWlYfDtusXgXiyCibuddAhdP

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Alcatel-Lucent finalizes wireless, satellite agreements
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T enhances encryption for MPLS networks
* DT chief expected to urge shake-up at board meeting
* Nortel expects to make profit targets by '08
* Ericsson wins broadband contracts in Germany, Colombia
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Service Fulfillment Strategies That Balance Risk and Reward
  Thursday, Dec . 7, 1 p.m. (ET)
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Nokia, Motorola eye services, software
* China telecom hints at 3G rollout
* Q-and-A: Telecom executives answer readers' questions
* Taipei begins citywide VoIP service
* Nortel, Toshiba testing WiMAX in Japan
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* EU telecom regulator says consumers should choose standards

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

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

From: Korey <newsemail@cox.net>
Subject: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Date: 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
Sunrocket.

After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
example?

What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
same high speed cable modem connection?

Just curious if this would be possible.


Thanks,

Korey

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 18:23:14 -0500
From: William Warren <william_warren@speakeasy.nonoise.net>
Subject: Info request: 877-229-9776


Anywho.com lists 877-229-9776 for Budget Truck Rental. When I dial the
number, there's a (clipped) recording saying something about password,
and then it disconnects.

If anyone knows who/what this number belongs to, please tell me.

William Warren
(filter noise from my address for direct replies)

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

Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2006 10:31:13 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Cell Phone Signal Narrows Search for Missing CNET Editor


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2006/12/05/state/n064320S67.DTL

wife and kids rescued, he is being tracked ...

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

Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 18:08:19 -0500
From: Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com>
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?


Pat

This is what I get from http://click411.ca reverse directory.

Results:  	1 listing matching "(773) 874-8589"

T Bernard
7832 S May St
Chicago, IL 60620-2939
(773) 874-8589

Chris

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

From: GlowingBlueMist <nobody@invalid.com>
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2006 19:30:22 -0600
Organization: Octanews


TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.405.6@telecom-digest.org:

> Can anyone detirmine who this is?  They have called one of my
> voicemail numbers (773-828-4212 [go ahead,anyone is free to call it
> anytime]) for the past week, leaving a one second hang-up
> message. That's all anyone will ever get there (voicemail) but it is
> a nuisance to keep erasing all the hangup calls from 773-874-8589.

> PAT

A Google search it came up with the following:
"T Bernard (773) 874-8589 7832 S May St,Chicago, IL 60620"

A call to the Chicago Police Department reporting phone harassment might be 
worth a try unless someone is spoofing the Caller ID. 

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: When I called that number -- 874-8589,
the first time of idle curiosity, and the second time just now, it
rang (each instance) for five or six times, then was pulled away by
'call forwarding on no answer' and transferred to someone's voice mail
where I was informed "the mailbox for (uninteligible; the recording
allowed for human intervention with a name) is full. To enter another
number, please do so now". Oh well ... PAT]

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

From: MB <mattb19020@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 19:47:34 -0800


Horace Bernard
7832 S May St
Chicago, IL 60620
(773) 783-3558


T Bernard
7832 S May St
Chicago, IL 60620
(773) 874-8589


> TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:
> Can anyone detirmine who this is?  They have called one of my voicemail
> numbers (773-828-4212 [go ahead,anyone is free to call it anytime]) for the
> past week, leaving a one second hang-up message. That's all anyone
> will ever get there (voicemail) but it is a nuisance to keep erasing
> all the hangup calls from 773-874-8589.

> PAT

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: This second number, 783-3558, being at
the same address and same last name seemed a bit suspicious, so I
tried it also. An elderly black lady put her husband on the phone; he
said that 874-8589 was his daughter's phone, but he did not know when
she would be around, and he offered to take a message. I suggested he
could give her a messsage 'to call again later' and he said he would
do so. I left no other details (i.e. name, address or number) and he
said 'okay he would', and disconnected. The STEwart-3 and the
TRIangle-4 phone exchanges both are wired out of Chicago-Englewood, a
central office in a majority black neighborhood (West 79th and South
May Streets) on the south side of Chicago. 

Oh well, just curious.  PAT]

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: 5 Dec 2006 07:33:22 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> Can anyone detirmine who this is?  They have called one of my
> voicemail numbers for the past week, leaving a one second hang-up
> message. That's all anyone will ever get there (voicemail) but it is
> a nuisance to keep erasing all the hangup calls from 773-874-8589.

I got a spate of them recently but then they stopped.  I'm usually at
work during the day but when I'm home a lot of crap comes in over the
phone.

Sometimes hangup calls like that are from a fax machine on repeat-try.

When I've had them, I put on a fax machine on the line and gotten a
legitimate fax sent to my number in error.  (Since it's cumbersome for
me to rearrange the wiring I don't do it often.)

Other people who have had them complained to the phone company, and
the phone company reported back it was an errant fax machine.  I think
the volume of such calls is so high today the phone company won't
bother anymore.

However, I suspect many of these are "spam" faxes going through all
numbers searching for a fax machine to tell you about stock or land
opportunities.  Of course it could be an automatic dialer gone bad,
just dialing up everyone over and over again.  Just because someone
owns such a unit and has an outward WATS line is no guarantee they
know what they're doing.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I have a fax machine on one of my
internal extensions; the computer modems (which by default do not
auto-answer) and the fax machine (which can be set to auto-answer)
share extension 105.  If someone wants to send a fax they ask me
(or whomever) to be transferred to extension 105, or if I answer
the phone and hear the familiar beep sounds, I just flash and dial
105 then disconnect myself. My problem here is that 773-828-4212 is
somewhere (only god knows) in Chicago; the voicemail picks it up
before any human (even if I knew where it was and had a human assigned
to pick up on it) can get to it. 

Your suggestion would work for me if "Ms. T. Bernard" (see another
message in this issue) was calling direct into my Kansas number. Maybe
I should praise God she has not yet gotten around to calling into the
630 area.  PAT]

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

From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2006 04:25:15 -0000
Organization: Widgets, Inc.


In article <telecom25.405.6@telecom-digest.org>,
TELECOM Digest Editor <ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:

> Can anyone detirmine who this is? 

Yup.  trivially.

> They have called one of my voicemail numbers (773-828-4212 [go
> ahead,anyone is free to call it anytime]) for the past week, leaving
> a one second hang-up message. That's all anyone will ever get there
> (voicemail) but it is a nuisance to keep erasing all the hangup
> calls from 773-874-8589.

Did you try plugging that phone number into Google?

Or didn't you know that Google can do that?

I wonder what happens when you call (773) 796-9600 from a COCOTS. <evil grin>

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well I did not try it, but I do know
about it. I tried it just now and got the 'T Bernard, 7832 S. May'
listing. Two-Oh-Eight-Oh now has a one dollar (is it?) charge per
call, unlike years ago when it amounted to a card file index box on
the chief operator's desk and it was free; I suppose the charge from a
COCOT would go to the COCOT owner unless the COCOT owner was
sophisticated enough to have it blocked out as a non-dialable number,
sort of like the 900 and 976 variety of numbers.

I wonder if the Chicago area had much snow this past weekend? 'They'
say our seventeen-inch blast was the second worst on record here in
Independence. *Everything* was shut down here all day Friday and the
rest of the weekend. Yesterday and today (Tuesday) it is starting to
become old, ugly news. No one came around here Friday, Saturday or
Sunday; yesterday (Monday) my housekeeper made it through to me; with
some pleading I convinced her to drive Raymond my helper, and myself
over to Marvins IGA to stock up on some groceries. On Monday (our
garbage pickup day in this part of town) the garbage trucks all had
been converted to snow plow duty; the main streets have all been
plowed, with HUGE mounds of snow piled everywhere and the requisite
HUGE lakes of water resulting running off to the sewers as icy slush.
Meals-on-Wheels said they were going to 'attempt' to resume service
tomorrrow (Wednesday).  If this latest storm was the 'second-worst' in
the history of our town, I would hate to think of the worst one. PAT]

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #406
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed Dec  6 22:56:17 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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	id A2EAB2284; Wed,  6 Dec 2006 22:56:16 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #407
Message-Id: <20061207035616.A2EAB2284@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Wed,  6 Dec 2006 22:56:16 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 6 Dec 2006 23:00:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 407

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    James Kim Found Dead in Oregon Mountains (Jeff Barnard, AP)
    ICANN Plans to Revoke Outdated Suffixes (Anick Jesdanun, AP)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 06, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Top Executives Out in Yahoo! Reorganization (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Rick Merrill)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Bruce L. Bergman)
    Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589? (John Hines)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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               ===========================

See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 21:04:31 -0600
From: Jeff Barnard, AP <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: James Kim Found Dead in Oregon Mountains


By JEFF BARNARD, Associated Press Writer 

A San Francisco man was found dead in a mountain creek Wednesday, four
days after he set out through the snowy wilderness to seek help for
his wife and young daughters, stranded in a car.

A search helicopter spotted James Kim's body about a mile from where
he set out in Oregon's snowy Klamath Mountains, two days after his
wife and two daughters were rescued from the vehicle, stuck on a
remote road.  Investigators believe he traveled about eight miles in
total, and said there was no way he could have reached the car
directly from where he was found.

Kim's body was found at the foot of the Big Windy Creek drainage, a
half-mile from the Rogue River, where ground crews and helicopters had
been searching for days.

A tearful Undersheriff Brian Anderson announced the discovery of the
body, his voice breaking at one point.

"He was very motivated," Anderson said. "We were having trouble in
there. He traveled a long distance."

He said he had few details about Kim's condition or the immediate area
where he was found.

The body was taken to Central Point for an autopsy, the results of
which are expected to be released Thursday.

Earlier in the day, searchers said they had uncovered clues that 
suggested Kim had shed clothing and arranged it to give searchers clues 
to his whereabouts. They had planned to drop rescue packages with 
clothing, emergency gear and provisions.

Kim, 35, was a senior editor for the technology media company CNET 
Networks Inc. He and his qfamily had been missing since Nov. 25. They 
were heading home to San Francisco after a family vacation in the 
Pacific Northwest.

Kim's wife, Kati, 30, and their daughters Penelope, 4, and Sabine, 7
months, were rescued Monday at their car. She told officers that the
couple made a wrong turn and became stuck in the snow nearly two weeks
before. They used their car heater until they ran out of gas, then
burned tires to stay warm and attract attention. With only a few jars
of baby food and limited supplies, Kati Kim nursed her children.

The key to finding them, police said, was a "ping" from one of the
family's cell phones that helped narrow down their location.

Roads in the area are often not plowed in the winter and can become
impassable.

On the Net: http://jamesandkati.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

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

Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 21:09:04 -0600
From: Anick Jesdanun, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: ICANN Plans to Revoke Outdated Suffixes


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

Over the past few years, the Internet has seen new domain names such
as ".eu" for Europe and ".travel" for the travel industry. Now, the
key oversight agency is looking to get rid of some.

Meeting in Sao Paulo, Brazil, the Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers began accepting public comments this week on how
best to revoke outdated suffixes, primarily assigned to countries that
no longer exist.

The Soviet Union's ".su" is the leading candidate for deletion,
although the former Yugoslav republics of Serbia and Montenegro are
transitioning from ".yu" to their own country codes. A Google search
generated millions of ".su" and ".yu" sites.

East Timor now uses ".tl," though about 150,000 sites remain under its
older code, ".tp."

Also obsolete is Great Britain's ".gb," which produced no sites on
Google. Britons typically use ".uk" for the United Kingdom.

ICANN assigns country codes based on standards set by the
International Organization for Standardization, which in turn takes
information from the United Nations.

Conflicts can potentially occur when codes are reassigned.

Czechoslovakia didn't need ".cs" after it split into the Czech
Republic (".cz") and Slovakia (".sk"). Serbia and Montenegro got ".cs"
following the breakup of Yugoslavia, before further splitting into
Serbia (".rs") and Montenegro (".me"). (In this case, a crisis was
averted because Czechoslovakia let go of ".cs" long before it was
reassigned, and Serbia and Montenegro never used it before splitting
up.)

A few other domains have already disappeared, including East Germany's
".dd" and Zaire's ".zr" after the country became the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (".cd").

ICANN wants to establish a formal policy and is accepting comments
online until Jan. 31. Further deletions will likely take a year or
longer to give users time to change.

Reductions in the number of domains -- now 265 -- are likely to be 
temporary. ICANN is crafting rules on how to roll out additional 
domains, including ones in non-English characters.

ICANN also is launching a review of eligibility rules for ".int," a 
domain reserved for international organizations.

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/newstoday.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 06, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Wed,  6 Dec 2006 11:42:55 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 06, 2006
********************************

Deutsche Telekom Reshuffles Top Management
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21507?11228

     As Deutsche Telekom's new CEO (chief executive officer),
     Ren&eacute; Obermann has started his reign as the boss of
     Europe's largest telecoms group with a top management reshuffle,
     which was approved on 5 December during the telco's supervisory
     board meeting. Obermann appointed the former head of European sales
     and service ...

Rogers Indicates National Ambitions Using VoIP
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21504?11228

     Speaking during an investor conference held by UBS, Ted Rogers,
     CEO of Rogers Communications, the largest cable TV and wireless
     carrier in Canada, has indicated that VoIP will form part of a
     plan to expand both voice and broadband services beyond the
     company's existing footprint for cable infrastructure. 
     Significance: Rogers ...

EU Calls for Consumer-Driven Telecoms Standards
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21501?11228

     The European Union telecoms commissioner, Viviane Reding, has
     called for telecoms regulators to allow room for consumers to
     decide on successful telecoms standards by choosing the platform
     that offers the services they want. Speaking at the ITU Telecoms
     World conference in Hong Kong, Reding said that regulators should
     no longer be the ...

Cable Company NTL Says It Won't Make a Formal Bid for ITV
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21498?11228

     LONDON -- Cable and telephone company NTL Inc. said Wednesday it
     has abandoned plans for a 4.7 billion pound (E 7 billion; US$9.3
     billion) takeover bid for British broadcaster ITV PLC and will
     concentrate on integrating recently acquired businesses.
     NTL's interest in Britain's largest independent TV
     broadcaster ...

Samsung Blackjack: Playing the 3G Card
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21493?11228

     Thinking of stepping up to 3G: Cingular is ready to deal you in
     with the Samsung Blackjack. The new UMTS/HSPDA-capable smart
     phone is targeted at busy professionals who need constant voice
     and data connectivity.  Featuring a sleek, black case, the
     Blackjack sets a new size and weight standard. Measuring an
     ultra-trim 4.4 x 2.3 x 0.6 ...

McDowell May Vote on AT&T-BellSouth Merger
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21492?11228

     It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas for AT&T Inc., as
     Washington sources say the FCC may approve the telco's merger
     with BellSouth Corp. with fewer concessions than even the
     carrier itself expected. (See Critics Consider AT&T Merger
     Conditions.)  This new turn centers on a decision by Republican
     Federal ...

Nortel Pushes WiMAX
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21490?11228

     Nortel announced WiMAX trials with Toshiba in Japan, which will
     be conducted in the northern Tohoku region. Separately, Nortel is
     working with Chunghwa Telecom to build Taiwan's first integrated
     local government WiMAX network, according to the company.  In its
     partnership with Toshiba, Nortel will deliver base stations
     and ...

Report From Hong Kong: Convergence The Top Topic
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21487?11228

     The hot word reaching TelecomWeb news break from the massive
     International Telecommunication Union (ITU) show being held in
     Hong Kong this week is 'convergence' of fixed a mobile, at least
     as far as voice and data go -- but the cold shoulder is
     apparently being given to mobile TV.  There's a lot of discussion
     about ...

Device Lockdown
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21483?11228

     Network Chemistry Inc. has extended its security system so that
     administrators can now protect Microsoft Corp. -- and Symbian
     Ltd.  -- based smartphones against data loss and network
     infections.  According to Brian De Haaff, vice president of
     product management and marketing at Network Chemistry, adding
     Symbian and Microsoft support to ...

Cellular Base Station Silicon Makers Face WiMAX, Other Challenges
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21481?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Just as 3G is deployed after years of
     delays, there is now a new potential fly-in-the-ointment, WiMAX,
     reports In-Stat. However, WiMAX is not the only threat to
     cellular base station semiconductor manufacturers. Not only has
     cellular subscriber growth started to slow, but also cheaper
     semiconductors from Asia ...

TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>
Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2006 11:57:32 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Top Executives Out in Yahoo! Reorganization


USTelecom dailyLead
December 6, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eWxAfDtusXhjgFCibuddzaJo

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Top executives out in Yahoo! reorganization
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T doesn't see need for FTTH network
* Sprint CFO predicts lower churn for '07
* Deutsche Telekom replaces three executives
* Vodafone: Turkish business will improve sooner than expected
* Telefonica delays launch of mobile TV
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Service Fulfillment Strategies That Balance Risk and RewardTomorrow, Dec.
  7, 1 p.m. (ET)
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Nortel signs first Mobile WiMAX deal with Taiwan telecom
* Study finds handsets safe
* Motorola, PCCW study mobile-TV service
* Belgacom launches IPTV channel
* Analysis: What's next for next-generation handsets
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Senators: FCC should review effect before changing rules

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

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

Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2006 16:11:10 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question


Korey wrote:

> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
> Sunrocket.

> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
> example?

> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
> same high speed cable modem connection?

> Just curious if this would be possible.

> Thanks,

> Korey

It's thinkable, but you don't want to do that. Both would still be
dependent on your ISP/HSI provider. (Better to have a land line as
backup.)

Second, your VoIP provider can give y0u a single ATA (analog telephone
adapter) with two lines!  Much simpler and it can handle the QoS
issues better (Quality of Service: which line gets priority ...)

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

From: Bruce L. Bergman <blbergman@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Organization: What - I have to be organized?  Why start now...
Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:11:29 GMT


On 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800, Korey <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
> Sunrocket.

> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
> example?

> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
> same high speed cable modem connection?

> Just curious if this would be possible.

  Possible, yes -- but don't try making two calls at once unless you
have really good service.  Most home net connections are asymmetric
and your 'outbound' connection probably isn't fast enough to handle
two calls at once.

  And even if you can pull it off in the slow times at 4 AM, try it at
6 PM when everyone is home surfing the web and it won't go -- if you
are really unlucky, you won't be able to get even one decent VOIP
phone call through during the busy hours.

  Cable modem speed is /very/ dependent on how heavily they have your
cable segment loaded with Internet users, and how much of the shared
segment bandwidth they are using.

  That's the one saving grace of DSL -- it's slower, but it's all YOUR
bandwidth, no sharing.  Unless they overload the backhaul connection
at the switchroom to Earthlink (or whomever), it's fairly reliable.

      --<< Bruce >>--

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

From: John Hines <jbhines@newsguy.com>
Subject: Re: Who/What is 773-874-8589?
Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 15:04:02 -0600
Organization: www.jhines.org
Reply-To: john@jhines.org


> I wonder if the Chicago area had much snow this past weekend? 'They'
> say our seventeen-inch blast was the second worst on record here in
> Independence.

About a foot or so. Icy rain at first, then snow, very heavy wet snow.

We (Chicago) didn't get it nearly as bad as southern Illinois, where
the power in some areas is still off, 5 days later. From the news
pictures I saw, it looked like long runs of power poles in rural areas
being replaced, but now the story is the need to hook individuals up.

The Bears played at home Sunday, other than cold and windy it was fine.

Silly sig to prevent isp ad

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: As of today, Wednesday, our temperature
got up to about fifty degrees, which is about normal for this time of
year. The snow began to melt in ernest, which left a small lake in
Poplar Street near Second Street. Oh well, it made up for last winter
when it did not snow even _once_ here. (Cold and grey; windy and damp;
but no snow). We made up for it this year, to say the least.  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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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #407
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Dec  7 23:53:13 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 9C8182247; Thu,  7 Dec 2006 23:53:12 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #408
Message-Id: <20061208045312.9C8182247@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu,  7 Dec 2006 23:53:12 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 7 Dec 2006 23:55:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 408

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    More Internet Journalists Put in Jail (Rukmini Callimachi, AP)
    Google Begins Experiment With Radio Advertising (Associated Press NewsWire)
    Yahoo Shakeup Highlights Web Video Shift (Gary Gentile, AP)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 07, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Cable Plans Smaller Rate Increases Amid Competition (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Korey Smith)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 21:55:41 -0600
From: Rukmini Callimachi, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: More Internet Journalists Put in Jail


By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI,  Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - When Iranian journalist Mojtaba Saminejad was sentenced to
two years in prison for insulting the country's Supreme Leader, it was
not for an article that appeared in a newspaper. His offending story
was posted on his personal Web blog.

Nearly one-third of journalists now serving time in prisons around the
world published their work on the Internet, the second-largest
category behind print journalists, the Committee to Protect
Journalists said in an analysis released Thursday.

The bulk of Internet journalists in jail -- 49 in total -- shows that
"authoritarian states are becoming more determined to control the
Internet," said Joel Simon, the New York-based group's executive
director.

"It wasn't so long ago that people were talking about the Internet as
a new medium that could never be controlled," he said. "The reality is
that governments are now recognizing they need to control the Internet
to control information."

Other noteworthy imprisoned Internet journalists include U.S. video
blogger Joshua Wolf, who refused to give a grand jury his footage of a
2005 protest against a G-8 economic summit, and China's Shi Tao, who
is serving a 10-year sentence for posting online instructions by the
government on how to cover the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen
Square crackdown.

For the second year in a row, CPJ's annual survey found the total
number of journalists in jail worldwide has increased. There were 134
reporters, editors and photographers incarcerated as of Dec. 1, nine
more than a year ago.

In addition to the Internet writers, the total includes 67 print
journalists, eight TV reporters, eight radio reporters and two
documentary filmmakers.

Among the 24 nations that have imprisoned reporters, China topped the
list for the eighth consecutive year with 31 journalists behind bars
 -- 19 of them Internet journalists.

Cuba was second with 24 reporters in prison. Nearly all of them had
filed their reports to overseas-based Web sites.

The U.S. government and military has detained three journalists,
including Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein, who was taken
into custody in Iraq nine months ago and has yet to be charged with a
crime.

CPJ recorded the first jailing of an Internet reporter in its 1997
census. Since then, the number has steadily grown and now includes
reporters, editors and photographers whose work appeared primarily on
the Internet, in e-mails or in other electronic forms.

The increase is a testament to the increasing attention of government
censors to the Internet, media experts say.

"I refer to the freedom of the press as the canary in the coal mine,"
said Joshua Friedman, director of international programs at Columbia
University's Graduate School of Journalism. "It's a barometer of the
insecurity of the people running these governments. One of the things
that makes them insecure these days is the power of the Internet."

The rise in jailings of Internet journalists is also an indication
that reporters in authoritarian countries are increasingly using the
Web to circumvent state controls.

Shi, the jailed Chinese journalist, could have published his notes on
state propaganda in the Chinese magazine in Hunan province where he
worked as an editorial director. He chose instead to send an e-mail
from his Yahoo account to the U.S.-based editor of a Chinese language
Web forum.

Cuban journalist Manuel Vasquez-Portal said he posted his articles on
a Miami-based Web site for a similar reason.

"Without a doubt, the Internet provided me an avenue. It was the only
way to get the truth out of Cuba," he said through an interpreter.

Vasquez-Portal, who was jailed for 15 months in 2003, said he had to
call his stories in to the operator of the Web site, though, because
Cubans are not allowed access to the Internet.

On the Net:

Committee to Protect Journalists: http://www.cpj.org/

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

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

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 21:59:34 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Google Begins Experiment With Radio Advertising


By The Associated Press

Google Inc. has started testing a long-awaited radio advertising
service that represents the Internet search leader's most elaborate
attempt yet at expanding its financial clout beyond the Web.

The test announced Thursday will help sell advertising on more than
700 radio stations in more than 200 U.S. metropolitan markets. Google
hopes to eventually sign up more than 5,000 stations, according to
documents shown potential advertisers.

For now, at least, Google will lag well behind other radio advertising
placement services like Softwave Media Exchange, which says it has
enlisted more than 1,500 stations with a combined daily audience of
more than 9 million listeners.

Thursday's announcement didn't specify how many advertisers are
involved in the early radio tests nor set a timetable for opening the
service to all comers.

Google is betting its technology can do for radio what it has already
done for the Internet by automating the process for selling and
distributing ads to an audience where the messages are most likely to
pique consumer interest. As it does on the Web, Google plans to charge
a commission for helping radio stations sell ads.

The Mountain View-based company signaled its intention to expand into
radio advertising in January with a $102 million acquisition of dMarc
Broadcasting Inc. Since then, Google has been working to make the
service compatible with a system that already serves millions of
Internet advertisers.

The Internet ad platform has turned into a gold mine, with Google's
profit this year expected to approach $3 billion — nearly a 30-fold
increase since 2002. The company makes virtually all its money from
short, written ads posted on the Web, raising worries among some
analysts about Google's lack of other moneymaking channels.

As part of its expansion efforts, Google also is trying to help
newspaper and magazine publishers fill some of their unsold
advertising space. Google's early efforts in magazines have had little
impact. The company just started working with 50 of the nation's
largest newspapers.

Google appears intent on pouring far more resources into the radio
service, with management openly discussing plans to employ about 1,000
workers in the division.

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/TDNewsradio.html

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

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 22:01:11 -0600
From: Gary Gentile, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Shakeup Highlights Web Video Shift


By GARY GENTILE, AP Business Writer

The departure of television veteran Lloyd Braun from Yahoo Inc.
underscores a shift, or at least a major hiccup, by Internet companies
away from creating costly original content.

Braun, who once ran primetime programming for the Walt Disney Co.'s
ABC network, left Yahoo this week after his role was greatly
diminished in a companywide reorganization that placed his group into
a newly created division.

Yahoo's hiring of Braun to run the new Yahoo Media Group two years ago
sparked speculation that the online company was itching to become, in
effect, a TV network on the Web, producing its own shows to attract
eyeballs to its lucrative Internet advertising.

After all, Braun was responsible for ABC's nascent turnaround and the
genius behind its hit show "Lost." Analysts saw great symbolism in the
consolidation of Yahoo's far-flung media sites -- music, video,
finance and news -- into a new Santa Monica office that was once home
of fabled movie studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

But two years ago, no one foresaw the rise of sites such as YouTube
and MySpace, which became huge companies by aggregating user-generated
videos and creating communities where people could network. YouTube
was eventually bought by search giant Google Inc. for $1.76 billion,
while MySpace was snatched by News Corp. for $580 million.

Few people also foresaw that major media companies such as Disney, CBS
Corp. and Time Warner Inc. would begin selling TV episodes or
full-length films over Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes store.

As YouTube and similar sites grew in popularity, Braun struggled to get 
competing Yahoo divisions to think in terms of content rather than 
technology, Braun recounted in an interview at his Santa Monica office 
several weeks before his departure.

One major glitch that consumed more than a year, for instance, was the
lack of common software for producing and publishing content at the
various product units inside Yahoo. Incompatible technology made it
nearly impossible to design a template that could be easily shared by
the various sites.

Before redesigns of such services as Yahoo Music or Yahoo Games could
be launched, Braun's unit had to develop a common software platform, a
task now completed. Yahoo recently started to rollout redesigned sites
and introduced a new offering, Yahoo Food.

Braun also had to curtail ambitions to produce original shows for the
Web. Replicating the TV network model would be prohibitively
expensive, especially if such shows could only be viewed on a small
computer screen.

Yahoo did create several new video and other programs, including news
dispatches from war journalist Kevin Sites. The company also recently
launched a series of live music performances similar to those featured
on rival AOL's site.

But in a twist, one of its most popular shows, called "The Nine,"
features host Maria Sansone counting down nine notable user-generated
video clips found on other sites such as YouTube.

Yahoo isn't alone.

When Time Warner Inc.'s AOL started breaking down its walls of
exclusivity two years ago, the company cited its own video productions
of concerts and other events as reasons people would want to visit its
free, ad-supported sites. AOL even won a broadband Emmy for last
year's "Live 8" concert special.

Although AOL isn't abandoning those productions, its focus lately has
been on search. It wants to be the starting point for online video,
whether it's hosted at AOL or at a rival like YouTube. AOL also
started its own video-sharing service, UnCut Video, where users can
share clips they produce with camera phones and camcorders.

The rapidly changing Web landscape has left Yahoo playing catch up, a
situation this week's reorganization is designed to address.

"Frankly I'm surprised it took Yahoo so long to make this decision,"
said Dmitry Shapiro, chief executive of video startup Veoh Networks
Inc.  "I think it's been known for at least a year, with the success
of YouTube and hundreds of media aggregator players like Veoh that are
jumping into the game, that this is the way it should be done. But
large companies move slowly."

Veoh wants to distribute user-generated and Hollywood content, but has
no plans to create its own shows.

Nonetheless, original content created for distribution over high-speed
Internet connections shouldn't be dismissed just yet, said former
Disney chief executive Michael Eisner, who now invests in
media-related startup companies such as Veoh.

"The production of original content for broadband is coming and will
be significant and important just like it was significant and
important for cable," Eisner said.

Eisner said traditional media and online companies are in a
transitional period where Hollywood-generated programs, TV shows and
films are competing for attention with user-generated material. Makers
of original Web content aren't wrong, he said, but may be hurt by
pushing it before consumers are ready.

"To take a position that it's all going to move to user-generated and
be this anarchy and democracy is wrong," Eisner said. "To take the
point of view that it's all going to be distribution of ancillary
product from the studios and others is wrong. And to take the position
that it's all going to be original product is wrong.

"It's all three and it's all a matter of being too early or too late."

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/newstoday.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 07, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Thu,  7 Dec 2006 11:16:58 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 07, 2006
********************************

The Cloud, Truphone in VoIP Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21531?11228

     Wi-fi hotspot provider, The Cloud, has signed an agreement with
     the software provider, Truphone, to allow customers with a
     Truphone-enabled handset to make VoIP calls over The Cloud's
     wi-fi hotspots. Truphone is a free software tool for making VoIP
     calls that can be loaded onto Nokia's series of wi-fi-equipped
     handsets.  ...

Tele-Visionaries
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21525?11228

     I just finished reading 'Tele-Visionaries, The People Behind the
     Invention of Television', by Richard C. Webb, IEEE Press. This
     is a relatively new book, published last year. I highly recommend it
     for a number of reasons discussed below. But I would caution that
     this is not the whole story and it has a well-defined ...

Fight Heats Up Over Tie-Breaking AT&T/BellSouth Vote
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21519?11228

     The flap over whether Federal Communications Commission
     (FCC)member Robert McDowell can be allowed to vote in favor of
     the AT&T/BellSouth merger has begun to ratchet up as the
     Republican commissioner indicated his willingness to participate
     in the regulator's approval process. Congressional Democrats
     openly expressed their ...

Verizon to Boost Storage Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21513?11228

     Verizon Communications Inc. is about to get more serious about
     storage for the sake of its broadband customers -- whether
     they're flying on FiOS or dawdling along with DSL.  The company
     first offered its file backup and sharing service in late
     September from its Verizon Surround portal. Today, it provides 5
     Gbytes of storage ...

Increasing Telco TV Deployments a Boon for Headend Vendors
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21511?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- A large number of headends have been built
     in 2005 and 2006 to support increasing telco TV deployments, and
     the wide availability of H.264 compression equipment in 2006 has
     prompted telcos that were waiting, to move forward with
     deployment plans, reports In-Stat. Growth in telco TV deployments
     and subscribers ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2006 11:58:35 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Cable Plans Smaller Rate Increases Amid More Competition


USTelecom dailyLead
December 7, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eXiAfDtusXhrxHCibuddsqNR

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Cable plans smaller rate increases amid more competition
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T seeks to launch 13 FTTN markets by year's end
* Verizon: Dilutive effect of FiOS to fall after Q1
* News Corp. near deal to regain Liberty's stake
* Motorola seeks growth beyond RAZR's edge
* RIM expects sales in Asia to double within a year
* Buyout firms eye Hutchison's Indian wireless assets
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Steven Shepard's IMS Crash Course
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Cisco to make Net-based phones in India
* Vodafone mulls 3G launch in Egypt
* China Unicom says CDMA, GSM networks can go 3G
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC's Martin discusses time limit on franchise reviews
* Ruling unlocks handsets

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

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

From: Korey Smith <newsemail@cox.net>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Reply-To: newsemail@cox.net
Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 05:39:17 -0600
Organization: Cox


On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:11:29 GMT, Bruce L. Bergman
<blbergman@earthlink.net> wrote:

> On 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800, Korey <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

>> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
>> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
>> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
>> Sunrocket.

>> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
>> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
>> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
>> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
>> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
>> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
>> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
>> example?

>> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
>> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
>> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
>> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
>> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
>> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
>> same high speed cable modem connection?

>> Just curious if this would be possible.

> Possible, yes -- but don't try making two calls at once unless you
> have really good service.  Most home net connections are asymmetric
> and your 'outbound' connection probably isn't fast enough to handle
> two calls at once.

> And even if you can pull it off in the slow times at 4 AM, try it at
> 6 PM when everyone is home surfing the web and it won't go -- if you
> are really unlucky, you won't be able to get even one decent VOIP
> phone call through during the busy hours.

> Cable modem speed is /very/ dependent on how heavily they have your
> cable segment loaded with Internet users, and how much of the shared
> segment bandwidth they are using.

> That's the one saving grace of DSL -- it's slower, but it's all YOUR
> bandwidth, no sharing.  Unless they overload the backhaul connection
> at the switchroom to Earthlink (or whomever), it's fairly reliable.

>      --<< Bruce >>--

I had tried DSL, but having been on cable before, I thought it was too
slow.  I was then looking for ways to save money on all of my home
communications needs, and so I looked into my cable company for
telephone service.  I have a single line through them right now and so
far the service is pretty good.  I have even been able to fax both
ways without any problems.  I thought the faxing would be an issue
since I had read somewhere else that faxing over this type of
connection isn't always reliable, but I haven't had any problems send
or receive.

I remember reading somewhere else that AT&T is now offering VOIP
Service (Internet Telephone Service) with their AT&T CallVantage®
Service Plan.  How are they going to be able to offer this and be
competitive with cable?  I'm no expert, but it would seem that with
the CallVantage, you would need the DSL, which would also require a
landline phone # or can you have DSL only?  If you are required to
have a landline phone, then what would be the purpose of subscribing
to their CallVantage® Service?

In other words, with this new AT&T CallVantage service, can you
subscribe to DSL only and have the CallVantage service for your voice
without having to pay extra for another line?

Korey

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

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
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believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material
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to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go
beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright
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For more information go to:
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #408
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Dec  7 23:53:13 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 9C8182247; Thu,  7 Dec 2006 23:53:12 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #408
Message-Id: <20061208045312.9C8182247@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu,  7 Dec 2006 23:53:12 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 7 Dec 2006 23:55:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 408

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    More Internet Journalists Put in Jail (Rukmini Callimachi, AP)
    Google Begins Experiment With Radio Advertising (Associated Press NewsWire)
    Yahoo Shakeup Highlights Web Video Shift (Gary Gentile, AP)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 07, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Cable Plans Smaller Rate Increases Amid Competition (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Korey Smith)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 21:55:41 -0600
From: Rukmini Callimachi, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: More Internet Journalists Put in Jail


By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI,  Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - When Iranian journalist Mojtaba Saminejad was sentenced to
two years in prison for insulting the country's Supreme Leader, it was
not for an article that appeared in a newspaper. His offending story
was posted on his personal Web blog.

Nearly one-third of journalists now serving time in prisons around the
world published their work on the Internet, the second-largest
category behind print journalists, the Committee to Protect
Journalists said in an analysis released Thursday.

The bulk of Internet journalists in jail -- 49 in total -- shows that
"authoritarian states are becoming more determined to control the
Internet," said Joel Simon, the New York-based group's executive
director.

"It wasn't so long ago that people were talking about the Internet as
a new medium that could never be controlled," he said. "The reality is
that governments are now recognizing they need to control the Internet
to control information."

Other noteworthy imprisoned Internet journalists include U.S. video
blogger Joshua Wolf, who refused to give a grand jury his footage of a
2005 protest against a G-8 economic summit, and China's Shi Tao, who
is serving a 10-year sentence for posting online instructions by the
government on how to cover the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen
Square crackdown.

For the second year in a row, CPJ's annual survey found the total
number of journalists in jail worldwide has increased. There were 134
reporters, editors and photographers incarcerated as of Dec. 1, nine
more than a year ago.

In addition to the Internet writers, the total includes 67 print
journalists, eight TV reporters, eight radio reporters and two
documentary filmmakers.

Among the 24 nations that have imprisoned reporters, China topped the
list for the eighth consecutive year with 31 journalists behind bars
 -- 19 of them Internet journalists.

Cuba was second with 24 reporters in prison. Nearly all of them had
filed their reports to overseas-based Web sites.

The U.S. government and military has detained three journalists,
including Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein, who was taken
into custody in Iraq nine months ago and has yet to be charged with a
crime.

CPJ recorded the first jailing of an Internet reporter in its 1997
census. Since then, the number has steadily grown and now includes
reporters, editors and photographers whose work appeared primarily on
the Internet, in e-mails or in other electronic forms.

The increase is a testament to the increasing attention of government
censors to the Internet, media experts say.

"I refer to the freedom of the press as the canary in the coal mine,"
said Joshua Friedman, director of international programs at Columbia
University's Graduate School of Journalism. "It's a barometer of the
insecurity of the people running these governments. One of the things
that makes them insecure these days is the power of the Internet."

The rise in jailings of Internet journalists is also an indication
that reporters in authoritarian countries are increasingly using the
Web to circumvent state controls.

Shi, the jailed Chinese journalist, could have published his notes on
state propaganda in the Chinese magazine in Hunan province where he
worked as an editorial director. He chose instead to send an e-mail
from his Yahoo account to the U.S.-based editor of a Chinese language
Web forum.

Cuban journalist Manuel Vasquez-Portal said he posted his articles on
a Miami-based Web site for a similar reason.

"Without a doubt, the Internet provided me an avenue. It was the only
way to get the truth out of Cuba," he said through an interpreter.

Vasquez-Portal, who was jailed for 15 months in 2003, said he had to
call his stories in to the operator of the Web site, though, because
Cubans are not allowed access to the Internet.

On the Net:

Committee to Protect Journalists: http://www.cpj.org/

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

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

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 21:59:34 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Google Begins Experiment With Radio Advertising


By The Associated Press

Google Inc. has started testing a long-awaited radio advertising
service that represents the Internet search leader's most elaborate
attempt yet at expanding its financial clout beyond the Web.

The test announced Thursday will help sell advertising on more than
700 radio stations in more than 200 U.S. metropolitan markets. Google
hopes to eventually sign up more than 5,000 stations, according to
documents shown potential advertisers.

For now, at least, Google will lag well behind other radio advertising
placement services like Softwave Media Exchange, which says it has
enlisted more than 1,500 stations with a combined daily audience of
more than 9 million listeners.

Thursday's announcement didn't specify how many advertisers are
involved in the early radio tests nor set a timetable for opening the
service to all comers.

Google is betting its technology can do for radio what it has already
done for the Internet by automating the process for selling and
distributing ads to an audience where the messages are most likely to
pique consumer interest. As it does on the Web, Google plans to charge
a commission for helping radio stations sell ads.

The Mountain View-based company signaled its intention to expand into
radio advertising in January with a $102 million acquisition of dMarc
Broadcasting Inc. Since then, Google has been working to make the
service compatible with a system that already serves millions of
Internet advertisers.

The Internet ad platform has turned into a gold mine, with Google's
profit this year expected to approach $3 billion — nearly a 30-fold
increase since 2002. The company makes virtually all its money from
short, written ads posted on the Web, raising worries among some
analysts about Google's lack of other moneymaking channels.

As part of its expansion efforts, Google also is trying to help
newspaper and magazine publishers fill some of their unsold
advertising space. Google's early efforts in magazines have had little
impact. The company just started working with 50 of the nation's
largest newspapers.

Google appears intent on pouring far more resources into the radio
service, with management openly discussing plans to employ about 1,000
workers in the division.

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/TDNewsradio.html

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

Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 22:01:11 -0600
From: Gary Gentile, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Yahoo Shakeup Highlights Web Video Shift


By GARY GENTILE, AP Business Writer

The departure of television veteran Lloyd Braun from Yahoo Inc.
underscores a shift, or at least a major hiccup, by Internet companies
away from creating costly original content.

Braun, who once ran primetime programming for the Walt Disney Co.'s
ABC network, left Yahoo this week after his role was greatly
diminished in a companywide reorganization that placed his group into
a newly created division.

Yahoo's hiring of Braun to run the new Yahoo Media Group two years ago
sparked speculation that the online company was itching to become, in
effect, a TV network on the Web, producing its own shows to attract
eyeballs to its lucrative Internet advertising.

After all, Braun was responsible for ABC's nascent turnaround and the
genius behind its hit show "Lost." Analysts saw great symbolism in the
consolidation of Yahoo's far-flung media sites -- music, video,
finance and news -- into a new Santa Monica office that was once home
of fabled movie studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

But two years ago, no one foresaw the rise of sites such as YouTube
and MySpace, which became huge companies by aggregating user-generated
videos and creating communities where people could network. YouTube
was eventually bought by search giant Google Inc. for $1.76 billion,
while MySpace was snatched by News Corp. for $580 million.

Few people also foresaw that major media companies such as Disney, CBS
Corp. and Time Warner Inc. would begin selling TV episodes or
full-length films over Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes store.

As YouTube and similar sites grew in popularity, Braun struggled to get 
competing Yahoo divisions to think in terms of content rather than 
technology, Braun recounted in an interview at his Santa Monica office 
several weeks before his departure.

One major glitch that consumed more than a year, for instance, was the
lack of common software for producing and publishing content at the
various product units inside Yahoo. Incompatible technology made it
nearly impossible to design a template that could be easily shared by
the various sites.

Before redesigns of such services as Yahoo Music or Yahoo Games could
be launched, Braun's unit had to develop a common software platform, a
task now completed. Yahoo recently started to rollout redesigned sites
and introduced a new offering, Yahoo Food.

Braun also had to curtail ambitions to produce original shows for the
Web. Replicating the TV network model would be prohibitively
expensive, especially if such shows could only be viewed on a small
computer screen.

Yahoo did create several new video and other programs, including news
dispatches from war journalist Kevin Sites. The company also recently
launched a series of live music performances similar to those featured
on rival AOL's site.

But in a twist, one of its most popular shows, called "The Nine,"
features host Maria Sansone counting down nine notable user-generated
video clips found on other sites such as YouTube.

Yahoo isn't alone.

When Time Warner Inc.'s AOL started breaking down its walls of
exclusivity two years ago, the company cited its own video productions
of concerts and other events as reasons people would want to visit its
free, ad-supported sites. AOL even won a broadband Emmy for last
year's "Live 8" concert special.

Although AOL isn't abandoning those productions, its focus lately has
been on search. It wants to be the starting point for online video,
whether it's hosted at AOL or at a rival like YouTube. AOL also
started its own video-sharing service, UnCut Video, where users can
share clips they produce with camera phones and camcorders.

The rapidly changing Web landscape has left Yahoo playing catch up, a
situation this week's reorganization is designed to address.

"Frankly I'm surprised it took Yahoo so long to make this decision,"
said Dmitry Shapiro, chief executive of video startup Veoh Networks
Inc.  "I think it's been known for at least a year, with the success
of YouTube and hundreds of media aggregator players like Veoh that are
jumping into the game, that this is the way it should be done. But
large companies move slowly."

Veoh wants to distribute user-generated and Hollywood content, but has
no plans to create its own shows.

Nonetheless, original content created for distribution over high-speed
Internet connections shouldn't be dismissed just yet, said former
Disney chief executive Michael Eisner, who now invests in
media-related startup companies such as Veoh.

"The production of original content for broadband is coming and will
be significant and important just like it was significant and
important for cable," Eisner said.

Eisner said traditional media and online companies are in a
transitional period where Hollywood-generated programs, TV shows and
films are competing for attention with user-generated material. Makers
of original Web content aren't wrong, he said, but may be hurt by
pushing it before consumers are ready.

"To take a position that it's all going to move to user-generated and
be this anarchy and democracy is wrong," Eisner said. "To take the
point of view that it's all going to be distribution of ancillary
product from the studios and others is wrong. And to take the position
that it's all going to be original product is wrong.

"It's all three and it's all a matter of being too early or too late."

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/newstoday.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 07, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Thu,  7 Dec 2006 11:16:58 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 07, 2006
********************************

The Cloud, Truphone in VoIP Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21531?11228

     Wi-fi hotspot provider, The Cloud, has signed an agreement with
     the software provider, Truphone, to allow customers with a
     Truphone-enabled handset to make VoIP calls over The Cloud's
     wi-fi hotspots. Truphone is a free software tool for making VoIP
     calls that can be loaded onto Nokia's series of wi-fi-equipped
     handsets.  ...

Tele-Visionaries
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21525?11228

     I just finished reading 'Tele-Visionaries, The People Behind the
     Invention of Television', by Richard C. Webb, IEEE Press. This
     is a relatively new book, published last year. I highly recommend it
     for a number of reasons discussed below. But I would caution that
     this is not the whole story and it has a well-defined ...

Fight Heats Up Over Tie-Breaking AT&T/BellSouth Vote
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21519?11228

     The flap over whether Federal Communications Commission
     (FCC)member Robert McDowell can be allowed to vote in favor of
     the AT&T/BellSouth merger has begun to ratchet up as the
     Republican commissioner indicated his willingness to participate
     in the regulator's approval process. Congressional Democrats
     openly expressed their ...

Verizon to Boost Storage Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21513?11228

     Verizon Communications Inc. is about to get more serious about
     storage for the sake of its broadband customers -- whether
     they're flying on FiOS or dawdling along with DSL.  The company
     first offered its file backup and sharing service in late
     September from its Verizon Surround portal. Today, it provides 5
     Gbytes of storage ...

Increasing Telco TV Deployments a Boon for Headend Vendors
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21511?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- A large number of headends have been built
     in 2005 and 2006 to support increasing telco TV deployments, and
     the wide availability of H.264 compression equipment in 2006 has
     prompted telcos that were waiting, to move forward with
     deployment plans, reports In-Stat. Growth in telco TV deployments
     and subscribers ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2006 11:58:35 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Cable Plans Smaller Rate Increases Amid More Competition


USTelecom dailyLead
December 7, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eXiAfDtusXhrxHCibuddsqNR

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Cable plans smaller rate increases amid more competition
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T seeks to launch 13 FTTN markets by year's end
* Verizon: Dilutive effect of FiOS to fall after Q1
* News Corp. near deal to regain Liberty's stake
* Motorola seeks growth beyond RAZR's edge
* RIM expects sales in Asia to double within a year
* Buyout firms eye Hutchison's Indian wireless assets
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Steven Shepard's IMS Crash Course
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Cisco to make Net-based phones in India
* Vodafone mulls 3G launch in Egypt
* China Unicom says CDMA, GSM networks can go 3G
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC's Martin discusses time limit on franchise reviews
* Ruling unlocks handsets

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

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

From: Korey Smith <newsemail@cox.net>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Reply-To: newsemail@cox.net
Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 05:39:17 -0600
Organization: Cox


On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:11:29 GMT, Bruce L. Bergman
<blbergman@earthlink.net> wrote:

> On 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800, Korey <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

>> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
>> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
>> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
>> Sunrocket.

>> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
>> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
>> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
>> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
>> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
>> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
>> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
>> example?

>> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
>> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
>> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
>> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
>> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
>> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
>> same high speed cable modem connection?

>> Just curious if this would be possible.

> Possible, yes -- but don't try making two calls at once unless you
> have really good service.  Most home net connections are asymmetric
> and your 'outbound' connection probably isn't fast enough to handle
> two calls at once.

> And even if you can pull it off in the slow times at 4 AM, try it at
> 6 PM when everyone is home surfing the web and it won't go -- if you
> are really unlucky, you won't be able to get even one decent VOIP
> phone call through during the busy hours.

> Cable modem speed is /very/ dependent on how heavily they have your
> cable segment loaded with Internet users, and how much of the shared
> segment bandwidth they are using.

> That's the one saving grace of DSL -- it's slower, but it's all YOUR
> bandwidth, no sharing.  Unless they overload the backhaul connection
> at the switchroom to Earthlink (or whomever), it's fairly reliable.

>      --<< Bruce >>--

I had tried DSL, but having been on cable before, I thought it was too
slow.  I was then looking for ways to save money on all of my home
communications needs, and so I looked into my cable company for
telephone service.  I have a single line through them right now and so
far the service is pretty good.  I have even been able to fax both
ways without any problems.  I thought the faxing would be an issue
since I had read somewhere else that faxing over this type of
connection isn't always reliable, but I haven't had any problems send
or receive.

I remember reading somewhere else that AT&T is now offering VOIP
Service (Internet Telephone Service) with their AT&T CallVantage®
Service Plan.  How are they going to be able to offer this and be
competitive with cable?  I'm no expert, but it would seem that with
the CallVantage, you would need the DSL, which would also require a
landline phone # or can you have DSL only?  If you are required to
have a landline phone, then what would be the purpose of subscribing
to their CallVantage® Service?

In other words, with this new AT&T CallVantage service, can you
subscribe to DSL only and have the CallVantage service for your voice
without having to pay extra for another line?

Korey

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

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #408
******************************



From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec  8 16:42:07 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id A75712270; Fri,  8 Dec 2006 16:42:07 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #409
Message-Id: <20061208214207.A75712270@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri,  8 Dec 2006 16:42:07 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: R

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 8 Dec 2006 16:45:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 409

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Internet Gangs Recruit on Line; Hire Students to Write Viruses (Griffiths)
    Identity Theft Gang Found Guilty in E-Bay Scam (Elsa McLaren, Reuters)
    Article on Mobile/Cell Phone History (Lisa Hancock)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 08, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Telecom Executives See Improvement (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Telecom Update #558, December 8, 2006 (John Riddell)
    Re: VOIP Internet Telephone Question (Rick Merrill)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Fri, 08 Dec 2006 14:26:15 -0600
From: Peter Griffiths, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Internet Gangs Recruit on Line; Hire Students to Write Viruses


By Peter Griffiths

Organized gangs have adopted "KGB-style" tactics to hire high-flying
computer students to commit Internet crime, a report said on Friday.

Criminals are targeting universities, computer clubs and online forums
to find undergraduates, according to Internet security firm McAfee.

Some gangs have sponsored promising students from other disciplines to
attend computer courses before planting them in businesses as
"sleepers."

McAfee said the students write computer viruses, commit identity theft
and launder money in a multi-billion dollar industry that is more
lucrative than the drugs trade.

The gangs' tactics echo the way Russian agents sought out experts at
trade conferences or universities during the Cold War, the company
said in an annual report.

"Although organized criminals may have less of the expertise and
access needed to commit cybercrimes, they have the funds to buy the
necessary people to do it for them," the report says.

McAfee said its study was based partly on FBI and European
intelligence.

In Eastern Europe, some people are lured into "cybercrime" because of
high unemployment and low wages.

"Many of these cybercriminals see the Internet as a job opportunity,"
McAfee quoted FBI Internet security expert Dave Thomas as
saying. "With low employment, they can use their technical skills to
feed their family."

Hackers are paid to write computer viruses that can infect millions of
machines to discover confidential information or send unwanted "spam"
emails.

This "spyware" can detect credit card numbers or other personal
information which is then used by fraudsters.

Criminals trawl through social networking Web sites which allow people
to leave their pictures and personal details.

Their research helps them to target "phishing" attacks, where people
are sent fraudulent emails to trick them into revealing credit card
numbers.

Hackers are increasingly hired to spy on businesses, McAfee said.
"Corporate espionage is big business," it added.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Fri, 08 Dec 2006 14:28:27 -0600
From: Elsa McLaren, Reuters <reurers@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Identity Theft Gang Found Guilty in E-Bay Scam


by Elsa McLaren and agencies

One of the world's most successful identity theft gangs who defrauded
bank account holders in Britain, America and several European
countries out of millions of pounds are behind bars today.
 
The gang created hundreds of false identities and used huge numbers of
cloned credit cards to buy electrical goods, which were later sold on
the website eBay.

Police believe the lucrative international operation could have been
running for 10 years and generated millions of pounds for the members.

Anton Dolgov, a former boss of the Moscow City Bank, was at the heart
of the operation and ran offices in north Kensington and Spain. He was
known under a number of aliases including Anton Gelonkin, the name he
appeared under at London's Harrow Crown Court.

A police investigation was prompted after Spanish authorities arrested
gang member Andreas Fuhrmann, who is currently awaiting trial in
Spain.  An international arrest warrant was issued for Anthony Peyton,
one of Gelonkin's aliases.

Gelonkin was tracked down by police after he reported a break-in at
his headquarters at BusPace Studios. After a police check the Interpol
warrant issued for his arrest was flagged up.

Officers from the Serious and Organised Crime unit raided the gang's
premises where they discovered a huge amount of evidence.

However, much of it was lost when gang member Aleksei Kostap, while
handcuffed, managed to leap off a sofa to flick a power switch on the
ceiling which wiped the computer databases and triggered layers of
encryption. Despite efforts of police IT experts, the system has
proved impregnable and its secrets will probably remain beyond reach
for ever.

Kostap, 31, an Estonian national, denied his involvement in the scam
and instead said that he had been framed by Gelonkin.

But, today he was found guilty of conspiracies to defraud, obtain
services by deception, acquire, use and possess criminal property, and
conceal, disguise, convert, transfer or remove criminal property. He
was also found guilty of perverting the course of justice by shutting
down the power to the PCs.

He is due to be sentenced on December 13, along with Gelonkin, 42, who
admitted four charges of conspiracy and Romanos Vasilauskas, 24, who
pleaded guilty to possessing three false passports.

David Hewett, for the prosecution, told the court that, while the
fraud was thought to have lasted up to a decade, the charges covered
just an 18-month period between June 2003 and January last year when
the gang was arrested. During that time the gang managed to pocket at
least 750,000 pounds.

"However, it is quite clear the total amount of money defrauded will
probably never be known," he explained.

The operation's ultimate mastermind is thought to have been a shady
underworld figure called Kaljusaar, who has never been caught.

Police discovered bogus passports, council tax documents, electoral
registration applications, and bank statements as well as employment
references from both an unsuspecting firm of solicitors and a fake one
that were used to create false identities.

Cloned credit cards were used to buy cameras, computers, iPods,
computer games, Royal Mint coin collection sets and other goods such
as Liverpool FC strips from a variety of website traders. These items
were then auctioned on eBay.

The gang also used stolen credit card details to set up online
gambling accounts and directed the winnings into bank accounts they
had created in false names.

They also used the compromised credit cards to make thousands of small
payments to WorldPay and PayPal accounts which they later banked.


Copyright 2006 Reuters.

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/internet-news.html
 
------------------------------

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Article on Mobile/Cell Phone History
Date: 8 Dec 2006 10:37:22 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


The magazine, American Heritage of Invention & Technology, Winter 2007,
has two feature articles on cell phone history.

The first article deals with the history of developing cells.  The
second article deals with hand held telephone development by Motorola.
It also discusses the relationship between Motorola, who developed and
manufactured the components, and AT&T that provided the service.

There is a supplemental article on Picturephone.

This issue also contains articles on making snow, the U-2 spy plane,
and metal fatigue prevention.

The magazine is found at better newstands under INVENTION & TECHNOLOGY.

http://www.inventionandtechnology.com

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 08, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Fri,  8 Dec 2006 11:58:39 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 08, 2006
********************************

Palm Gets Its OS Back
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21561?11228

     Paving over a gaping hole in its strategic roadmap, Palm
     Inc. said today that it has re-licensed the source code for its
     operating system, known as the Palm Garnet OS, from Access
     Systems Americas Inc., a unit of Japanese company Access
     Co. Ltd. The contract, under which Palm will pay $44 million
     for a perpetual, non-exclusive ...

Alfa Seeking Dialogue with TeliaSonera and Telenor
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21559?11228

     Altimo, the telecoms arm of Russian holding group Alfa, is keen
     to enter into dialogue with Sweden's TeliaSonera and Norway's
     Telenor, with a view to establishing some form of alliance with
     either, according to press reports. Altimo CEO Alexey Reznikovich
     has pointed out that representatives of Altimo and TeliaSonera
     are already.

Moto Q on MTS and Palm Treo on Rogers Increase Smartphone Options
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21556?11228

     Smartphone options available to Canadians have been expanded this
     week as MTS Allstream launches the Motorola's Moto Q, available
     for free on a three-year contract or C$149 on a two-year
     contract. Rogers Wireless has also taken on the quad-band
     EDGE-capable Palm Treo 680, available for C$299.99 on a
     three-year contract.  ...

Session Border Controllers in Converged Fixed-Mobile IMS/TISPAN Architecture
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21550?11228

     Acme Packet has defined the role of session border controllers
     within the next-generation, converged fixed-mobile IMS
     architecture defined by 3GPP and extended by ETSI TISPAN. Within
     this architecture, session border controllers provide service
     providers with critical support for real-time interactive
     IP-based voice, video and ...

Poll: 'IM-ing' Divides Teens, Adults
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21547?11228

     WASHINGTON -- Teenager Michelle Rome can't imagine life without
     instant messaging. Baby boomer Steve Wilson doesn't care that it
     even exists. They're part of an 'instant messaging gap' between
     teens and adults. And the division is wide, says an AP-AOL survey
     on how Americans use or snub those Internet ...

Take a Picture
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21544?11228

     It's no news that camera phones are hot. Tech research giant
     Gartner recently predicted that nearly 50 percent of mobile
     phones sold worldwide in 2006 will incorporate a camera; the
     number rises to 81 percent by 2010.  One is tempted that observe
     that cameras will be increasingly added to mobile phones whether
     or not buyers ...

U.K. Wireless/Broadband Retail Battle Twists & Shouts
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21542?11228

     In the latest twist in the turbulent British retail cellular and
     broadband markets, U.K. cellphone retailer Phones 4U today leaked
     -- and it appears on purpose -- word it's negotiating to become a
     broadband reseller.  Its target is rival Carphone Warehouse, from
     which it stole the Vodafone cellular resale contract two months
     ago, ...

BSkyB Gets Googly
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21539?11228

     British Sky Broadcasting Group plc (BSkyB) says it plans to offer
     its U.K. broadband customers a set of Sky-branded services from
     Google including video, communications, search, and
     advertising. The two companies say they've signed a set of
     'wide-ranging multi-year agreements' to develop, tailor, and
     re-brand ...

Battery Recall Hits Cell Phones
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21536?11228

     On the heels of the notebook computer industry being hit with a
     slew of battery recall announcements, NTT DoCoMo is calling back
     1.3 million battery packs used on one of its phones sold in
     Japan.  The Japanese operator says it is pulling the batteries
     made by Sanyo Electric Company back because deformed parts were
     discovered in the ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2006 12:31:07 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Telecom Executives See Improvement in Access Line Loss Trend


USTelecom dailyLead
December 8, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eXuMfDtusXhwrGCibuddGIXH

TODAY'S HEADLINES
NEWS OF THE DAY

* Telecom executives see improvement in access-line loss trend
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Net ads to reach $16.4 billion this year, eMarketer says
* Verizon promotes DirectTV to small businesses
* EU clears Alcatel purchase of Nortel radio access business
* Cincinnati Bell plays ball
* Sprint Nextel offers Hispanic customers mobile chats
* Nokia, France Telecom sign deal for remote-content service
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Secure Your Carrier Class Network Tuesday, Dec. 12, 1 p.m. (ET)
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Report: Developing countries show demand for high-end mobile products
* As Web videos grow longer, so too does competitive risk
* Customized ads for mobile phones to be tested
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Mass migration to VoIP has begun, says report
* Hinkley Q-and-A: Progress of massive VoIP conversion
* Survey: Small businesses tout VoIP conveniences as well as cost

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

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

Subject: Telecom Update #558, December 8, 2006
Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2006 13:46:03 -0500
From: John Riddell <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE
************************************************************

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

Number 558: December 8, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous
financial support from:

** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca/home/Home_Business.page
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.ca/communications/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions
** SHAW BUSINESS SOLUTIONS: www.shawbusinesssolutions.ca
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

IN THIS ISSUE:

** Study Finds No Cellphone Cancer Link
** Bernier Proposes Fines for Telecom Market Abuse
** Rogers Considers National Rollout of Phone, Internet
** MTS Seeks 50-Cent Payphone Charge
** CRTC Reintroduces Internal Decision Standards
** Telus Expands EVDO Roaming
** Northwestel Rate Increases Approved
** Cogeco Founder Leaves Board
** SR Telecom Takes $29M Hit, Gets New Backing
** Wi-LAN Wins Nokia Licence Deal
** Nortel Changes Its Auditor
** Nortel Completes Sale of UMTS Unit
** Call-Back LD Comes to Cellular
** New Handsets Announce Holiday Season
** Globalstar Shrinks the Satellite Phone
** Nordiq Board Approve Aliant Buyout
** Telecom Hall of Fame Gala on Rogers TV

STUDY FINDS NO CELLPHONE CANCER LINK: A major study has found that
cellphone users are no more likely to develop cancer than the population
at large. A report in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute
documents the largest study on the subject ever conducted: it examined
the health records of 420,000 people in Denmark who were cellphone users
for an average of 8.5 years and for over 20 years in some cases. It
found no increased incidence of tumours among mobile users. (See Telecom
Update #270, 352, 495, 514)

BERNIER PROPOSES FINES FOR TELECOM MARKET ABUSE: Industry Minister
Maxime Bernier has tabled amendments to the Competition Act that would
allow the Competition Tribunal to levy fines of up to $15 million
against telecommunications service providers that abuse their dominant
position.

http://xrl.us/BillC41

** The Martin government proposed to give both the
   Competition Tribunal and the CRTC the power to impose
   similar fines, but the bills died when Parliament was
   dissolved in November 2005.

** Last month, the Competition Bureau outlined its proposed
   approach to dealing with complaints of anti-competitive
   behaviour in telecom markets, and invited comments by
   December 29. (see Telecom Update #554).

ROGERS CONSIDERS NATIONAL ROLLOUT OF PHONE, INTERNET: Speaking at a
UBS-sponsored conference in New York this week, Ted Rogers said that his
company is "developing technology to offer high-speed Internet and phone
across the country." He may have been referring to an enhanced version
of the Inukshuk network, the wireless Internet venture that Rogers and
Bell own jointly.

** Rogers, who was due to retire at the end of 2008,
   recently signed a new contract that extends his term in
   office until either he or the company terminates the
   contract on six months' notice.

MTS SEEKS 50-CENT PAYPHONE CHARGE: MTS Allstream has asked the CRTC to
approve an increase in payphone charges to 50 cents, to be effective
in April 2007.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/public/8740/2006/m59/697249.zip

CRTC REINTRODUCES INTERNAL DECISION STANDARDS: The CRTC has set internal
deadlines for issuing decisions on a variety of telecommunications
applications. The Commission will begin measuring its internal service
standards in April 2007, and will report annually beginning in 2008.

** The Commission previously set performance standards for
   itself in 2002, but failed to meet them and subsequently
   stopped reporting results. (See Telecom Update #346).

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Circulars/2006/ct2006-11.htm

TELUS EXPANDS EVDO ROAMING: Telus says that its customers can now use
their high-speed (EVDO) mobile phones in more than 230 U.S. cities.
Telus charges for roaming in the U.S. are 95 cents/minute for airtime,
and an additional 50 cents/minute for long distance calls within Canada
and the U.S.

** A full list of U.S. cities where Telus EVDO roaming is
   available is posted at http://xrl.us/EVDOroam

NORTHWESTEL RATE INCREASES APPROVED: The CRTC has approved Northwestel
interim rate increases of $2/month for residential lines and $5/month 
for business lines, effective January 1, 2007.

** All of Northwestel's tariffs are made interim, to allow
   any price changes in the Commission's final ruling on the
   telco's regulatory framework, due in 2007, to be made
   retroactive to January 1. (See Telecom Update #513)

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Orders/2006/o2006-332.htm

COGECO FOUNDER LEAVES BOARD: Louis Audet, who founded Cogeco in 1956 and
led it until 1993, is resigning from the Board of Cogeco Cable and
Cogeco Inc. Audet, 88, owns 72% of Cogeco Inc. and remains its Chairman
Emeritus.

SR TELECOM TAKES $29M HIT, GETS NEW BACKING: SR Telecom has raised $20
million in new financing and taken a $29 million restructuring charge.
(See Telecom Update #555) SR says it has been burdened by
restructuring efforts that were "disruptive to operations" and has
responded by focusing all efforts on WiMAX products.

** SR reports a 35% decline in third quarter revenue,
   compared to a year ago, due to "outsourcing issues."

WI-LAN WINS NOKIA LICENCE DEAL: Nokia has agreed to pay Ottawa-based
Wi-LAN Inc. $15 million, and to transfer 93 patents worth $34 million to
Wi-LAN, in exchange for a licence to use Wi-LAN's ADSL patents.

** Earlier this year, Wi-LAN stopped making equipment in
   order to concentrate on licensing its technology. It is
   offering reduced fees to companies that sign licences
   before April 12, 2007. (See Telecom Update #515)

NORTEL CHANGES ITS AUDITOR: Deloitte & Touche, which has been Nortel's
auditor since 1914, has been replaced by KPMG. (See Telecom Update #472)

NORTEL COMPLETES SALE OF UMTS UNIT: Nortel Networks this week concluded
a definitive agreement to sell its UMTS mobile products division to
Alcatel-Lucent for US$320 million in cash -- "less significant
deductions and transaction-related costs." About 1,700 Nortel employees
will move to Alcatel-Lucent by year-end. (See Telecom Update #544)

CALL-BACK LD COMES TO CELLULAR: Call-back long distance, which was used
to cut overseas LD charges in the 1980s, has been reborn as an option
for cost-conscious cellular users. Customers of Toronto-based Mobilmiser
dial a Toronto number and get a busy signal -- Mobilmiser calls them
back and connects them to long distance dialtone. The company says that 
Canada and U.S. LD calls are 4.9 cents/minute.

http://www.mobilemiser.com

NEW HANDSETS ANNOUNCE HOLIDAY SEASON: Cellcos are preparing for Santa's
midnight ride by introducing a new crop of wireless gadgets:

** Bell Canada's LG Fusic phone offers an MP3 player and
   Canada's first in-phone FM transmitter.

** MTS Motorola Q smartphone has an MP3 player, a camera,
   Windows Mobile software, and an "ultra-thin design."

** Telus's Nokia 6165i push-to-talk phone includes "advanced
   mobile IP" and Bluetooth technology, and a "vibrantly
   coloured matte metallic finish."

GLOBALSTAR SHRINKS THE SATELLITE PHONE: Globalstar's 7.1-ounce satellite
handset, the Qualcomm GSP-1700, is half the size and weight of its
previous models.

NORDIQ BOARD APPROVE ALIANT BUYOUT: The directors of Bell Nordiq Group
have decided to recommend approval of Bell Aliant's bid to buy the 37%
of Nordiq that it does not already own. (See Telecom Update #556)

TELECOM HALL OF FAME GALA ON ROGERS TV: A film of the 2006 Awards
Ceremony for Canada's Telecom Hall of Fame will be broadcast on Rogers
cable on Saturday December 9 at 6pm in Owen Sound and York Region, and
at 8pm in the rest of Rogers' territory.

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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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, 08 Dec 2006 15:57:59 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question


Korey Smith wrote:

> On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:11:29 GMT, Bruce L. Bergman
> <blbergman@earthlink.net> wrote:

>> On 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800, Korey <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

>>> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
>>> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
>>> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
>>> Sunrocket.

>>> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
>>> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
>>> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
>>> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
>>> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
>>> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
>>> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
>>> example?

>>> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
>>> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
>>> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
>>> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
>>> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
>>> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
>>> same high speed cable modem connection?

>>> Just curious if this would be possible.

>> Possible, yes -- but don't try making two calls at once unless you
>> have really good service.  Most home net connections are asymmetric
>> and your 'outbound' connection probably isn't fast enough to handle
>> two calls at once.

>> And even if you can pull it off in the slow times at 4 AM, try it at
>> 6 PM when everyone is home surfing the web and it won't go -- if you
>> are really unlucky, you won't be able to get even one decent VOIP
>> phone call through during the busy hours.

>> Cable modem speed is /very/ dependent on how heavily they have your
>> cable segment loaded with Internet users, and how much of the shared
>> segment bandwidth they are using.

>> That's the one saving grace of DSL -- it's slower, but it's all YOUR
>> bandwidth, no sharing.  Unless they overload the backhaul connection
>> at the switchroom to Earthlink (or whomever), it's fairly reliable.

>>      --<< Bruce >>--

> I had tried DSL, but having been on cable before, I thought it was too
> slow.  I was then looking for ways to save money on all of my home
> communications needs, and so I looked into my cable company for
> telephone service.  I have a single line through them right now and so
> far the service is pretty good.  I have even been able to fax both
> ways without any problems.  I thought the faxing would be an issue
> since I had read somewhere else that faxing over this type of
> connection isn't always reliable, but I haven't had any problems send
> or receive.

> I remember reading somewhere else that AT&T is now offering VOIP
> Service (Internet Telephone Service) with their AT&T CallVantage=AE
> Service Plan.  How are they going to be able to offer this and be
> competitive with cable?  I'm no expert, but it would seem that with
> the CallVantage, you would need the DSL, which would also require a
> landline phone # or can you have DSL only?  If you are required to
> have a landline phone, then what would be the purpose of subscribing
> to their CallVantage service?

> In other words, with this new AT&T CallVantage service, can you
> subscribe to DSL only and have the CallVantage service for your voice
> without having to pay extra for another line?

You are very, very confused - it may not be your fault.  "ATT
CallVantage" IS a VoIP service over whatever broadband (cable)
provider you may have.  [VoIP is totally different from DSL which is not
too different from "landline".]

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

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
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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
some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
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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      *
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*************************************************************************

ICB Toll Free News.  Contact information is not sold, rented or leased.

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Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
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              ************************

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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
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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
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 #409
******************************

    

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat Dec  9 22:49:11 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 192E9223D; Sat,  9 Dec 2006 22:49:10 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #410
Message-Id: <20061210034910.192E9223D@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Sat,  9 Dec 2006 22:49:10 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sat, 9 Dec 2006 22:50:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 410

Inside This Issue:                            Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Your Email Address Known by Police? (David Farrett, Newsfactor)
    Step Taken Toward Global Internet Names (Anick Jesdanun)
    High-Tech Firms Push Data-Privacy Law (Christopher S. Rugaber)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Korey Smith)
    From Our Archives: History of Teletype (TELECOM Digest Editor)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Sat, 09 Dec 2006 20:25:05 -0600
From: David Garrett, Newsfactor <newsfactor@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Your Email Address Known by Police?


An E-Mail Registry for Sex Offenders? 
by David Garrett, newsfactor.com

Two of the Senate's biggest names, Charles E. Schumer (D.-NY) and John
McCain (R.-AZ) plan to push for legislation that will compel sex
offenders to register their active e-mail addresses with authorities
in an effort to save kids from online predators.

Schumer and McCain will introduce the bill at the start of 110th
Congress in 2007. If passed, it would send convicted sex offenders to
prison for providing false e-mail accounts.

The news follows on the heels of a MySpace announcement to vet its
user base against the sex offender registries of 46 states, the
nation's first attempt to combine database systems across state lines
into a single, unified system.

Technology or Talking?

MySpace is the star of the social networking universe, and a fixture
in most teens' after-school time. While popular, MySpace has been
dogged by reports of known sex offenders using it to solicit teens and
tweens with abusive and often nightmarish proposals.

It's a problem that's well known to John Shehan, program manager of
the CyberTipline, a project by the Center for Missing and Exploited
Children. According to Shehan, parents need to rely on talking, and
not merely technology, to keep their kids safe.

"It's old fashioned communication," said Shehan. "You put every type
of technological advantage online, but there are ways around all of
them."

Yet talking -- and above all, talking with teens -- is sometimes the
hardest part of parenting. Shehan and colleagues performed a set of
focus groups in which parents quickly admitted that not knowing as
much as their kids did about was a roadblock to even the simplest
dialogue.

LOL No More

Teens' language, including the dozens of acronyms they use for
on-screen chats, was among the most confounding facets of their online
lives. Yet some of those very acronyms reveal the danger that
unpoliced computer use can pose:

IPN: I'm posting naked
LDR: Long distance relationship
LULAB: Love you like a brother
LULAS: Love you like a sister
OLL: Online love
RPG: Role playing games
WIBNI: Wouldn't it be nice if
WTGP: Want to go private?
A/S/L: age, sex, location

To help parents talk with teens, CyberTipline offers a list of
acronyms, tips, and talking points on its Web site at
www.cybertipline.com, as well as a way to report the actions of
suspected predators.

"Even little tips like getting the computer out of kids' bedrooms and
putting it into a central location" can make a difference, said
Shehan.  He added that sex predators' attempts to contact kids seem to
know no limits of deception.

"We've even seen cases where individuals have gone online posing as
atheists," said Shehan, "then go into chatrooms and look for kids who
are devout in a particular religion."

The adult -- often posing as a teen -- claims to find religion in an
attempt to groom the victim into sending photos, meeting offline, or
worse.

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 news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are so many holes in this
proposal!  For on, what prevents a sex offender (or anyone else)
 from using two or more different email addresses? You use one
address, when it gets to be 'too hot' to use further, then ditch
it and start again. After all, its not like getting a driver's
license or State ID card where a lot of people can get involved. 
Email addresses are like 'throw-away' things. The second problem
I see is what happens to the user -- sex offender or not -- who 
gets a 'joe job' done on him?  In other words, someone impersonates
him, for the main reason of covering up his tracks. So does the
former sex offender get punished again for 'not registering' his
email address, or how will that work? And with the huge amount of
porn and spam on the net these days, which of you can say with
assurance your email name/address has never been forged?   PAT]

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

Date: Sat, 09 Dec 2006 20:27:03 -0600
From: Anick Jesdsanun, AP  <ap@teleccom-digest.org>
Subject: Step Taken Toward Global Internet Names


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

The Internet's key oversight agency sought Friday to identify policy
disputes that might arise from the introduction of addresses that end
in non-Latin scripts, marking one more step toward making the Internet
truly global.

Histrically, domain names have been limited to the 26 characters of
the English alphabet, the 10 numerals and the hyphen. Constraining
non-English speakers to those characters is akin to forcing all
English speakers to type domains in Chinese.

Operators of some domain name suffixes, such as ".com" and Thailand's
".th," already have adopted technical tricks to understand other
scripts. However, the suffix -- the ".com" part -- remains in English,
and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers so far has
barred addresses entirely in non-Latin scripts.

That could start to change in the next year or two.

In anticipation of non-English suffixes, the ICANN board asked
representatives from governments and operators of country-code domains
such as ".fr" for France to come up with a list of policy questions
that must be resolved.

That could include who should decide what countries get what suffixes
and how to make sure a domain in one language isn't inadvertently
offensive in another, said Vint Cerf, ICANN's chairman. A preliminary
report could come by March.

"What we're trying to do is get as much of the issues documented and
publicly visible," Cerf said Friday after the board wrapped up this
week's meetings in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Separately, engineers have been considering technical issues surrounding
such names. One concern is that characters in two scripts sometimes
look alike, raising the possibility that criminals might sub one for
the other as part of scams.

Earlier in the week, ICANN released technical details for application
developers and others to test whether non-English domains could wreck
a global addressing system that millions of Internet users rely upon
every day.

On Friday, ICANN's board also approved contract renewals for ".biz,"
".info" and ".org." Added clauses include one designed to ensure that
operators of those domains won't try to charge more to register the
simpler, more valuable names.

Critics had worried that without such a provision, an operator could
potentially raise prices when a company tries to renew an
easy-to-remember or trademarked name. Friday's decision clarifies that
the board opposes variable pricing and indicates that similar clauses
are likely for other domains as contracts get renewed.

Cerf, one of the Internet's founding fathers as co-developer of the
key communications protocols, also was named ICANN chairman for a
seventh and final year. He said ICANN's bylaws require him to leave
the board when his term expires next December. Cerf joined the board
in 1999 and became ICANN's second chair a year later.

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

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

Date: Sat, 09 Dec 2006 20:28:40 -0600
From: Christopher S. Rugaber, AP <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: High-Tech Firms Push Data-Privacy Law


By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER, AP Business Writer

Microsoft Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and other high-tech companies are
preparing to push for data-privacy legislation next year to replace
what they consider an outdated patchwork of state and federal laws
that are inconsistent and burdensome.

"We think the time has come for a comprehensive privacy bill that
would protect consumers' personal information while still allowing the
flow of information needed for commerce online," Ira Rubinstein, a
Microsoft lawyer, said this week.

Several recent high-profile breaches of consumers' personal
information have made consideration of privacy proposals more likely,
Rubinstein said. The Social Security numbers and medical data of
approximately 930,000 people were compromised this June, for example,
when computer equipment belonging to insurance provider American
International Group Inc. was stolen.

Microsoft, HP and eBay Inc. earlier this year formed the Consumer
Privacy Legislative Forum to lobby for privacy legislation. Google
Inc., Intel Corp., Oracle Corp. and other companies later joined.

The forum supports legislation that would set standards for what
notice must be given to consumers about personal information collected
on them and how it will be used, Rubinstein said. The companies are
aiming for a law that would override any existing state laws and
standardize privacy rules across industries.

The group's efforts will likely face some opposition, however.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy
Information Center, a consumer advocacy group, said the proposals, if
adopted, would amount to an industry drafting its own regulations.

Rotenberg also argued that the notices to consumers preferred by
Microsoft and other companies are insufficient to protect online
privacy. Instead, consumers should have access to the data that
companies have on them and have more control over how they are used,
he said, similar to the way consumers can currently access their
credit reports.

Rotenberg also opposes the pre-emption of state laws, which he said in
many cases have better protections than federal rules. Many anti-spam
experts complained when Congress in 2003 approved a measure that did
not let individuals sue spammers and that pre-empted most state laws
that did.

Meanwhile, Stuart Ingis, a partner at the law firm Venable LLP, said
that a broad privacy measure is unnecessary.

"Comprehensive privacy legislation already exists in this country," he 
said, citing existing laws and regulations governing financial and 
health-care privacy.

Those rules took decades to develop and provide strong protections for
consumers, said Ingis, whose firm represents several companies and
trade groups that track privacy issues.

Although high-tech companies have been seeking comprehensive federal
privacy legislation, Congress has focused on the steps companies
should take to protect data and when companies should notify consumers
of data security breaches.

But several data security bills failed to pass during the soon-to-end
congressional session, largely because of jurisdictional struggles
between different congressional committees, said Steve Adamske,
spokesman for Rep. Barney Frank (news, bio, voting record), D-Mass.

Frank, incoming chairman of the House Financial Services Committee,
said Wednesday that he plans to consider the issue of data security
next year. To avoid a repeat of the jurisdictional struggle, Frank
says he plans to propose to incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that
she appoint a task force of members from committees with oversight on
privacy matters to work on the issue.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

From: Korey Smith <newsemail@cox.net>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Reply-To: newsemail@cox.net
Date: Sat, 09 Dec 2006 16:14:08 -0600
Organization: Cox


On Fri, 08 Dec 2006 15:57:59 -0500, Rick Merrill
<rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote:

> Korey Smith wrote:

>> On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:11:29 GMT, Bruce L. Bergman
>> <blbergman@earthlink.net> wrote:

>>> On 4 Dec 2006 22:11:31 -0800, Korey <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

>>>> I just recently signed up for telephone service through my cable
>>>> company (It is supposed to be installed Tuesday, December 5.)  Other
>>>> than my cable company, I had considered services such as Vonage and
>>>> Sunrocket.

>>>> After I signed up with my cable company, I was thinking and had the
>>>> following question: Is it possible to subscribe to two different VOIP
>>>> telephone services at the same time and be able to use either of them
>>>> whenever you want?  In other words, after I port my current telephone
>>>> number to my cable company and start with their service, what if I
>>>> decide I need another line later and want to try another company for
>>>> the new  line, say Vonage, Sunrocket, or another one of my choice, for
>>>> example?

>>>> What would be involved with doing this, especially if I don't have an
>>>> active landline?  Would I need to go through my local telephone
>>>> company and have them install a new telephone line and then once it is
>>>> working, transfer the telephone service for the new line to Vonage,
>>>> Sunrocket, or some other provider of my choice?  Would it be possible
>>>> to have two VOIP lines with two separate VOIP providers utilizing the
>>>> same high speed cable modem connection?

>>>> Just curious if this would be possible.

>>> Possible, yes -- but don't try making two calls at once unless you
>>> have really good service.  Most home net connections are asymmetric
>>> and your 'outbound' connection probably isn't fast enough to handle
>>> two calls at once.

>>> And even if you can pull it off in the slow times at 4 AM, try it at
>>> 6 PM when everyone is home surfing the web and it won't go -- if you
>>> are really unlucky, you won't be able to get even one decent VOIP
>>> phone call through during the busy hours.

>>> Cable modem speed is /very/ dependent on how heavily they have your
>>> cable segment loaded with Internet users, and how much of the shared
>>> segment bandwidth they are using.

>>> That's the one saving grace of DSL -- it's slower, but it's all YOUR
>>> bandwidth, no sharing.  Unless they overload the backhaul connection
>>> at the switchroom to Earthlink (or whomever), it's fairly reliable.

>>>      --<< Bruce >>--

>> I had tried DSL, but having been on cable before, I thought it was too
>> slow.  I was then looking for ways to save money on all of my home
>> communications needs, and so I looked into my cable company for
>> telephone service.  I have a single line through them right now and so
>> far the service is pretty good.  I have even been able to fax both
>> ways without any problems.  I thought the faxing would be an issue
>> since I had read somewhere else that faxing over this type of
>> connection isn't always reliable, but I haven't had any problems send
>> or receive.

>> I remember reading somewhere else that AT&T is now offering VOIP
>> Service (Internet Telephone Service) with their AT&T CallVantage=AE
>> Service Plan.  How are they going to be able to offer this and be
>> competitive with cable?  I'm no expert, but it would seem that with
>> the CallVantage, you would need the DSL, which would also require a
>> landline phone # or can you have DSL only?  If you are required to
>> have a landline phone, then what would be the purpose of subscribing
>> to their CallVantage service?

>> In other words, with this new AT&T CallVantage service, can you
>> subscribe to DSL only and have the CallVantage service for your voice
>> without having to pay extra for another line?

> You are very, very confused - it may not be your fault.  "ATT
> CallVantage" IS a VoIP service over whatever broadband (cable)
> provider you may have.  [VoIP is totally different from DSL which is not
> too different from "landline".]

I'm new at learning all of this stuff as it relates to VoIP, etc.  So,
the "ATT CallVantage" service can be utilized over a DSL or Cable
connection, right?  I guess what seemed confusing to me is if it can
be used over a DSL connection, then in order to have a DSL connection,
you usually have to have a regular landline, correct?  Well, what
seemed odd to me is why anyone would pay for a landline in order to
have DSL service just so they could have the "ATT CallVantage"
service, unless a person could subscribe only to DSL service without
landline service.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are at least two forms of
'broadband' internet (or considered 'fast enough' for applications
such as VOIP service). There is DSL, which is a telco service, and
there is 'cable internet'. Cable is quite independent of your phone
service. They are a lot the same, but many of us feel that cable is
generally a bit faster. I used to have DSL when I was a customer of 
Southwestern Bell Telco; I have been with Cable One now for a few 
years, for both television and internet. I do not know if AT&T will
sell their 'CallVantage' service to people who do not have DSL
service. A few of us can easily have both DSL and cable internet,
but there are many people eligible for one (because of their location)
but not the other. Many of the cable companies are now doing phone
service as well.   PAT]

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

Date: Sat,  9 Dec 2006 21:47:49 EST
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Sunbject: From our Archives: History of Teletype


Fifteen years ago in this Digest, I published a book review which 
had been submitted by Jim Haynes; I thought it might be interesting
to look at it again.

  Date: Sat, 16 Nov 1991 20:33:50 -0600
  From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom>
  To: telecom
  Subject: History of Morkrum Company - Ancestor of Teletype Corporation

  [Moderator's Note: Attached is a very interesting piece I received
  which is too large for a regular issue of the Digest. I thought it was
  fascinating and hope you feel the same way.   PAT]

  From: Jim Haynes <haynes@cats.UCSC.EDU>
  Subject: History of Morkrum Company - Ancestor of Teletype Corporation
  Organization: University of California, Santa Cruz


		A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE MORKRUM COMPANY
                            Howard L. Krum
	    	 	      circa 1925
	
			       ABSTRACT

  This is a first-hand report of Teletype's early years.  Although the
original manuscript was found unsigned and undated, it has been
positively identified as the work of Mr. Howard L. Krum, son of Mr.
Charles L. Krum, a co-founder of the original Morkrum Company.  The
date of writing seems to have been somewhere between 1925 and 1928.

  The fame of Howard Krum does not depend on his illustrious
parentage.  His own contributions to the printing telegraph art, among
them the invention of _stop-start synchronization_, were of lasting
importance.

			     -----

  In the year 1902, Mr. Joy Morton, nationally known as the founder
and head of the Morton Salt Company, became interested in the
possibility of developing a printing telegraph system.  He called Mr.
Charles L. Krum, who was at that time Mechanical Engineer of the
Western Cold Storage Company, into consultation on the matter.  While
cold storage seems rather a far cry from printing telegraph
development, Mr. Krum had had considerable experience on the design of
intricate mechanisms, including adding machines.

  Inventors had been working on the development of printing telegraph
for forty years prior to this time but had not succeeded in producing
apparatus which was simple and practical enough to find any market or
any considerable use by the communication systems in the United
States.  As is the case with most others who started work on printing
telegraph, Mr. Krum was fascinated with the possibilities of this
development, and Mr. Morton agreed to go ahead with the proposition
and finance it.  How important this decision was did not become
apparent for many years, as certainly no one realized the vast sums of
money and the years of hard work which would have to be expended
before satisfactory printing telegraph apparatus would be produced and
widespread use made of it.

  In 1906, Mr. Howard Krum received his degree in electrical
engineering and immediately started work with his father on this
problem.  The combination of the electrical engineer and the
mechanical engineer proved to be a happy one and experiments were
diligently prosecuted for a couple of years, until in 1908 a system
was developed which looked good enough to try on an actual telegraph
line.  The first trial of this system was made on the lines of the
Chicago & Alton Railroad.  While operation was secured and the results
were sufficiently satisfactory to cause the inventors to feel quite
jubilant, still they were hard-headed enough to see the weak points of
this system in the state of development in which it was at that time.
The experience acquired in this actual line test of the apparatus was
made the basis for further research, and after two more years of work,
the start-stop printing telegraph system which has become the basis
for all successful single channel printer systems of the present day,
was born.  The apparatus which embodied the start-stop system at that
time bore little resemblance to the present apparatus but the
principles of operation were there and the working out of them was
sufficiently satisfactory to justify a commercial installation.

  In their pursuit of a satisfactory system of transmission, the
mechanism for recording the signals was not neglected.  Several
different kinds of commercial typewriters were modified to perform the
duty of recording the received signals, but strange as it may seem, it
was found that commercial typewriters were not satisfactory for the
rigorous job of recording telegraph signals.  It was therefore found
necessary to design a typewriter especially for this work.

  These first tests also pointed out the advantages and superiority of
mechanical over electrical operation, with a result that all functions
outside of the bare selection are now performed mechanically by the
Teletype in its present form.

  Having finally produced a system and apparatus which they felt
certain was commercially practical, the inventors were then faced with
the necessity for finding a communication company who would permit the
installation of this apparatus in regular commercial operation.  The
Postal Telegraph Company proved to be the most receptive and a commit-
tee headed by Mr. Minor M. Davis, at that time Electrical Engineer for
the Postal Telegraph Company, visited Chicago to investigate this new
Morkrum system.  It is interesting to note that Mr. Davis, who had
years of experience in the telegraph business and who had seen many
attempts at the development of a successful printing telegraph system,
was not so much concerned in the actual functioning of the recording
apparatus but was more concerned in learning if the basis of the
system, that is, the line signal, was of a type which would function
on ordinary telegraph lines in good weather and bad.  After a thorough
investigation of the system, he became convinced that the start-stop
line signal devised by the Krums would meet the rigorous service
requirements, and the committee decided to permit an actual commercial
installation on the Postal lines between New York and Boston.  This
installation was made in the summer of 1910.

  After years of work, the inventors felt that they had finally
reached their goal.  The apparatus was packed and shipped and Mr.
Howard Krum went to Boston to supervise the installation at that end
of the circuit and Mr. Charles Krum went to New York to take care of
the operations at that end.  However, the difficulties were not yet
over, for when the apparatus arrived at its destination it was found
that due to rough handling the delicate instruments were so badly
damaged that instead of proceeding with the installation they had to
spend months of work to get the machines back in shape for operation.
Finally the day came when everything was in readiness and the two
sets, one at New York and one at Boston, were hooked together by a
telegraph wire and the first commercial message was transmitted by the
Morkrum system.

  From the start good results were obtained, but as operation
continued the inventors realized more and more that the operating
requirements for commercial telegraph service were terribly exacting.
The percentage of accuracy required was much higher than with any
other form of mechanism; it must work twenty-four hours a day; it must
operate on good telegraph wires and on telegraph wires whose quality
was impaired by rain and other adverse weather conditions.  The
apparatus was too delicate to function over long periods of time
without the necessity of close supervision.  However, as in the case
of the earlier installation, the inventors profited by their
experience and went steadily along perfecting their apparatus, making
changes here and there to improve its accuracy [and] to make it
sturdier and simpler.  Further Postal Telegraph lines were equipped
and an installation was made on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
Railroad between Chicago and Galesburg, Illinois.  

However, in spite of the fact that these circuits gave good service,
the growth of the business was very slow.  Telegraph companies and the
railroads seemed loath to adopt the new system.  Possibly this slow
growth in the early days of the Morkrum system was due to the fact
that the telegraph companies and the railroads could easily secure
good Morse operators at low wages.  Therefore, they were loath to
abandon Morse operation, concerning which they were thoroughly
familiar, and to replace it with machine telegraphy which would force
them to go to school all over again.

However, the telegraph business continued to grow and good Morse
operators became harder to secure, wages increased, and above all, the
Morkrum system steadily improved and finally installations of the
system were made by the Western Union Telegraph Company, and the
Canadian Pacific and Great Northwestern Telegraph companies in Canada.
Due to increased business, Morkrum Company were able to enlarge
their plant facilities, to engage expert assistants and to steadily
improve their product.

In 1917, Mr. Sterling Morton, son of Mr. Joy Morton, who had had
wide experience with the Morton Salt Company, became president of the
Morkrum Company.  Mr. Morton brought to the Morkrum Company not only
his great organizing and executive ability, but also an unusual talent
for machine design work.  The page printer and the Simplex tape
printer, which are the most widely used units at the present time, are
the joint work of Mr. Morton and Mr. Howard Krum.

Up to this time, the laboratory and manufacturing work had been
carried on in an old building near the business district.  A careful
survey of the employees showed that the majority of them lived on the
north side of Chicago and this study determined the location of the
present factory.  In 1918, the factory was moved to the first unit of
the present building, which is entirely fireproof and is considered
one of the finest factory buildings in Chicago.  Since that time, a
total of six units have been built and a seventh is just being
started. [1]
  
As the demand for printing telegraph apparatus grew, the standards
were steadily raised and apparatus which was thought quite wonderful a
few years previous became obsolete and was replaced with newer types
having greater margins of operation, higher speeds, and which were
much simpler to maintain.  Installations were made in new fields and
each new field offered new and more difficult problems.

In 1914, Mr. Kent Cooper, who was then head of the Traffic
Department of the Associated Press, became convinced that the method
of delivering copy to the New York newspapers by messenger boy was
decidedly unsatisfactory and asked the Morkrum Company if they could
make an installation of their apparatus by which one operator in the
Associated Press could transmit the press matter simultaneously to all
of the newspapers in New York City.  A simple problem in the light of
our present-day knowledge, but at that time it was an undertaking
which offered many problems as yet unsolved.  However, it was
undertaken; the problem was studied, suitable apparatus was designed
and within a year all of the newspapers in New York City and nearby
towns, as well as in Philadelphia, were receiving their press matter
simultaneously from a transmitting set controlled by a single operator
in the Associated Press office in New York City.

 From this small beginning in the service of the Associated Press, the
use of printing telegraphs has spread until over 800 newspapers
belonging to the Associated Press receive their news dispatches by
these machines, and some of the wire circuits of which this matter is
transmitted involve as much as 4,000 miles of wire.  The other press
associations are using the apparatus to much the same extent.

Up to 1917, the Morkrum Company had devoted all their efforts to the
design of single channel printing telegraph systems and had developed
both direct keyboard and tape transmission, but at this time the
Postal Telegraph Company asked the Morkrum Company to develop a
Multiplex system to meet the requirements on their heavy trunk lines.
This development was undertaken and in less than a year a satisfactory
Multiplex system had been designed, manufactured and installed on the
Postal Company's line and proved so valuable that its use was extended
to all their main trunk lines.

As the use of printing telegraph became more general, needs
developed for different types of apparatus to meet different classes
of service, and the Morkrum Company attacked these problems and devel-
oped different types of apparatus until at present there are available
both direct keyboard and perforated tape transmission systems,
printing either on tape printers or page printers, operated either
single channel or Multiplex, using either five-unit or six-unit code,
the latter being especially valuable for stock quotation work.

The use of the apparatus in the telegraph companies continued to
grow until at the present time fully 80% of all commercial telegrams
are handled by printing telegraph.  As the use of the machines grew,
the requirements became more and more rigid and these were met by
intensive research and development work which has never ceased.
Printers are operating today under service conditions which would not
have been considered possible even two or three years back.  The
latest development, the so-called "Typebar Tape Teletype" has proven
so simple and reliable that it bids fair to drive Morse operation even
 from the way wires.

Always on the alert for new fields for its equipment, the Morkrum
Company several years ago became convinced that its apparatus could
render valuable service for the communication needs of business
houses, factories, hotels, etc.  To sell this idea required a lot of
time and much hard work, and the first few installations proved that
this service was much more exacting that the use of the machines in
regular telegraph offices where expert maintenance was instantly
available, The experience gained in these early commercial install-
ations paid big dividends, in that it resulted in such marked
improvement in the apparatus that the use has grown so that today
there is scarcely a city or town in the United States where this
apparatus is not used for some communication need outside of its
primary field -- that of telegraphic message traffic.

The development of an organization that could satisfactorily handle
the complex problems of developing and manufacturing a printing
telegraph system has been quite as remarkable as the development of
the apparatus itself; in fact, the successful culmination of the work
would not have been possible had it not been for the splendid loyalty
and intelligent work of the whole organization.  This is particularly
true in the case of the many men who had courage enough to stick to
the proposition through the many years that it took before practical
commercial results were obtained.  The Morkrum Company is particularly
proud of the fact that the outstanding men in the organization have
developed in their own organization.  It is a fixed policy of the
company to develop its own men for important positions wherever
possible.

Mr. Howard Krum met Mr. J. O. Carr, who is now head of the Sales
Engineering Department, in Boston in 1910 and engaged him for testing
and engineering work.  About the same time, Mr. G. Heding, who is now
Factory Manager, came to the company as a tool maker.  During their
long years of service these two men have filled practically every
position of importance in the organization and much credit is due them
for their part in the final success of the work.  We believe there are
few companies where such a large proportion of the men in supervisory
positions have grown up with the company and developed as the company
has developed and there are certainly few companies where there is a
greater spirit of loyalty and co-operation.

Just a word about the manufacture of this apparatus.  The requirements
which printing telegraph apparatus must meet are extremely severe.
This is readily understood when it seen that when a printer is opera-
ting at the rate of 60 words per minute it is printing six characters
per second.  The printing of a character requires at least four
successive operations of the various portions of the machine; in other
words, many of these mechanisms have less than a twenty-fourth of a
second in which to do their job.  Coupled with this is the fact that
the control of this rapidly moving mechanism is by means of a current
of electricity so weak that it would hardly cause the smallest
electric light globe to even glow.

Knowing this, it is easy to understand that continuous work and
research must be carried on to secure proper alloys and devise the
proper methods of heat treating and hardening to permit all of the
parts of the machine to function properly.

Another requirement which is successfully met by Morkrum apparatus
is absolute interchangeability of parts.  This has been secured by the
work of a force of highly trained designers and engineers and by the
policy of the company of unhesitatingly securing the finest machine
tool equipment available to permit parts to be made with the highest
degree of accuracy.  The present plant of the Morkrum-Kleinschmidt
Corporation [2] at Chicago contains about 135,000 square feet of floor
space devoted solely to the manufacture of this type of apparatus,
filled wit the best machine tool equipment that can be purchased and
manned by a force of highly trained employees, many of whom have been
in the service of the company for a great many years.

	                -----

[1] This would be the building at 1400 Wrightwood Ave., in Chicago
which was occupied by Teletype until early in the 1960s, when the R&D
portion of the complex at 5555 Touhy Ave., Skokie, was completed.  I
hear it has now been remodeled into luxury apartments.

[2] E. E. Kleinschmidt had a competing printing telegraph company in
the 1905-1920 time frame.  His company eventually merged with the
Morkrum company because of the dominance of the Krum patent on
start-stop operation.  In the 1950s Mr. Kleinschmidt got back into the
business with his own company, located in Deerfield, IL.


haynes@cats.ucsc.edu
haynes@ucsccats.bitnet

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

  From: Jim Haynes <haynes@cats.UCSC.EDU>
  Subject: History of Teletypewriter Development
  Date: 17 Nov 91 08:34:46 GMT
  Organization: University of California, Santa Cruz


Here's another one (and that exhausts my supply). These two came into
my hands as Monographs when I was working for Teletype in 1963-1966.
The main reason I typed them in is to get them into the telecom
archive since they contain information that isn't readily available so
far as I know.


              HISTORY OF TELETYPEWRITER DEVELOPMENT

			 R. A. Nelson

		     K. M. Lovitt, Editor


October 1963					Teletype Corporation
						5555 West Touhy Avenue
						Skokie, Illinois

			------

		      ABSTRACT

The success of the modern teletypewriter began with Howard L. Krum's
conception of the start-stop method of synchronization for permutation
code telegraph systems.  The purpose of this paper is to provide a
brief historical account of events which led to that achievement and
of those which ensued.

Four areas of development will be covered:

  (1) The contributions of Sterling Morton, Charles L. Krum and
      Howard L. Krum.
  (2) The contributions of E. E. Kleinschmidt.
  (3) The contributions of AT&T and Western Electric.
  (4) The contributions of L. M. Potts

			-----

     _HISTORY OF TELETYPEWRITER DEVELOPMENT_

Area I.  In 1902 a young electrical engineer named Frank Pearne
solicited financial support from Joy Morton, head of the Morton Salt
interests.  Pearne had been experimenting with a printing telegraph
system and needed sponsorship to continue his work.  Morton discussed
the matter with his friend, Charles L. Krum, a distinguished
mechanical engineer and vice president of the Western Cold Storage
Company (which was operated by Joy's brother, Mark Morton).  The
verdict for Pearne was favorable, and he was given laboratory space in
the attic of the Western Cold Storage Company.

After about a year of unsuccessful experimenting, Pearne lost
interest and decided to enter the teaching field.  Charles Krum
continued the work and by 1906 had developed a promising model.  In
that year his son, Howard, a newly graduated electrical engineer,
plunged into the work alongside his father.  The fruit of these early
efforts was a typebar page printer (Patent No. 888,335; filed August
22, 1903; issued May 19, 1908) and a typewheel printing telegraph
machine (Patent No. 862,402; filed August 6, 1904; issued August 6,
1907).  Neither of these machines used a permutation code.

They experimented with transmitters as well, applications filed in
1904 and 1906 maturing into Patents No. 929,602 and No. 929,603.
These patents covered modes of transmission which depended both on
alternation of polarity and change in current level.

By 1908 the Krums were able to test an experimental printer on an
actual telegraph line.  The typing portion of this machine was a
modified Oliver typewriter mounted on a desk with the necessary
relays, contacts, magnets, and interconnecting wires (Patent No.
1,137,146; filed February 4, 1909; issued April 27, 1915). As a result
of the successful test of this printer, Charles and Howard Krum
continued their experiments with a view to developing a direct
keyboard typewheel printer.

They sought most of all to discover a way of synchronizing
transmitting and receiving units so that they would stay "in step."
It was Howard Krum who worked out the start-stop method of
synchronization (Patent No. 1,286,351; filed May 31, 1910; issued
December 3, 1918).  This achievement, which more than anything else
put printing telegraphy on a practical basis, was first embodied (for
commercial purposes) in the "Green Code" Printer, a typewheel page
printer (Patent No. 1,232,045; filed November 28, 1909;issued July 3,
1917).

The transmitters first used by the Krums were of the continuously-
moving-tape variety. (A stepped tape feed, they maintained, would have
reduced transmission speed.)  In order to permit sequential sensing,
the rows of code holes were arranged in a slightly oblique pattern
(with respect to tape edges).  This method of transmission is more
fully elaborated in Krum Patents No. 1,326,456, No. 1,360,231, and No.
1,366,812.

Keyboard-controlled cam-type start-stop permutation code transmitters 
were developed by Charles and Howard Krum in about 1919.  Such a
device is the transmitter component of the Morkrum 11-Type tape printer
(Krum Patent No. 1,635,486).  This kind of transmitter employs a
single contact to open or close the signal line.

In about 1924 the Morkrum Company introduced the No. 12-Type tape
printer (H. L. Krum Patent No. 1,665,594).  On December 23, 1924,
Howard Krum and Sterling Morton (son of Joy Morton) filed an
application on the 14-Type type-bar tape printer which matured into
Patent No. 1,745,633. [1]

Area II.  It appears that the early efforts of E. E. Kleinschmidt
were directed toward development of facsimile printing apparatus and
automatic Morse code equipment.  He patented first a Morse keyboard
transmitter (Patent No. 964,372; filed February 7, 1095; issued
January 11, 1910) and later a Morse keyboard perforator (Patents No.
1,045,855, No. 1,085,984, and No. 1,085,985).  (The latter became
known as the Wheatstone Perforator.)

In 1916 Kleinschmidt filed an application for a type-bar page
printer (Patent No. 1,448,750 issued March 20, 1923).  This printer
utilized Baudot code but was not start-stop.  It was intended for use
on multiplex circuits, and its printing was controlled from a local
segment on a receiving distributor of the sunflower type.  Later,
around 1919, Kleinschmidt appeared to be concerned chiefly with
development of multiplex transmitters for use with this printer
(Kleinschmidt Patent No. 1,460,357).

It seems that Kleinschmidt first became interested in modern
start-stop permutation code telegraph systems when H. L. Krum's basic
start-stop patent was issued in December 1918.  Shortly after that
Kleinschmidt filed an application entitled "Method of and Apparatus
for Operating Printing Telegraphs" (Patent No. 1,463,136; filed May 1,
1919; issued July 24, 1923).  The system described therein employed
the start-stop principle with a modified version of his earlier
multiplex distributor. That patent, accordingly, was dominated by the
Krum start-stop patent.  The conflict of patent rights between the
Morkrum Company and the Kleinschmidt Electric Company eventually led
to a merger of the two interests.

Shortly after the new Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Corporation (later called
the Teletype Corporation) had been established, Sterling Morton,
Howard Krum, and E. E. Kleinschmidt filed an application covering the
commercial form of the well-known 15-Type page printer (Patent No.
1,9904,164).  [2]

Area III.  Teletype entered the Bell System in 1930.  From this
point on, advances in the Teletype product can be considered the
result of the pooled efforts of the AT&T Company, the Western Electric
Company, and the Teletype Corporation.  Teletype Corporation, of
course, holder of the basic patents and expert in the art, was the
chief contributor.

Although it appears from the report of R. E. Pierce, dated December
24, 1934, that the Bell System was active in the development of
telegraph printers and transmitters as early as the year 1909, a
review of the patents issued to Bell reveals no significant
contribution to modern teletypewriter development (using start-stop
permutation code) until the introduction in 1920 of the 10-A
teletypewriter (Pfannenstiehl Patents No. 1,374,606, No. 1,399,933,
No. 1,426,768, No. 1,623,809, and No. 1,661,012).

The 10-A teletypewriter was the first embodiment of such basic
design features of the 15-Type printer as stationary platen, moving
type basket, and selector vane assembly, but the majority of
improvements incorporated in the 15-Type were proprietary to the
Teletype Corporation.

Area IV.  The earliest contribution of Dr. L. M. Potts to the
start-stop method of synchronization appears to have been set forth in
a patent application filed November 18, 1911, covering a reed-type
start-stop selector (Patent No. 1,151,216).

In 1914, Dr. Potts filed an application for a single magnet page
printer which used an eight-unit code (Patent No. 1,229,202; issued
June 5, 1917).

In 1915, Dr. Potts filed an application covering another single
magnet page printer, this one using the start-stop permutation code
(Patent No. 1,370,669; assigned to AT&T March 8, 1921).

Potts Patents No. 1,517,381 and No. 1,570,923 were also assigned to
AT&T.

                           ----------

[1] For anyone who is old enough to have seen a Western Union Telegram
where the typing is on narrow gum-backed tape that is moistened and
stuck to a telegram blank, this is the machine that produces that kind
of printing.  The same mechanism is the basis of a typing reperforator, 
a machine which punches received signals into a tape for retransmission
and also types on the tape so an operator can read it.

[2] This is the machine used until the 1960s or so by the news wire
services.  Some radio stations still use a recording of the sound of
one of these machines as background during news broadcasts.


haynes@cats.ucsc.edu   haynes@cats.bitnet


 [Moderator's Note: Thank you for two very excellent articles this
 weekend on the history of Teletype and its predecessor companies.
 Jim's earlier article on the history of the Morkrum Company was
 distributed as a special mailing sent out between issues 936-937 on
 Saturday evening. Watch for your copy to arrive if it hasn't yet. 

 But I am curious about something not mentioned in either article. Did
 the Bell System buy out Morkrum and change the name to Teletype in
 1930 or did Teletype start and later buy out Morkrum?  How did that
 transition occur? I love these history articles because so much
 telecom history happened right here in Chicago -- the Chicago I like
 to remember from years ago.  PAT]

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon Dec 11 03:37:22 2006
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TELECOM Digest     Mon, 11 Dec 2006 03:35:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 411

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    How Much Will Windows Security Matter? (Brian Bergstein, AP)
    Unlocking Cell Phones Does Not Violate DMCA (Monty Solomon)
    Town Explores Offering WiFi (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Phonelabs Dock N Talk vs. Cidco Communications Merge (support@sellcom)
    Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question (Dave Garland)
    Re: Your Email Address Known by Police? (mc)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 01:48:37 -0600
From: Brian Bergstein, AP <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: How Much Will Windows Security Matter?


By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer

Microsoft Corp. took great pains to improve security in its newly
released computer operating system, Windows Vista, redesigning it to
reduce users' exposure to destructive programs from the Internet.
Outside researchers commend the retooled approach -- yet they also
say the changes won't make online life much safer than it is now.

Why not? Partly because of security progress that Microsoft already
had made in its last operating system, Windows XP. Also because a
complex product like Vista is bound to have holes yet to be
discovered. And mainly because of the rapidly changing nature of
online threats.

Sure, Microsoft appears to have fixed the glitches that used to make
it easy for viruses, worms and other problems to wreck PCs. But other
avenues for attack are always evolving.

"Microsoft has made the core of the operating system more secure, but
they've really solved, by and large, yesterday's problems," said
Oliver Friedrichs, director of emerging technologies at antivirus
vendor Symantec Corp.

That claim would not please Microsoft, which touts Vista's improved
security as a big reason why companies and consumers will want to
upgrade to the new operating system.

In fact, Microsoft's effort to tighten security in Vista was one
reason the software was delayed past the crucial holiday shopping
season. It's now available for businesses and will be available to
consumers Jan. 30.

"It is an incremental improvement -- it is a reasonably large
increment," said Jon Callas, chief technology officer at PGP Corp., a
maker of encryption software. "I don't think it's a game-changer."

Some of Vista's security enhancements require computers with the
latest microprocessors -- which are known as 64-bit chips, in
reference to how much data they process at once. That won't improve
things on today's standard 32-bit computers, which will stick around
for a long time.

However, most of the improvements are available in all editions of
Vista, including a stronger firewall and a built-in program known as
Defender that alerts users if Vista believes spyware is being
installed.

"Windows is going to talk to you a lot more and make sure you're a lot
more aware of what you're doing," said Adrien Robinson, a director in
Windows' security technology unit. "It's going to help consumers be
more savvy."

One of Vista's biggest changes is more control over computer management. 
With previous versions of Windows, users were given by default great 
control over the computer's settings -- a situation that opened the door 
to nefarious manipulation by outsiders. In Vista, users are prompted to 
supply a password when they make significant changes -- a security 
feature long available on Apple Computer Inc.'s Macintosh and computers 
running the Linux operating system.

At the same time, the software gives corporate PC administrators new
security powers, such as the ability to turn off the USB ports that
employees might use to remove data or bring in troublesome programs on
flash drives. (Some network administrators had told Microsoft they
were so desperate to stop that practice that they were filling the PC
ports with glue.)

Even with all the changes, Vista does not promise a total cure for
security headaches. Microsoft, after all, is also selling security
add-ons, competing more directly with antivirus companies than in the
past.

"Rather than having all the doors unlocked, you now have locks on the
doors. It doesn't mean it's a silver bullet," Robinson said. "If they
really wanted to get in, they could get through. They could throw a
rock through the window. But it's harder. Our goal is to make it
harder, to raise the bar."

Still, when Vista for businesses was launched in New York on Nov. 30,
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer promised a "dramatic" drop in "the number
of vulnerabilities that ever present themselves."

If so, that would spare Microsoft from a repeat of the embarrassing
series of "critical" security patches it had to release for the
previous operating system.

But it might not mean much against many threats Web surfers face
today.

For one thing, the kinds of large-scale, automated worms that Vista
purportedly will hinder have been waning anyway, according to security
analysts. Symantec's Friedrichs said 2006 hasn't seen any worms as
prevalent as the kinds that caused widely publicized PC outages
several years ago, with names like Slammer and Blaster.

That's partly because of enhancements Microsoft already made in
Service Pack 2, a huge set of patches for Windows XP that were
released in 2004.

"If you're looking at two versions, XP Service Pack 2 versus Vista,
I'm going to say to the average user they're both going to offer them
good security," said Michael Cherry, an analyst at Directions on
Microsoft.  "Is Vista better? I don't know if it's that substantially
better."

Security experts say malicious hackers have largely moved away from
outage-causing attacks, motivated by publicity or pride, in favor of
more targeted and lucrative thefts of users' data. Those attacks tend
to exploit flaws in Web applications or employ "social engineering"
 -- such as tricking people with phony e-mails into giving up
passwords.

"From that perspective, Vista is a non-event," said John McCormack, a
senior vice president at security vendor Websense Inc.

To its credit, Microsoft is fighting such "phishing" attacks by
configuring its new Internet Explorer 7 Web browser to alert users if
they're visiting a dicey-seeming Web site. Internet Explorer 7 is
already available for free download.

But IE7's phish-catching method alone is limited: It is based on a
"black list" of sites known to be up to no good. Outside security
experts say that will not stop the increasingly savvy attackers who
constantly morph their tactics, sometimes every few hours.

For example, Websense recently tracked a phishing attack that mimicked
a customer service message from Amazon.com. It passed through most
spam filters, and the phony Web site to which it directed victims
changed throughout the day. For at least the first few days, IE7
hadn't caught up to block it, McCormack said.

Perhaps one indication that security in the Vista era will be better
but far from perfect came in recent research by Sophos PLC.

The security software company determined that three of the 10 most
prevalent malicious worms circulating on the Internet in November were
able to run on Vista.

Impressively, the e-mail program that comes with Vista -- Windows
Mail, formerly called Outlook Express -- successfully found and
blocked the malware. But Web-based e-mail services let it through,
said Sophos security analyst Ron O'Brien.

For O'Brien, that finding showed that while Microsoft's efforts to
upgrade computer security are praiseworthy, there's only so much the
company can do. Not only are Microsoft's hands tied when it comes to
the security of third-party applications, but the company also is
limited in what it can do with its own software.

For example, McCormack said Microsoft might have done more to prevent
criminals from surreptitiously placing keystroke-monitoring programs
on computers to steal data. But the fix likely would have shut out
legitimate programs as well, such as those that let people operate
their PCs remotely.

"You have to find this happy medium between usability and security,"
McCormack said.

Of course, with Vista on a tiny fraction of desktops today, it's way
too early to assess how much hackers can mess with it.

"I don't know how long Microsoft is going to be able to claim the
streets are safe before a criminal decides to challenge that opinion,"
O'Brien said. "That's going to just be a matter of time."

On the Net:
Microsoft's page on Vista security:

http://www.microsoft.com/security/windowsvista/default.mspx


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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For more news and headlines each day, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Sun, 10 Dec 2006 01:02:58 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Unlocking Cell Phones Does Not Violate DMCA


Excerpt from:

[Federal Register: November 27, 2006  (Volume 71, Number 227)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 68472-68480]

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Copyright Office 37 CFR Part 201 Docket No. RM
2005-11 Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright
Protection Systems for Access Control Technologies
http://www.copyright.gov/fedreg/2006/71fr68472.html


5. Computer programs in the form of firmware that enable wireless
telephone handsets to connect to a wireless telephone communication
network, when circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of
lawfully connecting to a wireless telephone communication network.

The Wireless Alliance and Robert Pinkerton proposed an exemption for
"Computer programs that operate wireless communications handsets."
The proponents of this exemption stated that providers of mobile
telecommunications (cellphone) networks are using various types of
software locks in order to control customer access to the "bootloader"
programs on cellphones and the operating system programs embedded
inside mobile handsets (cellphones). These software locks prevent
customers from using their handsets on a competitor's network (even
after all contractual obligations to the original wireless carrier
have been satisfied) by controlling access to the software that
operates the mobile phones (e.g., the mobile firmware).

Many reply comments were submitted in support of this exemption and
only one reply comment provided any opposition to the proposal. Only
two witnesses testified at the hearing on this issue: a representative
of the principal proponent of the exemption and a representative of
some copyright owners (none of whom operate wireless telecommunication
services, manufacture wireless handsets or make bootloader or
operating system programs for cellphones). It was undisputed that
mobile handset consumers who desire to use their handsets on a
different telecommunications network are often precluded from doing so
unless they can obtain access to the bootloader or operating system
within the handset in order to direct the phone to a different
carrier's network. The evidence demonstrated that most wireless
telecommunications network providers do not allow a consumer to obtain
such access in order to switch a cell phone from one network to
another, and that the consumer could not use the cell phone with
another carrier, even after fulfilling his or her contractual
obligations with the carrier that sold the phone. In order to switch
carriers, the consumer would have to purchase a new phone from a
competing mobile telecommunications carrier.

The obstacle that prevents customers from using lawfully acquired
handsets on different carriers is the software lock. At least one
wireless telecommunications service has filed lawsuits alleging that
circumvention of the software lock is a violation of section
1201(a)(1)(A) and has obtained a permanent injunction (albeit by
stipulation).

The Register has concluded that the software locks are access controls
that adversely affect the ability of consumers to make noninfringing
use of the software on their cellular phones. Moreover, a review of
the four factors enumerated in 1201(a)(1)(C)(i)-(iv) supports the
conclusion that an exemption is warranted. There is nothing in the
record that suggests that the availability for use of copyrighted
works would be adversely affected by permitting an exemption for
software locks. Nor is there any reason to conclude that there would
be any impact -- positive or negative -- on the availability for use
of works for nonprofit archival, preservation, and educational
purposes or on the ability to engage in criticism, comment, news
reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research. Nor would circumvention
of software locks to connect to alternative mobile telecommunications
networks be likely to have any effect on the market for or value of
copyrighted works. The reason that these four factors appears to be
neutral is that in this case, the access controls do not appear to
actually be deployed in order to protect the interests of the
copyright owner or the value or integrity of the copyrighted work;
rather, they are used by wireless carriers to limit the ability of
subscribers to switch to other carriers, a business decision that has
nothing whatsoever to do with the interests protected by
copyright. And that, in turn, invokes the additional factor set forth
in 1201(a)(1)(C)(v): "such other factors as the Librarian
considers appropriate." When application of the prohibition on
circumvention of access controls would offer no apparent benefit to
the author or copyright owner in relation to the work to which access
is controlled, but simply offers a benefit to a third party who may
use 1201 to control the use of hardware which, as is increasingly
the case, may be operated in part through the use of computer software
or firmware, an exemption may well be warranted.  Such appears to be
the case with respect to the software locks involved in the current
proposal.

The copyright owners who did express concern about the proposed
exemption are owners of copyrights in music, sound recordings and
audiovisual works whose works are offered for downloading onto
cellular phones. They expressed concern that the proposed exemption
might permit circumvention of access controls that protect their works
when those works have been downloaded onto cellular phones. The record
on this issue was fairly inconclusive, but in any event the proponents
of the exemption provided assurances that there was no intention that
the exemption be used to permit unauthorized access to those
works. Rather, the exemption is sought for the sole purpose of
permitting owners of cellular phone handsets to switch their handsets
to a different network.

Because the Register has concluded that, in appropriate circumstances,
a class of works may be refined by reference to uses made of the
works, this issue can best be resolved by modifying the proposed class
of works to extend only to "Computer programs in the form of firmware
that enable wireless telephone handsets to connect to a wireless
telephone communication network, when circumvention is accomplished
for the sole purpose of lawfully connecting to a wireless telephone
communication network."

On September 18, 2006, long after the comments had been submitted and
the hearings had been conducted in this rulemaking, the Register
received unsolicited submissions from CTIA - The Wireless Association
(a nonprofit trade association that promotes the interests of the
wireless industry, representing both wireless carriers and
manufacturers) and TracFone Wireless, Inc. (which describes itself as
"America's largest prepaid wireless company"). The submissions
included the submitters' responses to written questions that the
Copyright Office had submitted to the two witnesses who had testified
at the March 23, 2006, hearing on the proposed exemption -- witnesses
who had no relationship with Tracfone or CTIA. The submissions also
contained arguments opposing the proposed exemption.

In the course of his consultation with the Register of Copyrights on
this rulemaking, the Acting Assistant Secretary of Commerce for
Communications and Information shared his concern that the record on
this proposal appeared to be incomplete and stated that he was pleased
that the Register had sought additional information (in the form of
the written questions to the witnesses) to supplement the record. 

Subsequently, he expressed to the Register his view that the CTIA and
TracFone comments "afford you a complete record in which the views of
both users and creators of content are currently represented," and
urged the Register to consider those submissions in making her
recommendation.

The Assistant Secretary's concerns are understandable, and the
Register shares his desire that the views of both users and creators
of content be represented in the rulemaking. However, complying with
the Assistant Secretary's request and accepting the last-minute
submissions of CTIA and TracFone would undermine the procedural
requirements of this proceeding and of the rulemaking process in
general. While it is preferable that all interested parties make their
views known in the rulemaking process, they must do so in compliance
with the process that is provided for public comment, or offer a
compelling justification for their failure to do so. In this case,
they have failed to offer such justification. CTIA (which counts
TracFone among its members) was aware of this rulemaking proceeding
and this request for an exemption as early as January or February,
2006. Yet it remained silent until September 18, long after the
opportunities provided for comment and testimony had expired. Nor did
it offer any explanation for its silence. If these extremely untimely
submissions were accepted, it would be difficult to imagine when it
ever would be justified to reject an untimely comment. Such a
precedent would be an invitation to chaos in future rulemakings.
Therefore, the late submissions of CTIA and TracFone have not been
considered.

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

Date: Sun, 10 Dec 2006 01:50:59 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Town Explores Offering WiFi


FRAMINGHAM
Town explores offering WiFi

By John C. Drake, Globe Staff  |  December 7, 2006

Framingham officials say they are ready to push forward with a plan to
blanket the town with wireless Internet service, a proposal seen as a
potential boon to law enforcement and a source of revenue.

But they are undecided on whether to build the network themselves or
leave the work to private companies.

That decision is significant, said Bill Ennen , program director for
the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative's Innovation Institute.
The choice of business model can determine whether the town's effort
to provide Internet access to town employees in the field and
residents in their homes can be sustained or will be just a passing
fad.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/12/07/town_explores_offering_wifi/

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

From: support@sellcom.com
Subject: Re: Phonelabs Dock N Talk vs. Cidco Communications Merge
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 01:04:24 -0500
Organization: www.sellcom.com
Reply-To: support@sellcom.com


support@sellcom.com spake thusly and wrote:

> Richard Davies <RED_dummy@att.net> spake thusly and wrote:

>> I can find several reviews about the Phonlabs Dock N Talk product on CNet,
>> but nothing on the Cidco Communications Merge product. Both provide
>> solutions for using your cell phone through household wiring.

>> Has anyone used either product, and if so, what is your opinion?

> We picked up the Dock N Talk ( www.dock-n-talk.biz ) recently and
> so far it is a -0- complaint item.  I have not heard about the
> other product but will try to get a look at it.

I did a bit of research.  The Phonelabs product has a vastly larger
list of supported cell phone brands and models, over 1000 now.  The
other one just works with a handful of Motorolas many of which, like
mine, are about obsolete.

With the Dock-n-talk if you switch cell phones you would just need a
new cable (unless you went with Bluetooth).

I believe we picked the way better product to sell by choosing
Phonelabs.  I am ordering one in here to test with the TMC phone
systems that we sell.  I plan to put it on line 2 and see if I can
drop one land line.

Regards,

Steve

www.sellcom.com for firewood splitters, ergonomic chairs, 
office phone systems, "non-mov" surge protection, Exabyte, 
CA, Minuteman, Brave Products, Fisch, TMC, Panasonic and more
http://www.phonelabs.biz cellphone docking now here!

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: VOIP: Internet Telephone Question
Date: Sat, 09 Dec 2006 22:40:40 -0600
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when Korey Smith <newsemail@cox.net>
wrote:

>>> you would need the DSL, which would also require a
>>> landline phone # or can you have DSL only?

Some companies (e.g. Qwest) will sell you DSL without phone service. 

Dave

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Your Email Address Known by Police?
Organization: BellSouth Internet Service
Date: Sat, 9 Dec 2006 23:40:45 -0500


> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are so many holes in this
> proposal!
 ...

> And with the huge amount of porn and spam on the net these days,
> which of you can say with assurance your email name/address has
> never been forged?  PAT]

I think, in fact, that the way spammers operate, everyone's e-mail address 
*has* been forged many times, and will continue to be, unless it's a very 
rarely used address.

Legislators don't know how the Internet works.

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

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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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #411
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon Dec 11 14:56:36 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id BF9862227; Mon, 11 Dec 2006 14:56:35 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #412
Message-Id: <20061211195635.BF9862227@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 14:56:35 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 11 Dec 2006 15:00:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 412

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Internet Criminals Stepping Up Cyberwar (Peter Griffiths, Reuters)
    School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen (Ben McConville, AP)
    FCC Commissioner Can Break Tie in AT&T-Bell South Merger Vote (
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 11, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Verizon Extends Efforts to Offer Video (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Unlocking Cell Phones Does Not Violate DMCA (Mr Joseph Singer)
    Re: Your Email Address Known by Police? (mc)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 13:07:18 -0600
From: Peter Griffiths <reuter@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Internet Criminals Stepping Up Cyberwar


By Peter Griffiths

Computer hackers will open a new front in the multi-billion pound
"cyberwar" in 2007, targeting mobile phones, instant messaging and
community Web sites such as MySpace, security experts predict.

As people grow wise to email scams, criminal gangs will find new ways
to commit online fraud, sell fake goods or steal corporate secrets.

"The attacks are becoming more sophisticated," said Dave Rand of
Internet security firm Trend Micro. "It's all about making money. And
they're making a lot of it," he told Reuters.

In 2007, hackers will be scouring social networking sites such as
MySpace to gather information for more focused attacks on people's
computers.

"It is definitely an area that is ripe for more exploitation by
malware (malicious software)," said Ed English, Trend Micro's Chief
Technology Officer for anti-spyware.

People could find their computers infected with viruses that secretly
record all their keystrokes or send out millions of spam email
messages.

Identity theft fraudsters will trawl through sites which allow people
to leave their pictures and personal details, finding target   s for
"phishing" attacks -- fraudulent emails aimed at tricking people into
revealing credit card numbers.

"It is way too easy for the spyware guys to assemble a puzzle of who
you are," English said.

Hackers will also target people using instant messaging services or
making telephone calls over the Internet in 2007, Trend Micro said.

MOBILE PHONES ARE TARGETS

Powerful new mobile phones and portable computers will also be targets
as thieves try to bypass tight security to steal emails, documents or
contacts, security firm McAfee said.

"Modern mobile phones are in essence miniature portable computers,"
the company said in its annual crime report. "Mobile devices present a
serious challenge."

A new version of the popular Web browser Internet Explorer released in
November and Microsoft's new Vista operating system will also attract
hackers, Trend Micro said.

McAfee warns that spying on businesses will become more sophisticated.
Criminals are hiring students to plant as sleepers in companies and
huge amounts of data can be removed on small, portable memory sticks.

"Corporate espionage is big business," its report says. "Data is often
priceless property. Stealing trade secrets, information or contacts is
a lucrative money-spinner for cybercriminals."

Security firms say Internet crime can be hard to combat because it
embraces different continents and time zones.

Criminals are attracted by the relative ease of making money, the
speed and anonymity the Internet offers. "It beats taking a gun and
walking into a 7-Eleven store," English 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 news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 13:09:54 -0600
From: Ben McConville, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen


By BEN McCONVILLE, Associated Press Writer

In this age of cell phones, text messages and computer keyboards, one
Scottish school has returned to basics. It's teaching youngsters the
neglected art of writing with a fountain pen.

There is no clacking of keyboards in most classrooms at the Mary
Erskine and Stewart's Melville Junior School, although there is a full
range of facilities for computer lessons and technology isn't being
ignored.

But the private school's principal believes the old-fashioned pens
have helped boost the academic performance and self-esteem of his
1,200 pupils.

"The pens improve the quality of work because they force the children
to take care, and better work improves self-esteem," principal Bryan
Lewis said. "Proper handwriting is as relevant today as it ever has
been."

Students as young as 7 have been instructed to forgo their ball point
pens and get to grips with its more artful predecessor. By the time
they reach grade five, at age 9, they are expected to write mainly
with fountain pens.

At an English class recently, students worked at perfecting a skill
that is under threat from the onset of e-mail -- the art of writing a
letter by hand. Each child's work was meticulous and clearly presented
in the upright, graceful strokes of a fountain pen.

Ten-year-old Cailean Gall has been using fountain pens in class for
two years. It took the keen soccer player one month to master the pen
and, like all pupils at the school, still has regular handwriting
lessons.

"At the start it was hard because I kept smudging, but you get used to
it," he said. "I still have to use a pencil for maths, and now I find
it strange using the pencils. I like it because it makes me
concentrate much more on my work."

Cailean now uses his fountain pen even for non-school work, but
classmate Katie Walker, 11, prefers to use ball point and pencil when
not in class.

"I use it for schoolwork and homework only," she said. "It is quite
easy using a fountain pen once you're used to it. My parents say it's
improved my work enormously."

The children learn a handwriting style developed by teachers at the 
school, which charges $12,500 a year. New teachers are also put through 
a course on how to write with pens -- as well as refresher courses on 
literacy and numeracy -- before they are let loose in classes.

Lewis said the school's 7- and 8-year-olds use fountain pens for 80
percent to 90 percent of their work, reverting to pencils for such
subjects as math.

"I don't see fountain pens as old-fashioned or outmoded. Modern
fountain pens are beautiful to use; it's not like in the old days of
broken nibs and smudging," Lewis said. "We have a particular writing
style and we have developed it very carefully and found a way that
allows left- and right-handed people to write without smudging."

Parent Susan Garlick supports the school and believes the use of
fountain pens has improved the work of her daughter Elisabeth, an
11-year-old in grade 7.

"Her handwriting is beautiful," Garlick said.

Some people in wealthy nations argue that handwriting is becoming less
important because of the growing use of cell phone text messaging and
typing on computers, but the school disagrees.

In August, for example, examiners at the Scottish Qualifications
Agency complained they had difficulty deciphering the scrawl of many
students on exam papers used to determine admission to universities.

"We talk of the paperless office and the paperless world, but this is
not true," Lewis said. "You still need to have proper handwriting
skills."

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

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 02:53:19 -0600
From: HighTech Magazine <hightech@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: FCC Commissioner Can Break Tie in AT&T-Bell South Merger Vote


Find this article at:
http://www.HighTechMagazine.com/ManageArticle.asp?c=210&a=9559

FCC Commissioner Can Break Tie In AT&T-BellSouth Merger
 
The head lawyer for the Federal Communications Commission has paved
the way for Commissioner Robert McDowell to break the deadlock on the
mega-merger between AT&T and BellSouth, despite his recent affiliation
with an organization strongly opposed to the deal. Samuel Feder,
general counsel for the FCC, issued a memorandum on Friday evening
clearing the path for McDowell to participate in the vote.

Feder said he based his decision on a similar situation the FCC dealt
with under then-chairman William Kennard. The commission has been
split between Democrats and Republicans on what, if any, conditions
should be imposed on the merger, which is currently valued at around
$83.7 billion.

The two Democratic commissioners would like to see more restrictions,
including a provision to protect Net neutrality, which would bar
companies from prioritizing Web traffic or charge extra fees for
providing enhanced services over a network. The deadlock has resulted
in the final vote on the merger being postponed three times.

McDowell, a Republican, would cast the tiebreaking vote. McDowell
recused himself from the process, however, because just prior to
joining the FCC earlier this year, he had been a lobbyist for seven
years for a trade organization called CompTel, which represents
companies competing against the incumbent phone companies.

CompTel has been one of the strongest opponents to the merger. While
Feder has authorized McDowell to vote on the deal, he emphasized
several times in the memorandum he sent to McDowell that it was
ultimately McDowell's decision whether to participate in the
proceedings or not.  "Balancing competing concerns here was
difficult," he said.

"And reasonable people looking at these facts could disagree about the
appropriate result. However, on balance, I find that you should not be
barred from participating in the proceeding if you so choose to do
so."  McDowell said in a statement that he is reviewing Feder's
opinion.

He also said he plans to review Feder's responses to a letter sent to
the general counsel's office earlier this week by Congressman John
Dingell, D-Mich., the incoming chairman of the Energy and Commerce
Committee and Ed Markey, D-Mass., who is likely to become chairman of
a telecommunications panel.

In their letter, the Congressmen posed 15 questions aimed at gathering
information on the laws that Feder plans to consult in reaching his
decision and the history of actions in situations when commissioners
have recused themselves. "I look forward to receiving a copy of Mr.
Feder's response to Congressman John Dingell's letter of December 5,"
McDowell said.

"In the meantime, I strongly urge the participating parties and my
four colleagues to resolve their differences in the same amicable and
unified manner they did in the similar merger between SBC and AT&T
just last year." Earlier on Friday, AT&T and BellSouth said they had
no objection to McDowell voting on the merger.

In a letter to the FCC's general counsel, they said they trusted
McDowell to live up to his pledge at his Senate confirmation
hearing -- to be impartial and fair. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, who sent
a letter to Feder last week urging him to clear McDowell to vote,
applauded the general counsel's decision.

After sharp criticism from Democratic lawmakers, Martin explained his
concern that the merger has been before the commission for more than
eight months already. The agency usually tries to complete actions
within 180 days. Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge, a consumer
group opposed to the merger, was heartened by the fact that the
general counsel emphasized that the decision was ultimately
McDowell's.

But she criticized the agency for being more concerned about pleasing
the companies involved than about responding to the public. "The
concept of the public interest was nowhere to be found in this General
Counsel's opinion," she said in a statement.

"The chief concern is the effect on the companies involved, and not
the effect on the public interest. Government's role should be broader
than meeting arbitrary deadlines or acting for the convenience of
large companies."

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/technews.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 11, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 11:45:06 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 11, 2006
********************************

Vodafone Italia Gets Go Ahead for Fixed-Mobile Convergence Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21583?11228

     Vodafone's Italian unit finally got the go-ahead order to trial
     its new mobile service temporarily for two months. The Italian
     communications ministry came up with the compromise after a court
     in Rome blocked the service late in November, claiming that it
     encourages customers to transfer their fixed-line number to their
     mobile ...

BenQ Mobile May Be Sold to Financial Investor
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21580?11228

     BenQ Mobile, the former mobile handset joint venture of the
     German electronics maker, Siemens, and the Taiwanese vendor,
     BenQ, is in advanced negotiations with a private equity fund. The
     potential investor has already completed the due diligence. At
     the same time, Siemens has refused to pay the outstanding 100
     million euro (US$131.9 ...

The DIY Dream, Deferred
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21578?11228

     MAYBE IT'S PART OF THE RUGGED individual, American Dream ethos,
     but very few of us can resist the opportunity to do things
     ourselves.  Whether it's putting in a new kitchen or learning how
     to knit, DIY is hot. Resellers and master agents are on top of
     the trend, implementing self-provisioning and self-management for
     their own ...

Dutch Pull Plug on Free Analog TV
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21575?11228

     AMSTERDAM, Netherlands -- The Netherlands ended transmission of
     'free to air&' analog television Monday, becoming the first
     nation to switch completely to digital signals.  Few Dutch
     consumers noticed, because the overwhelming majority get TV via
     cable. Only around 74,000 households relied primarily on the ...

Third VoIP Era Uses Software to Challenge Telcos
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21573?11228

     VoIP is quickly maturing, gaining new power and capabilities. As
     the technology gains added strength, it promises to pose its most
     serious challenge yet to traditional voice service providers.
     When VoIP first arrived, the technology was little more than a
     nuisance to traditional telcos. Focused on a narrow bandwidth,
     PC-to-PC ...

McDowell to Vote on AT&T-Bellsouth Merger
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21570?11228

     As predicted by Light Reading sources last week, Commissioner
     Robert McDowell was cleared by the Federal Communications
     Commission (FCC) general counsel to vote on the merger of AT&T
     Inc. and BellSouth Corp. McDowell had recused himself earlier due
     to his recent employment by the CLEC group Competitive ...

Nokia Scores A Hat Trick
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21568?11228

     During this past week, Nokia disclosed a deal with France Telecom
     covering mobile content while landing a 3G contract from carrier
     Wind in Italy and a network-modernization pact with Philippine
     telecom operator Eastern Telecom.  The French deal calls for
     Nokia to integrate a customized remote-content service and
     related platforms ...

Alltel Adds TeleNav Navigation Service
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21565?11228

     Alltel Wireless wants to make sure its customers are always
     pointing in the right direction. With this hope in mind, the
     carrier is launching the TeleNav GPS Navigator service on select
     devices.  The TeleNav GPS Navigator is a mapping service designed
     to give users a 3-D bird's eye view of moving maps, voice and
     on-screen ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 12:12:46 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Verizon Extends Efforts to Offer Video


USTelecom dailyLead
December 11, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eYcYfDtusXhziJCibuddXRvt

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Verizon extends efforts to offer video, broadband services
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T boosts business in China, but regulatory barriers remain
* Media companies in talks to build online network
* Cingular rolls out big fourth-quarter ad campaign
* Samsung, Chinese telecom close to deal for wireless networks
* SK Telecom, Hanaro in position to make deal, reports say
* Vodacom seeks African expansion
* Google 2.0 offers best of media, software
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Secure Your Carrier Class Network Tomorrow, Dec. 12, 1 p.m. (ET)
HOT TOPICS
* AT&T doesn't see need for FTTH network
* Alcatel-Lucent begins next phase
* Top executives out in Yahoo! reorganization
* AT&T seeks to launch 13 FTTN markets by year's end
* Motorola, Nokia "unlock" handsets
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Cisco shifts focus to media
* For mobile carriers, data driving growth
* M-commerce expected to take off in S. Korea
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Senate passes bill making pretexting a crime
* U.K.'s Ofcom readies spectrum auction

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

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 10:52:09 PST
From: Mr Joseph Singer <joeofseattle@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Unlocking Cell Phones Does Not Violate DMCA


Sun, 10 Dec 2006 01:02:58 -0500 Monty Solomon quoted a snippet from an
article:

> Excerpt from:

> [Federal Register: November 27, 2006  (Volume 71, Number 227)]
> [Rules and Regulations]
> [Page 68472-68480]

> LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Copyright Office 37 CFR Part 201 Docket No. RM
> 2005-11 Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright
> Protection Systems for Access Control Technologies
> http://www.copyright.gov/fedreg/2006/71fr68472.html

> 5. Computer programs in the form of firmware that enable wireless
> telephone handsets to connect to a wireless telephone communication
> network, when circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of
> lawfully connecting to a wireless telephone communication network.

What this article fails to point out is several things among them th1at
"unlocking" has been available for GSM phones for as long as there has
been GSM.  The carriers locked the handsets they sell to their
subscribers so that their subscriber will not take the handset that
the carrier has subsidized (either giving you the phone outright or
giving the subscriber a siezeable discount towards the price of the
handset.

It fails to mention among other things that even unlocking a handset
does not make it work with a technology for which is was not designed
e.g. you cannot use a handset from T-Mobile on VeriZon or vice versa
if only because VeriZon uses CDMA technology for an air interface and
T-Mobile uses the GSM air interface.

Other arguments from parties such as TracFone that it will cause
pricing to increase is a red herring since the handsets can only be
used in the US or North America even with the firmware modified.

And as far as modifying firmware unless you are in a business that
does that sort of thing it's not the kind of thing you're going to
easily find.  Without a firmware revision TracFone and Net10 handsets
will not work with anything other than TracFone or Net10.

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Your Email Address Known by Police?
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 10:24:28 -0500


mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.411.6@telecom-digest.org:

>> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: There are so many holes in this
>> proposal!

>> And with the huge amount of porn and spam on the net these days,
>> which of you can say with assurance your email name/address has
>> never been forged?  PAT]

> I think, in fact, that the way spammers operate, everyone's e-mail address
> *has* been forged many times, and will continue to be, unless it's a very
> rarely used address.

> Legislators don't know how the Internet works.

Come to think of it, this may be what it takes to dissuade spammers
from forging e-mail addresses.  "How do you know you're not
impersonating a sex offender?"

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Seriously, I doubt that it matters
all that much to your average, garden-variety spammer. They are
all such hit-and-run users anyway. They just send out their garbage
and rush along to some other database to rip off. PAT]

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #412
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue Dec 12 20:51:58 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 0FBB9225F; Tue, 12 Dec 2006 20:51:57 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #413
Message-Id: <20061213015157.0FBB9225F@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 20:51:57 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 12 Dec 2006 20:55:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 413

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Microsoft Starts Test of New VoIP Server (Reuters News Wire)
    Oracle Tackles Identity Governance (Paul Roberts - Oracle Press Release) 
    Hackers Attack Naval War College Network, Shut it Down (Michelle Smith)
    Mobile Phone Security Attacks on Rise (Will Head, Vnunet)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 12, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Verizon Communications Vice Chairman to Retire (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen (Rick Merrill)
    Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 17:50:01 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Microsoft Starts Test of New VoIP Server


Microsoft Corp. started testing on Monday a new computer server
software that allows corporate customers to make Web-based phone calls
through its Office suite of business software.

Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007, due for release in the
April-June quarter of 2007, will push the software giant into the
business telephone market at a time when many large companies shift to
cheaper telecommunications powered by Voice over Internet Protocol
(VoIP) technology.

Ahead of the official release, Microsoft said it will make the
technology available to 2,500 companies for testing.

The new voice server will allow users to instantly call anyone from
within Office applications by clicking on a person's name and
initiating a call.

For example, a worker who receives an e-mail in Office Outlook from
various colleagues can simply click on each colleague's name to check
their availability and place a person-to-person phone call or arrange
a conference call.

The company's push into the business telephone market pits Microsoft
against Cisco Systems Inc., International Business Machines Corp. and
other technology companies seeking to cash in on growing demand for
VoIP.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer has predicted that within 10
years all business communications will be Web-based, meaning hundreds
of millions of people will change how they communicate.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 17:52:39 -0600
From: Paul Roberts <oracle@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Oracle Tackles Identity Governance


by Paul F. Roberts

There's a common nightmare haunting CISOs (computer information security 
officers) that features a glance at the morning paper, and 72-point 
banner headlines with the name of their employer and the words 'LOST' 
and 'CUSTOMER DATA.'

There's no question about it: protecting customer and employee data is 
one of the thorniest problems facing enterprises today. Last week, 
Oracle took a swing at solving that problem, announcing the Identity 
Governance Framework, an initiative to develop specifications for 
sharing identity data across heterogeneous applications. The project has 
the support of identity and access management (IAM) vendors Ping 
Identity, Sun Microsystems, and Securent, as well as CA and Novell, 
according to Amit Jasuja, vice president of product development for 
Oracle's security and identity management products.

Problems such as lost data on laptops and identity theft point to the
need for overarching standards that govern all the sensitive data
squirreled away in data repositories across an enterprise, such as
human resources, customer relationship management and custom-built
internal applications, he said.

IGF addresses that problem by establishing a governance model that 
allows organizations to create 'contracts' between applications and 
repositories of identity data. The model would cover how data flows 
within an enterprise and outside the enterprise to supply chain or 
business partners, he said.

Because the framework came together quickly, the real value of IGG
will be determined in the coming weeks and months, as Oracle and its
partners work to develop the specifications and transfer them to a
standards group such as OASIS or the Liberty Alliance to manage, Bowen
said.

"It's a good first step. It will get us closer to the goal line," said 
Don Bowen, director of identity integration at Sun. "Will it get us into 
the end zone? I don't know."

Copyright 2006 Yahoo! 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 and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 17:54:49 -0600
From: Michelle R. Smith, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Hackers Attack Naval War College Network, Shut it Down


By MICHELLE R. SMITH, Associated Press Writer

Hackers attacked the computer network at the Naval War College in 
Newport, taking down the school's network for more than two weeks, 
including some e-mail services and the college's Web site.

The Navy Cyber Defense Operations Command in Norfolk, Va., detected
the intrusion around Nov. 16 and took the system offline, spokesman
Lt.  Cmdr. Doug Gabos said. He said the unclassified network was used
by students.

Military spokesmen would not give an estimate on when the school's Web
site, http://www.nwc.navy.mil, will be back up.

The Naval War College bills itself as the Navy's leading center of
strategic thought and national security policy.

Investigators were trying to determine the extent of the intrusion,
Gabos said. They planned to upgrade firewalls and make other
unspecified improvements.

"Once that is complete, the network will be restored," Gabos said.

Gabos would not comment on who is suspected of attacking the network.

School spokeswoman Karen Sellers said e-mail worked on campus, but 
people could not send or receive messages from off-campus.

"It's certainly inconvenient," she said. "But we all understand the
importance of network security and we're patiently waiting."


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

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 14:18:54 -0600
From: Will Head <vnunet@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Mobile Phone Security Attacks on Rise


Mobile security products to be worth $5bn by 2011
Will Head, vnunet.com 11 Dec 2006

The number of security attacks against mobile phones is increasingly
dramatically, according to new data from Juniper Research.

The analyst firm has identified a raft of risks that can affect mobile
users, including viruses and malware.

These dangers, combined with ever-tightening corporate governance
rules and the increasing use of mobiles to store critical data, will
prompt mobile users to install security products on 247 million mobile
phones, nearly eight per cent of the total, by 2011.

Juniper's latest report also forecasts that mobile phone theft will
continue to rise, despite initiatives by mobile operators and police
forces. The analyst firm expects that nearly four per cent of mobile
phones will be stolen annually by 2011.

Revenues from mobile security products, including antivirus, virtual
private networks, data and file encryption and mobile identity
management applications, are expected to generate almost $5bn worth of
revenue by 2011.

The biggest mobile security market will be in the secure mobile
content sector, where antivirus, anti-spam, anti-spyware and content
filtering will make up 40 per cent of the total market, according to
the report.

Revenue from mobile data and file encryption products is expected to
outstrip the PC market by 2011.

"Initially driven by the data-hungry mobile business user who has seen
the benefits of data services such as email, predominantly on
BlackBerry devices, we will see mobile security products go mainstream
by late 2008 or early 2009 resulting in a doubling of revenues from
2008 to 2010," said Juniper analyst Alan Goode, author of the report.

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 12, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 11:39:14 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 12, 2006
********************************

European Industry Body Calls for Greater Power to National Regulators
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21614?11228

     The European Competitive Telecommunications Association (ECTA),
     the industry body representing Europe's alternative telcos,
     has released a report, calling on European countries to give
     greater powers to their national regulators in order to make the
     region more globally competitive by 2010. In the study, conducted
     with Brussels law ...

Consolidation in Cable Market as UPC Belgium and Telenet Merge
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21611?11228

     The Belgian cable market is set for a major consolidation as the
     two leading players-Telenet and UPC Belgium-confirmed plans to
     merge.  Telenet, which has 2.6 million customers, is buying UPC
     Belgium from Liberty Global for 187 million euro (US$246 million)
     in cash. UPC Belgium has 125,000 customers.  Significance: The
     merger deal is ...

Ofcom Unveils Proposal for Wireless Broadband Spectrum Auction
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21608?11228

     The United Kingdom's telecoms regulator, Ofcom, has unveiled
     proposals for the auction of its 2.6 GHz radio spectrum, in what
     has been dubbed Ofcom's largest sell-off of wireless
     spectrum. The 2.6 GHz spectrum band can be used for mobile
     services, mobile TV and WiMAX. Ofcom said that depending on the
     length of the consultation ...

HP, Cingular Unveil Global Mobile Broadband Laptop
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21602?11228

     Hewlett-Packard and Cingular Wireless have teamed to integrate
     Cingular's 3G UMTS/HSDPA network capabilities into the new HP
     Compaq nc6400 Notebook PC. The laptop, according to the
     companies, is the first to feature built-in support for global
     high-speed connections.  The HP Compaq nc6400 features a tri-band
     UMTS modem, which ...

Survey Sez: Despite Risks, Securities Firms Love IM
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21599?11228

     A new poll confirms that instant messaging (IMing) is an
     increasingly common communication tool within securities firms,
     despite the fact risk management remains the top barrier to
     institutional adoption of IM in many companies and that the days
     are likely numbered for unsanctioned consumer IM applications on
     securities-industry ...

New Memory Device Could Trash Flash
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21596?11228

     Leap-frogging Moore's Law, scientists from IBM Corp. will
     announce on Wednesday a prototype of a new type of memory device
     that has the potential to replace flash memory in mobile devices
     such as music players, cell phones, and digital cameras. Called
     'phase-change memory', the new technology runs more than 500 ...

Mobile Carriers Tackle Backhaul Bottleneck
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21594?11228

     Three leading European mobile operators will take to the podium
     at a one-day conference in London this week to tackle one of the
     biggest issues currently facing wireless carriers: the backhaul
     bottleneck.  Emin Gurdenli, technical director at T-Mobile (UK) ,
     will provide the keynote address at Light Reading's 'Backhaul ...

Mirapoint to Bundle SAN/Email Solution
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21592?11228

     The worlds of storage and email are becoming entwined as users
     attempt to tackle the double-whammy of email growth and
     compliance pressures.  Today, for instance, messaging specialist
     Mirapoint announced a partnership with NetApp to sell the storage
     vendor's SAN technology with its own Message Server device.
     ...

Complexity Will Hasten Managed Services Adoption Among US Firms
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21589?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Most US firms-especially leading IT-using
     firms-choose to perform business network functions in-house, reports
     In-Stat. But even these do-it-yourselfers (DIYers) admit that future
     complexity could spur managed service adoption within two years, the
     high-tech market research firm says. To best capitalize on this ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 12:21:31 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Verizon Communications Vice Chairman to Retire


USTelecom dailyLead
December 12, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eYqQfDtusXhCqMCibuddgyyC

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Verizon Communications vice chairman to retire
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Canadian telecom Telus offers TV service
* Alcatel-Lucent prepares for next-generation mobile
* Spain's Telefonica increases stake in China Netcom
* BT could re-enter U.K. mobile market
* Cisco, Citrix extend click-to-call feature
* Texas Instruments trims fourth-quarter outlook
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* New: The USTelecom IP Multimedia Subsystem Implementation Guide
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Analysis: IPTV market heats up
* Report: Most U.S. mobile users don't use data services
* Operators ready for German WiMAX auction
* Nokia to open flagship in Mexico
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* AT&T suit accuses Time Warner of damaging network wiring

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

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

Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2006 16:30:52 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen


Ben McConville wrote:
> By BEN McCONVILLE, Associated Press Writer

> In this age of cell phones, text messages and computer keyboards, one
> Scottish school has returned to basics. It's teaching youngsters the
> neglected art of writing with a fountain pen.

> There is no clacking of keyboards in most classrooms at the Mary
> Erskine and Stewart's Melville Junior School, although there is a full
> range of facilities for computer lessons and technology isn't being
> ignored.

> But the private school's principal believes the old-fashioned pens
> have helped boost the academic performance and self-esteem of his
> 1,200 pupils.

> "The pens improve the quality of work because they force the children
> to take care, and better work improves self-esteem," principal Bryan
> Lewis said. "Proper handwriting is as relevant today as it ever has
> been."

> Students as young as 7 have been instructed to forgo their ball point
> pens and get to grips with its more artful predecessor. By the time
> they reach grade five, at age 9, they are expected to write mainly
> with fountain pens.

> At an English class recently, students worked at perfecting a skill
> that is under threat from the onset of e-mail -- the art of writing a
> letter by hand. Each child's work was meticulous and clearly presented
> in the upright, graceful strokes of a fountain pen.

> Ten-year-old Cailean Gall has been using fountain pens in class for
> two years. It took the keen soccer player one month to master the pen
> and, like all pupils at the school, still has regular handwriting
> lessons.

> "At the start it was hard because I kept smudging, but you get used to
> it," he said. "I still have to use a pencil for maths, and now I find
> it strange using the pencils. I like it because it makes me
> concentrate much more on my work."

> Cailean now uses his fountain pen even for non-school work, but
> classmate Katie Walker, 11, prefers to use ball point and pencil when
> not in class.

> "I use it for schoolwork and homework only," she said. "It is quite
> easy using a fountain pen once you're used to it. My parents say it's
> improved my work enormously."

> The children learn a handwriting style developed by teachers at the 
> school, which charges $12,500 a year. New teachers are also put through 
> a course on how to write with pens -- as well as refresher courses on 
> literacy and numeracy -- before they are let loose in classes.

> Lewis said the school's 7- and 8-year-olds use fountain pens for 80
> percent to 90 percent of their work, reverting to pencils for such
> subjects as math.

> "I don't see fountain pens as old-fashioned or outmoded. Modern
> fountain pens are beautiful to use; it's not like in the old days of
> broken nibs and smudging," Lewis said. "We have a particular writing
> style and we have developed it very carefully and found a way that
> allows left- and right-handed people to write without smudging."

> Parent Susan Garlick supports the school and believes the use of
> fountain pens has improved the work of her daughter Elisabeth, an
> 11-year-old in grade 7.

> "Her handwriting is beautiful," Garlick said.

And I betcha they FORCE all lefthanded kids to write with their right
hand!

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I don't think they go _that_ far ... I
can understand the rationale, however ... when I was in high school
(far too long ago, IMO, to remember much about it) our Algebra and
other general mathematics teacher was a guy named Paul Wilkinson. We
did not have computers of any kind in 'those days' (late 1950's). Then
in the middle 1970's as 'home computers' became a bit more common, I 
learned Microsoft DOS _very well_ if I do say so myself -- so well
that as a 'sideline' I taught it to a few other folks, not the least
of whom was one (by this time) old man, retired school teacher, Paul
Wilkinson. So I taught Microsoft BASIC to the fellow who had twenty
years earlier taught _me_ algebra and mathematics. 

Some of you long time readers will recall in the late 1970's I had
an OSI (Ohio Scientific Instruments) Model C-1-P home computer, with 
all of 4 K memory (and DOS, loaded from a tape recorder took a bit
of that as well).  You'll also recall that OSI had a reputation as a
'number cruncher'. We used to play these parlor games such as 'search
for and print out on the screen all prime numbers from one up to
infinity' and 'print out all square roots', etc.  Paul watched me set
up the OSI to do these things and other stuff, then he remarked, 'oh
my, that sure is fast'.  I told him, "yes Paul, it is quite fast, but
I would not be able to program it all in had _you_ not first taught me
the general principles. To find a prime number at infinity I do not
have to test all numbers up to one less than infinity, I need only
test numbers up to the square root of infinity _plus one more_, and
if I fail at that point, then the number (infinity) is NOT a prime 
number." Paul thought about that and said, "yes, you are correct, and
I did teach that at some point or another."  So anytime a computer is
used for anything more than just a convenient shortcut, it is being
abused, IMO. If I don't know telephones, then no matter now fancy my
typing or intricate my language, I cannot do TELECOM Digest.  

Ant that is/was the problem at the school in question. Students were
using the computer alone, rather than their brains plus computer. 
Instead of using the ten or twelve percent of their brains most of us
use, the computer had allowed them to get by with only one or two
percent of their brain power.   PAT] 

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen
Date: 12 Dec 2006 07:43:26 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Ben McConville, AP  <a...@telecom-digest.org> wrote:

> But the private school's principal believes the old-fashioned pens
> have helped boost the academic performance and self-esteem of his
> 1,200 pupils.

> "The pens improve the quality of work because they force the children
> to take care, and better work improves self-esteem," principal Bryan
> Lewis said. "Proper handwriting is as relevant today as it ever has
> been."

That is quite true.

Using low speed devices forces people to think about their task.
qThinking first improves quality.  I use the word processor now but when
I used a typewriter I was forced to first think through what I wanted
to write to save the trouble of endless draft retyping.  (The often
parodied IBM "THINK" sign was created for a resaon.)

If I were a secondary or college level teacher I would require _one_
homework assignment to be done neatly in longhand.  This is to
demonstrate the benefit of thinking ahead and reinforce the skill of
writing.  Computers have replaced many things, but we still have a
need for handwritten notes that are legible.  Power tools are great,
but we should know how to use hand tools as well.

Fountain pens also reproduce much better than ball point on copying and
fascimile machines.

I once told somebody my fountain pen was actually a digital device that
read the computer screen.  They believed me.

But the flip side is that fountain pens can be a nuisance.  Most pens
today use pre-filled cartridges.  They go through them quickly and
cartridges are expensive.  If you use a bladder and an ink bottle the
ink is cheap, but filling is messy.  (Even changing cartridges can be
messy).  If you flick or jar a fountain pen it will splatter staining
clothing.  I'm not sure it's a good idea for such young kids to be
using them given their rambuctiousness.  I must admit I have some
fountain pens out of service since they need to be cleaned and filled
and it's just easier using my inexpensive "Bic round stick".


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do feel that forcing a _fountain pen_
on students -- as opposed, let's say to a 'ballpoint pen' or something
similar -- is perhaps a bit extreme, for the reasons you suggested,
but I definitly would require students to work out at least one
problem in 'long-hand' and _circle their answer_ and explain how they
arrived at that answer. The rest of the test could be done on computer
for all I care as long as they knew what they were doing.  

For a test once in high school, Paul said take a couple pieces of
paper, compute (in your head, not on computer!) some mathematical
formula of (number). That's your test, pass your papers forward. Either
you know how to do it or you don't know. Count on your fingers and
toes if you wish, but I want a detailed explanation of how you arrived
at your answer.

Well, try that approach in most high schools these days, and see how
many children can pass the test.   PAT]

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

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://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 #413
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed Dec 13 20:24:33 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 71A252238; Wed, 13 Dec 2006 20:24:33 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #414
Message-Id: <20061214012433.71A252238@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 20:24:33 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 13 Dec 2006 20:25:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 414

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Man Gets 8 Years in Prison for Computer Sabotage (Associated Press News)
    Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Associated Press News Wire)
    Windows Development Chief Says 'Buy a Mac Instead' (Eric Lai, IDG)
    Skype Begins Charging For Calls  (Reuters News Wire)
    Search Engines Sometimes Return Risky Results (Anick Jesdanun, AP)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 13, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Sprint Names CEO Forsee as Chairman (USTelecom dailyLead)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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
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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
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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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 18:07:02 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Man Gets 8 Years in Prison for Computer Sabotage


A former UBS PaineWebber systems administrator was sentenced Wednesday
to eight years and one month in prison for attempting to profit by
detonating a "logic bomb" program that prosecutors said caused
millions of dollars in damage to the brokerage's computer network in
2002.

Roger Duronio also was ordered to pay $3.1 million in restitution to
his former employer, now known as UBS Financial Services Inc., part of
the Swiss banking company UBS AG.

Duronio, 64, of Bogota was put under house arrest by U.S. District
Judge Joseph A. Greenaway Jr. until he is assigned to a prison. He had
been free on $1 million bond.

The term was the maximum under sentencing guidelines, which pleased
U.S.  Attorney Christopher J. Christie.

"This was a fitting, appropriately long sentence," Christie said.
"Duronio acted out of misplaced vengeance and greed. He sought to do
financial harm to a company and to profit from that, but he failed on
both counts."

A message left for Duronio's lawyer, Christopher D. Adams, was not
immediately returned.

A federal jury in July convicted Duronio on one count of securities
fraud and one count of computer fraud, and acquitted him on two counts
of mail fraud.

Prosecutors presented evidence that Duronio was angry with the
company, where he had worked for nearly two years in Weehawken,
because he expected an annual bonus of $50,000 but got $32,500.

Evidence showed Duronio ultimately lost $23,000 he invested in a stock
market bet against UBS because the ploy failed to reduce the company's
share price.

Duronio planted the logic bomb in some 1,000 of PaineWebber's
approximately 1,500 networked computers in branch offices around the
country and resigned from the company Feb. 22, 2002, prosecutors said.

That day, Duronio went to a broker and bought what are called "put
options" for UBS stock, prosecutors said. Those give the purchaser the
right to sell shares for a fixed per-share price, so the lower a stock
falls the more valuable the option becomes.

Duronio placed his last trade on March 1, 2002, and the logic bomb
attack took place three days later, deleting files on 1,000 computers,
prosecutors said.

On the Net:
U.S. Attorney's Office: http://www.njusao.org/break.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 information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 18:08:54 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies


Alan Shugart, the co-founder of hard drive maker Seagate Technology
LLC, has died, the company said Wednesday. He was 76.

Shugart helped pioneer the multibillion dollar hard drive industry, in
which Seagate now holds the leading market position. He founded the
company in 1979 and left in 1998.

Described by some as a maverick, Shugart was well known for his
colorful personality that included an effort to get his dog to run for
Congress.  The unsuccessful ploy became the topic of one of his three
books, "Ernest Goes to Washington (Well, Not Exactly)."

Shugart died Tuesday at Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula,
said Seagate spokeswoman Julie Stills. He was admitted last week and
died of complications from heart surgery he underwent six weeks ago.

He was still working until the day of his death, checking e-mails for
his company, Al Shugart International, a startup incubator based in
Santa Cruz, Stills said.

He is survived by his wife, Rita, four daughters, a son, and seven 
grandchildren.


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/technews.html

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 18:11:14 -0600
From: Eric Lai, IDG   <idg@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Windows Development Chief Says 'Buy a Mac Instead'


by Eric Lai, Computerworld - 
IDG News Service

Editor's note: This story was reprinted from Computerworld. For more of 
Computerworld's coverage of the Mac, visit its Mac Knowledge Center.

Longtime Windows development chief James Allchin wrote in a January
2004 e-mail to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and company co-founder Bill
Gates that the software vendor had 'lost sight' of customers' needs
and said he would buy a Mac if he wasn't working for Microsoft.

"In my view, we lost our way," Allchin, the co-president of
Microsoft's platform and services division, wrote in an e-mail dated
Jan. 7, 2004.  The e-mail was presented as evidence late last week in
the Iowa antitrust trial, Comes v. Microsoft.

"I think our teams lost sight of what bug-free means, what resilience 
means, what full scenarios mean, what security means, what performance 
means, how important current applications are, and really understanding 
what the most important problems our customers face are. I see lots of 
random features and some great vision, but that does not translate into 
great products."

Allchin, who has headed various aspects of Windows development since the 
mid-1990s but plans to retire at the end of this year with the shipping 
of Windows Vista, later wrote in the same e-mail that he would buy a Mac 
if he was not a Microsoft employee, according to transcripts from 
proceedings Thursday and Friday in the class-action case obtained and 
posted by Groklaw.net, an open-source legal Web site.

Jim Hibbs, a spokesman for Wixted Pope Nora Thompson & Associates, a Des 
Moines public relations firm employed by the law firm prosecuting the 
case, confirmed that Allchin's quotes were read directly from his 
e-mails by the plaintiff's lawyers.

The case, filed in February 2000, charges that Microsoft used its 
monopoly position to overcharge Iowans for its software. Held in the 
Polk County District Court in Des Moines, it is one of two remaining 
antitrust cases; the state of Mississippi's case is the other brought 
by the U.S. government and multiple states against Microsoft starting in 
the late 1990s.

In 2004, Microsoft settled a class-action lawsuit accusing it of
overcharging customers in California for $1.1 billion. That same year,
it was also hit by a $613 million fine by the European Commission for
monopolistic behavior for its free bundling of Windows Media Player
with Windows. Microsoft, which has appealed the ruling, was hit by a
further $356 million fine in October for failing to comply with the
ruling.

Microsoft, through its public relations firm, Waggener Edstrom
Worldwide, was unable to comment on the Allchin e-mail immediately.
Allchin has said in the past that Vista's delayed arrival -- it
shipped five years after Windows XP was released -- was the result
of a desire to improve its security and make it perform bug-free from
the get-go.

As in past antitrust trials against Microsoft, much of the evidence
came in the form of e-mails from Allchin and other Microsoft
executives.  Ironically, Allchin himself is quoted in two internal
memos directing employees to get rid of all e-mails after 30 days.

"This is not something you get to decide," he wrote on Jan. 23, 2000. 
"This is company policy. Do not think this is something that only 
applies to a few people. Do not think it will be okay if I do this, it 
hasn't caused any problems so far. Do not archive your mail. Do not be 
foolish. 30 days."

Iowa's counsel also presented evidence designed to show that an 
ostensibly charitable program from Microsoft for developing countries 
and schools was actually designed to ensure that Windows remained 
preinstalled on PCs to discourage competition from the open-source Linux 
operating system.

The so-called Education Government Incentive (or Edgi) program, appears 
'to be based on Microsoft generosity, but in fact the program is 
intended only for use where Linux is a threat,' according to Roxanne 
Conlin, co-counsel for Iowa.

Conlin also presented evidence of a job description for Bill Gates' 
technical assistant, whose primary duty was to make sure no permanent 
record of Gates' e-mail existed, Conlin said, according to transcripts.

Copyright 2006 Mac Publishing 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 and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 13:42:19 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Skype Begins Charging For Calls 


Internet telephone service Skype said on Wednesday that it would
charge customers $29.95 a year for unlimited calling in the United
States and Canada, a service it had offered free since May.

eBay Inc.'s Skype, which competes with traditional phone companies and
Web operators like Vonage Holdings Corp. for customers, said
subscribers who sign up for the plan before January 31 will get the
service for half price.

The service covers calls to mobile phones or traditional wire line
phones from computers or from a new category of Internet-connected
phones that run Skype software.

Skype had been offering the computer-to-phone call service free since
May as a promotion aimed at winning new customers.

Customers who do not want to pay a subscription could also opt to pay
for calls at the rate of 2.1 cents a minute which it charged before
the promotion.

Skype calls from computer to computer would still be free for its
customers. The company said it would consider extending the service
for international calls.

"We'll be taking a close look at how this plan does and keep our
options open to see what our customers want on a more International
scale," said Skype spokeswoman Jennifer Caukin.

Skype said it had more than 136 million registered users globally at
the end of September.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 13:44:31 -0600
From: Anick Jesdanun, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Search Engines Sometimes Return Risky Results


Study: 4 pct of search results risky 
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

It's slightly safer to use search engines, but about 4 percent of
search results still lead to sites deemed risky, a new study finds.

Ben Edelman, a security expert who serves as an adviser to security
software vendor McAfee Inc., said that although the overall riskiness
of search engines declined 12 percent since May, some 4.4 percent of
results still lead to sites flagged with a "red" warning or a
cautionary "yellow" by McAfee's SiteAdvisor service.

SiteAdvisor rates sites based on whether they result in spyware, 
viruses, excessive pop-up ads, junk e-mail or other threats. The study 
was conducted by running about 2,500 popular keywords through the top 
five search engines -- Google Inc., Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp.'s MSN,
Time Warner Inc.'s AOL ad IAC/InterActive Corp.'s Ask.

Risks are about three times greater when clicking on keyword ads that
make up much of these companies' revenues, and adult-related search
terms are twice as risky as non-adult terms, the study found. Queries
containing the word "free" are also more likely to produce risky
sites.

Getting malicious software isn't the only threat from search engines.

Security experts say that some hackers have used search engines to
find sites with security vulnerabilities to exploit. Others have used
cleverly crafted keywords to locate confidential documents and
passwords inadvertently left on public Web sites.

Search companies, meanwhile, have taken steps to mitigate the risks.
Google, for instance, sometimes flags links to sites it deems risky.

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/newstoday.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 13, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 11:24:17 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 13, 2006
********************************

Eepad Partners With Neuf Cegetel To Offer Algeria-France Calls
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21636?11228

     Eepad, the Algerian ISP, has entered into a partnership with the
     French operator, Neuf Cegetel, to offer international VoIP calls
     between France and Algeria. The agreement means that those of
     Eepad's ADSL subscribers who also have a Neuf Cegetel
     subscription will be able to make and receive international VoIP
     calls. This means that ...

Wireless Enters the Political Arena
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21633?11228

     Wireless technology may be the next big thing for election
     campaigning and even voting, but its use could initially be
     troubling, according to media experts.  Wireless phones have been
     increasingly used internationally in the past few years, to great
     political and strategic affect among political groups.  The
     'Orange ...

Waiting for WiMAX
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21630?11228

     In the high-speed networking arena, plenty of people and businesses
     are waiting for WiMAX. That includes today&#39;s 3G wireless data
     service providers, who have the most to lose from a widespread WiMAX
     deployment.      But 3G carriers can breathe easy, since WiMAX
     probably won&#39;t be a major technology--at least in North America
     and...

BT Confirms WiMax Ambitions
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21625?11228

     Domestic reports out of the U.K. confirm what Unstrung readers
     already knew. BT Group plc looks set to re-enter the mobile
     market using WiMax or similar wireless broadband technology.
     Back in October, we reported that BT was plotting to bid on a
     wireless broadband spectrum auction in the in the 2.5GHz to
     2.69GHz band in order ...

T-Mobile's Backhaul Bugbear
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21622?11228

     LONDON -- Backhaul Strategies for Mobile Operators: Europe --
     Mobile operators are being forced towards alternative backhaul
     strategies by prohibitively expensive leased-line pricing
     structures, according to Emin Gurdenli, Technical Director at
     T-Mobile (UK) .  Giving the keynote address at today's Light
     Reading Live conference in ...

ITC Rules in Broadcom/Qualcomm Spat
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21620?11228

     The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) has ruled that
     Qualcomm is infringing on a patent held by rival Broadcom
     Corporation. The ITC accepted an administrative law judge
     (ALJ) recommendation that found Qualcomm did infringe on some of
     Broadcom's patents.  However, the recommendation, which was
     issued in October, ...

Chinese PMP Market Becomes Established in 2006
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21617?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.  -- New entrants, declining prices, and
     improvements in product features are making Portable Media Player
     (PMP) shipments gain traction in 2006 in China, reports In-Stat.
     Early adopters will remain the primary market for PMPs in China
     in 2007, the high-tech market research firm says. PMP shipments
     in China will ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 12:12:08 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Sprint Names CEO Forsee as Chairman


USTelecom dailyLead
December 13, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eZakfDtusXhGAKCibuddQMAo


TODAY'S HEADLINES
NEWS OF THE DAY

* Sprint names CEO Forsee as chairman
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Microsoft begins VoIP beta
* Skype to charge for phone service that is now free
* Sprint finishes Revision A rollout for 2006
* The Net challenges for big media in 2007
* Vodafone Italia, Sky Italia sign mobile TV deal
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Integrate WiMAX into your 3G network
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* More than 75% of Web users are on broadband
* Q-and-A: Ad executive discusses mobile advertising
* SMS wildly successful, but successor being sought
* Report: Global handset users top 2.6 billion
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Michigan moves to expand video competition

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

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

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://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
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and messages should not be considered any official expression by the
organization.

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #414
******************************

    
    
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From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 15 Dec 2006 00:07:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 415

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Douane D. James)
    Virtually Addicted (Catherine Holahan, Business Week)
    Still Too Hot to Touch! Bell South/ATT Merger Put Off Again (Blooomberg)
    Are There Any Portable Quasi Cell-Base Stations Yet? (Danny Burstein)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 14, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Cisco in $50 Million Deal With China's CCS (USTelecom dailyLead)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 21:37:07 -0600
From: Douane D. James <sun-sentinal@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme


Class president at Cooper City High charged with changing grades of 19
students

By Douane D. James
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
 
Cooper City High School's senior class president was arrested Tuesday
and charged in a grade-tampering scandal that has rocked the campus.

Ryan C. Shrouder, 18, of Cooper City, was taken to jail from school
and charged with two counts of computer crime with intent to defraud,
a second-degree felony, according to a Broward Sheriff's Office
report. He was released from jail on bail, has been suspended from
school and will be recommended for expulsion, said Joe Melita, head of
the Broward County School District's investigative unit.
 
Shrouder serves as the alternate student advisor to the Broward School
Board. He often sits in on board meetings and was issued a school
district laptop computer. Sheriff's Office investigators say Shrouder
took advantage of that access and used an employee password to access
the district's network and change the grades of 19 students. It's
unclear whether authorities think he changed his own grades.

Shrouder was considered the main suspect, but other students could be
punished for being involved, Melita said.

Shrouder's attorney said his client will plead not guilty and that he
is being unfairly singled out.

"To charge a kid with a computer crime is absurd," said Fort
Lauderdale attorney Fred Haddad. "There's plenty of ways to handle
this besides charging a felony."

Shrouder had been elected leader of his sophomore, junior and senior
classes at Cooper City High and recently was voted "most likely to be
president" of the United States.

Rumors of the arrest spread quickly at the school Tuesday.
Administrators delayed the second-period bell so students would remain
in class while deputies took Shrouder from the school.

Kara Olesky, student government president at Cooper City High, said
Shrouder was well liked and appeared to be "headed in a positive
direction."

"We were shocked," she said. "We would never have thought anyone would
attempt something like that."

The report filed by the Sheriff's Office detailed the alleged
grade-tampering as follows:

On Nov. 2, an assistant principal told authorities that the school had
begun investigating unauthorized grade changes. Course grades from
previous years for 19 students, mostly seniors, had been altered.

Cooper City High's bookkeeper told investigators that in the week
before the grades were changed she witnessed Shrouder in the office of
the computer technology specialist looking for a "sign-on" password to
the district network. The technology specialist had left his passwords
on a notepad in his desk, according to the report.

Investigators later determined that the employee's sign-on account was
the same one used to access the grades program and modify the marks.

A Cooper City High student witness told authorities that on Oct. 30 he
saw Shrouder use his laptop to access the computer application that
manages pupil grades. Another student said Shrouder approached her at
a party the next day and said he altered her grades, along with those
of other students.

Sheriff's Office investigators reviewed video surveillance and
forensic computer examinations to back up the witnesses' statements,
according to the report.

Advisors to the School Board are given laptops that have access to the
district network for e-mail purposes, but they don't have the security
clearance to log into the application that manages grades, officials
said.

Last year, a West Boca Raton High student used employee passwords to
hack into the Palm Beach County district network and change
transcripts for students at four high schools. He was ordered to pay
restitution and complete a yearlong program to avoid being prosecuted
for felony computer fraud.

Staff Writer Jean-Paul Renaud contributed to this report.

Douane D. James can be reached at ddjames@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7930.

Copyright 2006 Sun-Sentinal.

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/news-today.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I suspect the poor guy is absolutely
mortified today.  I am reminded of the teenage kid in the 1950's who
had a very cushy job working at University of Chicago in the telephone
switchboard room. After graduation from high school he worked one
summer on the overnight shift in the phone room -- alone -- and on
those terribly hot summer nights between the hours of 3 and 5 in the
morning with _nothing_ to do, he devised a scheme to defraud telco
of its money on international long distance calls. It all worked quite
well -- or so he thought -- until one Sunday morning.

6:45 AM on a Sunday morning in August, he was quite anxious to get off
work. The two day shift operators started at 7, he would be free to
leave, walk over to the Hyde Park Coffee Shop for breakfast, then go
home to shower, change clothes and meet Mother for services at
Rockefeller Chapel, where the very smart young man and his Mother were
in charge of the after-service tea and little cakes served to the
congregation as refreshments. Then, his intention was to spend the
afternoon on the Promentory Beach at 55th Street exhibiting himself to
others of his persuasion and nap for a few hours before going back to
work that night.

Two day shift operators show up a couple minutes before 7 AM; he bids
them adieu, walks to the elevator and rides down to the first floor.
When he steps out of the elevator, two men approach him, both of
whom were impeccably dressed. Calling him by name, the one man
shows identification which identifies him as a telephone security
representative for Illinois Bell; "and this gentleman with me is
Officer (name), a Chicago Police Detective."  

Oh my ... so that day, instead of breakfast at the hotel coffee shop
followed by Chapel services and an afternoon on the beach, much of 
the day was spent at the Wentworth District police lockup, with his
Mother there with money in hand to bail him out of jail. Later that
afternoon, back at home, a registered letter arrived for the kid from
the telephone chief operator at University of Chicago telling him he
was officially dismissed and was NOT to return to work nor be on the
premises again. Then the next day, Monday, his picture appeared in 
the Maroon -- UC daily newspaper -- with a story headlined "Overnight
Campus Phone Operator Arrested on Fraud Charges."

Yes, I imagine Master Schrouder is quite mortified today by his
circumstances. A teenager 45 years ago was likewise severely mortified
in his attempt to defraud.   PAT]

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

Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 21:41:14 -0600
From: Catherine Holahan <businessweek@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Virtually Addicted


A lawsuit against IBM is reviving debate over whether Web overuse may
be classified as an addiction. The answer will have big implications
for business.

by Catherine Holahan

By his own admission, James Pacenza was spending too much time in
Internet chat rooms, in some of them discussing sex. He goes so far as
to call his interest in inappropriate Web sites a form of addiction
that stems from the posttraumatic stress disorder he's suffered since
returning from Vietnam. Whatever it's called, Pacenza's chat-room
habit cost him his job.

After 19 years at IBM's East Fishkill plant, Pacenza was fired in May,
2003, after a fellow employee noticed discussion of a sex act on a
chat room open on Pacenza's computer. IBM maintains that logging onto
the Web site was a violation of its business conduct guidelines and a
misuse of company property -- and that it was well within its rights
to terminate Pacenza's employment.

Pacenza and his attorney beg to differ. They filed suit in a New York
U.S. District Court in July, 2004, seeking $5 million for wrongful
termination. Earlier in the year, Pacenza had admitted to a superior
that he had a problem with the Internet at home. Pacenza's attorney,
Michael Diederich Jr., alleges that the perception that Pacenza was
addicted to the Internet caused IBM to fire first without asking
questions or "even attempting to examine the situation." Diederich
says there are several steps IBM could have taken, including limiting
his Internet use or blocking certain sites. "It's not productive or
useful for the employer to unfairly terminate employees," says
Diederich.

The case was held up for two years due to Pacenza's medical problems
and his attorney's service as a military lawyer in Iraq. But it has
come back to the fore recently, and IBM on Dec. 8 sought a dismissal
of the case, saying it's without merit. On the surface, Pacenza's may
appear to be an open-and-shut case. He doesn't deny logging onto the
chat room at work, and company policy provides for the termination of
employees who access inappropriate Web sites.

Certifying Addiction.

But cases like Pacenza's, which involve Internet misuse, may no longer
be quite so simple, thanks to a growing debate over whether Internet
abuse is a legitimate addiction, akin to alcoholism. Attorneys say
recognition by a court -- whether in this or some future litigation --
that Internet abuse is an uncontrollable addiction, and not just a bad
habit, could redefine the condition as a psychological impairment
worthy of protection under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

That in turn would have far-reaching ramifications for how companies 
deal with workplace Internet use and abuse. For starters, businesses 
could be compelled to allow medical leave, provide counseling to, or 
make other accommodations for employees who can't control Internet use, 
says Brian East, co-chair of the disability rights committee of the 
National Employment Lawyers' Assn. East says recognizing Internet abuse 
as an addiction would make it more difficult for employers to fire 
employees who have a problem. "Assuming it is recognized as an 
impairment -- it is analyzed the same way as alcoholism," says East.

That's a big assumption, and there's intense debate over whether
compulsive Internet use should be recognized as an addiction. The
American Psychiatric Assn. (APA) doesn't include Internet addiction in
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth
Edition, which serves as the basis for many ADA claims related to
mental disabilities. Substance abuse, on the other hand, is listed in
a special category under substance-use disorders. Internet addiction
would not be eligible for inclusion in the manual until nearly 2012,
when the next edition is scheduled to be released, according to the
APA.

Compulsive Behavior.

Whatever the APA stance, several psychiatrists and psychologists
already say compulsive Internet overuse can legitimately be called an
addiction.  Among them is Dr. David Greenfield, an assistant clinical
professor of psychiatry at the University of Connecticut School of
Medicine and author of the 1999 book Virtual Addiction. He compares
compulsive Internet use to alcoholism, drug abuse, or pathological
gambling.

Like alcoholics or those who abuse drugs, people who are addicted to
the Internet use it to change their mood and feel better, says
Greenfield.  There are also many who can't stop using it, despite
reprimands from work, disputes with family and friends, and other
negative effects such as debt due to compulsive Internet shopping or
gambling. "It's not surprising that it is not defined yet, because
these things change very slowly," says Greenfield. "But when you are
in clinical practice and you are dealing with people's lives, you
can't wait for those issues to be addressed. There is a huge problem
with Internet abuse in the workplace, and you can't pretend that they
don't exist because there isn't a label."

In October, researchers at Stanford University's medical school
released a study showing that a significant number of Americans show
addiction symptoms with regard to the Internet. Some 14% reported that
it was hard to stay away from the Internet for a several-day
stretch. More than 12% said they stayed online longer than intended
and nearly 9% said they hid their Internet use from loved ones or
employers. Roughly 6% said relationships had suffered due to excessive
Internet use.

Dr. Elias Aboujaoude, director of Stanford's Impulse Control Disorders 
Clinic, which conducted the study, says there are clear similarities 
between excessive Internet use and other addictions. "People are very 
secretive, people will tell me that they feel restless when they go for 
a whole afternoon without checking e-mail, there is mounting anxiety 
when they try to cut back on their online use," says Aboujaoude. 

However, he stops short of calling it an addiction. The clinic is 
designing a more rigorous study aimed at determining whether Internet 
abuse is an addiction and not just a bad habit, or a manifestation of 
another addiction or psychological problem. "Based on our studies there 
are definitely red flags and there are things that should be followed up 
on. But until that is done, you are not going to find a serious 
researcher calling this Internet addiction," says Aboujaoude. "It's too 
early to coin a new term 'Internet addiction.'"

Treatment Options.

Not according to psychologist Kimberly Young, founder of the Center
for Internet Addiction Recovery in Bradford, Pa. She says that the
U.S. lags behind other countries in its recognition of compulsive
Internet use as a legitimate addiction worthy of specialized
treatment. Korea, for example, has launched the Centre for Internet
Addiction Prevention & Counseling in response to what the government
sees as the growing problem of Internet addicts in its highly wired
society. In October, a 24-year-old died after playing an online game
nonstop for 86 hours (see http://BusinessWeek.com 9/11/06, "Online
Gaming: Korea's Gotta Have It").  "They have been able to move faster
than we have in America," says Young of the Korean government. "They
have a lot of government funding to put together these clinics."

China also recognizes Internet addiction as a legitimate problem.
Chinese employers can send workers to a two-week rehabilitation clinic
for Internet issues. Besides counseling, the clinic provides
regimented exercise and medical treatment to help people become
healthy and redirect their energy.

U.S. companies ought to wake up to the problem in order to avoid lost
productivity from workers and liability for unjust termination or
disciplinary action regarding the Internet. "If you have something
like the Americans with Disabilities Act, which recognizes many
addictions as a disability, it is not a stretch to see that people who
are getting in trouble with the Internet are going to see it as a
legitimate addiction and sue," says Greenfield. "It is only a matter
of time before one of these suits is successful."

Just how many suits are coming down the pike isn't clear, and
Pacenza's is among the earliest to weave Internet addiction into a
wrongful termination suit. There have been several other legal battles
relating to presumed Internet addiction, though often those involve
online games or chat rooms that parents say contribute to a child's
problems.

Workplace Prevention.

Even as the debate rages on within the medical community and
increasingly in the courts, some businesses are taking steps to combat
Internet addiction beyond implementing Internet-use policies. Young,
author of Caught in the Net, says she regularly speaks to companies
about Internet addiction. "They want to deal with the problem of abuse
and minimize that as much as they can," she says. Young says she sees
everyone from IT professionals obsessed with Web surfing, to
administrative assistants glued to eBay (EBAY), to self-employed
lawyers who are missing deadlines because of a fixation with Internet
porn.  Still, most companies are leery of treating Internet abuse as
an addiction. "Overall companies are still a little hesitant to look
at it as an addiction," says Young. "But if they look at the costs, it
makes more sense than just firing people."

Employers try to alert employees to the potential of the problem, by
paying for talks or literature, in order to avoid problems such as
lost productivity, too much demand on company bandwidth, and
sexual-harassment claims from employees who see objectionable material
on a colleague's computer. However, some businesses are concerned
enough about the cost of replacing otherwise good employees that they
send employees to rehabilitation clinics.

When it comes to Internet overuse, some companies are finding the best
cure isn't firing, but preventive medicine. Some limit Internet access
to only those employees who need it to do their jobs. And they are
spending money on filtering and blocking software to keep employees
from surfing the Web for personal use.

Sensible Limits.

Continental Airlines (CAL) acknowledges it's impossible to ban all
personal use of the Web at work. Louis Obdyke, Continental's managing
attorney for labor and employment issues, says the company lets
employees occasionally surf the Web, shop, bank, or do other
activities online -- providing it doesn't interfere with
productivity. "It's pretty much under a rule of reason," says
Obdyke. "If you get your work done and you go on the Internet during
the workday, we wouldn't see that as a problem."

When Internet use causes work to suffer, stiffer measures are
taken. And an employee who can't improve or who visits adult or
pornographic sites while at work is susceptible to firing. As for
whether Internet abuse is comparable to other disorders such as
alcoholism, Obdyke is clear: "We don't recognize this Internet
addiction idea."

Depending on the outcome of Pacenza's case and others likely to
follow, companies like Continental may have to.

Holahan is a writer for BusinessWeek.com in New York.

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, 13 Dec 2006 19:58:24 -0600
From: Molly Peterson <bloomberg@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Still Too Hot to Touch! Bell South/ATT Merger Put Off Another Month


Vote on BellSouth Deal Omitted From Next FCC Meeting 

By Molly Peterson

Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Federal Communications Commission
decided not to vote on AT&T Inc.'s $86 billion purchase of BellSouth
Corp. at its Dec. 20 meeting, lessening the prospects for approval
this month.

The agenda for the meeting, released late today, does include a vote
on rules making it easier for telephone companies to sell television
service.

The FCC hasn't indicated when it will vote on the BellSouth sale. Two
Republican commissioners and two Democrats have been deadlocked for
months on what, if any, conditions to impose on the deal. They are
waiting for the fifth member, Republican Robert McDowell, to decide
whether to vote to break the tie.

McDowell sat out of the commission's negotiations because of his past
work as a lobbyist for rivals of AT&T and BellSouth. FCC General
Counsel Samuel Feder ruled on Dec. 8 that a vote by McDowell would
serve the government's interest. McDowell, who has been reviewing
Feder's opinion and related materials this week, hasn't decided
whether he will vote.

Before today's announcement, AT&T Chief Financial Officer Richard
Lindner said the company is still holding out for regulatory approval
of the transaction this month.

"The merger's going to be approved," Lindner said in a telephone 
interview today. "I don't think it will be an extended approval process 
from this point."

Federal rules don't require the FCC to vote in public, so the
commission could approve the deal later this month, in a secet
session, if at least three members agree to support it.

Conditions Sought

The panel's Democrats, Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein, are
demanding conditions such as price controls and airwave license sales,
moves resisted by FCC Chairman Kevin Martin and Commissioner Deborah
Taylor Tate, both Republicans.

Next week, the commission plans to vote on rules that would make it
easier for companies including AT&T and Verizon Communications Inc. to
sell television service.

Martin said last week he circulated a proposal to the other four
commissioners to require local franchise authorities to decide within
90 days on some phone-company applications to offer TV in competition
with cable providers.

FCC action may speed the companies' efforts to offer TV service and
counter cable companies such as Comcast Corp. that have lured phone
customers by packaging calling services with TV and high-speed
Internet access. The phone companies say lengthy negotiations with
hundreds of local agencies have hindered their attempts to offer TV
service and raised costs.

Martin's plan would require local authorities to rule within 90 days
on video-franchise applications from companies that already have a
community's rights-of-way, such as a phone carrier with existing lines
in the region, the chairman told reporters after giving a speech
Dec. 6.

The proposal would also limit the fees local agencies can require new
TV providers to pay as part of franchise deals, Martin said. The FCC
also may curb local regulators' ability to impose ``build-out'' rules,
which typically require a company to eventually offer service to all
households in that region.

To contact the reporter on this story: Molly Peterson in Washington at 
mpeterson9@bloomberg.net

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: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Are There Any Portable Quasi Cell-Base Stations Yet?
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 11:21:18 -0500
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


The recent death of James Kim, who had gotten lost with his family in
the snow covered and cold middle_of_nowhere Oregon reminded me of a
proposal from years ago.

In the debriefings after 11-Sept, a bunch of cellular techies
announced plans to come up with portable quasi-base stations which
could be rolled out and used to "ping" cellphones.

In a situation like the World Trade Center, this would have been used
for close-in searching -- that is, to let the emergency folk know there
was an active cellphone thirty or so feet under the rubble to the
right, helping them in the rescue and/or recovery.

In Mr. Kim's case, where his family was beyond range of any cellular
tower, the portable stations would have been running around in rescue
vehicles or aircraft, looking (initially) at a wider area.

I didn't see any mention of these in use, and haven't found any
indication that they've been built.

Anyone have any updates? Thanks.

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

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 14, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 11:23:40 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 14, 2006
********************************

Incumbent European Telcos Take Swipe at New EU Rules
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21664?11228

     Europe's incumbent telcos have warned that new European Union
     (EU) rules on telecoms, slated for finalisation in 2008, would
     harm the industry. Speaking under the auspices of ETNO (European
     Telecommunications Network Operators Association), they said the
     rules are outdated, will scare off investment in the sector and
     will cripple ...

Skype to Charge for Unlimited Domestic Calls
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21659?11228

     Following the provision of free Skype calling within the United
     States and Canada for the last six months, the VoIP market
     leader, Skype, has announced that it will be moving to convert
     this loss leader into paying customers, launching an unlimited
     calling package for Skype-Out calls to PSTN landlines within the
     United States and Canada ...

New Congress Unlikely to Push Telecom Agenda Forward
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21657?11228

     With the Democrats in control of Congress after 12 years of
     Republican rule, lawmakers are tackling all manner of issues
     anew. But a rewrite of the Telecom Act, which Republicans took a
     stab at in 2006, is far down the list. This leads industry
     watchers to surmise that while some small-scale action could come
     out of the House or Senate, ...

Identity Management and Protection: A Key Differentiator?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21655?11228

     Convergence in an IP world means that carriers will compete and
     partner with entertainment companies, financial institutions,
     ISPs and a host of other players to monetize digital
     content.&nbsp; Although carriers currently leverage the trust and
     branding they have established with customers through billing and
     customer care relationships, ...

Swedish Government to Sell Off Stakes in TeliaSonera, Nordea, OMX
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21654?11228

     STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- Sweden's center-right government said
     Thursday it will sell off stakes in six companies including
     telecom TeliaSonera AB, Nordic banking group Nordea AB and stock
     market operator OMX AB.  It did not offer a timeline of when and
     in which order the assets would be sold. The other companies were
     real estate ...

Apple as Mobile Operator?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21652?11228

     If Apple Computer Inc. actually does launch an iPhone next year,
     as many expect, is a move to become a mobile virtual network
     operator (MVNO) the next step?  At least one financial analyst
     firm thinks so; UBS Research has issued a report suggesting that
     Apple could start an MVNO venture early next year. "We
     believe Apple ...

FCC Details Second 2007 'Modest' Spectrum Auction
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/100/21648?11228

     The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) unveiled the
     particulars of its 2007 auction of some 94 RF licenses in the 220
     MHz-222 MHz band range, its second very- modest-dollar-volume
     bidding contest.  Auction 72, targeted to start June 20, 2007,
     will permit a variety of fixed, mobile and paging services to be
     offered in 52 ...

Cisco Kills Initial IMS Platform
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21647?11228

     Cisco Systems Inc. is killing off its first real products aimed
     at mobile and wireline operators that wanted to support IP-based
     services via IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem).  The networking giant
     issued an 'End of Life' notice for its Call Session Control
     Platform (CSCP) product family on November 30. It will stop
     taking ...

Cingular Extends TruePosition Deal
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21644?11228

     In an effort to expand its location technology capabilities,
     Cingular Wireless has decided to extend its partnership with
     TruePosition to make the company's wireless location system
     available across its network nationwide.  As part of the newly
     signed deal, Cingular will extend the coverage of the
     TruePosition Finder wireless ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 11:43:10 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Cisco in $50 Million Deal With China's CCS


USTelecom dailyLead
December 14, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/eZoofDtusXhJyoCibuddJNKu

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Cisco in $50 million deal with China's CCS
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T tests free directory assistance
* BT touts growth in retail unit
* Qualcomm promotes Jha to COO, hires Lauer
* Build a YouTube killer? Not likely
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Take a Steven Shepard Crash Course in WiMAX, IMS, VoIP and Telecom
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* T-Mobile's cellular-Wi-Fi service reviewed
* Analysis: FMC services
* Report: 2007 outlook for Sprint is positive
* Skype releases software for Windows Mobile smartphones
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC to vote on 90-day franchise proposal

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

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

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
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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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some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work
and that of the original author.

Contact information:    Patrick Townson/TELECOM Digest
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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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*************************************************************************

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Copyright 2006 ICB, Inc. and TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved.
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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 #415
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec 15 16:05:10 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 1640E2234; Fri, 15 Dec 2006 16:05:09 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #416
Message-Id: <20061215210509.1640E2234@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 16:05:09 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 15 Dec 2006 16:07:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 416

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Senior AOL Executives Leaving the Company (Anick Jesdanun, AP)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 15, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Telecom Update #559, December 15, 2006 (John Riddell)
    Nokia, Siemens Delay Merger of Equipment Units to First Quarter (USTelecom)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Rick Merrill)
    Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen (kludge@panix.com)
    Re: Virtually Addicted (mc)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details
and the name of our lawyer; other stuff of interest, and why not
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 14:03:10 -0600
From: Anick Jesdanun, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.com>
Subject: Senior AOL Executives Leaving the Company


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

Three senior executives are leaving AOL following a recent shake-up
that brought in a veteran NBC executive as the online company's new
chief executive, two people familiar with the matter said Friday.

The executives are Joe Redling, who is chairman and chief executive of
AOL International, Jim Bankoff, executive vice president for consumer
and publisher services, and John Buckley, executive vice president for
corporate communications.

The company had no official comment. The people who confirmed the
changes spoke on condition of anonymity because they involved
personnel matters not yet announced.

Over the past two years, the company has been giving away more of its
services to drive traffic to its Web sites and boost online
advertising dollars. In August, AOL accelerated the transition by
deciding to give away AOL.com e-mail addresses and software once
reserved for paying customers.

AOL parent Time Warner Inc. later lured Randy Falco, NBC Universal
Television Group's president and chief operating officer, to run AOL
LLC, pushing out Jonathan Miller. Time Warner executives had been
supportive of Miller's efforts to set AOL on a new course, but wanted
someone with operational experience to execute the plan.

Several AOL executives have contractual clauses allowing them to leave
when senior management changes, triggering the departures of Redling,
Bankoff and Buckley, according to the people familiar with the
decisions.

Earlier in the week, Carlo d'Asaro Biondo, the chief executive of
AOL's European operations, announced plans to leave after less than
two months at the helm to take another job. John McKinley, acting
chief technology officer, has previously said he would leave.

The people said the changes were voluntary and unrelated to the
layoffs of about 450 workers at AOL's Dulles, Va., headquarters on
Wednesday.

PaidContent reported the departures on its Web site Friday.

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

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 15, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 11:53:41 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 15, 2006
********************************

MTS Lays Out Strategy: Cut Costs, Expand and Buyback
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21690?11228

     Following a year-long review of strategic options throughout 2006 by
     incoming CEO (chief executive officer) Pierre Blouin, Manitoba
     Telecom Services Inc.-through its subsidiary MTS Allstream, (which
     comprises local incumbent wireline and wireless carrier Manitoba
     Telecom Services and the national business services operator
     Allstream) ...

Iliad Selects Cisco for FTTx
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21687?11228

     France's leading alternative broadband provider, Iliad, has
     selected Cisco's Ethernet fibre-to-the-home (E-FTTH) technology
     for its forthcoming roll-out of FTTx. The new network will be based
     on Cisco's Internet Protocol Next Generation Network (IP NGN)
     architecture. The first phase of the network will connect 2
     million ...

Strategies to Fight Low-Cost Rivals
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21680?11228

     Companies find it challenging and yet strangely reassuring to
     take on opponents whose strategies, strengths, and weaknesses
     resemble their own. Their obsession with familiar rivals,
     however, has blinded them to threats from disruptive, low-cost
     competitors. Successful price warriors, such as the German
     retailer Aldi, are changing the ...

EC Sets Common Spectrum For Short Range Unlicensed Wireless
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21679?11228

     Yesterday, the European Commission (EC) said it will implement a
     series of spectrum set-aside allocations across European Union
     (EU) member states for a variety of unlicensed, short-range
     wireless devices, including radio frequency identification
     (RFID), medical implants, garage door openers, wireless alarms,
     baby monitors, ...

Nokia Siemens JV in Jeopardy
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21677?11228

     A corruption scandal that includes charges of money-laundering
     via Greece and Lichtenstein has thrown a spanner into the works
     of the merger that would create the world's second-largest vendor
     of wireless infrastructure.  In a terse, 219-word statement,
     Nokia Corp. and Siemens AG, whose combined networks divisions
     were ...

Email Gets More Outsourced Options
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21672?11228

     A slew of newcomers are using promises of compliance to push
     email management services, in a trend that could mean growth in
     outsourced options.  Recent announcements include MX Logic, a
     four-year-old firm based in Colo., which today unveiled MX Logic
     Message Archiving, a nationwide Web-based email service based on
     technology from ...

Visa Invests in Mobile Payment Facilitator
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21668?11228

     Mobile payments continue to intrigue Visa International. In its
     latest move, the company is making a strategic investment in
     mFormation and has forged a strategic alliance with the mobile
     device management (MDM) solutions provider.  The companies plan
     to work together to advance over-the-air (OTA) solutions for
     mobile payments ...

Public Hotspot Deployments Show No Sign of Abating
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21666?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.  The popularity of public Wi-Fi hotspots
     continues to grow quickly, and the number of worldwide
     deployments will double over the next five years, reports
     In-Stat. This includes both stand alone sites and muni-wireless
     deployments.  From 2005 to 2006, there has been significant
     public hotspot usage uptake within ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Subject: Telecom Update #559, December 15, 2006
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 13:38:55 -0500
From: John Riddell <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE
************************************************************

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

Number 559: December 15, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous
financial support from:

** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca/home/Home_Business.page
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.ca/communications/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions
** SHAW BUSINESS SOLUTIONS: www.shawbusinesssolutions.ca
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

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

IN THIS ISSUE:

** Our Next Issue
** Ottawa to Overturn CRTC on Local Deregulation
** Cableos Split on Bernier Action
** BCE Drops Plan for Trust
** MTS Decides Against Shakeup
** CRTC Expands Ottawa Free-Calling Area
** Persona to Provide IP Telephony
** Primus Expands Wireless Coverage
** MTS Cellphones Offer Radio, TV
** Parkes to Head Selectcore Board
** Unlimited LD for $17.50 a Year
** Ottawa Offers Cellphone Buying Guide
** Wireless Innovation Contest Open Now
** ITU to Showcase 'Fully Networked Car'
** Com Dev Sales, Profits Rise
** Correction

OUR NEXT ISSUE: For the convenience of readers leaving early for a
holiday break, next week's Telecom Update will be published on Thursday,
December 21.

OTTAWA TO OVERTURN CRTC ON LOCAL DEREGULATION: In a sweeping rejection
of the CRTC's approach to deregulating local phone service, the federal
government plans to rewrite key sections of CRTC Telecom Decision
2006-15 (see Telecom Update #524).  Changes proposed by Industry
Minister Maxime Bernier include:

** The geographic market for deregulation will be either a
   local interconnection region (roughly, a local calling
   area) or a local exchange -- not the larger Local
   Forbearance Regions defined by the CRTC.

** Instead of requiring a 25% market share loss, business
   service deregulation can take place if there are two
   independent, facilities-based wireline providers.
   Residential deregulation will require three providers, but
   the additional one can be wireless.

** The telcos will still have to show that they are meeting
   QoS standards on services they provide to competitors, but
   on a smaller number of standards and showing only
   "average" compliance, not a six-month consistent record.

** Restrictions on the telcos' local promotions and winbacks
   will be removed as soon as the new rules take effect.

** Telcos will be invited to file forbearance applications
   for Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Hamilton,
   London, Toronto, Ottawa-Gatineau, Montreal, and Quebec
   City. In each case the CRTC will have 120 days to
   issue a decision.

The government's proposal will be published in the Canada Gazette on
December 16, with a 30-day public comment period.

http://xrl.us/BernierAnnouncement

CABLEOS SPLIT ON BERNIER ACTION: Not surprisingly, the incumbent
telcos were very pleased by the Industry Minister's announcement --
but the cable industry was divided.

** Shaw Communications said that it "supported the Minister's
   decision" and urged the government to make similar changes
   to cable and satellite regulation. Quebecor, owner of
   Videotron, issued a similar statement.

** In contrast, Cogeco Cable said Bernier's announcement is
   "contrary to sound public interest policy and practice for
   deregulating the telecommunications sector, and it ignores
   the relevant recommendations of the Telecommunications
   Policy Review Panel issued earlier this year."

BCE DROPS PLAN FOR TRUST: At its December 12 business conference, BCE
confirmed that it will not become an income trust but will eliminate
its holding company structure. BCE, to be renamed Bell Canada, will have two
operating companies: Bell Inc. (the former Bell Canada) and Bell Aliant
Regional Communications. (See Telecom Update #550, 557)

** Bell Globemedia, now 15% owned by BCE, is changing its
   name to CTVglobemedia, effective January 1.

MTS DECIDES AGAINST SHAKEUP: After an 11-month-long "comprehensive
review" of its business, MTS Allstream has decided against selling off
assets or other major changes. The telco plans to cut costs by another
$40 million to $50 million in 2007 while focusing on "growth services."
(See Telecom Update #515)

CRTC EXPANDS OTTAWA FREE-CALLING AREA: CRTC Telecom Order 2006-340 gives
interim approval to Bell Canada's application to eliminate long-distance
charges within the City of Ottawa, and between Ottawa and surrounding
communities including Arnprior, Kemptville, Merrickville, and Smiths
Falls. The change, to be effective June 18, will be financed by
three-year bill surcharges of 50 cents (residential lines) and 39 cents
(business lines).

** The City of Ottawa has been lobbying for this change for
   more than five years. (see Telecom Update #287)

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/public/8740/2006/b2/697562.zip

PERSONA TO PROVIDE IP TELEPHONY: Persona Communications, which has
about 200,000 cable subscribers, plans to offer Digital Phone service
in a number of Canadian cities in 2007. The underlying provider will
be MTS Allstream.

PRIMUS EXPANDS WIRELESS COVERAGE: Primus Canada now offers wireless
service using Rogers' GSM/GPRS network, which covers 93% of Canadian
residents. Until November 18, Primus cellphones used the more limited 
Fido network.

MTS CELLPHONES OFFER RADIO, TV: MTS Mobility subscribers can now access
TV clips and 24-hour commercial-free radio. Streaming Radio and
Streaming TV cost $7/month each plus usage charges.

PARKES TO HEAD SELECTCORE BOARD: David Parkes, former President and CEO
of Sprint Canada, has been named Chairman of Selectcore, a Tecumseh,
Ontario-based company that offers prepaid telecom services to "the
ever-growing credit-challenged/sub-prime consumer market."

UNLIMITED LD FOR $17.50 A YEAR: Skype's Unlimited Calling Plan,
announced this week, offers unlimited VoIP-based long distance calls
to any phone within Canada and the U.S. for C$35/year. Customers who
sign up by January 31, 2007, will pay half-price ($17.50/year) and
receive 100 minutes of free worldwide calls.

OTTAWA OFFERS CELLPHONE BUYING GUIDE: "Get a Grip on Your Cellphone
Costs," a 28-page pamphlet published by Industry Canada's Office of
Consumer Affairs, is available online at http://xrl.us/CellGuide. It can
be downloaded in PDF format at http://xrl.us/Cellphone .

WIRELESS INNOVATION CONTEST OPEN NOW: The Wireless Innovation Network of
B.C. is now accepting entries for its fourth annual Wireless Innovation 
Contest. The entry deadline is January 29; winners will be announced at 
CTIA Wireless Orlando, March 27-29. See http://www.winbc.org/WIC/Overview.aspx 
for details.

ITU TO SHOWCASE 'FULLY NETWORKED CAR': The International
Telecommunications Union will hold a workshop and showcase exhibit on
"The Fully Networked Car: Information and Communication Technologies in
Motor Vehicles," at the Geneva Motor Show in Switzerland, March 2-12,
2007.

http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/worksem/ict-auto/200703/index.html

COM DEV SALES, PROFITS RISE: Com Dev International, which makes
satellite components, had revenue of $154 million for the year ended
October 31, 24% more than the previous year. Net income was $21.2
million, compared to $5.2 million the previous year.

CORRECTION: Contrary to Telecom Update #558, the founder and Chairman
Emeritus of Cogeco is Henri Audet, not Louis, his son and Cogeco's
CEO.  We apologize for the error.

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@blast.sparklist.com
   To stop receiving the e-mail edition, send
   an e-mail message to:
      leave-telecom_update@blast.sparklist.com
   Sending e-mail to these addresses will automatically add
   or remove the sender's e-mail address from the list. Leave
   subject line and message area blank.

   We do not give Telecom Update subscribers' e-mail
   addresses to any third party. For more information,
   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, 15 Dec 2006 12:58:19 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Nokia, Siemens Delay Merger of Equipment Units to First Quarter


USTelecom dailyLead
December 15, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/faaUfDtusXhMuwCibuddtLof

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Nokia, Siemens delay merger of equipment units to first quarter
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon looks to stem Internet "domain tasting"
* France Telecom to limit spending on ultra-high-speed Internet services
* BT unveils Wi-Fi FMC service for small businesses
* Online video sales to reach $1.5 billion next year
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* USTelecom chief outlines the path to a wonderful life
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* More than 75% of Web users are on broadband
* Samsung: Up to 10% growth for U.S. wireless handsets in 2007
* Staccato and SK Telecom offer ultrawideband product
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Jaxtr tests calling service for social networks
* New Skype version adds social features

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

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

Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 09:28:58 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme


It seems so easy that it did not feel like a crime at the time. In a
corporation some of the blame would be placed on the IT executive that
permitted such sloppy security.

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

From: kludge@panix.com
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 09:40:53 -0500
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)
Subject: Re: School Shuns Tech, Teaches Fountain Pen


May I recommend the Pilot Varsity disposable fountain pen?  It uses a
gas-sealed chamber rather than a bladder or replaceable cartridge, and
as a result it is pretty much completely immune to clogs.  Although it
can dry out if the cap is left off long enough, it is almost
impossible to clog up.

It has the convenience of a ballpoint, but it feels and writes like a
fountain pen.  Absolutely wonderful.

--scott

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Virtually Addicted
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 09:46:12 -0500


Must all misconduct be classified as a medical disorder?

Any moralist up to, say, 1950 could have told you that practically all
wrongdoing is addictive.  (If it weren't, people wouldn't do it.)
After B.  F. Skinner and the notion that morality has no place in a
scientific view of the world, all faults of character are being
medicalized.

I am not denying that (1) there are real mental illnesses of
biological origin, some of the manifesting as lack of self-control, or
that (2) addiction is a real biological phenomenon (especially
addiction to drugs that alter brain chemistry).

But what's next?  "Bank-robbing disorder"?

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

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://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 #416
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun Dec 17 02:34:44 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id E6FDD224E; Sun, 17 Dec 2006 02:34:43 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #417
Message-Id: <20061217073443.E6FDD224E@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 02:34:43 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sun, 17 Dec 2006 02:35:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 417

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Showdown Looms Over Telecom Spying (David Kravets, AP)
    Former CEO Gets 15 Months Prison for Computer Child Porn (Reuters NewsWire)
    New Computer Worm Attacks Business PCs (Associated Press News Wire)
    A Note From Pay Pal: Internet Security Tips  (customercare@paypal.com)
    Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used??? (Chris Farrar)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Barry Margolin)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (mc)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 00:42:32 -0600
From: David Kravets, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Showdown Looms Over Telecom Spying


By DAVID KRAVETS, Associated Press Writer

Federal agents continue to eavesdrop on Americans' electronic
communications without warrants a year after President Bush confirmed
the practice, and experts say a new Congress' efforts to limit the
program could trigger a constitutional showdown.

High-ranking Democrats set to take control of both chambers are
mulling ways to curb the program Bush secretly authorized a month
after the Sept. 11 attacks. The White House argues the Constitution
gives the president wartime powers to eavesdrop that he wouldn't have
during times of peace.

"As a practical matter, the president can do whatever he wants as long
as he has the capacity and executive branch officials to do it," said
Carl Tobias, a legal scholar at the University of Richmond in
Virginia.

Lawmakers could impeach or withhold funding, or quash judicial
nominations, among other measures.

The president, however, can veto legislation, including a law
demanding the National Security Agency obtain warrants before
monitoring communications. Such a veto would force Congress to muster
a two-thirds vote to override.

"He could take the position he doesn't have to comply with whatever a
new Congress says," said Vikram Amar, a law professor at the
University of California, Hastings, and a former Supreme Court clerk.

Douglas Kmiec, a former Justice Department official under former
presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush, speculated the younger Bush
would assert executive authority to continue eavesdropping in the face
of new legislation -- perhaps leaving the Supreme Court as the final
arbiter.

"He has as much a constitutional obligation to assert himself, just as
much as Congress does," Kmiec said. "We do need an arbitrator, an
interpreter. That's what the courts, the third branch of government,
was intended to be."

On Dec. 17, 2005, Bush publicly acknowledged for the first time he had
authorized the NSA to monitor, without approval from a judge, phone
calls and e-mails that come into or originate in the U.S. and involve
people the government suspects of having terrorist links.

Bush said he had no intention of halting what he called a "vital tool"
in the war on terror.

When the Republican-controlled Congress adjourned last week, it left
the spying program unchecked.

The next move falls to the Democrats who take control in January and
are considering a proposal to demands Bush get warrants and others
lengthening the time between surveillance and when a warrant must be
obtained.

A spokesman for Sen. Harry Reid (news, bio, voting record), the
incoming Senate majority leader from Nevada, said the eavesdropping
issue "is something he expects to tackle early next year."

"He doesn't believe in giving the president a blank check to listen to
the phone conversations of millions of Americans," spokesman Jim
Manley said.

Jennifer Crider, a spokeswoman for Nancy Pelosi, the San Francisco
Democrat who will become House speaker, said eavesdropping legislation
was under consideration and hearings on the topic were likely early
next year.

Decisions are pending in dozens of lawsuits challenging the program.

The Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the highest
court squarely confronted with the issue so far, is to hear the
American Civil Liberties Union's challenge Jan. 31. One stop short of
the Supreme Court, the appeals court will review a Detroit judge's
ruling that the program was unconstitutional.

The case is American Civil Liberties Union v. National Security
Agency, 06-2095.

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

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

Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 00:46:03 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Former CEO Gets 15 Months Prison for Computer Child Porn


A former chief executive of a financial printing firm was sentenced on
Friday to 15 months in prison for possessing child porn and erasing
thousands of seedy computer files when he learned he was under
investigation.

Robert Johnson, 61, downloaded the pornography onto a company computer
while chief executive officer of Bowne & Co. Inc. He pleaded guilty to
possessing at least two child porn images in August.

Johnson, who had been publisher of Long Island's Newsday from 1986 to
1994, resigned from Bowne & Co. and gave up his seat on New York
state's education board in July 2004 when learning of the
investigation.

Johnson, who also admitted using a computer program called "Evidence
Eliminator" to destroy the hard drives on the company computer, made a
tearful plea to U.S. District Judge Richard Howell, saying the
pressure of being Bowne's CEO caused him to become severely depressed.

"I decided to escape," said Johnson, whose lawyer said he logged onto
child pornography Web sites late at night from his office computer and
was alleged by federal authorities to have downloaded a movie called
"Real Child Rape."

"I decided to go to fantasy because reality was too much to bear," he said.

Howell, who said Johnson took part in a "detestable subculture," also
noted his history of community service as a reason for the sentence of
15 months prison that was less than what federal prosecutors
wanted. The judge also fined Johnson $50,000.

Johnson will also have to undergo a sex-offender treatment program.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 00:48:43 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: New Computer Worm Attacks Business PCs


A computer worm is attacking some business PCs through a flaw in
antivirus software by Symantec Corp., a security company warned
Friday.

EEye Digital Security, based in Aliso Viejo, Calif., said the worm, 
dubbed "Big Yellow," began attacking some computer systems on Thursday -- 
seven months after eEye first discovered the flaw.

Symantec released a patch to address the flaw in May, but it's up to
its corporate customers to install it. Officials at the Cupertino,
Calif.-based security software company said Friday it had so far
received three reports of systems affected by the worm.

"It is definitely a new worm, and it is looking for vulnerable
systems, but we're not seeing any evidence of a significant outbreak
or infection," said Vincent Weafer, a senior director at Symantec's
security response unit.

Big Yellow enters machines through a security hole in the corporate
version of Symantec's antivirus software. Once infected with the
worm's "bot" program, a hacker can use it as a way to connect with
other computers for malicious attacks.

EEye urged corporate information-technology departments to fix the flaw.

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/internet-news.html

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

Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 16:19:30 -0600
Subject: A Note From Pay Pal: Internet Security Tips
From: <customercare@paypal.com>
Reply-To: <customercare@paypal.com>


At PayPal we continually strive to exceed our customers' expectations
to provide a safe, secure method to send and receive money
online. PayPal has agents that work 24/7 monitoring accounts and
transactions, enabling you to buy and pay safely.

PayPal periodically contacts our customers by phone to verify activity
on the PayPal account is authorized. During these phone calls, we will
never ask you for your full credit card, or bank account
information. By speaking to our customers, we ensure you are in
control of your account and this further secures our system.

The terms "spoofing" and "phishing" are industry phrases used to
describe the act of collecting personal information by using a fake
email, website, or phone calls to entice victims into entering
personal information such as your birthday, credit card numbers, bank
accounts, passwords, etc. This sensitive information allows
perpetrators to commit identity theft, credit card, and Internet
fraud. These emails and sites appear identical to real ones, however,
they are not. Unfortunately, some people fall prey to such scams and
unknowingly surrender their password, credit card number, and a wide
array of other personal information.

At PayPal, we care about the security of your account and financial
information, therefore, we offer Security Tips that allow us to work
together to protect against fraud.

Please remember these steps to help protect your PayPal account from
Unauthorized Account Access.

Emails - Make sure they are sent from PayPal

   1.  If you receive an email and are unsure whether it is from
PayPal, open a new web browser (e.g., Internet Explorer or Netscape)
and type in the following: https://www.paypal.com/ Do not click on any
link in an email which seems suspicious to you.

   2.  Some spoof websites will send emails that pretend to come from
PayPal to entice you to log in at the spoof URL. Be extremely cautious
of emails that direct you to a website that asks for sensitive
information.


   3.  Stay safe; don't respond to emails asking for any of the
following:
           Your password and email address combination
           Credit card numbers
           Bank account numbers
           Social security number
           Drivers license number
           First and Last Names

If you have surrendered financial or password information to a
suspicious email or website, promptly report this to the issuing
institution as well as change your password and security answers on
your PayPal account.  This can be completed in the Profile section of
your account.

Email Greeting -

      PayPal will never send you an email with the greeting "Dear
PayPal User" or "Dear PayPal Member." Emails initiated by PayPal will
address you by your first and last name, or the business name
associated with your PayPal account.

      Please note that the automatic response you get from us may not
address you by name.

Always log into the PayPal site

      PayPal will only ask for information after you have securely
logged in.

      For your security, PayPal will never ask you to re-enter your
full bank account, credit, or debit card number without providing you
at least the last two digits of the number. These digits let you know
that we already know the full number and are asking you for the rest
of it.  Beware of any website or email asking for these numbers for
"verification" that does not prove that it knows the number by
providing at least the last two digits.

      Use Account Guard on the eBay toolbar. If you use Internet
Explorer, download the eBay toolbar. Account Guard helps ensure you
are on PayPal or eBay.

Website pages - make sure that they are hosted by PayPal

   1.  When using the PayPal service, always ensure that the URL
address listed at the top of the browser is
https://www.paypal.com/. This ensures that the website is secure. Even
if the URL contains the word 'PayPal', it may not be a PayPal webpage.

   2.  Look for the "lock" symbol that appears in the lower right hand
corner of the browser. This symbol indicates that it is a secure site.
Do not download attachments, software updates, or any application to
your computer via a link you received in an email. PayPal will never
send you an attachment or software update to install on your computer.

Passwords - keep it on PayPal.

   1.  Use a unique password for the PayPal account and change it
       every 30-60 days.  
   2.  The password should be one that is not used on
       any other site, service, or login.

If you think you have received a fraudulent email, forward the entire
email, including the header information to spoof@paypal.com and then
delete the email from your mailbox. Never click any links or
attachments in a suspicious email.

Go to the Security Center at the bottom of any PayPal webpage to learn
additional tips for staying safe online and to find tools that you can
use to increase your security.  If you have any further questions,
please feel free to contact us again.

Sincerely,

Linda
PayPal Resolution Services
PayPal, an eBay Company

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

Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 21:46:39 -0500
From: Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com>
Reply-To: cfarrar1307@rogers.com
Subject: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???


Recently I've noticed a change when someone calls me using a Bell
Canada Calling Card.  Previously when they would call, from whatever
number they were calling from and using a Bell Canada Calling Card the
number would show on my Caller ID of my cell phone (on the Bell Canada
Mobility network) as "Private Number."

Today I received a call, from someone I know was using a calling card
as they definitely are not at the location the number is physically
terminated at, but my caller id showed it as originating as from there
even though I know it originated from South Carolina.  Clearly Bell is
now putting the "billing number" for the calling card through as
Caller ID.

Are any other phone companies doing this?

Chris

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Organization: Symantec
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 22:04:36 -0500


In article <telecom25.416.5@telecom-digest.org>, Rick Merrill
<rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote:

> It seems so easy that it did not feel like a crime at the time. In a
> corporation some of the blame would be placed on the IT executive that
> permitted such sloppy security.

Come on.  Even if you don't think that it's a "crime", do you really
think he thought it was permissible to change grades?

And while the IT person certainly was negligent to leave passwords
sitting around, that does not excuse the student's behavior.  Just
because you *can* do something doesn't mean it's OK to do it.  Does
such a thing as ethics exist any more?

If I don't lock my front door, does that mean I can't press charges if
my house is robbed?


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: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2006 01:19:09 -0500


Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.416.5@telecom-digest.org:

> It seems so easy that it did not feel like a crime at the time. In a
> corporation some of the blame would be placed on the IT executive that
> permitted such sloppy security.

I disagree.  Altering grades is CLEARLY AND OBVIOUSLY wrong no matter how 
easy it is.

If you are not trustworthy when there are no safeguards, you are not
trustworthy, period.

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

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******************************
    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Mon Dec 18 16:06:38 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #418
Message-Id: <20061218210638.33E142271@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 16:06:38 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Mon, 18 Dec 2006 16:07:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 418

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Cingular to Offer MySpace on Cellphones (Reuters News Wire)
    Opera Browser Now Has Phishing Filter (Associated Press News Wire)
    Book Review: Don't Get Burned on E-Bay (Ron Slade) 
    So This Manatee Walks Into the Internet (Monty Solomon)
    Cell Phones and Cancer (Charles Gray)
    Verizon to Link U.S. and China (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Korey Smith)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (K vandenHout)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (nonoise)
    Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used??? (Ken Abrams)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 13:55:38 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Cingular to Offer MySpace on Cellphones


Cingular, the largest U.S. wireless phone carrier, will offer a
version of popular Internet social network MySpace on its phones in an
expansion of their partnership, the companies plan to announce on
Monday.

For an additional $2.99 per month, customers will be able to upload
photos taken on cellphones, read and respond to MySpace e-mails,
update blog entries and view and search for friends from their
handsets.

Media and other entertainment services are expected to be a major
areas of growth for the wireless and media industries, analysts have
said.

MySpace, one of the fastest-growing Internet services with more than
130 million user profiles, is also offered on cellphone service
carrier Helios. But Cingular's version will be more expansive, MySpace
said.

Users will need to download a Java software application to their
cellphones. Initially, about 30 cellphone models will be supported,
with another 20 models supported in the coming weeks, which will then
account for about 90 percent of Cingular's cellphone user base, a
MySpace spokeswoman said.

Although online videos from MySpace will not be viewable on cellphones
at launch, it is likely to be a service offered some time in 2007, she
said.

Media conglomerate News Corp. bought MySpace for about $580 million in
2005. Cingular is a joint venture of phone companies AT&T Inc. and
BellSouth Corp..

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 13:58:10
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Opera Browser Now Has Phishing Filter 


The latest version of the Opera Web browser incorporates a technology
that warns users when they visit a fraudulent site.

Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer and Mozilla's Firefox both included 
such a feature -- called a phishing filter -- in their new releases in 
October.

Like the others, Opera Software ASA's free Opera 9.1 browser displays
a warning when visitors go to a site that may trick them into
revealing passwords and other sensitive information. Opera's update
was released Monday.

For the lists of bad sites, Opera is tapping into the PhishTank
project from OpenDNS LLC. Users submit to PhishTank.com the messages
they believe are scams, and others in the PhishTank community examine
the message and the site to which it links and vote on whether it is
or isn't a scam.

Opera has a sliver of the Web browsing market. According to
WebSideStory, Internet Explorer leads with 88 percent of the
U.S. share on computers running Microsoft's Windows operating
system. Firefox is second at nearly 11 percent.

The Norwegian browser maker has made greater inroads on mobile phones.

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

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 12:26:45 -0800
From: Rob Slade <rMslade@shaw.ca>
Subject: Book Review: Don't Get Burned on eBay, Shauna Wright
Organization: Vancouver Institute for Research into User


BKDGBOEB.RVW   20061108

"Don't Get Burned on eBay", Shauna Wright, 2006, 0-596-10178-3,
U$16.99/C$23.99
%A   Shauna Wright www.whowouldbuythat.com media@whowouldbuythat.com
%C   103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA   95472
%D   2006
%G   0-596-10178-3
%I   O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
%O   U$16.99/C$23.99 800-998-9938 fax: 707-829-0104 info@ora.com
%O   http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596101783/robsladesinterne
     http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596101783/robsladesinte-21
%O   http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596101783/robsladesin03-20
%O   Audience i+ Tech 1 Writing 2 (see revfaq.htm for explanation)
%P   160 p.
%T   "Don't Get Burned on eBay"

The preface states that this book was conceived as a series of
personal stories about (and experiences on) eBay, plus lessons about
what *not* to do.  It isn't intended as a primer for using eBay, and,
in fact, assumes that the reader has a working knowledge of eBay.

Chapter one outlines some of the complexities and rules about bidding. 
It also includes information about "shilling" (activities to
artificially drive up the price of an auction) and a story about poor
communications.  The dangers involved in various types of payment
(including PayPal) are outlined in chapter two.  Packing items for
shipment, in chapter three, is predominately aimed at sellers, but
buyers are advised of steps to take in case of a problem.  Again,
vendors might be seen as those primarily interested in the advice on
different issues related to shipping, in chapter four, but purchasers
should note a number of them as well.  (I was interested in, and can
personally and fully attest to, the tales of United Parcel Service's
inability to properly handle shipments to Canada, and the random and
unreasonable nature of charges that can be involved in the process.) 
Chapter five's stories about other people on eBay generally refer to
non-malicious errors or misunderstandings, whereas chapter six closes
off with intentionally fraudulent scams such as phishing.

The book does use a number of eBay specific acronyms.  These are
listed in the glossary, but under the full expansion, so they are not
easy to find.

If you use eBay, this work will likely help you to use it much more
effectively, and to prevent any number of disasters.  (If you don't
use eBay, this text will probably keep you from ever getting started.)

copyright Robert M. Slade, 2006   BKDGBOEB.RVW   20061108

======================  (quote inserted randomly by Pegasus Mailer)
rslade@vcn.bc.ca     slade@victoria.tc.ca     rslade@computercrime.org
I have to share the credit. I invented it, but Bill made it
famous.                - IBM engineer Dave Bradley describing the
                                  control-alt-delete reboot sequence
Dictionary of Information Security  www.syngress.com/catalog/?pid=4150
http://victoria.tc.ca/techrev/rms.htm

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The main thing I do not like about
e-Bay is their lack of a 'spoof' address to use in the same way as
many other sites.  I've tried sending the more outragous  spoofs to
the company, but unlike PayPal where they immediatly send on your
submission to the 'police' for handling and send you back a receipt,
e-Bay does not put any sort of address to be used in a conspicuous
place on their site, and email to 'spoof@ebay.com' comes back to me
with a complaint letter from e-Bay saying that address is reserved
for something or another. If they made their 'spoof' address easy for
the public to use, then I would like to use it also. Lord only knows
how many 'complaints from a user' or 'account suspension, please
re-enter your personal data' emails I get each day from the 'e-Bay
fraud team' whidh are themselves simple frauds. I am frankly sort
of scared to use e-Bay anyway, and given their (it would seem to me)
lack of any real concern for users, I tend to stay away.  PAT]

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 00:58:06 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: So This Manatee Walks Into the Internet


By JACQUES STEINBERG
December 12, 2006

The skit, as scripted for the Dec. 4 installment of "Late Night With
Conan O'Brien," was about absurdist college sports mascots that the
host and his writers would like to see someday.

Among them were "the Boise State Conjoined Vikings," who had been born
locked at the horns, as well as something Mr. O'Brien called "the
Webcam manatee" - said to be the mascot of "F.S.U." -- which was
basically someone in a manatee costume rubbing himself or herself
provocatively in front of a camera (to the tune of the 1991 hit "I
Touch Myself"). Meanwhile a voyeur with a lascivious expression
watched via computer.

Who knew that life would soon imitate art.

At the end of the skit, in a line Mr. O'Brien insists was ad-libbed,
he mentioned that the voyeur (actually Mark Pender, a member of the
show's band) was watching http://www.hornymanatee.com. There was only
one problem: as of the taping of that show, which concluded at 6:30
p.m., no such site existed. Which presented an immediate quandary for
NBC: If a viewer were somehow to acquire the license to use that
Internet domain name, then put something inappropriate on the site,
the network could potentially be held liable for appearing to promote
it.

In a pre-emptive strike inspired as much by the regulations of the 
Federal Communications Commission as by the laws of comedy, NBC 
bought the license to http://hornymanatee.com, for $159, after the taping of 
the Dec. 4 show but before it was broadcast.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/12/arts/television/12mana.html?ex=1323579600&en=876ea90d803ef2da&ei=5090

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

Subject: Cell Phones and Cancer
Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 12:33:19 -0600
From: Charles Gray <charles.gray@okstate.edu>


I don't have the original article from the Washington Post on this,
but it has been replicated numerous times.  Here is one link
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=3D2702500

Best regards,

Charles G. Gray
Senior Lecturer, Telecommunications
Oklahoma State University - Tulsa

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for sending this in. The 'cell 
phones and cancer' story is a very popular one, and I get these
occassionally for use here in the Digest.  Apparently, there is no
real association between the two, although some people continue to
persist that 'research is not yet complete'.  PAT]

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 12:22:24 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Verizon to Link U.S. and China


The dailyLead team wishes you and yours the best this holiday
season. We'd like to take a moment to thank our partners, our
advertisers and most significantly, you and the thousands of your
colleagues who read the USTelecom dailyLead for making this a good
year. Your comments and suggestions make us smarter every day. We look
forward to delivering you the industry intelligence you need in 2007!

USTelecom dailyLead
December 18, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/falofDtusXiraFCibuddrOJL


TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Verizon to link U.S. and China with trans-Pacific cable system
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Qwest targets six metro areas in marketing push
* Cingular to offer MySpace access via cell phone
* Analysis: Future of Hutchinson Essar joint venture draws attention
* Google Internet phone seen on the horizon, report says
* Will media giants team for YouTube rival?
* MTV expands mobile content efforts
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* Are you ready for the CALEA deadline?
HOT TOPICS
* Verizon extends efforts to offer video, broadband services
* AT&T suit accuses Time Warner of damaging network wiring
* Skype to charge for phone service that is now free
* Sprint names CEO Forsee as chairman
* Microsoft begins VoIP beta
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Time magazine names you "Person of the Year"
* Skype founders plan to debut Web-based TV service in 2007
* Report: Devices for wireless multimedia networks to hit 52 million units
* Comcast sells on-demand movies on same day as DVD
* Top 10 online trends of the year

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

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

From: Korey Smith <newsemail@cox.net>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Reply-To: newsemail@cox.net
Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 02:44:15 -0600
Organization: Cox


On Sat, 16 Dec 2006 01:19:09 -0500, mc
<look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote:

> Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote in message 
> news:telecom25.416.5@telecom-digest.org:

>> It seems so easy that it did not feel like a crime at the time. In a
>> corporation some of the blame would be placed on the IT executive that
>> permitted such sloppy security.

> I disagree.  Altering grades is CLEARLY AND OBVIOUSLY wrong no matter how 
> easy it is.

> If you are not trustworthy when there are no safeguards, you are not
> trustworthy, period.

True, it's a crime, but whoever is in charge of security should have
to answer for the sloppy security that he/she had in place that
allowed someon to make such changes.

The same would be true for the corporate world and a school should be
no different.  If the IT department isn't doing their job in
protecting the information about student's grades, then they need to
held accountable.

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

From: Koos van den Hout <koos+newsposting@kzdoos.xs4all.nl>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Date: 17 Dec 2006 18:03:33 GMT
Organization: http://idefix.net/~koos/


Douane D. James <sun-sentinal@telecom-digest.org> wrote in
<telecom25.415.1@telecom-digest.org>:

> Cooper City High School's senior class president was arrested Tuesday
> and charged in a grade-tampering scandal that has rocked the campus.

> Ryan C. Shrouder, 18, of Cooper City, was taken to jail from school
> and charged with two counts of computer crime with intent to defraud,

> He was released from jail on bail, has been suspended from
> school and will be recommended for expulsion, said Joe Melita, head of
> the Broward County School District's investigative unit.

"Interesting" how he is charged with (i.e. suspected to have done
certain crimes, if I understand US terminology correctly) but the
school directly passes judgment and punishes him dearly by suspension
and probably expulsion.

Koos van den Hout

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

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

Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 13:38:07 -0500
From: nonoise <william_warren_nonoise@speakeasy.net> 
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme


Douane D. James wrote:
> Class president at Cooper City High charged with changing grades of 19
> students

> By Douane D. James
> South Florida Sun-Sentinel

> Cooper City High School's senior class president was arrested Tuesday
> and charged in a grade-tampering scandal that has rocked the campus.

[snip]

> Cooper City High's bookkeeper told investigators that in the week
> before the grades were changed she witnessed Shrouder in the office of
> the computer technology specialist looking for a "sign-on" password to
> the district network. The technology specialist had left his passwords
> on a notepad in his desk, according to the report.

> Investigators later determined that the employee's sign-on account was
> the same one used to access the grades program and modify the marks.

Leaving aside the moral question, I feel compelled to ask "Why was
anyone surprised?". Hollywood has glorified computer thievery and
hacking for years, with films such as "War Games" showing EXACTLY this
offense, and "Swordfish" portraying a computer expert receiving sexual
favors while breaking into a government site.

As if that weren't bad enough, other movies have shown computer
invasions and misuse by all manner of "good guy" characters, inferring
that the end justifies the means, even if the "good guys" were doing
so without proper supervision, without accountability, and without
penalty.

Small wonder, then, that children feel it's OK to break the rules of
civilized behavior so long as a computer is involved. To compound the
felony -- pun intended -- school departments and government agencies
at many levels treat computers as electronic typewriters that are
"safe" so long as they're located in municipal buildings, without
regard to the larger question of how such systems came to be used for
grading without any serious effort to conduct a security audit, or to
educate their users, or even to question whether the computer system
involved should have been connected to the net at all.

The criminal charges being thrown at this young man are, of course, an
over-reaction, attributable to the embarrassment he has caused those
in charge of the system, and especially to those in charge of those in
charge.

IMNSHO, this was an incident waiting to happen: an attractive nuisance
no different than a stepladder left leaning against the side of a
building where children could use it and thereby be injured. We don't
blame children for climbing ladders: it's what children do.

William

(Filter noise from my address for private replies)

    A little learning is a dang'rous thing;
    Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring;
    There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
    And drinking largely sobers us again.
                      -- Alexander Pope, Essay on Criticism

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

From: Ken Abrams <harvest_this@scum.suckers>
Subject: Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???
Organization: AT&T http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 16:08:25 -0600


Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com> wrote

> Clearly Bell is now putting the "billing number" for the calling
> card through as Caller ID.

> Are any other phone companies doing this?

I doubt it is a "billing number" and probably isn't directly related
to the originator of the call at all.  I've used prepaid cards from
AT&T for about 5 years now.  The CID that shows for calls I make comes
from various places around the country: Denver, Dallas, San Francisco,
etc.  I assume that the 800 number I call to start the process
actually routes to whatever AT&T center is the least busy at the
moment and the CID number comes from there.

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

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
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #418
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Tue Dec 19 15:21:27 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 44DB32289; Tue, 19 Dec 2006 15:21:27 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #419
Message-Id: <20061219202127.44DB32289@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 15:21:27 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 19 Dec 2006 15:22:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 419

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Times Square Ads Spread Via Tourists' Cameras (Monty Solomon)
    Do u txt ur kdz? / Fastest Growing Group of Messagers is Adults (M Solomon)
    Logan Joins the Age of the Internet (Monty Solomon)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 19, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    CenturyTel to Buy Madison River (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used??? (ellis@no.spam)
    Re: Caller ID showing which Calling Card Used??? (Chris Farrar)
    Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used??? (Danny Burstein)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (ellis@no.spam)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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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
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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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 23:56:00 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Times Sq. Ads Spread Via Tourists' Cameras


By LOUISE STORY
The New York Times
December 11, 2006

Advertisers have long been drawn to Times Square as a valuable place
to reach consumers, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for space
on billboards and blazing video screens.

But recently they have discovered that down on the ground, new
technology has given low cost, face-to-face marketing campaigns
something of a cutting edge as consumers spread their messages on the
Internet.

Take the recent display of public toilets set up by Charmin bathroom 
tissue: Used by thousands in Times Square and viewed by 7,400 Web 
users on one site alone. Or Nascar's recent display of racecars; 
videos of the event have been viewed on YouTube more than 1,800 
times. More than 60 people wrote about the event on their blogs and 
60 more spread the word -- and pictures -- on the Flickr Web site.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/11/technology/11square.html

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 00:17:12 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Do u txt ur kdz? / Fastest growing group of messagers is adults


Do u txt ur kdz?
Fastest growing group of messagers is adults

By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff  |  December 17, 2006

Lynne O'Connell and her teenage daughter have discovered a new way to
bridge the generation gap: a cellphone screen.

She and Annie, 15, send text messages to each other throughout the
day, scheduling rides, sending reminders, and sometimes just talking.

"OMG!" popped up onto O'Connell's cellphone one recent afternoon.

"R U OK?" the 36-year-old mom typed back.

"I got an 83 on my Spanish quiz," Annie replied.

"OMG is right! Great!" her mom pinged back.

"You know if I had asked her at dinner, 'How was school today?' she'd
say, 'Fine,' " O'Connell said. "This gives her a way to talk to me
without having to talk to me."

"Texting" -- sending brief messages by cellphone -- has grown
dramatically beyond the teenage and 20-something "thumb generation"
over the past year, in part because parents are beginning to use the
cellphone screen as another channel to communicate with children who
otherwise might not have much to say.

M:Metrics , a mobile market research company, found that nationwide,
the fastest growing group of text messagers is adults. Between
September 2005 and September 2006, the number of text-message users
from age 45 to 64 grew about seven times as fast as among teenagers
under 18, according to their data.

Telephia , a consumer research firm, found that among Cingular users,
women in their 40s are the fastest growing text message demographic
and fourth largest group.

The overall growth in text messaging is driven by multiple factors.
There are adults who use texting to "talk" while they're in meetings
and 40-somethings who text their peers. But a survey commissioned by
Cingular this summer found that among 1,175 parents, nearly half said
their children introduced them to text messaging, and 63 percent said
it had improved communication with their child.

http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/articles/2006/12/17/do_u_txt_ur_kdz

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 00:29:49 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Logan Joins the Age of the Internet


By Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff  |  December 18, 2006

It's been 47 years since Logan International Airport joined the jet age.

Now a key part of the airport's operations is finally joining the 
Internet age, too.

This month, officials at the Massachusetts Port Authority , which runs
Logan, started a new system that gives airlines, air-traffic
controllers, and airport officials a password-protected website to
review runway closings, weather conditions, and a trove of other Logan
data. It's updated every 30 seconds.

As recently as this fall, much of that information was being relayed
through the equivalent of teletype machines and conference calls --
which isn't unusual. Boston's is one of only a handful of big US
airports to install the new "airfield reporting system." The two New
York City airports and Dulles International Airport, outside
Washington, D.C., are among the few others that are putting the
information on websites.

If it lives up to expectations, Logan's new automated airfield
reporting system could help reduce flight delays for passengers,
particularly during snowstorms that shut down runways and force
airlines to cancel and reschedule flights.

With better, timelier data about runway and weather conditions,
airlines may have a better chance to use available takeoff slots
during snowstorms and to time aircraft de-icing operations to make
sure planes are ready to go at available takeoff times. (Because ice
buildup on wings can make planes crash, airlines typically have a
window of only several minutes after wings are sprayed with de-icing
fluid before the plane has to be pulled out of the takeoff queue and
treated again.)

Alternatively, airlines can use the system to learn when they should
hold Boston-bound flights in other cities to reduce arrival delays and
avoid having planes circling over Massachusetts Bay.

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/12/18/logan_joins_the_age_of_the_internet/

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 19, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 11:24:10 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 19, 2006
********************************

BREAKING NEWS: McDowell 'Disqualifies' Himself From AT&T/BellSouth Merger P=
roceedings

http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21747?11228

     In a surprising move, FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell -- bucking
     pressure from the agency's chairman -- cited the ethics agreement
     that got him vetted by the Senate last May along with his own
     personal convictions as the reasons for continuing to recuse
     himself from the proposed AT&T/BellSouth merger now deadlocked
     between two ...

First China-U.S. Undersea Optical Cable to Boost Trans-Pacific Capacity
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21744?11228

     The new system, to be named Trans-Pacific Express (TPE), will use
     the latest optical technology to provide greater capacity and
     higher speeds to meet the significant increase in demand for IP,
     data and voice communications with the Asia-Pacific region. The
     new fibre-optic cable can support the equivalent of 62 million
     simultaneous phone ...

Verizon Launches 50 Mbps FiOS
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21741?11228

     Verizon has upped the broadband speeds available for business and
     residential customers of its FiOS service in Rhode Island and
     Massachusetts to 50 Mbps downstream, or 5 Mbps upstream for
     consumers and 10 Mbps upstream for business users. For consumers,
     this increases the maximum speed available by 20 Mbps, and
     Verizon has also lowered ...

Hutchison Whampoa Launches HSDPA in Ireland
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21737?11228

     Hutchison Whampoa's 3G Ireland has launched an HSDPA network
     upgrade in Dublin, with plans to commence offering high-speed mobile
     broadband services across the country by January 2007. Commenting on
     the launch, Robert Finnegan, 3 Ireland's managing director said:
     "Because of the slow roll-out of fixed-line broadband ...

The Comeback Kid: Unified Communications Comes Around
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21734?11228

     Four years after find me/follow me failed to take off, unified
     communications is back, spearheaded by big initiatives from Microsoft
     Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. The companies say the market trajectory
     will be different this time, thanks to the rise of IP telephony and
     advanced networking. The new idea for UC goes beyond the ...

BellSouth Triples Up on $99 Bundle
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21731?11228

     BellSouth has launched an introductory $99 'Triple Choice'
     bundle that ties together the telco's phone and DSL services, and
     the choice of digital video from DirecTV or a mobile phone
     offering from Cingular. BellSouth launched the new bundle in
     South Florida, and expects to fuel it with a TV, radio and print ...

Vodafone Sells Swiss Stake
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21728?11228

     Vodafone Group plc has slimmed down its investment portfolio
     again by selling its 25 percent stake in Swisscom Mobile AG to
     partner Swisscom AG for 4.25 billion Swiss francs (US$3.5
     billion). The move was not unexpected. Vodafone has been
     divesting minority stakes, and buying into new territories,
     during the past ...

Google in Phone Search?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21726?11228

     On a day when the long-awaited iPhone was finally announced --
     only not that iPhone, the one expected from Apple Computer
     Inc. -- another big tech brand is reportedly in talks to produce
     its own branded mobile handset. Citing a source close to the
     talks, U.K. broadsheet the Observer reported over the weekend
     that ...

SEC Takes Formal Look at Broadcom
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21723?11228

     Broadcom revealed that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
     (SEC) has stepped up its inquiry to a formal investigation. The
     chipmaker also announced that its own internal review of its stock
     option practices revealed improper dating. The company said it
     has finished the internal review of its stock option practices.
     According ...

Finally, Wireless Data Adoption Accelerates - 75% of US Businesses
Have at Least One Data App
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21721?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Organizations, primarily large ones, focus
     on more sophisticated and valuable applications of wireless data
     networks, reports In-Stat. In addition, the number of users in 2006
     having at least one wireless data application in the field has
     increased significantly, the high-tech market research firm says.
     Most ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 12:07:35 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: CenturyTel to Buy Madison River


USTelecom dailyLead
December 19, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fauYfDtusXitmXCibuddMXZi


TODAY'S HEADLINES


NEWS OF THE DAY
* CenturyTel to buy Madison River
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* AT&T adds HD channels to U-verse lineup
* BellSouth reduces price of fastest DSL service
* Swisscom buys 25% stake in mobile unit from Vodafone
* NFL Network preview coming to Time Warner Cable
* Analysis: Nokia's successful Nseries launch in India
* China's ZTE wins U.S. mobile contract with Clear Talk
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* USTelecom membership elects 2007 board, officers
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Using SMS to send cash
* Reuters launches free mobile news service
* Startup lets handset users create own video channel
* Forbes shows off trendiest handsets of '06
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC official won't vote on AT&T-BellSouth merger
* USTelecom's McCormick discusses expanding consumer choice

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

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

From: Michael D. Sullivan <userid@camsul.example.invalid>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 06:35:02 GMT


On 12/18/2006 1:33 PM, Charles Gray wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for sending this in. The 'cell 
> phones and cancer' story is a very popular one, and I get these
> occassionally for use here in the Digest.  Apparently, there is no
> real association between the two, although some people continue to
> persist that 'research is not yet complete'.  PAT]

No research is ever complete.

Unfortunately, the article cited is no longer available on abcnews.go.com.

Michael D. Sullivan
Bethesda, MD (USA)
(To reply, change example.invalid to com in the address.)

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

From: ellis@no.spam
Subject: Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 00:17:36 -0000
Organization: S.P.C.A.A.


In article <telecom25.417.5@telecom-digest.org>,
Chris Farrar  <cfarrar1307@rogers.com> wrote:

> Clearly Bell is now putting the "billing number" for the calling
> card through as Caller ID.

> Are any other phone companies doing this?

They most certainly are. I had a problem with a pest that led me to
add call block and later caller-id to my phone plan. The pest
continued to call by using calling cards to get around the blocks and
ID.


http://yosemitephotos.net/

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 12:05:04 -0500
From: Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com>
Reply-To: cfarrar1307@rogers.com
Subject: Re:Caller ID Showing Which Card ...


> From: Ken Abrams <harvest_this@scum.suckers>
> Subject: Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???
> Organization: AT&T http://yahoo.sbc.com
> Date: Sun, 17 Dec 2006 16:08:25 -0600

> Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com> wrote

>> Clearly Bell is now putting the "billing number" for the calling
>> card through as Caller ID.

>> Are any other phone companies doing this?

> I doubt it is a "billing number" and probably isn't directly related
> to the originator of the call at all.  I've used prepaid cards from
> AT&T for about 5 years now.  The CID that shows for calls I make comes
> from various places around the country: Denver, Dallas, San Francisco,
> etc.  I assume that the 800 number I call to start the process
> actually routes to whatever AT&T center is the least busy at the
> moment and the CID number comes from there.

These aren't calls using a prepaid card, but the LEC issued post paid
calling card (shows on your local home phone bill).  The calls are
originating in South Carolina but are arriving with Caller ID of the
Calling Card, which has a Toronto Ontario (416) phone number.
Perviously these arrived as "Private Number" or occasionally "Out Of
Area/Unknown".  Now the phone number to which the call is billed is
arriving as Called ID!

Chris

Chris Farrar cfarrar1307@rogers.com

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???
Date: Mon, 18 Dec 2006 21:59:14 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


In <telecom25.418.10@telecom-digest.org> Ken Abrams
<harvest_this@scum.suckers> writes:

> Chris Farrar <cfarrar1307@rogers.com> wrote

>> Clearly Bell is now putting the "billing number" for the calling
>> card through as Caller ID.

>> Are any other phone companies doing this?

> I doubt it is a "billing number" and probably isn't directly related
> to the originator of the call at all.  I've used prepaid cards from
> AT&T for about 5 years now.  The CID that shows for calls I make comes
> from various places around the country: Denver, Dallas, San Francisco,
> etc.  I assume that the 800 number I call to start the process
> actually routes to whatever AT&T center is the least busy at the
> moment and the CID number comes from there.

The original poster's writing was a bit vague, but I got the
impression he was talking about a calling card that was actually part
of his main landline phone service.

I know that some of the Bells, some of the time ... did, indeed, send
over the CNID of the home telephone/account number in the Bad Old
Days. But it's been a decade, or longer, since I've used or had any
friends using them, so have no idea how long this lasted.

(We looked into this option about five years ago for corporate use -
we wanted people to be able to call out from home or offsite or at
lunch.. and have the CNID show their work number. Think, oh, a teacher
or doctor calling from home. We weren't able to find anyone set up for
this.)

There are some folk _today_ who'll reset the CNID for you to whatever
you wish when you make the call. Check out, for example,
http://spoofcard.com.

(no connection with them aside from having tested their service).

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

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Date: 19 Dec 2006 10:08:00 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


nonoise wrote:

> Douane D. James wrote:
> Leaving aside the moral question, I feel compelled to ask "Why was
> anyone surprised?". Hollywood has glorified computer thievery and
> hacking for years, with films such as "War Games" showing EXACTLY this
> offense, and "Swordfish" portraying a computer expert receiving sexual
> favors while breaking into a government site.

Hollywood has glorified crime and gangsters since film was invented.
People blame Hollywood movies and TV as being a bad influence, but I
don't think a correlation has ever been proven.  Kids' shows in my
generation were leftover old cartoons and Three Stooges; both had
plenty of extreme violence.  Today's kids have cute and lovable PBS
offerings and sitcoms that avoid violence and other vices; yet kids
are just as or even more violent than in the past.

In any event, long before Hollywood even knew what a computer was and
put it on film, kids in my high school did exactly the same
thing -- peering over someone's shoulder or rifling a desk to find a
password.  In our day it was merely slow Teletype access with very
limited capability, the point is that kids still did it without being
influenced.

> The criminal charges being thrown at this young man are, of course, an
> over-reaction, attributable to the embarrassment he has caused those
> in charge of the system, and especially to those in charge of those in
> charge.

> IMNSHO, this was an incident waiting to happen: an attractive nuisance
> no different than a stepladder left leaning against the side of a
> building where children could use it and thereby be injured. We don't
> blame children for climbing ladders: it's what children do.

I couldn't disagree more.

When I was a kid in public school, our parents and school taught us
about privacy.  Just because something was unlocked or even open did
not mean it was ok to go through it, be it a closet, a teacher's desk,
another student's belongings, etc.  If a student offered the excuse
"well, it was open", he/she got an even worse punishment.

We were taught as kids that we were only allowed to go where we were
specifically authorized, if we weren't authorized, we could not go
there or touch it, etc.  The excuse "nobody told us we couldn't"
didn't fly.  We were expected, even at a young age, to use common
sense.  We are taught over and over again to respect other people's
proeprty and good manenrs*.  Stealing the teacher's rollbook--easy to
do if anyone wanted to -- and making unathorized changes was wrong.
Doing it via computer is just as wrong and inexcusable.

If someone leaves a $20 bill or a nickel on top of their desk it does
not mean anyone walking by may take it.  A computer log-on is no
different.  It may be prudent to keep money and log-ons under lock,
but if we fail to the blame is still 100% the thief, not us.

Criminal charges are appropriate in this particular case.  It would be
one thing if the kid just merely looked around (read only) but didn't
change anything (though still wrong.)  But by changing grades he
crossed the line.  There probably is some long-existing criminal
statute about unauthorized changes to official records; again, be it
by pen or computer doesn't matter.  That access was easy or not
doesn't matter.  Indeed, even if a teacher left his/her computer
logged on and a kid snuck in that way doesn't excuse the illegal act.

I disagree strongly with this rationalization of criminal activity and
blaming the victim (saying the administrators were sloppy).

As an aside, I also think the legal principle of "attractive nusiance"
has gone too far.  (That's where an owner is liable even if someone is
trespassing on their property to say swim in their pool.)  I don't
mind requiring swimming pool owners to have a fence around the pool.
But when an older kid (age 17) goes to the trouble of trespassing
across a large field and scaling the fence to get into a pool, I think
he is responsible for his injuries, not the school (a real case in
which the school was found guilty of negligence).

Back in the 1970s the Bell System prosecuted "blue box" users.  Back
then it was in vogue, cool, to "put one over Ma Bell".  But Bell was
correct in doing so because it was stealing and disruption, even if
the amounts were neglible.  I couldn't believe the idiots who blamed
Bell saying it was their fault because of their technology.  Again,
regardless of the quality of the lock (or lack thereof) on my front
door doesn't given anyone the right to come in uninvited.

*In elementary school we were not allowed to roam anywhere within the
school outside the classroom.  In junior high we could roam the whole
school but under strict controls.  In high school we had more options.
Finally in college we were freed of hall passes, hall monitors, noisy
vice principals, etc.  I remember feeling some sense of freedom going
up each level of school until college when I finally felt free, no
more asking permission to go to pee.  But even in college and in life
I didn't automatically get license to walk into someone's private
office and make myself at home.

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

From: ellis@no.spam
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 00:14:48 -0000
Organization: S.P.C.A.A.


In article <telecom25.418.7@telecom-digest.org>, Korey Smith
<newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

> The same would be true for the corporate world and a school should be
> no different.  If the IT department isn't doing their job in
> protecting the information about student's grades, then they need to
> held accountable.

If it were medical records instead of school records, the IT
department would be facing heavy fines for violation of federal
law. They were just plain sloppy.

http://yosemitephotos.net/

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed Dec 20 19:48:22 2006
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From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 20 Dec 2006 19:50:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 420

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Facial Recognition Makes Finding Web Photos Easier (Eric Auchard, Reuters)
    Piracy Lawsuit Being Dropped Against NY Mother (Jim Fitzgerald, AP)
    YouTube Gives a New Challenge to Copyright Law (Daniel B. Wood, CS Monitor)
    Seasons Greetings: Spam Worse Than Ever This Month (Ellen Wulfhorst)
    Feds: NJ Worker Put 'Bomb' in Computers (Monty Solomon)
    Live From Your Cingular Phone, It's Saturday Night! (Monty Solomon)
    Linksys Announces iPhone Family of Voice Over IP Solutions (Monty Solomon)
    NASA To Make Data Available Through Google (Neal McLain)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 20, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Ericsson to Acquire Redback Networks (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (Rick Merrill)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Barry Margolin)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used??? (Lisa Hancock)
    Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (Howard Pierpont)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 01:49:36 -0600
From: Eric Auchard, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Facial Recognition Makes Finding Web Photos Easier


By Eric Auchard

Swedish start-up Polar Rose AB aims to make it easy to find photos of
familiar faces online, the company said on Tuesday, solving difficult
Web search issues while potentially raising new privacy concerns.

Polar Rose said it plans to offer free software to make photos
searchable on both personal computers and across the Web by analyzing
the contents of pictures with pattern recognition technology to locate
specific faces within them.

The company said it will allow users to annotate photos with
descriptive details, harnessing the collective intelligence of the Web
to improve what can be done with computational searching alone on
sites like Google or Yahoo.

Polar Rose, which takes its name from a flower-shaped mathematical
curve used to plot two-dimensional coordinates, will help consumers to
label any photo and in turn to search for related photos of the same
or similar-looking people.

"Now we are in the visual era of the Web," Mikkel Thagaard, Polar
Rose's vice president of business development. "That will have
implications for the kind of information we find."

In its simplest incarnation, Polar Rose promises to help a computer
user sort through and group personal photos face by face. More
broadly, the software can ferret out similar-looking photos across the
Web, company officials said.

Its software analyzes digital photos to locate faces, then converts
the data from two-dimensional (2D) images into 3D models. These
skeletal models can be rendered into what scientists call
"faceprints."

Polar Rose does not store actual photos, only the faceprint summaries,
which can then be compared with other faceprints. This promises to
allow the company to create a massive searchable index for comparing
and cataloging digital images.

FUN AND OPEN

"You can label photos by name, or find them by their faceprint
signature," said Jan Erik Solem, Polar Rose's founder and chief
technology officer, said in an interview.

Solem said Polar Rose will only search through and catalog publicly
available photographs on the Web, not private databases. It also has
ruled out selling its technology for use in surveillance or by
intelligence agencies, he added.

"We just want to build a fun, open and transparent service," Solem
said.  "I can guarantee you that we will not touch those areas."

But in one dramatic example of the search system's power, Thagaard
showed a photo of a woman on an online dating site and said Polar Rose
technology could potentially be used to identify photos of similar
looking women from across the Web.

"Marriages are going to fail because of this technology," Gartner Inc.
analyst Mike McGuire said.

In March, Polar Rose plans to offer a public test version of its
software. In the second quarter, it aims to introduce a mobile phone
photo search version and, by third quarter, to complete an index of
publicly available photos on the Web.

The privately held company from Malm, Sweden plans to extend its
pattern-recognition capabilities beyond just faces to recognize
objects like landmarks, or dogs and cats. Eventually, it also plans to
search videos as well.

Still, McGuire questions whether the technology is simply a cool
feature to enhance other Web sites or something more. "Right now it is
probably a pretty powerful ingredient rather than a business of its
own," 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
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For more news and headlines, please go to:
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------------------------------

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 01:55:22 -0600
From: Jim Fitzgerald, AP <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Piracy Lawsuit Being Dropped Against NY Mother


By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer

The recording industry is giving up its lawsuit against Patti
Santangelo, a mother of five who became the best-known defendant in
the industry's battle against music piracy. However, two of her
children are still being sued.

The five companies suing Santangelo, of Wappingers Falls, filed a
motion Tuesday in federal court in White Plains asking Judge Colleen
McMahon to dismiss the case. Their lead counsel, Richard Gabriel,
wrote in court papers that the record companies still believe they
could win damages against Santangelo but their preference was to
"pursue defendant's children."

The five companies are: Elektra Entertainment Group Inc., Virgin
Records America Inc., UMG Recordings Inc., BMG Music and Sony BMG
Music Entertainment.

Santangelo's lawyer, Jordan Glass, said the dismissal bid "shows
defendants can stand up to powerful plaintiffs." He noted, however,
that the companies were seeking a dismissal "without prejudice,"
meaning they could bring the action again, "so I'm not sure what
that's worth."

The companies, coordinated by the Recording Industry Association of
America, have sued more than 18,000 people, including many minors,
accusing them of pirating music through file-sharing computer
networks, most of which have been forced out of business. Typically,
the industry tracked downloads to a computer address and learned the
name of the computer owner from the Internet service provider.

When Santangelo, 42, was sued last year, she said she had never
downloaded music and was unaware of her children doing it. If children
download, she said, file-sharing programs like Kazaa should be blamed,
not the parents. The judge called her an "Internet-illiterate parent,
who does not know Kazaa from kazoo."

Santangelo refused to settle with the record companies, pleaded her
case in newspapers and on national TV and became a heroine to
defenders of Internet freedom, who helped raise money for her defense.

Last month, the record companies filed lawsuits against Santangelo's
20-year-old daughter, Michelle, and 16-year-old son, Robert, saying
they had downloaded and distributed more than 1,000 recordings.

The companies said that the daughter had acknowledged downloading
songs on the family computer -- which Glass denied -- and that the
son had been implicated in statements from his best friend.

The suit against the children seeks unspecified damages.

On the Net:
Recording Industry Association of America: http://www.riaa.com
Defense lawyers' blog on RIAA cases: 
http://www.recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.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
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For more news and headlines, please go to:
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------------------------------

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 01:58:27 -0600
From: Daniel B. Wood, Christian Science Monitor <csm@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: YouTube Gives a New Challenge to Copyright Law


  from the December 18, 2006 edition - 
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1218/p01s03-usju.html
The YouTube world opens an untamed frontier for copyright law

By Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
LOS ANGELES

Larry Richard is one of the millions to have discovered the world of
YouTube, the free website that allows people to post, watch, and share
video clips. When he receives a link to the site, usually via e-mail,
he spends a few moments to click and watch a clip on his computer
screen -- sometimes a video of a friend's singing recital, other times
a snippet of a foreign commercial or a monologue from late-night TV.

"It's entertaining, it's information, it's a community of people
sharing things," says Mr. Richard, a marketing consultant in Santa
Monica, Calif. But is it legal, given that at least some of what he's
watching is copyrighted material being disseminated by individuals who
clearly do not hold the copyright?

The law on this matter is murky, and likely to get murkier before it
gets clearer, say experts in intellectual property law.

Several companies such as Time Warner have been threatening YouTube
with copyright infringement lawsuits. Now that Internet giant Google
has purchased YouTube, experts expect that the rampant disregard of
copyright law shown by early YouTube users, at least, is likely to get
resolved -- but they caution that each successive new technology can
put early users, in particular, on nebulous legal ground, especially
if financial profit is involved.

"As more and more technology comes along, the legal underpinnings 
governing them are not becoming clearer," says Mark McCreary, a partner 
in the Technology and Venture Finance Group of Fox Rothschild, which 
handles intellectual property cases. Increasing ability to download 
video clips from YouTube and to watch videos on iPods and cellphones 
will present users with more opportunities to violate copyright -- 
wittingly or unwittingly, he says.

Still, those who watch videos at YouTube - whether or not such content 
is copyrighted -- are unlikely to be pursued with the same fervor with 
which the music industry prosecuted those who downloaded music free of 
charge via the file-sharing website Napster, say Mr. McCreary and other 
experts.

"The very big difference between today's YouTube and the music-sharing
of MP3 files of several years ago is that you have to watch and you
can't -- absent the knowledge of advanced hackers -- copy it for your
own use," says David Axtell, an intellectual property specialist at
the law firm Leonard, Street and Deinard in Minneapolis. "During
Napster's heyday, people were making their own digital copies and
using them on their own."

But concerns should be higher for those who actually submit videos for
posting and watching, say Mr. Axtell and others. Because copying and
distributing copyrighted material is illegal, people who post that
material on YouTube without permission are more likely to be held
liable.

"There certainly will be more litigation, and Google has set aside
hundreds of millions in a war chest in recognition of this," says
Kevin Parks, a copyright specialist with the law firm Leydig, Voit and
Mayer in Chicago.

On the side of the YouTubites are those who argue that use of such
copyrighted material falls into "fair use" provisions of the law.

"It's up to the courts to continually balance the rights of those who
own copyrighted material with the need for society to adapt to
emerging technology," says Perry Binder, assistant professor of legal
studies at Georgia State University.

Copyright laws, which give exclusive legal right to a writer, editor,
composer, publisher or distributor to publish, produce, sell, or
distribute an artistic work are unambiguous, experts say. But how many
copies of something a person may make for personal use is far more
open to interpretation by judges and courts.

Mr. Binder says movie and TV industries are figuring out how to handle
the more serious abuses, such as excessive downloading by casual
users, profiting from the sale of a downloaded video, and having a
website that links to copyrighted videos, particularly if the Web page
profits from drawing traffic to the pages.

"These people should expect 'cease and desist' letters from attornies
and face the threat of a lawsuit if copyrighted material is not taken
down immediately," says Binder.

For its part, YouTube directs users to common-sense "Dos and Don'ts"
at its online help center. Users are asked not to send pornography,
videos of dangerous or illegal acts (such as animal abuse or
bombmaking), violence, and to avoid the malicious use of stereotypes.

"We ask our users to respect copyrighted material and to only upload
videos they have made or obtained the rights to use," says Jenny
Nielsen, marketing manager at YouTube. "Our policy prohibits
inappropriate content ... users can flag content they feel is
inappropriate and once it is flagged, YouTube reviews the material and
reserves the right to remove videos from the system."

Meanwhile, YouTube's power has prompted content creators to see how
they can make money from the site's content that is copyrighted.
Companies such as CBS and three major recording companies -- Universal
Music Group, Warner Music, and Sony BMG Music Entertainment -- have
inked deals with Google/YouTube to share revenues generated by
copyrighted content on the site.

As part of an experimental "brand channel" at the site, CBS in October
agreed to offer free video clips for downloading. By Thanksgiving, 300
such clips had drawn 30 million viewers. More than 35,000 have
subscribed to the free channel and CBS claims its "Late Show with
David Letterman" now boasts 200,000 more viewers and its "Late Late
Show with Craig Ferguson" has 7 percent more viewers.

"YouTube has not only held the threats at bay, but also shown it can
be a revenue boon for old media," says Chris Taylor, senior editor of
Business 2.0 Magazine.

http://www.csmonitor.com 
Copyright 2006 The Christian Science Publishing Society.

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 from NY Times, Christian Science
Monitor and National Public Radio, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 17:07:38 -0600
From: Ellen Wulfhorst <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Seasons Greetings: Spam Worse Than Ever This Month


By Ellen Wulfhorst

The holiday season brings festive parties, family gatherings -- and a
deluge of spam. Unsolicited messages, or spam, which account for nine
out of 10 e-mails, fill up the inboxes of computer users more than
ever at this time of year, experts say.

"Every year we see a seasonal increase around the holiday season. It's
just worse than it's ever been before this year," said Daniel Druker,
executive vice president of marketing at Postini, a company that
provides message security services.

Spammers spew out millions of e-mails. Some hawk pharmaceuticals and
sexual aids, others offer hot stock tips.

The unscrupulous commit identity theft by luring unsuspecting
recipients into disclosing personal information, while others commit
fraud with the lure of phony offers.

The glut of spam can clog business communications systems to the
extent that e-mails at the workplace can be held up for hours, if not
days, experts say.

"The threat of this is that e-mail becomes no longer productive as a
tool, and that is scary because e-mail is ubiquitous. Most businesses
could no longer run without it," Druker said.

Spam cost an estimated $17 billion in the United States last year in
lost productivity and the expense of measures to fight it, according
to San Francisco-based Ferris Research.

Worldwide, the cost was estimated at $50 billion.

Around the holidays, spammers take advantage as people use computers
for online shopping, experts say.

"You see a big increase around the holidays of messages where they are
trying to fool you into buying things or trick you into providing your
ID," said Jerry Upton, executive director of the San Francisco-based
Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group.

"People are busy and I think the abusers take advantage of that," he
said.

NEW TRICKS

The amount of spam has exploded in recent months, experts say, as
spammers have adopted new tricks. Research by Postini found a record
93 percent of e-mail was spam from September through November.

"The spammers are definitely winning at this point. It's gotten much
worse," said Gerald Thain, a professor of consumer law at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison who specializes in e-mail issues.
Some long-time netters insist that filtering is working well, but it
obviously is failing. One of the newest dodges is sending spam in the
form of an image rather than text, allowing it to get past filters
that trap spam by hunting down specific words.

So-called image e-mails account for some 30 percent of junk e-mails,
compared with just 2 percent in 2005, Postini said.

Another ploy is called phishing, in which an official-looking e-mail 
asks recipients for passwords or personal information.

"Pump and dump" e-mails urge recipients to buy certain stocks, driving
up the price, while in other schemes spammers hijack other computers
 -- turning them into what pros call zombies -- to deliver their messages.

"We recently saw 400,000 new zombies coming online every day," said
Atri Chatterjee, senior vice president of marketing at Secure
Computing Corp.  in Alpharetta, Georgia.

"What you have is a very aggressive use of innocent computers," he
said.

The battle between spammers and antispammers is like a game of "cops
and robbers," said J.J. Schoch, a security expert at Panda Software, a
developer of computer anti-virus systems.

"The cops try and outsmart the robbers, the robbers try and outsmart
the cops," he said.

Not only has the amount of spam ballooned, but its nature has changed,
said Druker.

"First it was hackers trying to show off how smart they were. Then it
shifted to annoying marketers," he said. "Now a large percentage of
this stuff is coming from criminal networks who are out to steal your
money."

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/internet-news.html

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 23:20:39 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Feds: NJ Worker Put 'Bomb' in Computers


NEWARK, N.J., Dec 19, 2006 (AP Online via COMTEX News Network) --

A computer administrator upset over the possibility of losing his job
planted an electronic "bomb" in the systems of one of the nation's
largest prescription drug management companies, prosecutors said
Tuesday.

If the so-called "logic bomb" had gone off at Medco Health Solutions
Inc., it would have wiped out critical patient information,
authorities said.

Even after surviving a round of layoffs, Yung-Hsun Lin, 50, kept the
code in the system and tinkered with it in an attempt to set it off,
prosecutors said. The bug eventually was discovered and neutralized by
the company.

U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie said the bomb could have caused
widespread financial damage to the company, and possibly harmed a
large number of patients.

Among the targeted databases was one that tracked patient-specific
drug interaction conflicts, prosecutors said. Before dispensing
medication, pharmacists routinely examine that information to
determine whether conflicts exist among a patient's prescribed
medicines.

      - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=62988236

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 23:24:27 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Live From Your Cingular Phone, It's Saturday Night!


NEW YORK and ATLANTA, Dec 19, 2006 /PRNewswire via COMTEX News Network/ --

Cingular customers no longer have to wait until Saturday night to
enjoy what is undoubtedly the most influential sketch comedy show of
all time.  NBC Universal, Broadway Video Entertainment, and Cingular
Wireless today announced the launch of Saturday Night Live (SNL)
Mobile on Cingular handsets, marking the first time SNL content has
been made available on the mobile phone.

Cingular Video subscribers can enjoy exclusive mobile access to
Saturday Night Live content, including video clips from classic and
current episodes, as well as original material produced especially for
the mobile screen.  Cingular customers can also purchase and download
a diverse collection of SNL- themed ringtones and graphics -- both
from current and classic seasons.


     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=62984073

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 23:27:54 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Linksys Announces iPhone Family of Voice Over IP Solutions


IRVINE, Calif., Dec 18, 2006 /PRNewswire via COMTEX News Network/ --

Linksys(R), a Division of Cisco Systems, Inc., and the recognized
leading global manufacturer of voice, wireless, and networking
hardware for home, Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) and small business
user, today unveiled its iPhone(R) family of Voice over IP (VoIP)
solutions.  The iPhone family of handheld devices harnesses the power
of the Internet to enhance voice communications, integrate compelling
information services, and deliver access to multimedia.  In short,
Linksys iPhones voice solutions and products give consumers the
ability to do more with their phone than talk.

     - http://www.quote.com/home/news/story.asp?story=62958994

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

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 06:43:50 -0600
From: Neal McLain <nmclain@annsgarden.com>
Subject: NASA To Make Data Available Through Google


 From Satellite Today, December 20, 2006:

NASA has signed an agreement to make its archive of images and other
information available through Internet giant Google, NASA announced
Dec. 18.

Under a Space Act Agreement, NASA's Ames Research Center and Google
will make NASA's information, including weather visualization and
forecasting, 3-D maps of the moon and Mars, and tracking of the
International Space Station and the space shuttle, available on the
Internet,

The program is part of a NASA initiative to foster private-public
partnerships and future collaborations between NASA and Google could
include joint research, products, facilities, education and missions,
the agency said.

http://www.satellitetoday.com/st/headlines/15002.html

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 20, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 11:34:27 EST


********************************
PricewaterhouseCoopers Presents
The TelecomDirect News Daily Update
For December 20, 2006
********************************

Verizon Picks Nortel for Five-Year US$2-bil. CDMA Contract
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/140/21776?11228

     Nortel has announced that it has won a contract from Verizon
     Wireless for equipment and services valued at US$2 billion,
     upgrading and expanding the Verizon Wireless network. The
     contract runs for a five-year period and covers installation of
     CDMA 2000 base stations, switching, IP platforms, optical
     networking, related equipment, and ...

Exploring Connected Navigation
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21767?11228

     Today's mobile navigation devices generally operate in a world of
     their own, but not for much longer. As navigation products grow
     increasingly powerful and sophisticated, and as device vendors
     strive to differentiate their gadgets from the competition,
     real-time connectivity is destined to become a standard feature
     on most mobile ...

Linksys Unveils 'iPhone' But Apple is Rumored to Be Working on a Cell Phone-
iPod Combination
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21765?11228

     SAN FRANCISCO -- The iPhone has arrived, but it is not made by
     Apple Computer Inc., which was widely rumored to be working a cell
     phone-iPod combination of the same name. Linksys, a division of
     Cisco Systems Inc. that makes networking equipment for the home and
     small businesses, unveiled the new line of Internet-enabled
     phones ...

Will McDowell Fallout Cause An AT&T/BellSouth Waterloo?
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21762?11228

     Reactions to Federal Communications Commissioner Robert
     M. McDowell disqualifying himself from breaking the tie on the
     deadlocked AT&T/BellSouth merger vote are just starting to filter
     in but the surprise decision, like mountainous winter snow, has
     the potential of slowing things down. Without a  Republican-
     Democratic ...

Ericsson Offers $2.1B for Redback
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21758?11228

     Ericsson AB has agreed to a $2.1 billion cash deal worth $25 per
     share to buy IP router vendor Redback Networks Inc. The Swedish
     firm, which bought British vendor Marconi about a year ago and
     has only just completed that integration process, says the deal
     gives it the edge IP router technology it needs to go with its
     IP-based ...

Treo Delay Hits Palm Earnings
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21756?11228

     As expected, Palm Inc. said today that its quarterly earnings
     were dragged down by the delay in shipping in the U.S. of its new
     Treo 750 device. Reporting shortly after the markets closed, Palm
     said its earnings hit $17.6 million, or 17 cents per share, on
     revenue of $392.9 million, down 12 percent from the same period
     last year.  The ...

Vodafone Sells Swisscom Stake
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21753?11228

     After nearly six years, Vodafone has decided to relinquish its
     stake in Swisscom Mobile. Swisscom is paying $3.5 billion for
     ownership of the 25% stake.  Vodafone first purchased its 25%
     stake in March 2001. Even though Swisscom will now be the sole
     owner of Swisscom Mobile, the companies signed a 5-year partner
     network agreement ...

Consumer Education Key to Next Phase of Home Networking
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21750?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- The emerging phase in home networks is a
     multimedia network that blends in consumer electronics (CE)
     devices, and although early adopters have been testing
     first-generation networked media devices, these devices are still
     far away from the average mainstream digital home, according to
     In-Stat. In fact, the ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 12:03:22 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Ericsson to Acquire Redback Networks


USTelecom dailyLead
December 20, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fbfcfDtusXiwaCCibuddzbIq

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Ericsson to acquire Redback Networks
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon appoints wireless head as new operating chief
* AT&T offers lower-cost voice packages
* Nortel, Verizon Wireless sign $2 billion network deal
* Clearwire seeks $400 million in IPO
* Cingular goes live with "SNL" mobile service
* Motorola's holiday sales start slow, analysts say
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Analysis: Apple's phone could shake up wireless industry
* Making moves in mobile video
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC scheduled to vote on video franchising

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

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

Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 18:08:22 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer


Charles Gray wrote:

> I don't have the original article from the Washington Post on this,
> but it has been replicated numerous times.  Here is one link
> http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=3D2702500

> Best regards,

> Charles G. Gray
> Senior Lecturer, Telecommunications
> Oklahoma State University - Tulsa

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks for sending this in. The 'cell 
> phones and cancer' story is a very popular one, and I get these
> occassionally for use here in the Digest.  Apparently, there is no
> real association between the two, although some people continue to
> persist that 'research is not yet complete'.  PAT]

One tool that lets cell phones work is that the base (cell tower)
tells the cell phone how much power to use. In other words if you don't 
pull up the antenna you brain will be subject to the max power output.

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

From: Barry Margolin <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Organization: Symantec
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 20:40:29 -0500


In article <telecom25.419.11@telecom-digest.org>, ellis@no.spam wrote:

> In article <telecom25.418.7@telecom-digest.org>, Korey Smith
> <newsemail@cox.net> wrote:

>> The same would be true for the corporate world and a school should be
>> no different.  If the IT department isn't doing their job in
>> protecting the information about student's grades, then they need to
>> held accountable.

> If it were medical records instead of school records, the IT
> department would be facing heavy fines for violation of federal
> law. They were just plain sloppy.

Yes, they were sloppy, but the kid was still BAD.  You reprimand the IT 
Department, maybe even fire the administrator, but that doesn't negate 
the illegal nature of what the kid did.

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: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Date: 20 Dec 2006 08:05:32 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Korey Smith wrote:

> The same would be true for the corporate world and a school should be
> no different.  If the IT department isn't doing their job in
> protecting the information about student's grades, then they need to
> held accountable.

The system had passwords so the IT department had done its job.

 From the original article, it appears someone left their password
written out on a piece of paper and the student was able to find it.
Perhaps that particular worker shouldn't have written the password
down.  It still appears the student had to rifle the desk; it wasn't
as if the password was prominently posted on a bulletin board.

Some organizations change their passwords regularly.  This makes it
hard for people to keep remembering them and IMHO actually makes
things worse by encouraging written passwords.

As an aside, speaking of passwords and schools ...

Back in junior high we had two lockers, a hall locker and a gym
locker, with two combination locks.  (Even with high tech it appears
the very same locks are in use today).  For our hall locker it was
easy to write down the combination until it was memorized.  But the
gym locker on the first time at gym presented a problem.  We had to
take showers and there was no way or place to write down the number
(humans aren't equipped with pockets).

I understand schools have done away with showers after gym these days
and that's fine by me.  It was embarassing for both boys and girls.  (I
think that was the point -- to "toughen" us up.)

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies
Date: 20 Dec 2006 09:39:54 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Associated Press News Wire wrote:

> Shugart helped pioneer the multibillion dollar hard drive industry, in
> which Seagate now holds the leading market position. He founded the
> company in 1979 and left in 1998.

Just a tiny clarification -- the hard disk drive was invented and
marketed by IBM 50 years ago, announced in their product line in Sept
1956.  IBM also invented the floppy disk as well.

I understand IBM sold off its hard disk drive line recently; I don't
know why.  Peripherals used to be quite profitable.

[public replies, please]

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Caller ID Showing Which Calling Card Used???
Date: 20 Dec 2006 11:09:03 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


ellis@no.spam wrote:

> They most certainly are. I had a problem with a pest that led me to
> add call block and later caller-id to my phone plan. The pest
> continued to call by using calling cards to get around the blocks and
> ID.

If he was using calling cards and presumably pay phones he was paying
dearly to be a pest.  Sounds strange.

But most places have "Call Trace" (*57) in which the special unit of
the telephone company gets a record of the call and has means of
dealing with them.  They charge about $1.50 per use, but if there is a
repeat problem it's worth using.  They can see more info than
callerID, including blocked calls.  I understand the special unit only
gets involved if there is a repeat problem, not isolated incidents.

IMHO, the major carriers should bar calls from entering their system
with faked caller IDs, such as VOIP systems that offer "111-111-1111".

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: $1.50 per use?  How about eight to ten
dollars per use, which is more like it, at least in the case of SBC. I
suggested to the chairman of SBC (or to the flunky who takes his phone
calls and responds in his name) that telco should outlaw that all ones
combination or all zeros, etc and when 'dipping in their database' to 
fetch the name, etc of the caller totally change all those entries to
the essence of 'information denied by caller' (in other words, a *67
type call) and treat it accordingly. If I block *67 type calls --
which I do -- then I do not want all ones or all zeros either. 
Chairman's office told me that was quite impossible to do, and that if
they delivered all zeros or all ones they had 'done their job and
delivered caller ID' to me, so shut up and pay your bill.  PAT]

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

Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 15:24:38 PST
From: HOWARD PIERPONT <howard.pierpont@verizon.net>
Subject: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?


Dear Mr. Professor, the Exalted One, Pat Townson:
   
In the mid 90s I was an active reader of the Digest and my association
still shows in many Google searches [I worked for Digital Equipment at
the time]. VAXclusters with food nodes SNAX etc.
   
On of the Portland radio folk today mentioned the early 90s and 900
numbers in his show today. His claim was some television advertisers
would encourage you to hold the handset to the phone and the broadcast
the tones and actually dial the 900 number.
   
Do I just not remember this or was it never real? I check SNOPES and
didn't see a reference. Telcomm has so many references, thankfully. I
figured I'd go to the Master!
   
Howard Pierpont
Retired DEC/Intel
Hillsboro OR

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, dialing a phone number
*accoustically* is certainly sometimes possible; consider the man with
his whistle who blew certain tones into the phone to confuse the
central office circuitry, or the man who could whistle those tones
into the phone. How reliable that method of 'dialing' is I do not
know, but if your question is was this a way to defraud telco (at
least where 900 numbers and blocks against them was concerned) the
answer is no, it was not. If a phone was otherwise equipped to 'dial'
a 900 number (many phones have blocks on them against dialing a
premium charge number; I know my phones are fixed that way), then
whether the tone was 'heard' by the central office via the dial pad
on the phone itself or from input via the receiver, central would
either accept the request or not. Central does not care if you are a
damn fool with a sex hotline or whatever, just that you pay the bill. 

This was not the case for the supervisory tones however; they had to 
be blown into the phone or sent from some external device since telco
does not equip your phone with those 'special tones' they use
internally. To answer your question, yes I think I heard of that
method of dialing also, many, many years ago.  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
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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #420
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Dec 21 13:02:00 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #421
Message-Id: <20061221175909.B893C226C@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 12:59:09 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 21 Dec 2006 13:00:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 421

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Siemens Sets New Network Speed Record (Reuters News Wire)
    Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights For Users (Monty Solomon)
    TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 21, 2006 (telecomdirect_daily)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Herb Oxley)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Julian Thomas)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (panoptes@iquest.net)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (Scott Dorsey)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 00:50:58 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Siemens Sets New Network Speed Record


Germany's Siemens AG has set a new speed record for electrical
processing of data through a fiber-optic cable, it said on Wednesday,
opening the possibility of cheaper Internet and data networks.

Siemens said in a statement it had processed data using exclusively
electrical means at 107 gigabits per second -- roughly two full DVDs
per second -- and sent it over a single optical fiber channel in a 100
mile-long (161-kilometre) U.S. network, the first time outside of a
laboratory.

Online games, music and video downloads are generating increasing
amounts of Internet traffic, creating a need for ever faster and
affordable transmission.

The test, 2.5 times faster than a previous maximum transmission
performance per channel, was done in cooperation with Germany's Micram
Microelectronic, the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications and
Eindhoven Technical University of the Netherlands.

Siemens said the advantage of its method of using electrical
processing only was that it removed the need to split signals into
multiple, lower data-rate signals to avoid bottlenecks -- which makes
transmission slower and more expensive.

"Such a system would be particularly interesting for the future
100-gigabit Ethernet on which the telecommunication providers are
currently working," Siemens said.

Ethernet networking technology powers the vast majority of local
computer networks, such as corporate networks, but is increasingly
important for larger networks, due to its flexibility, as the
technology becomes cheaper.

Siemens said it expected the first products based on the prototype
could be on the market within a few 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

For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 00:00:15 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights Sought For Users


By Andrea Estes, Globe Staff  |  December 20, 2006
The Boston Globe

Calls fade out or break up. Calls are dropped altogether in
mid-conversation. These are the afflictions of cellphone users. And as
dependence on the devices grows, so does the annoyance level.

Now Michael W. Morrissey, the Senate chairman of the Joint Committee
on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy, is putting forth
legislation to impose new regulations on cellular phone companies to
make them more responsive to consumers.

The bill, drafted by Morrissey, would force the companies to issue
semiannual public reports detailing their signal strength, their dead
zones, and gaps in coverage, along with the number of dropped calls.

In addition, the legislation would allow customers with poor service
to terminate their contract with their cellphone company without
having to pay hefty penalties. Consumers would pay only a pro-rated
share of the early termination fee, based on how long they have had
their service; currently, customers who wish to get out of a service
contract are usually required to pay the full termination fee.

There are no similar laws in effect anywhere in the country, according
to industry officials.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/12/20/bill_would_rein_in_cellphone_firms/

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

Subject: TelecomDirect News Daily Update - December 21, 2006
From: telecomdirect_daily <telecomdirect_daily-owner@www.telecomdirectnews.com>
Reply-To: telecomdirect_daily-owner@telecomdirectnews.com
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 08:31:33 EST


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

Starting tomorrow, 22 December, TelecommDirect will be on an editorial
holiday.We will resume publishing on 2 January. In the new year we
will relaunch our website under a new name, Communications Direct.

We hope you will enjoy the refreshed design of the new site and we
look for ward to bringing you additional communications news and
resources in 2007.  We wish everyone a safe and happy holiday.

Golden Telecom Closing In on Corbina, Acquires Digital TV Operator
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21810?11228

     Moscow's burgeoning broadband market looks set for its first
     major piece of consolidation, as Golden Telecom prepares to
     acquire ...

Market Watchdog Clears France Telecom, Sonaecom of Collusion in
Portugal Telecom Bid
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21807?11228

     The Portuguese market regulator, CMVM, yesterday said that it has
     cleared Sonaecom and France Telecom of collusion in the ongoing
     takeover bid for Portugal Telecom. In a statement, the CMNM said
     that after a review of the documents filed by both companies, it
     has sufficient proof that France Telecom did not collude with
     Sonaecom in the ...

Telekom Austria Acquires eTel for US$118.7 million
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21803?11228

     Telekom Austria yesterday said that it has agreed to buy 100% of
     the European integrated telephony operator, eTel, for 90 million
     euro (US$118.7 million). In a statement, Telekom Austria said it
     would fund the acquisition of eTel-which made 100 million euro in
     revenue in 2005-entirely from its cash-flow without taking on
     debt. eTel is ...

Not Your Father's Voice Mail
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21800?11228

     Every day, workers are bombarded with a constant stream of
     instant messages, email, phone calls, faxes, scheduled and
     unscheduled conferences, and online input like blogs and video
     clips. Juggling all those communications can take up a large
     chunk of the working day. Gone are the days of message pads,
     departmental voice mail and ...

Telecom's Need for Speed
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21796?11228

     In the telecommunications market, speed has two distinct but
     equally important meanings -- speed of service and speed in
     deployment.  Triple-play services require some of the highest
     speeds the telecommunications industry has experienced. Many
     providers are moving from POTS services for voice and Internet
     access that average 1.5mbps to ...

Did You Leave the Light On? Check Online
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/150/21792?11228

     RICHFIELD, Minn. (AP) - Imagine coming home and, with the push of
     a single button, turning on the lights, turning up the thermostat
     and flipping on the TV. Another button might shut off all the
     lights and turn down the thermostat when you leave.  Starting
     next month, Best Buy Co. will sell a ...

Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom Signs Agreement with Google on Mobile
Internet Search Services
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/120/21789?11228

     TAIPEI, Taiwan - Chunghwa Telecom Co. signed an agreement with
     Google Inc. Thursday on mobile Internet search services, said the
     chairman of Taiwan's largest phone company by revenue.  Under
     the agreement, search-engine giant Google will provide a Web
     search service on Chunghwa Telecom's mobile phones from
     January.  ...

FCC Approves Telco-Friendly Video Rules
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21784?11228

     The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved new rules
     earlier today that will let phone companies gain local video
     franchise rights as soon as three months after they file an
     application.  The new rules set a 90-day cap for local
     authorities to approve or deny video franchise applications made
     by incumbent telcos who already ...

China's IPTV Market Developing Slowly But Surely
http://www.telecomdirectnews.com/do.php/130/21780?11228

     SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., December 20, 2006 - China's IPTV market will
     go through a gradual but solid increase from 2006 to 2010,
     reports In-Stat http://www.in-stat.com . The industry environment
     for IPTV has gotten better, but the outlook is still not
     completely positive, the high-tech market research firm says. Two
     more IPTV ...

Your feedback on our e-letter is always welcome. Send email to:
TelecomDirect Editor <telecom_direct_editor@us.pwc.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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

From: nospam4me@mytrashmail.com (Herb Oxley)
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 01:16:41 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> Associated Press News Wire wrote:

>> Shugart helped pioneer the multibillion dollar hard drive industry, in
>> which Seagate now holds the leading market position. He founded the
>> company in 1979 and left in 1998.

> Just a tiny clarification -- the hard disk drive was invented and
> marketed by IBM 50 years ago, announced in their product line in Sept
> 1956.  IBM also invented the floppy disk as well.

Typical mainstream media oversimplification; they left out "personal
computer" before "hard drive".

 Herb Oxley
 From: address IS Valid.

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

From: Julian Thomas <blackhole@jt-mj.net>
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 20:46:29 -0500
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies


In <20061221004821.F1E522254@massis.lcs.mit.edu>, on 12/20/06 at 07:48
PM, editor@telecom-digest.org typed:

>> Shugart helped pioneer the multibillion dollar hard drive industry, in
>> which Seagate now holds the leading market position. He founded the
>> company in 1979 and left in 1998.

> Just a tiny clarification -- the hard disk drive was invented and
> marketed by IBM 50 years ago, announced in their product line in Sept
> 1956.  IBM also invented the floppy disk as well.

At that time (floppy disk invention) Al Shugart was still with IBM.

 Julian Thomas:   jt at jt-mj  dot net    http://jt-mj.net
 In the beautiful Finger Lakes Wine Country of New York State!
 -- --
 Error #33: (A)bort this mess (R)etry last mistake (S)kip to new mess-up.

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

From: panoptes@iquest.net
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Date: 20 Dec 2006 20:09:21 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


HOWARD PIERPONT wrote:

> On of the Portland radio folk today mentioned the early 90s and 900
> numbers in his show today. His claim was some television advertisers
> would encourage you to hold the handset to the phone and the broadcast
> the tones and actually dial the 900 number.

> Do I just not remember this or was it never real? I check SNOPES and
> didn't see a reference. Telcomm has so many references, thankfully. I
> figured I'd go to the Master!

This seems odd, but it would have the advantage that there is no chance
of a mis-dial.  I wouldn't know whether any such advertiser actually
bothered.  I'm pretty sure TV audio would have been able to produce
those dialing tones accurately enough.

Once tone dial was introduced, there certainly was never a requirement
that the tone generator be connected to the wall by a wire all the
way.  The Apple Newton had that capability over ten years ago, and I
remember reports of other portable devices that could dial that way:

http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.09/09.11/Nov93Editorial/index.html

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Date: 21 Dec 2006 11:00:04 -0500
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


Rick Merrill  <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote:

> One tool that lets cell phones work is that the base (cell tower)
> tells the cell phone how much power to use. In other words if you don't 
> pull up the antenna you brain will be subject to the max power output.

Umm ... no ... if you don't pull up the antenna, the phone won't be
able to radiate much even on maximum power output because the antenna
is inefficient.

I think it's pretty clear, though that the RF is not much of an issue
when it's below the levels where tissue heating is a problem.  Not
that there are not plenty of secondary behavioural issues.  I know a
lot of people who can't talk on the phone without a cigarette.  Now
that they have cell phones, they find themselves smoking a lot more.
The phone has indeed increased their cancer risk, though not directly.

--scott

"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #421
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec 22 00:11:53 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id A35EB2270; Fri, 22 Dec 2006 00:11:52 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #422
Message-Id: <20061222051152.A35EB2270@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 00:11:52 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 22 Dec 2006 00:12:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 422

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    FCC Votes to Change Video-Franchising Rules (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Telecom Update #560, December 21, 2006 (John Riddell)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer  (John Stahl)
    Cell Phones, Cancer and Secret Words (John Stahl & TELECOM Editor)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Geoffrey Welsh)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (AES)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Tom Horsley)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 12:07:10 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: FCC Votes to Change Video-Franchising Rules


USTelecom dailyLead
December 21, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fbwEfDtusXizefCibuddbkAB

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* FCC votes to change video-franchising rules
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Telecoms submit final bids for federal Networx program
* Level 3 sees traffic, stock surge on Web video
* Investors see risks for Juniper as rivals beef up
* India's Reliance readies bid for Hutchison Essar
* Samsung's wireless head's road to the top
* Freston among investors in resort TV venture
* Content moving between TV, Web
USTELECOM SPOTLIGHT
* USTelecom applauds FCC action to streamline video-franchising process
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Motorola sees momentum for WiMAX
* Report: Mobile-TV revenue to surge by 2011
* Europe's 3G users near 39 million
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC proposes national wireless safety network

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

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

Subject: Telecom Update #560, December 21, 2006
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 15:30:27 -0500
From: John Riddell <jriddell@angustel.ca>


************************************************************
TELECOM UPDATE
************************************************************

published weekly by Angus TeleManagement Group
http://www.angustel.ca
Number 560: December 21, 2006

Publication of Telecom Update is made possible by generous
financial support from:

** AVAYA: www.avaya.ca/
** BELL CANADA: www.bell.ca/home/Home_Business.page
** CISCO SYSTEMS CANADA: www.cisco.com/ca/
** ERICSSON: www.ericsson.ca
** MICROSOFT CANADA: www.microsoft.ca/communications/
** NEC UNIFIED SOLUTIONS: www.necunifiedsolutions.com
** ROGERS TELECOM: www.rogers.com/solutions
** SHAW BUSINESS SOLUTIONS: www.shawbusinesssolutions.ca
** VONAGE CANADA: www.vonage.ca

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

IN THIS ISSUE:

** We're Taking a Holiday
** Cabinet Tells CRTC to Rely on Market Forces
      Order Ignores Industry Committee Majority
** Telesat Sold to Loral, Pension Fund
** Ericsson Buys Edge-Router Maker
** CRTC Okays Withdrawal of Phone Service
** Police Raid Phone Fraud Boiler Rooms
** Consumers Appeal Deferral Account Ruling
** RIM Still Mired in Options Review
** Primus Expands Partner Program
** SaskTel Cuts LD Package Rates
** Gatineau Free-Calling Area to Expand in June
** CRTC Suspends Local Competition Proceedings
** Rogers Provides Wireless Call Restriction
** Siemens Sets Optical Speed Record
** Phonetime Takes Call Select Private
** Telus to Buy Back 7% of Shares
** Nortel Inks $2 Billion Deal With Verizon

WE'RE TAKING A HOLIDAY: Telecom Update is taking a winter break; our
next issue will be published Friday, January 5. We wish all readers a
joyous holiday season and a successful and rewarding New Year.

CABINET TELLS CRTC TO RELY ON MARKET FORCES: The federal Cabinet has
issued the policy direction to the CRTC that was first tabled in
Parliament last June by Industry Minister Bernier (see Telecom Update
#534), requiring the Commission to "rely on market forces to the maximum
extent feasible."

** Cabinet made one change to the order, a concession to
   telecom competitors. In the CRTC's review of essential and
   wholesale services (see Telecom Update #554), the
   Commission is to take into account "technological and
   competitive neutrality, the potential for incumbents to
   exercise market power ... and the impediments faced by new
   and existing carriers seeking to develop competing network
   facilities."

http://xrl.us/PolicyDirection 

ORDER IGNORES INDUSTRY COMMITTEE MAJORITY: On October 31, Parliament's
standing committee on Industry, Science and Technology, after hearing
submissions from telcos, cablecos, and other competitors, recommended
to Parliament that the policy direction to the CRTC not be issued
until the Committee had a chance to review the matter in more
detail. The four Conservative Party members on the committee
dissented.

** The preamble to the Policy Direction mentions the committee's
   recommendation, but notes that the vote "was not unanimous" and
   says "the Government has decided to move forward with issuing the
   Policy Direction at this time."

http://xrl.us/IndustryCommittee

TELESAT SOLD TO LORAL, PENSION FUND: BCE has sold Telesat Canada for
$3.42 billion to a new company formed by PSP Investments, which
manages Canada's public service pension fund, and New York-based Loral
Space and Communications. Loral will have a 64% ownership and 33%
voting stake.  Loral is contributing its own satellite business to the
new company, making Telesat the world's fourth-largest satellite
operator.

** The new Telesat will be headquartered in Ottawa and will
   conduct all its research in Canada. Daniel Goldberg,
   recently named Telesat CEO, remains in that post. (See
   Telecom Update #546)

ERICSSON BUYS EDGE-ROUTER MAKER: Ericsson has agreed to buy
California-based Redback Networks for US$25 a share, a total of about
$1.9 billion. Redback designs and manufactures IP equipment for
carriers, including a line of multi-service edge routers that support
broadband, telephone, TV, and mobility services.

CRTC OKAYS WITHDRAWAL OF PHONE SERVICE: CRTC Telecom Order 2006-342
approves an application by Northwestel to stop providing telephone 
service to Nanisivik, Nunavut. The telco said that demolition activity 
associated with the shutdown of the Nanisivik mine and the nearby
community has repeatedly disrupted service, making it expensive and
dangerous to maintain service to the remaining nine customers in the
town.

** 23 residents of Nanisivik submitted a petition to the CRTC saying
   that Northwestel's action would cut them off from the outside
   world.

** Three commissioners dissented, saying that the ruling sets a
   precedent by exempting an incumbent telco from its obligation to
   provide service.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Orders/2006/o2006-342.htm

POLICE RAID PHONE FRAUD BOILER ROOMS: Police and RCMP say they have
broken up a telemarketing fraud ring in Montreal, following a series
of raids on December 19. The organization, which allegedly targeted
seniors, is said to have grossed between $8 million and $13 million a
year since 2003.

** Also this week, Simon Grouin of Centre d'expedition direct
   pleaded guilty to telemarketing fraud charges related to the sale
   of supplies for banking machines. He was fined $75,000; he and the
   company were placed under a 10-year prohibition order under the
   Competition Act.

CONSUMERS APPEAL DEFERRAL ACCOUNT RULING: The Consumers Association of
Canada and the National Anti-Poverty Organization have now filed their
appeal to the Federal Court, asking it to rule that all of the money in
the telcos' deferral accounts should be returned to customers, not spent
on broadband deployment or improving telephone service to the disabled,
as ordered in CRTC Telecom Decision 2006-9. (See Telecom Update #548)

http://xrl.us/ConsumerAppeal

RIM STILL MIRED IN OPTIONS REVIEW: Research In Motion says its review of
stock option grants is taking longer than expected and will involve a
charge significantly higher than the previous estimate of $25 million to
$45 million. RIM says it will file restated results by March 3. (See
Telecom Update #554)

PRIMUS EXPANDS PARTNER PROGRAM: Primus Telecom Canada is offering
"enhanced solution sets" to its resellers, including managed Internet
access, Web development, website hosting, and server colocation.

SASKTEL CUTS LD PACKAGE RATES: Users of some SaskTel long distance
calling plans will pay lower rates effective January 25. The Anytime
North America plan will drop from $35 to $28 a month, and the Evenings
and Weekends Canada plan goes from $25 to $23.  Both rates will be
lower for customers with several SaskTel services.

** Rates for the Business One Rate and Managed LD Solutions plans will
   also be reduced -- actual rates will depend on the customer's total
   usage.

GATINEAU FREE-CALLING AREA TO EXPAND IN JUNE: CRTC Telecom Order
2006-348 gives interim approval to Bell Canada's application to
eliminate long-distance charges within the amalgamated City of
Gatineau, Quebec. The change, to be effective June 18, will be
financed by three-year bill surcharges of 20 cents (residential lines)
and 18 cents (business lines).

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Orders/2006/o2006-348.htm
http://www.crtc.gc.ca/public/8740/2006/b2/701985.zip

CRTC SUSPENDS LOCAL COMPETITION PROCEEDINGS: In light of Cabinet's
proposed revision of the rules for local phone deregulation, which would
eliminate the CRTC's 25% market share loss test, modify competitor
Quality of Service requirements, and eliminate winback restrictions (see
Telecom Update #559), the Commission has suspended its own
reconsideration of these matters until the Cabinet order is finalized.

http://www.crtc.gc.ca/archive/ENG/Circulars/2006/ct2006-12.htm

ROGERS PROVIDES WIRELESS CALL RESTRICTION: Rogers' new Call Manager
plan enables parents to set usage rules restricting the times, dates,
area codes, and phone numbers available for calling on their
children's cellphones.

** Aliant introduced a similar plan last month. (See Telecom Update #557)

SIEMENS SETS OPTICAL SPEED RECORD: Siemens says it has achieved data
rates of 107 gigabits per second over a single channel in a 100 mile
long fibre-optic route in the U.S. -- about two-and-a-half times
faster than previous transmission performance. That's equivalent to
sending two fully loaded DVDs every second.

PHONETIME TAKES CALL SELECT PRIVATE: Mississauga-based Phonetime
International has acquired the 20% of Vancouver-based Call Select it
did not already own. Phonetime is a wholesaler of prepaid phone
cards. Call Select, founded two years ago, takes in $900,000 a month
selling 1+ long distance services to ethnic communities.

TELUS TO BUY BACK 7% OF SHARES: Telus plans to buy back up to 12
million common shares (6.7%) and 12 million non-voting shares (7.5%)
over the next 12 months.

NORTEL INKS $2 BILLION DEAL WITH VERIZON: Nortel has won a contract to
provide up to US$2 billion worth of broadband wireless to Verizon
Wireless over five years.

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
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   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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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: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 21:36:46 -0500
From: John Stahl <aljon@stny.rr.com>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer 


> Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 18:08:22 -0500
> From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer

> Charles Gray wrote:
>> I don't have the original article from the Washington Post on this,
>> but it has been replicated numerous times. Here is one link
>> http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=3D2702500
>> Best regards,

>   <clip>

> One tool that lets cell phones work is that the base (cell tower)
> tells the cell phone how much power to use. In other words if you don't
> pull up the antenna you brain will be subject to the max power output.

The American Cancer Society seems to have the latest information regarding 
the findings of many tests which have been made to find if there is any 
relationship between cell phone (and other wireless RF generating personal 
devices) and Cancer. A detailed summary can be found at:
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/PED/content/PED_1_3X_Cellular_Phones.asp?sitearea=PED

Additionally the FCC web site has info about the RF measurement
process and related results along with the specs to be targeted for
the whole cellular system including hand held phones and the radiation
limits for the human body . This URL is:
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety/cellpcs.html

At the FCC site you will note that they set limits for cell site
transmitters, car mounted cellular antenna output and the hand held
phones with relation to power/radiation measurements depending on the
system/device. Since the majority of consumer RF "exposure" is related
(today) to the hand held devices, the FCC has taken it a step further
to set a maximum SAR or Specific Absorption Rate of 1.6 watts/kg (of
body weight) based upon a tissue (human) sample size of 1 gram. Each
phone manufacturer must test their individual phone models and supply
the SAR to the FCC before the phone is type accepted for use.

As I recall the maximum transmitting power (by spec and by design due
to battery capacity) for a hand held phone is something like 0.7
watts, so there is very little (or no) chance that the phone could
generate 1.6 watts/kg. Perhaps the old car-mounted or bag-phones could
generate that kind of power because their power was variable (as is
the hand held, as you indicated) from around 7 watts down to the hand
held limit controlled by the cell site through the "business" or
control frequency.

Also some of the major cell service companies have on-line info
available about cell phones and Cancer. One web site I found by
Verizon Wireless seems to summarize what is known:
http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/aboutUs/wirelessissues/radioEmissions.jsp

As you might have read there have been some court cases litigated by
person(s) who have determined that their Cancer was caused by cell
phone usage. To date none of these cases have been won by the litigant
as all the scientific tests so far have not shown any causal
effect. However, there is much on going scientific study which might
(or might not) find some probable cause, someday.

But, hey, what about those people who hang a BlueTooth device (it
emits RF energy, too) on their ear and wear it all day long? A cell
phone is only used occasionally, brought to the ear then put back on
the belt or into the purse, or where ever it is stored. What about the
effects of prolonged RF energy from the BT ear piece in direct contact
with the ear/head? That will be another "story", won't it?

Hope the above helps to answer your query. However, if you are looking
for some more practical info as to how the cell sites "talk" with the
cell phones to vary power, etc. and how the whole system works, I
found a web site (can't vouch for its total accuracy though) which
contains a wealth of info regarding the "inner-workings" of the cell
system. It is located at:
http://members.tripod.com/~peacecraft/infomining/cellphon.htm


John Stahl
Telecom/Data Consultant
Aljon Enterprises

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

Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 21:21:24 -0500
From: John Stahl <aljon@stny.rr.com>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer and Secret Words


Pat,

What the heck is the Secret Word? I can't find one in the last issue of 
Telecom Digest!

John Stahl

At 12/21/2006 09:03 PM, you wrote:

> Your recent submission to TELECOM Digest was rejected. If you feel it
> should be printed, please resubmit it with the Secret Word as part of
> the subject line.

> Editor, TELECOM Digest

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: First of all, thanks very much for your
excellent item on Cell phone power radiation and cancer. Maybe your
explanation along with Charles Gray's referral to the magazine article
will suffice for _a long time_. 

Now regards the 'secret word'.  I announced it here a long time ago,
and the reason for not repeating it every day is that the spammers
would pick up on it and use it as part of the headers in their spam. I
will assure you, however, that your use of the Secret Word in the
subject line of your message moves your message out of the queue and
directly to the top of the list of messages to be printed. I trust in
Spam Assassin, but I suspect it is a misplaced trust, since although
about 300 items each day arrive and are deliberatly tossed into the
spam bucket by the mail program here, an additional 200 or so fall
into my 'legitimate' mail queue by virtue of the creative ways they
have of spelling the word starting with /V/ having to do with sexual
enhancement and the multitude of ways one can spell sex acts and
male or female sex organs. No matter how many adjustments are made to
Spam Assassin, there is always some way to get around it, and beat
Spam Assassin at its own game. With my spam vrs. legit mail here
running most days in excess of 95 percent, my decision was it will be
easier to default it all to the spam bucket. And of course, a demand
is made of me a hundred times of day to please re-open my (closed due
to fraud) e-Bay, PayPal, or you name the bank credit card; just type
in your social and credit card numbers via the imposter's cgi-bin and
we will all be on the straight and narrow once again.

So my response was simply to replace my autoack message with one
saying 'your submission refused, etc'  (see the example above you sent
me). I do peek into the 'legitimate' mailbox however as time permits
and pick out the known and familiar names and run their stuff anyway.
But those folks who _do_ include the Secret Word get their (truly)
legit mail forwarded yet another time to a place of honor here.

About fifty years ago, on CBS Radio, there was a very humorous man
named Groucho Marx with a program called 'You Bet Your Life'. Every
day, Groucho had a guest; he and the guest would banter on various
topics. At the start of each show however, the announcer would whisper
to the studio and radio audience, "today, the Secret Word is 'telecom'
(or whatever it happened to be)" and then in the course of the
broadcast, if the special guest happened to use the Secret Word (for
example in a sentence) all hell would break loose.  A cuckoo bird flew
up on the stage and flitted around, fireworks went off, the audience
would yell and hoot, and Groucho, would stand there with a deadpan
look on his face would say "you said the Secret Word" and give the
guest a couple hundred dollars in prize money, taking it out of his
own pocket. Many days, the guest did NOT say the secret word, that was
fine if he did or did not say it. As often as not however, the guest
did NOT say the secret word, a lot like most of my email these days.
Groucho -- indeed all the Marx brothers -- were quite funny in their
movies and on the radio; some of you must feel likewise about Spam,
thinking that it is quite humorous. I see nothing funny about it at
all. PAT]

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

From: Geoffrey Welsh <reply@newsgroup.please>
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 13:06:28 -0500
Organization: UseNetServer.com


hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> Associated Press News Wire wrote:

>> Shugart helped pioneer the multibillion dollar hard drive industry,
>> in which Seagate now holds the leading market position. He founded
>> the company in 1979 and left in 1998.

> Just a tiny clarification -- the hard disk drive was invented and
> marketed by IBM 50 years ago, announced in their product line in Sept
> 1956.  IBM also invented the floppy disk as well.

Shugart worked for IBM's storage division for some time before he
started Shugart Associates.  I presume the news article referred to
his work at that time.

> I understand IBM sold off its hard disk drive line recently; I don't
> know why.  Peripherals used to be quite profitable.

IBM sold their hard drive manufacturing operations to Hitachi in 2003.
The hard drive industry had become increasingly commoditized and
highly competetive.  Given the rapidly increasing demand for capacity
and performance, I suspect that product life cycles were shrinking and
R&D costs were skyrocketing.  Some manufacturers (e.g. Micropolis)
folded, some (e.g.  Conner Peripherals) were absorbed, and some
(e.g. Quantum) exited the hard drive business to focus on more
profitable product lines.


Geoffrey Welsh <Geoffrey [dot] Welsh [at] bigfoot [dot] com>
I'm a cynic.  Optimists say the glass is half full, pessimists say the
glass is half empty, and cynics observe that our education system can
no longer produce purchasing managers who can order the correct size of
glass. 

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

From: AES <siegman@stanford.edu>
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 11:31:43 -0800
Organization:  Stanford University


In article <telecom25.421.6@telecom-digest.org>, panoptes@iquest.net 
wrote:

> Once tone dial was introduced, there certainly was never a requirement
> that the tone generator be connected to the wall by a wire all the
> way.  The Apple Newton had that capability over ten years ago, and I
> remember reports of other portable devices that could dial that way:

Do I have a vague memory that a very early version of Now Contact -- or 
some other Mac application? -- could tone dial to a handset through the 
computer's built-in speaker?

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

From: Tom Horsley <tom.horsley@att.net>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 22:26:21 GMT


On 20 Dec 2006 08:05:32 -0800 hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> Some organizations change their passwords regularly.  This makes it
> hard for people to keep remembering them and IMHO actually makes
> things worse by encouraging written passwords.

In fact, the folks who do the Sarbanes-Oxley auditing seem to
interpret the rules to mean that everyone absolutely must change
passwords with fanatical frequency, thus insuring that every
workstation in every corporate environment in the United States will
have the password stuck to it with an easy to spot yellow sticky note
:-).

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

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #422
*******************************





    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec 22 21:50:04 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 701B222D2; Fri, 22 Dec 2006 21:50:04 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #423
Message-Id: <20061223025004.701B222D2@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 21:50:04 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 22 Dec 2006 21:50:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 423

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    No Typing not a Problem for 'The Hammer' Blogger (Donna Smith, Reuters)
    Boston Cardinal Launching Podcasts (Jim Finkle, Reuters)
    Vodafone Eyes Bid For India's Hutchison Essar (USTelecom dailyLead)
    How Apple Could Rock Wireless (Monty Solomon)
    An Apple Phone is no Slam-Dunk (Monty Solomon)
    A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection (Monty Solomon)
    To Catch Rule-Breakers, Schools Look Online (Monty Solomon)
    Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme (Tom Horsley)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (panoptes@iquest.net)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (davidesan@gmail.com)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (Ron Kritzman)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (Dave Garland)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (Linc Madison)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer  (Howard Eisenhauer)
    Re: Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights (Lisa Hancock)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 13:01:02 -0600
From: Donna Smith, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: No Typing not a Problem for 'The Hammer' Blogger


By Donna Smith

Former U.S. Republican leader Tom DeLay, known as "The Hammer" for his
tough tactics on Capitol Hill, hasn't nailed the art of typing but
that's not keeping him from a new career as a blogger.

The former U.S. House of Representatives leader's entry into the 
blogosphere brought an onslaught of nasty responses during a trial run 
on Sunday, December 10.

"I guess liberals are the only ones around on Sunday afternoons and
they inundated us with vile, nasty comments. We pulled it down and
cleaned it up," DeLay told Reuters.

In an interview, he said he writes out his submissions for
http://www.tomdelay.com in long hand and leaves it to aides to do the online
work. "I can't type, which is a disadvantage," DeLay said. "I come up
with ideas."

The blog was formally launched on Monday, December 11, with a call to
action for conservatives in which he said his blog could serve a role.

"Our liberal opponents would have Americans believe that they are
becoming more conservative; that they are moderating their radical
agenda so that they can claim to be the final arbiters of 'mainstream'
political thought," DeLay wrote.

"The time has come for a call to action for all conservatives to
rededicate ourselves to our principles, to taking direct, grassroots,
political action and work together to reclaim America," DeLay added.

Once one of the most powerful politicians in Washington, DeLay was
indicted on campaign finance-related charges and resigned from
Congress this year. Delay's seat in the House of Representatives was
one of those lost in November, when control of Congress slipped away
to the Democrats.

DeLay, who denies any wrongdoing, blamed Republican losses on a
failure to communicate and said his blog will provide a forum for
conservative commentary with links to other blogs on the Internet.

DeLay also started the Grassroots Action and Information Network,
which promises to be a force for the conservative movement "and a
staunch opponent of secular progressive pressure groups and radical
leftist agendas."

The former owner of a pest-control company, Delay was first elected in
1984 in the "Republican revolution" that took control of the House in
1994 for the first time in 40 years.

Closely allied with Christian conservatives, DeLay was a prodigious
fund raiser and helped push Bush's agenda through Congress.

Stephen Hess, a media expert at Brookings Institution, said blogging
was a logical choice for the former congressman as he tries to reclaim
power broker status.

"Tom DeLay plans to be active and have a voice and when you make that
decision, blogs are an opportunity, and when you think about it a very
cheap one at that," Hess said.

According to Technorati, a Web site that tracks blogs, there are
currently about 63.2 million blogs on the Internet. Of those about
850,000 are tagged "politics." Technorati says some 175,000 new blogs
are created every day.

Experts say good bloggers can rise above the crowd to attract a
devoted audience.

Roger Simon, a novelist and screen writer who co-founded
Pajamasmedia.com, said the blogosphere was a "brutal meritocracy" and
offered this advice: "The blogs that are successful are written by
people who can write."

Micah Silfry, executive editor of Personal Democracy Forum, which
examines the impact of technology on politics, said it is hard for
politicians to become bloggers. They are used to talking at people,
not to people, and to be successful they have to have real
conversations, he said.

"Politicians have figured out mostly defensive tactics to deal with the 
blogosphere, but not how to join it," Silfry added.

DeLay said he was happy with the response to his blog. "It's pretty
amazing," he said. "I am just knocked away by the number of people
involved. ... People have a lot to say."

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 13:10:33 -0600
From: Jim Finkle, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Boston Cardinal Launching Podcasts


By Jim Finkle

Boston's Cardinal Sean O'Malley, the Internet-savvy leader of the
fourth-largest U.S. Roman Catholic diocese, is bringing the church's
2,000-year-old message to the world's millions of iPod owners.

O'Malley will become the first of the Catholic Church's 186 cardinals
worldwide to launch a podcast and use the technology to reach
followers, said Father Robert Reed, who runs a Web site that will
distribute the podcasts, on Thursday.

The cardinal, who already maintains his own blog, plans to deliver his
first video message over the Web on Christmas Eve, issuing holiday
greetings in English, Spanish and Portuguese that can be played on
demand. That will be followed up next month with downloadable video
podcasts.

Podcasts are audio and video programs that can be downloaded from the
Internet and played on iPods and other digital media players.

The Archdiocese of Boston has turned to the Web to unify its followers
and help repair its damaged image after a pedophile priest scandal
that erupted in 2002 in Boston and spread to other U.S. dioceses,
sparking hundreds of lawsuits.

Last month, it launched a password-protected Intranet computer network
that links the cardinal with about 800 priests in Massachusetts. He's
also issued them e-mail accounts.

"He embraces technology," said Reed, who is director of Catholic TV, a
cable TV station in Massachusetts.

The station recently launched http://www.iCatholic.com, which will
feature podcasts, video-on-demand programming and a live stream of
Catholic TV.

O'Malley, 62, was named to run Boston's troubled Catholic church in
2003. He wears the plain brown habit and rope belt of his Capuchin
order, founded in the 16th century as an offshoot of the Franciscan
Order.

In September, he became the first U.S. cardinal to launch a blog,
http://www.cardinalseansblog.org , where he posts photos and messages
describing his activities each week.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 11:04:50 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Vodafone Eyes Bid For India's Hutchison Essar


USTelecom dailyLead
December 22, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fGbsfDtusXiEptCibuddELAj

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Vodafone eyes bid for India's Hutchison Essar
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* BT awards $1 billion outsourcing contract to Indian firm
* Top telecom, cable firms add 2.5 million broadband subs
* AT&T brings U-verse to Bay Area
* Motorola enhances ability to deliver video with Tut buy
* RIM's third-quarter profit rises 47%
* EarthLink launches Wi-Fi in two more cities
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Growth surge seen for mobile social networks
* What was big for mobile in 2006
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Google teams with VoIP for click-to-talk
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.smartbrief.com/resp/fGbsfDtusXiEptCibuddELAj

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 14:50:49 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: How Apple Could Rock Wireless


How Apple could rock wireless:
Nokia, Motorola, Samsung and LG might be secretly rooting for the 
Apple phone to be a (minor) hit.

By Stephanie Mehta, Fortune senior writer

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- If Steve Jobs' Apple decides to build a wireless
phone, as widely rumored, the company has the chance to shake up not
just the wireless device business -- an industry dominated by the
likes of Motorola and Nokia -- it also could upend the entire wireless
distribution model in the United States.

We know very little about the Apple's plans for a cell phone. Apple
(Charts) isn't talking ("We don't comment on rumor and speculation," a
spokesman told me) but we do know that wireless represents a huge
opportunity -- and threat -- for Apple, and every other consumer
electronics and computer maker.

Wireless phone makers increasingly are adding MP3 players to their
devices, with the capability to download songs over the air. It
certainly makes sense for Apple to want a piece of this action.

How Apple makes this happen is a topic of great swirl in tech and
telecom circles. UBS telecom analyst John Hodulik recently published a
report positing that Apple would seek to become a virtual phone
company, buying airtime wholesale from Cingular and reselling wireless
service, along with its new phone, sometime in the first quarter of
2007.

Other rumors have Apple building a phone with built-in Wi-Fi service
that would allow customers to make calls and download data and music
from the free or cheap Wi-Fi networks proliferating in urban and
suburban settings, bypassing traditional cellular networks. Both
scenarios underscore Jobs' aversion to ceding control to telcos such
as Cingular, Verizon (Charts), T-Mobile and Sprint (Charts), which
exercise huge control over the entire wireless food chain in the U.S.

http://money.cnn.com/2006/12/15/technology/pluggedin_mehta_iphone.fortune/

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 15:09:01 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: An Apple Phone is No Slam-Dunk


An Apple phone is no slam-dunk
The wireless world can be a harsh place. Just ask Sony, says 
Fortune's Stephanie Mehta.

By Stephanie N. Mehta, Fortune senior writer
December 22 2006: 11:31 AM EST

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- A well-regarded computer and
consumer-electronics maker plunges into the competitive wireless
market with a combination music player/cell phone. The company's loyal
users can barely wait to try the new gadget, and analysts predict the
device will deliver on the long-promised marriage of music and
mobility.

We're describing, of course, a phone Sony made for Japan's NTT DoCoMo,
circa 2000. But you'd be forgiven for thinking we were talking about
Apple's rumored wireless phone, which could be launched as early as
next month.

It turns out that Sony's wireless experience is a cautionary tale for
any consumer electronics maker - including Apple - trying to make the
move into the cell phone business. Sony stumbled badly with its music
player/phone, and in May 2001 DoCoMo recalled 40,000 of the handsets
due to software glitches. (One phone reportedly shut down if the user
was listening to music when the phone rang.)

Then, another Japanese operator recalled more than 500,000 Sony
Internet-capable handsets. A few months later, Sony entered a joint
venture with established telecom player Ericsson, in part, executives
of the venture say, to gain much-needed wireless expertise. The
alliance, Sony Ericsson, today is the No. 4 maker of wireless phones,
after Nokia, Motorola and Samsung.

http://money.cnn.com/2006/12/22/technology/pluggedin_mehta_apple_phone.fortune/

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 19:42:36 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection


            A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection
            ===================================================

                 Peter Gutmann, pgut001@cs.auckland.ac.nz
         http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt
                       Last updated 22 December 2006

Executive Summary
-----------------

Windows Vista includes an extensive reworking of core OS elements in
order to provide content protection for so-called "premium content",
typically HD data from Blu-Ray and HD-DVD sources. Providing this
protection incurs considerable costs in terms of system performance,
system stability, technical support overhead, and hardware and
software cost. These issues affect not only users of Vista but the
entire PC industry, since the effects of the protection measures
extend to cover all hardware and software that will ever come into
contact with Vista, even if it's not used directly with Vista (for
example hardware in a Macintosh computer or on a Linux server). This
document analyses the cost involved in Vista's content protection, and
the collateral damage that this incurs throughout the computer
industry.

http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 19:45:30 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: To Catch Rule-Breakers, Schools Look Online


Photos show athletes using alcohol, drugs
By Maria Sacchetti, Globe Staff  |  December 22, 2006

High schools across Massachusetts are threatening to punish athletes
if they are spotted drinking alcohol or using drugs in photos or
videos posted on MySpace , YouTube , or other online sites.

School officials say they are enforcing existing bans on smoking or
drinking, and turning to online sites to catch the rule-breakers. In
at least 20 high schools across the state, principals are warning
athletes that they will punish them for behavior caught online ,
according to the state's secondary school principals group and
athletic association. The two groups estimate that dozens of schools
are using this tactic. Several schools have suspended students from
games.

Woburn High School suspended a handful of athletes from two practices
and one game last spring after police recognized the athletes holding
cans of beer in photographs posted on MySpace. This year, Newton South
High School notified athletes they could be suspended if captured
breaking the rules in photographs or video online.

Schools generally do not punish nonathletes for behavior outside
school, but the 175,000 student athletes in Massachusetts must follow
a code of conduct that bans drug and alcohol use during the season.
The Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association , which governs
school sports, requires schools to, at a minimum, suspend first
offenders for 25 percent of the games and subsequent offenders for 60
percent. Individual schools can set tougher rules, including removing
students from teams or enforcing the rules year-round.

Schools already have been warning students to be careful about what
they post online, but punishing athletes for misdeeds online is a more
aggressive approach.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/12/22/to_catch_rule_breakers_schools_look_online/

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

From: Tom Horsley <tom.horsley@att.net>
Subject: Re: High School Student Charged in Computer Hacking Scheme
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 22:26:21 GMT


On 20 Dec 2006 08:05:32 -0800 hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> Some organizations change their passwords regularly.  This makes it
> hard for people to keep remembering them and IMHO actually makes
> things worse by encouraging written passwords.

In fact, the folks who do the Sarbanes-Oxley auditing seem to
interpret the rules to mean that everyone absolutely must change
passwords with fanatical frequency, thus insuring that every
workstation in every corporate environment in the United States will
have the password stuck to it with an easy to spot yellow sticky note
:-).

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

From: panoptes@iquest.net
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Date: 22 Dec 2006 07:44:18 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


AES wrote:

> Do I have a vague memory that a very early version of Now Contact -- or
> some other Mac application? -- could tone dial to a handset through the
> computer's built-in speaker?

Could you be thinking of Claris Organizer (which definitely has that
capability)?

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 06:16:39 GMT


In message <telecom25.421.6@telecom-digest.org> panoptes@iquest.net
wrote:

> This seems odd, but it would have the advantage that there is no chance
> of a mis-dial.  I wouldn't know whether any such advertiser actually
> bothered.  I'm pretty sure TV audio would have been able to produce
> those dialing tones accurately enough.

TVs certainly could transmit the frequency accurately enough.  However,
whether it would travel across the room and into your handset is
debatable, unless you have your TV cranked way up, or you place the
microphone extremely close.

> Once tone dial was introduced, there certainly was never a requirement
> that the tone generator be connected to the wall by a wire all the
> way.  The Apple Newton had that capability over ten years ago, and I
> remember reports of other portable devices that could dial that way:

>  http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.09/09.11/Nov93Editorial/index.html

And on the more modern side, most Palm devices have sufficient audio
capability to dial a phone held near the PDA ... A whole new dimension
to blueboxing, were the billing loopholes not closed years ago ...
http://www.palmgear.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=software.showsoftware&prodID=47441

Boom.  Boom boom boom.  Boom boom.  BOOM.  Have a nice day.
 -- Susan Ivanova, B5

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

From: davidesan@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Date: 22 Dec 2006 07:47:07 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


HOWARD PIERPONT wrote:

> Dear Mr. Professor, the Exalted One, Pat Townson:

> In the mid 90s I was an active reader of the Digest and my association
> still shows in many Google searches [I worked for Digital Equipment at
> the time]. VAXclusters with food nodes SNAX etc.

> On of the Portland radio folk today mentioned the early 90s and 900
> numbers in his show today. His claim was some television advertisers
> would encourage you to hold the handset to the phone and the broadcast
> the tones and actually dial the 900 number.

> Do I just not remember this or was it never real? I check SNOPES and
> didn't see a reference. Telcomm has so many references, thankfully. I
> figured I'd go to the Master!

> Howard Pierpont
> Retired DEC/Intel
> Hillsboro OR

I remember that the ad would come on TV, and at the end of the ad it
would tell the audience to hold their phones up to the TV and the DTMF
tones would be played and the call would be completed.  But darned if
I can remember what it was for.  At some point I think it was for a
children's product and it got rapidly banned since it was a long
distance (or maybe a 900 call) and how were children supposed to
understand that.  I also vaguely remember it for one of those adult
chat lines ads that came on during the late, late movie.  I would
suspect that this is somewhere in the archives, but the search could
be fairly daunting.

Happy Solstice.

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 12:58:33 -0600
From: Ron Kritzman <ron@dbOnayAmspaYmasters.com>
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?


HOWARD PIERPONT wrote:

> .... His claim was some television advertisers
> would encourage you to hold the handset to the phone and the broadcast
> the tones and actually dial the 900 number ...

In my many years in the answering service and paging business and even
more years in ham radio I've seen it all. Dialing by sound is possible
but not terribly reliable. When there were still a lot of dial phones
around there were hand held boxes that played tones into the phone
mouthpiece to allow you to check your voicemail or send digits to a
pager. The ones that worked the best had nice sized speakers and a
rubber seal. Most of the time the problem was twist. The combination
of the speaker, the mouthpiece and the crummy phone line would make
the two tones arrive at the destination at unequal amplitude. Today's
DSP doesn't care much, but the toroid cores and finicky AGC of those
days couldn't handle much more than a few DB difference between the
tones.

       - Ron

Emoveray ethay Igpay Atinlay otay eplyray

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 03:19:30 -0600
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

> I understand IBM sold off its hard disk drive line recently; I don't
> know why.  Peripherals used to be quite profitable.

Whether there's a connection or not, I don't know.  But they sold the
line to Hitachi shortly after what appeared to be defects in their
60GXP and 75GXP models of drives.  These "DeskStar" drives had become
widely known as "DeathStar" drives, due to drive failures.

Dave

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

Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 11:48:35 -0800
From: Linc Madison <lincmad@suespammers.org>
Organization: Linc Mad dot com


In article <telecom25.422.3@telecom-digest.org>, John Stahl
<aljon@stny.rr.com> wrote:

> But, hey, what about those people who hang a BlueTooth device (it
> emits RF energy, too) on their ear and wear it all day long? A cell
> phone is only used occasionally, brought to the ear then put back on
> the belt or into the purse, or where ever it is stored. What about
> the effects of prolonged RF energy from the BT ear piece in direct
> contact with the ear/head? That will be another "story", won't it?

Actually, no. The cellphone itself has to talk to the cell tower,
which might be several kilometers away; the BlueTooth device only has
to communicate over a range of a couple of meters. Even with 24/7
exposure, you'd need aeons to have detectable effects. The risk is
somewhere up there with being eaten by Martians.

Of course, the real answer to people who worry about the radiation
from their cellphones is to use a wired hands-free kit. If you have
the cellphone at arm's length instead of right next to your skull, the
radiation risk goes from negligible to super-duper-extra-negligible.
Seriously, it's trivial to reduce the cellphone radiation strength
reaching your brain a millionfold or more -- not that the risk at full
strength is anything to worry about to begin with.

Linc Madison * San Francisco, California * Telecom at Linc Mad d0t c0m
URL: < http://www.lincmad.com >  *  North American Area Codes & Splits
Read my political blog, "The Third Path" <http://LincMad.blogspot.com>
US, California, and Washington State laws apply to LINCMAD.COM e-mail.

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

From: Howard Eisenhauer <howarde@REMOVECAPShfx.eastlink.ca>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer 
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 00:48:53 GMT


For a rather complete, if not quite up to date, list of studies, what
they reported and if anyone was able to replicate the results have a
look here:

http://www.mcw.edu/gcrc/cop/cell-phone-health-faq/toc.html

H.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights Sought For Users
Date: 22 Dec 2006 12:03:08 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Monty Solomon wrote:

> By Andrea Estes, Globe Staff  |  December 20, 2006
> Now Michael W. Morrissey, the Senate chairman of the Joint Committee
> on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy, is putting forth
> legislation to impose new regulations on cellular phone companies to
> make them more responsive to consumers.
> In addition, the legislation would allow customers with poor service
> to terminate their contract with their cellphone company without
> having to pay hefty penalties.

Definitely needed.

I suspect the companies have a pretty good idea of how well their
networks actually perform in service.

However, according to the cell phone articles in I&T magazine
(previously posted), a part of the problem is the ever higher consumer
demand for cell phone service and the finite space of radio
frequencies.  The more 'tricks' they do to compress signals and
squeeze in more conversations the more risk there is of trouble.  With
the coded digital transmission on a common frequency, if there happens
to be no available space, the call becomes hung.  (I&T said calls are
interspersed between silent periods of conversations.)

I don't think they anticpated the massive demand for cell phone
service.  It was one thing for business people to get and individuals
to get it "for emergencies".  But now families give a phone to all
their kids, even young ones, and the texting and voice consume
channels.  (Apparently the data (all non-voice) transmissions can be
sent on a delayed basis which makes them easier to accomodate.)

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

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun Dec 24 00:47:37 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #424
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Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 00:47:36 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sun, 24 Dec 2006 00:50:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 424

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Do You Know Your 'Terror Score'? Think You Don't Have One? (Alex Marks)
    OnLine Sites Offer Help for Holiday Grief (Lisa Baertlein, Reuters)
    Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (Sharon Gaudin, CMP)
    AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (AES)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (T)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (mc)
    Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth? (www.Queensbridge.us)
    Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies (T)
    Re: Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights (DevilsPGD)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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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
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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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 21:54:44 -0600
From: Alexandra Marks - Christian Science Monitor <csm@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Do You Know Your 'Terror Score'? Think You Don't Have One?


Dispute over 'terror scores' for airline travelers
Supporters of the federal system say it's necessary in the terror war. 
Privacy advocates aren't persuaded.

By Alexandra Marks | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

NEW YORK -- Do you know your terror score? Think you don't have one?
You may, if you've traveled internationally during the past four
years. And that is generating a growing controversy both in the United
States and abroad.

The Department of Homeland Security's Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) has been quietly assigning travelers, both American and foreign,
on international flights a score that's designed to identify high-risk
travelers. It's derived from a set of criteria, such as where you're
from and whether you have a habit of buying one-way tickets and paying
with cash.

CBP officials call the program, which was implemented with little
public notice and no congressional approval, a crucial tool to protect
the nation. They describe it as a kind of extra electronic border that
has the potential to catch terrorists and criminals before they get to
an actual border crossing.

"Without a system like this, we would in many ways be blind to
potential threats before they arrive," says Jarrod Agen, a DHS
spokesman.

But some congressional leaders, privacy advocates, and travel
executives believe it's an unparalleled use of data-mining to invade
individuals' privacy. Some European leaders also object, claiming the
program - called the Automated Targeting System (ATS) - violates a
privacy agreement worked out between the US and the European Union.

Opponents are calling on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to
suspend the program until privacy concerns can be addressed. They say
the key problem with ATS is that there's no way for individual to
determine that he or she has been flagged. CBP can also share the
information it's collected with other government agencies, other
governments, and even private contractors. And CBP can keep the data
up to 40 years.

"For the first time, a dossier is being built on me and every other
innocent citizen that tracks information on them," says Kevin
Mitchell, chairman of the Business Travel Coalition in Radnor, Pa. "To
add insult to injury ... they say they're keeping the data for 40
years -- just in case Kevin Mitchell -- whose profile is not
threatening at the moment -- has some kind of ties to a terrorist
organization in the future."

The controversy over ATS erupted after privacy advocates at the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) found an obscure notice about it
in the Federal Register last month. In the notice, which is required
under the 1974 Privacy Act, DHS says that its data collection system
"does not identify or create any new collection of information, rather
DHS is providing additional notice and transparency of the
functionality of these systems."

In fact, the data collection system has been in place since the
mid-1990s, says CBP spokesman Pat Jones. It was started as a way to
help interdict drug shipments and smugglers and was carried out by the
Treasury Department. After 9/11, it was enhanced to include potential
terrorists, and it was eventually moved to CBP, according to
Mr. Jones.  "The information that we've got is not invasive. How
someone pays for their plane ticket I don't think is an invasion of
anyone's privacy," he says. "These issues always involve some kind of
a balance."

But privacy advocates contend the issue is far more complex. EFF's
lead counsel, David Sobel, notes that prior to the publication of the
November notice, the only public mention of ATS said that it was used
to target and assess cargo shipments, not people.

"Congress didn't know they were doing this. Even DHS's own inspector
general in a report issued this summer didn't realize they were using
this to target passengers," he says.

The Transportation Security Administration has been trying to put
together a similar data collection system to check air passengers for
years, Mr. Sobel and other privacy advocates note. That system, called
Secure Flight, has been tabled by DHS until privacy concerns raised by
Congress can be addressed.

Mr. Mitchell of the Business Travel Coalition says that while he and
others were testifying before Congress about problems with Secure
Flight, DHS was quietly collecting almost the same kind of
information.  And unlike Secure Flight, which is designed to "ping
data" and then expunge it, the ATS data is saved in a data bank.

"None of us knew this was going on behind our backs," says Mitchell.
"This looks like it was done because [other data-mining systems
failed] and Secure Flight's in trouble."

Some congressional leaders, including Sen. Patrick Leahy (D) of
Vermont, have pledged to hold hearings on ATS. "Databanks like this
are overdue for oversight, and that is going to change in the new
Congress," Senator Leahy said in a statement.

For now, DHS is standing by its program and says it has no plans to
suspend it for further public scrutiny. "You tell [privacy advocates]
when they're able to persuade the bad guys to announce when they're
coming into the country, we won't need a system like this," says Jones
of CBP.

Copyright 2006 Christian Science Publishing Society.

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 Christian Science Monitor, the
New York Times  and National Public Radio, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/nytimes.html

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

Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 23:03:09 -0600
From: Lisa Baertlein, Reuters  <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: OnLine Sites Offer Help for Holiday Grief


By Lisa Baertlein

As excitement over the holidays builds so does the dread for millions
of people grieving loved ones, sparking a rush to Web sites offering
advice on how to cope with what can be a blizzard of emotions.

David Kessler, who co-wrote the book "On Grief and Grieving" with
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, author of the groundbreaking end-of-life book
"On Death and Dying," gets more e-mails this time of the year and said
it's normal to feel a little extra pain and sorrow if someone you love
has died.

"The holidays, since we were children were about togetherness and loss
is the opposite of togetherness," said Kessler, who lists grief
resources and tips on coping with holidays on Web site
http://www.davidkessler.org/html/holidays.html.

For those in the grip of loss, anticipating holidays can be the
fraught with pain and anxiety.

Kessler advises people to accept invitations, to light a candle for
loved ones, to share memories and to talk to friends who listen
without passing judgment or offering advice.

Above all, he encouraged people to remember that there is no right way 
to grieve.

"Grief doesn't take a holiday," Noreen Carrington, director of the
Center for Grief Care and Education at San Diego Hospice, said in a
statement.

Still, she and others said you can take a break from the holidays --
if that's what feels right: "Don't be afraid to make changes this
year.  Sometimes it can be very stressful to keep up with holiday
traditions when a loved one has died. Whatever you choose to do this
year may be different next year, and that's okay."

Cendra Lynn founded the online community http://GriefNet.org, which
operates 24 hours a day and has various support groups.

There are groups for people who have lost a spouse or partner, a
child, a parent, a sibling or a friend, as well as those dealing with
health-related losses or supporting the bereaved. Its site for
children is at http://www.kidsaid.com.

"When we are bereaved we are comforted most by those who have suffered
a similar loss. With them we know we are understood, that we are safe
to experience the multiple aspects of our grief," Lynn said in a note
to users.

In the United States, two to three million people died last
year. About 200,000 people have loved ones who will die during this
holiday season.

"While we are celebrating, they're sitting by a bedside," said Kessler.

For those who will be spending time with people who are dealing with 
loss, Kessler says: "Allow them to grieve. Don't try to cheer them up. 
Know it's a situation that can't be fixed. The greatest gift you can 
give them is your presence."

In its holiday section, http://Bereavement.net reminds people not to
feel guilty if they find themselves enjoying the holiday.

"Having a good time does not mean that you have forgotten your loved 
one," the site 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 news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 23:05:43 -0600
From: Sharon Gaudin <infoweek@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans


By Sharon Gaudin, InformationWeek

A report out of the U.K. contends that in about 50 years, robots will
be given the same rights as humans and even will be expected to vote
and pay taxes.

The report was a team effort of analysts at Outsights, a U.K.-based
management consultancy, and Ipsos Mori, a U.K.-based opinion research
organization. The study was sponsored by the British government.

What will push governments to give rights to inanimate objects or what
are now considered to be pieces of property?

The achievement of artificial intelligence will be critical, according
to the report. "If artificial intelligence is achieved and widely
deployed (or if they can reproduce and improve themselves), calls may
be made for human rights to be extended to robots," the report
notes. "If so, this may be balanced with citizen responsibilities,
like voting and paying taxes."

The report argues that there will be a "monumental shift" in coming
years when robots get to the point where they can reproduce, improve
themselves or gain artificial intelligence. The granting of human-like
rights would then call for robots to be given human-like
responsibilities, as well. The report says they might even have
compulsory military service.

"Humankind could engage in spirited debates as to how humans, animals
and robots rank with respect to rights and responsibilities in our
world," the report states. "Robots with advanced artificial
intelligence could promote the development of schools of thought that
see the human brain as nothing more than a special type of computer."

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 and headlines of interest, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: AES <siegman@stanford.edu>
Subject: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date:  Sat, 23 Dec 2006 16:31:22 -0800
Organization:  Stanford University


Just got several mailings re our AT&T residential service in Palo
Alto/Stanford CA area announcing *big* rate increases on POTS service:
5% to 10% increases on package plans, up to 30% each on a long list of
individual features (Caller ID, Call Waiting, etc. etc).

What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
features)

What's the agenda behind this?

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 00:00:47 -0500


In article <telecom25.423.14@telecom-digest.org>, 
lincmad@suespammers.org says ...

> In article <telecom25.422.3@telecom-digest.org>, John Stahl
> <aljon@stny.rr.com> wrote:

>> But, hey, what about those people who hang a BlueTooth device (it
>> emits RF energy, too) on their ear and wear it all day long? A cell
>> phone is only used occasionally, brought to the ear then put back on
>> the belt or into the purse, or where ever it is stored. What about
>> the effects of prolonged RF energy from the BT ear piece in direct
>> contact with the ear/head? That will be another "story", won't it?

> Actually, no. The cellphone itself has to talk to the cell tower,
> which might be several kilometers away; the BlueTooth device only has
> to communicate over a range of a couple of meters. Even with 24/7
> exposure, you'd need aeons to have detectable effects. The risk is
> somewhere up there with being eaten by Martians.

> Of course, the real answer to people who worry about the radiation
> from their cellphones is to use a wired hands-free kit. If you have
> the cellphone at arm's length instead of right next to your skull, the
> radiation risk goes from negligible to super-duper-extra-negligible.
> Seriously, it's trivial to reduce the cellphone radiation strength
> reaching your brain a millionfold or more -- not that the risk at full
> strength is anything to worry about to begin with.

Power drops at the square of the distance if I'm correct. 

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 16:11:23 GMT


In message <telecom25.423.14@telecom-digest.org> Linc Madison
<lincmad@suespammers.org> wrote:

> Of course, the real answer to people who worry about the radiation
> from their cellphones is to use a wired hands-free kit. If you have
> the cellphone at arm's length instead of right next to your skull, the
> radiation risk goes from negligible to super-duper-extra-negligible.
> Seriously, it's trivial to reduce the cellphone radiation strength
> reaching your brain a millionfold or more -- not that the risk at full
> strength is anything to worry about to begin with.

Of course you'll get some radiation-kooks who say that a wired headset
amplifies rather then reduces the risk as it not only carries the
radiation up to your ear, but it acts like an antenna and picks up
additional radiation and channels it to your ear too.

Personally, I'm waiting for Penn and Teller to take on the cell phone
radiation kooks (And if anyone misses the reference, see
http://www.tv.com/search.php?qs=penn+and+teller&type=11&stype=all )

When you're arguing with a fool, make sure he isn't doing the same thing.

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer 
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 22:28:42 -0500


Howard Eisenhauer <howarde@REMOVECAPShfx.eastlink.ca> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.423.15@telecom-digest.org:

> For a rather complete, if not quite up to date, list of studies, what
> they reported and if anyone was able to replicate the results have a
> look here:

> http://www.mcw.edu/gcrc/cop/cell-phone-health-faq/toc.html

Thanks.

One important factor is that exposure varies tremendously from person
to person.  I use my cell phone an average of maybe 2 minutes per day.
But an increasing number of young people seem to go around with "cell
phone glued to ear" -- in the virtual presence of a distant friend
continuously, not necessarily even talking!  Has anyone else noticed
this?  Even with handheld phones, not just earphones.

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

From: www.Queensbridge.us <NOTvalid@Queensbridge.us>
Subject: Re: Urban Legend or Never Before Heard of Truth?
Date: 22 Dec 2006 20:12:18 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Ron Kritzman wrote:

> HOWARD PIERPONT wrote:
> In my many years in the answering service and paging business and even
> more years in ham radio I've seen it all. Dialing by sound is possible
> but not terribly reliable. When there were still a lot of dial phones
> around there were hand held boxes that played tones into the phone
> mouthpiece to allow you to check your voicemail or send digits to a
> pager.

When staying with relatives out of town, I carry a dialer with
pre-programmed number for my home TADs, important numbers I may want to
call back home, OneSuite access and pin code etc.  I have also
programmed my OneSuite account with relatives home number, so if I call
from there, OneSuite will not ask for PIN when I call access numner.

I don't usually use my cell phone to call back home as I am on a
pre-pay by-the-minute plan and keep my chats down to five dollars a
month.

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Disk Drive Pioneer Al Sugart Dies
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 23:59:20 -0500


In article <telecom25.423.13@telecom-digest.org>, 
dave.garland@wizinfo.com says:

> It was a dark and stormy night when hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

>> I understand IBM sold off its hard disk drive line recently; I don't
>> know why.  Peripherals used to be quite profitable.

> Whether there's a connection or not, I don't know.  But they sold the
> line to Hitachi shortly after what appeared to be defects in their
> 60GXP and 75GXP models of drives.  These "DeskStar" drives had become
> widely known as "DeathStar" drives, due to drive failures.

> Dave

Oh yes, I remember the DeathStar disks. Lost a number of them on
critical machines.

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Bill Would Rein in Cellphone Firms / More Rights Sought For Users
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2006 16:11:24 GMT


In message <telecom25.423.16@telecom-digest.org> hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
wrote:

> I don't think they anticpated the massive demand for cell phone
> service.  It was one thing for business people to get and individuals
> to get it "for emergencies".  But now families give a phone to all
> their kids, even young ones, and the texting and voice consume
> channels.  (Apparently the data (all non-voice) transmissions can be
> sent on a delayed basis which makes them easier to accomodate.)

The big bonus here is that jitter isn't a factor -- Having an
additional 400ms delay on a voice call is extremely disruptive, having
the same on a data transmission is barely noticeable.

This allows a wireless network to accommodate data traffic much easier
then voice, at least until someone starts running VoIP over a cell
phone's data ...

When you're arguing with a fool, make sure he isn't doing the same thing.

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

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Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2006 21:02:35 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 26 Dec 2006 21:05:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 425

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Dash and Treo 680 Have Bargain Prices If You Can Compromise (Monty Solomon)
    Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone (Monty Solomon)
    New Earphone Devices Let You Go Cordless On iPod, Cellphone (Monty Solomon)
    But They Never Say 'Can You Hear Me Now?' (Monty Solomon)
    2006: A Year For M&As (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Cell Phones and Cancer (Dave Garland)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (T)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (Steven J. Sobol)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (Sam Spade)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (Rick Blaine)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (T)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (mc)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 20:15:12 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Dash and Treo 680 Have Bargain Prices, If You Can Compromise


By Walter S. Mossberg

For years, Palm's Treo smart phones have set the standard for
combining a good phone and a great data device into one relatively
small package that also sports a full keyboard for typing email. But
the Treo is being strongly challenged by a bunch of new rivals that
are thinner, lighter and less expensive.

The slender Motorola Q, despite software that is markedly inferior to
that of the Treo 700p, is wooing some users because it is much slimmer
and now can be had for just $99, versus $299 for the Treo.  The Nokia
E62 is about the size of the Q and also costs just $99 these days. The
tiny BlackBerry Pearl is just $199. And Samsung has introduced the
skinny BlackJack for $199, too.

So, this month, Palm is striking back with a lighter, thinner, cheaper
model of its own, the Treo 680, which is being offered by Cingular
Wireless at $199.

Meanwhile, T-Mobile has introduced a new slim, light competitor called
the Dash. It has built-in Wi-Fi wireless networking to supplement the
slower cellphone data network. And it costs just $149.

I've been testing the new Treo and the Dash. Both are OK, but neither
is as good as it could be. The new Treo still has great software, but
it makes some compromises and still fails to match the new competitors
in slimness, lightness or price. The Dash has very nice hardware, but
is hampered by lousy software.

http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/ptech-20061130.html

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

Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 20:02:58 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone


By Walter S. Mossberg and Katherine Boehret

To many of us, the Internet is an essential part of our daily lives,
whether we're communicating by email, chatting via instant messaging
or surfing the Web for research or entertainment. But to some friends
and family who don't own computers or aren't comfortable going online,
the Internet can come off as a club that pulls its users closer
together while causing others to feel left out.

For the analog grandfather who wishes he could see the digital
vacation photos that everyone else in the family emails to one
another, or the beloved aunt who just can't or won't get an email
address, one company thinks it has a solution: turn emails and digital
photos into paper documents, automatically, without a computer.

Presto!

This week, we tested a new service called Presto that works with a
special Hewlett-Packard printer called the Printing Mailbox. After
setup, the user is assigned a Presto.com email address to which
friends and family send text emails or photos. But the owner of this
gadget doesn't need a computer, and never has to go online to retrieve
emails. The Printing Mailbox automatically and periodically dials into
the Internet using a regular phone line, retrieves all messages sent
to it -- including photos -- and prints them out.

Hewlett-Packard Co.'s Printing Mailbox costs $150. The accompanying
Presto service http://www.presto.com from Presto Services Inc. costs
about $10 monthly or $100 annually. The printer doesn't work without
Presto, making it useless if you stop the service.

The Presto plan includes optional free subscriptions to various
articles and puzzles, which print out in addition to any emails that
you receive. You set up and manage the account via a Web site accessed
from a computer, a task intended to be performed on the owner's behalf
by a friend or relative.

http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/solution-20061220.html

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

Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 19:59:44 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: New Earphone Devices Let You Go Cordless On iPods, Cellphones


By Walter S. Mossberg

Wireless earphones are becoming quite common. You often see cellphone
users walking down the street with the alien-like appendages
protruding from an ear. And even in the world of iPods, where the
famous white earbud cord still rules, a half-dozen or more wireless
headphones have been introduced.

But there are problems with going cord-free. In the case of cellphone
wireless headsets, loud street and crowd noises make it hard to hear.
And the wireless iPod headphones have been big, bulky units of
unremarkable audio quality.

Now, some wireless earphones address those problems. For cellphones, a
new wireless headset called Jawbone promises to filter out all that
background noise. For iPods, new wireless earphones called Ety8
promise to bring small size and great sound quality to the wireless
category. Both products use Bluetooth wireless technology to transmit
audio from the device to the ear.

I've been testing these two new products and have found that each
lives up to its claims. Both are advances that have real advantages
over the more standard cord-free competitors. But each also has some
drawbacks that might deter some folks from using them.

http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/ptech-20061221.html

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

Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 13:18:28 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: But They Never Say 'Can You Hear Me Now?'


But they never say 'Can you hear me now?'
Cellphone firms say tests ensure quality, data remain private

By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff  |  December 25, 2006

WESTBOROUGH -- In real life, the "Can you hear me now?" guy never
actually utters the catchphrase.

Instead, Verizon Wireless engineer Marc Lefevre logs 3,000 miles a
month on New England highways while an arsenal of phones in the
backseat makes calls, playing recordings of phrases like, "These days
a chicken leg is a rare dish," while the computer on the other end of
the line analyzes audio quality.

All of the major cellphone carriers use drive tests to find dead
zones, map signal strength, and count dropped calls. And all claim to
offer superior service. Verizon Wireless boasts "the most reliable
wireless network," Cingular Wireless claims "the fewest dropped
calls," and the Sprint Nextel network calls itself "the nation's most
powerful network."

But the copious data gathered by the companies is not available to
consumers, and advertising claims based on studies by third parties
have led to contentious legal battles. Last week, state Senator
Michael W. Morrissey, a Boston Democrat, began a push for more
transparency.

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/12/25/but_they_never_say_can_you_hear_me_now/

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

Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2006 10:26:35 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: 2006: A Year For M&As


USTelecom dailyLead
December 26, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fQngfDtusXiVcOCibuddsUvM


TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* 2006: A year for M&As
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* 2007 to bring heightened competition between telecoms and cable
* Ads to appear on Verizon mobile phones
* Analysis: The rise and rise of Leap Wireless
* SK Telecom to cut mobile Internet rate
* Verizon plans BlackJack-like device
* Net growth poses '07 challenge for media
HOT TOPICS
* CenturyTel to buy Madison River
* Ericsson to acquire Redback Networks
* AT&T offers lower-cost voice packages
* BellSouth reduces price of fastest DSL service
* FCC official won't vote on AT&T-BellSouth merger
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Mobile momentum set to continue
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* FCC ruling may help Verizon's FiOS rollout

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

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

From: Dave Garland <dave.garland@wizinfo.com>
Subject: Re: Cell Phones and Cancer
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 00:41:13 -0600
Organization: Wizard Information


It was a dark and stormy night when T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
wrote:

> Power drops at the square of the distance if I'm correct. 

For a point source, it does.  

For a line source, it drops as the distance.  E.g. the emissions from
a power line.

For a plane source, it doesn't drop at all.  E.g. a source that fills
your field of vision.

I'd expect a cell phone antenna to approximate a point source when
it's at a foot or so distance.  An inch from your head, it probably
drops less rapidly (in the nearby area).

Dave

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 08:46:57 -0500


In article <telecom25.424.4@telecom-digest.org>, siegman@stanford.edu 
says:

> Just got several mailings re our AT&T residential service in Palo
> Alto/Stanford CA area announcing *big* rate increases on POTS service:
> 5% to 10% increases on package plans, up to 30% each on a long list of
> individual features (Caller ID, Call Waiting, etc. etc).

> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
> features)

> What's the agenda behind this?

It sure looks that way. I've heard through the grapevine that Verizon
has lost approximately one third of it's business since 1996. Verizon
is also seeking rate increases and sending out 'come back' offers that
are just short of ridiculous considering what they're offering.

Right now my Vonage unlimited account costs me a total of $33 a month
once all the damned fees are added in. Yes, we pay taxes, E-911, etc.
because the incumbents bitched about it and so now we get to share in
the joy. But the same service from Verizon would cost me $90 a month
so I'll swallow the pill without too much complaint.

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

From: Steven J. Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 19:31:03 UTC
Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com


In article <telecom25.424.4@telecom-digest.org>, AES wrote:

> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
> features)

> What's the agenda behind this?

My guess: the company screwing over people just as they always have.

AT&T has a VoIP service, but they can't just ignore it like they do
POTS.  How much do you think they actually invest in their copper
plant?

Steve Sobol, Professional Geek ** Java/VB/VC/PHP/Perl ** Linux/*BSD/Windows
Victorville, California     PGP:0xE3AE35ED

It's all fun and games until someone starts a bonfire in the living room.

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

From: Sam Spade <Sam@coldmail.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 01:19:41 -0800
Organization: Cox


AES wrote:

> Just got several mailings re our AT&T residential service in Palo
> Alto/Stanford CA area announcing *big* rate increases on POTS service:
> 5% to 10% increases on package plans, up to 30% each on a long list of
> individual features (Caller ID, Call Waiting, etc. etc).

> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
> features)

> What's the agenda behind this?

Those folks run on the same mentality as the Post Office (aka United 
States Postal "Service").  The Postal Service has seen its first class 
mail revenues fail significantly.  So, they raise rates to force 
revenues to remain relatively stable.

Caller ID, for example, is terribly overpriced by the wireline
carriers.  It is part of standard service with wireless and VOIP
service providers.

In the case of California those funny folks called the PUC have hated
Caller ID since its inception (remember, they were the nut cases that
sued the FCC to stop the implementation of Caller ID).  So, if Pacific
Telephone, a unit of AT&T, nay Pacific Bell, nay SBC, nay AT&T wanted
to charge $40 a month for Caller ID, the PUC would approve it.  It is
like a cigerette tax to those folks.

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

From: Rick Blaine <dont@bother.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 07:19:48 -0700
Organization: Rick's Place
Reply-To: dont@bother.com


AES <siegman@stanford.edu> wrote:

> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
> features)

> What's the agenda behind this?

Business 101. In a declining market, you raise prices to preserve
profitability (think cigarettes).

It's not just VOIP -- that's more a future threat. It started with big
minute cell phone plans. While the rate of decline has lessened, all
the wireline carriers are continuing to lose physical lines.

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 08:48:07 -0500


In article <telecom25.424.3@telecom-digest.org>, infoweek@telecom-
digest.org says:

> By Sharon Gaudin, InformationWeek

> A report out of the U.K. contends that in about 50 years, robots will
> be given the same rights as humans and even will be expected to vote
> and pay taxes.

I have no problem with this so long as there is a large red power
switch clearly visible on the back of the robot. That way you can shut
them the hell up when they babble about their so called rights.

Seriously though, what happens when a robot is unemployed? Who pays
its electric bills?

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 10:24:09 -0500


Harumph.  As an artificial intelligence researcher, I don't think
robots are any closer to humanlike consciousness than they were 50
years ago.

Note that the study was done by management and public opinion
consultants, not AI scientists.

What fundamental breakthrough do these people think is on the horizon?
"The achievement of artificial intelligence"?  That's newspaperspeak,
not anything you ever actually hear in the AI research community.  And
it seems to be based on 1950s science(-fiction), the notion that there
is a single, one-dimensional quality called "intelligence" and if you
achieve it, you have something that can think like a human.

There's been tremendous progress in robotics and AI, but it hasn't
been aimed at achieving humanlike consciousness.  Why should it be?
We're building tools, not dolls.  An example of an AI success is
Mapquest automated directions.  Another is computer translation of
human languages.  Not to mention hundreds of machines of all types
that are subtly smarter and safer than they used to be.  Forklifts
that won't run into you, electrocardiographs that issue a tentative
diagnosis ...

Rather than robots, I am much more concerned about ensuring full human
rights for human beings who are conceived by cloning.  Although I
don't approve of it, there are going to be human clones.  They will be
perfectly normal human beings just like the rest of us.
Unfortunately, science fiction and popular culture have set people up
to think of clones as some kind of slaves or sub-human entities with
no rights.

Merry Christmas!

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

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
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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Wed Dec 27 16:08:26 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #426
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Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 16:08:25 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Wed, 27 Dec 2006 16:10:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 426

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Asia Earthquake Damages Cables; Internet, Banks Affected (Reuters NewsWire)
    Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Mark Ward, BBC)
    Analysis: Sprint's Big Bet on WiMAX (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone (mc)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (T)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: But They Never Say 'Can You Hear Me Now?' (Steve Stone)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (T)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (harold@hallikainen.com)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 14:12:41 -0600
From: Reuters News Wire <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Asia Earthquake Damages Cables; Internet and Banks Among Affected


Telecommunications around Asia were severely disrupted on Wednesday
after earthquakes off Taiwan damaged undersea cables, slowing Internet
services and hindering financial transactions, particularly in the
currency market.

International telephone traffic was restricted from some countries and
Internet access slowed to a crawl. Sources working with Asian telecoms
providers said it could take several weeks before all the cables were
repaired.

South Korea's top fixed-line and broadband service provider, KT Corp,
said six submarine cables were knocked out by Tuesday night's
earthquakes.

"Twenty-seven of our customers were hit, including banks and
churches," a KT spokesman said. "It is not known yet when we can fully
restore the services."

The foreign exchange market suffered in Seoul, with trade in the won
extremely slow during the morning.

Some disruption was also reported in the important Tokyo currency
market but the EBS system that handles much dollar/yen trading
appeared to be working.

Global information company Reuters Group Plc said users of its
services in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan had been affected, although
dealing services were restored in Tokyo during the afternoon.

In India, back offices and call centers experienced some difficulty,
but industry officials said the full extent of the problem would not
be known until later in the day when data and voice traffic peaked
during European and U.S. business hours.

The main quake, measured by Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau at
magnitude 6.7 and at magnitude 7.1 by the U.S. Geological Survey,
struck off Taiwan's southern coast at 1226 GMT on Tuesday. Two people
were killed.

STATE SECRET

In China, financial markets worked normally but China
Telecommunications Group, the country's biggest fixed-line telephone
operator and parent of China Telecom Corp., said the Internet had been
badly disrupted.

Phone links and dedicated business lines had also been affected to
some degree, it said.

Officials declined to give further details. "Undersea communications
cables fall in the area of state secrets," said a ministry of
communications official in Beijing.

Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. said its Internet service was
intermittent and international phone calls had been affected. Rival
Globe Telecom said "the entire country's telecom services to the
United States were disrupted."

Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan's biggest telecoms carrier, said two of four
major undersea cables out of Taiwan had been affected, initially
cutting more than half its international telecommunications capacity.

Calls to Southeast Asia were the worst affected, with less than 10
percent getting through at 0500 GMT -- an improvement from the
morning, when less than 2 percent succeeded.

KDDI Corp., Japan's second-largest telecoms company, said
communications along submarine cables out of Japan went through Taiwan
before reaching Southeast Asian countries, which was leading to
disruption, but there were alternative lines.

PCCW, Hong Kong's main fixed-line telecoms provider, said several
undersea cables it part-owned had been damaged. "Data transfer is down
by half," a spokeswoman said.

Singapore Telecommunications (SingTel), Southeast Asia's top phone
company, said traffic was being diverted and repair work was in
progress, adding: "Our submarine cables linking to Europe and the U.S.
are not affected."

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 14:18:18 -0600
From: Mark Ward, BBC <bbc@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree


By Mark Ward, Technology Correspondent, BBC News website  

The tussle between computer security companies trying to protect your
PC and the bad guys that try to compromise it is often characterised
as an arms race.  Sometimes the security companies have the upper hand
as they develop and deploy novel techniques to spot and stop malicious
software of all stripes.

And sometimes, such as in 2006, the bad guys are on top. And nowhere
has this been more apparent than in the realm of that old favourite --
spam.

In the closing months of 2006 spam volumes jumped
enormously. According to e-mail filtering firm Postini, spam volumes
increased by 73% in the three months to December.

"92.6% of all e-mail messages are spam," said Dan Druker, spokesman
for Postini. "That's the highest it's ever been."

Other e-mail security specialists have not reported such big leaps in
junk mail volumes, but all say that they are seeing more spam than
ever before.

Jump in junk

The type of spam being sent has also changed, said Mr Druker. In 2004
only a small percentage of junk mail messages had images in them. Now,
said Mr Druker, the figure is 25%.

"A lot of spam is in the form of images and HTML documents that are
designed to get beyond the filters," he said.

Filters are good at analysing plain text to spot the tell-tale signs
of spam but they struggle if the text is in an image. Techniques are
being developed to help them read images but none are widely deployed
yet.  Spammers are also turning out more variants of their messages
than ever before. This is because tweaking the text in small ways can
help to fool the anti-spam filters and get the messages through.

Dave Marcus, security research and communications manager for McAfee's
Avert Labs, said some of the other reasons behind the rising tide of
junk mail provided a good summary of how the digital underworld had
developed in 2006.

To begin with, he said, the software tools that hi-tech criminals use
to put together spam runs and craft their messages have in the last 12
months got much easier to find and use.

The bad guys have also got a lot better at managing the platform they
use to send junk mail, he said. Increasingly, said Mr. Marcus, junk
mail is routed through home PCs that have been hijacked by viruses or
booby-trapped webpages. Networks of these remotely-controlled
computers, or bots, are called botnets.

"80% of spam is shot out through botnets of some form," said Mr Marcus.

Home help.

Attackers are also getting better at recruiting PCs to botnets and
stopping their owners finding out that their machine has been
compromised and is being used to send out junk mail or malware.

The most popular way of recruiting a PC to a botnet is by getting its
owner to click on the booby-trapped attachment on an e-mail. In a bid
to catch more people out, virus writers are turning out more variants
of their creations.

No longer do they just send out millions of copies of the same virus
or malicious program. This has led to an explosion in the number of
viruses and variants in circulation.

"We are seeing 150-200 new pieces of malware every day," said Mr Marcus.

The creators of the malicious software were pumping out variants, said
Mr Marcus, to defeat anti-virus companies by overwhelming them with
novelties they have to investigate, analyse and warn their customers
about.

Paul King, a senior security advisor for Cisco, said it also showed
said how malicious software was becoming more targeted.

Gone, he said, were the days when millions of e-mail addresses got the
same virus. Now the viruses and trojans are being customised to catch
out as many people in a target organisation as possible.

"There's less focus on what is the top virus," said Mr King, "to be
quite honest it does not really matter because the criminals just do
what works."

The problem for many organisations was spotting threats that only they
are being hit with.

"Those types of threats are not going to be on anyone's radar," he
said.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/technology/6198113.stm

Copyright 2006 BBC.

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 and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/tech-news.html

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 12:04:08 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: Analysis: Sprint's Big Bet on WiMAX


USTelecom dailyLead
December 27, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fRccfDtusXjavpCibuddmUDC

TODAY'S HEADLINES

NEWS OF THE DAY
* Analysis: Sprint's big bet on WiMAX
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon offers FiOS "Experience" at mall
* Level 3 snaps up Savvis' content-delivery network assets
* Essar bids to buy out Hutchison's stake in wireless carrier
* BigBand sets IPO plans in motion
* Sony Ericsson to enter S. Korea handset market in 2007
* Google testing AdSense-like system for Web video
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Wireless technology trends for 2006
* Online sales of handsets rise
* CNET reviews Moto's Rizr Z3

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

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 01:45:10 -0500


Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.425.2@telecom-digest.org:

...

> For the analog grandfather who wishes he could see the digital
> vacation photos that everyone else in the family emails to one
> another, or the beloved aunt who just can't or won't get an email
> address, one company thinks it has a solution: turn emails and digital
> photos into paper documents, automatically, without a computer.

> Presto!

> This week, we tested a new service called Presto that works with a
> special Hewlett-Packard printer called the Printing Mailbox. After
> setup, the user is assigned a Presto.com email address to which
> friends and family send text emails or photos. But the owner of this
> gadget doesn't need a computer, and never has to go online to retrieve
> emails. The Printing Mailbox automatically and periodically dials into
> the Internet using a regular phone line, retrieves all messages sent
> to it -- including photos -- and prints them out.

Won't spam kill this thing immediately?

My legitimate e-mail is outnumbered by spam 10 to 1.  And much of it is 
obnoxious.

Maybe we finally have a corporation with a vested interest in stopping 
spammers.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I was thinking the same thing; and the
folks who use this little printer (instead of a computer) will have to
pay for the paper and the ink it uses. Like yourself, spam here
outnumbers legitimate email, but for me, about 15-20 to 1. My mother
has a device like that; it is called 'Mail Station' but instead of
printing out the mail FIRST, it displays it on a small screen, and
allows you to print it as desired. For the most part, it is immune
to the viri which infects 'regular computers'. The 'mail station' is
a very simple display terminal, but, does it ever get spammed. Over
Christmas, my mother complained that the 'mail station' seemed to be
quite sluggish in receiving her email, and then when it did come out
it was a couple hundred pages of someone's core dump. She said she
guessed she would 'just give up on it'; when I told her that here at
my site, spams in the form of HMTL pages and other gibberish were
the norm rather than the exception. Even on Christmas Day itself,
Spam Assassin here caught several hundred items, another 300-400 items
managed to get through the filters. The BBC writer earlier in this
issue is correct; spam is well into the ninetieth percentile range.
I certainly would not want one of those printers around here, mainly
because who can afford to keep the paper stocked for it.   PAT]

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 08:39:24 -0500


In article <telecom25.425.12@telecom-digest.org>, 
look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address says:

> Harumph.  As an artificial intelligence researcher, I don't think
> robots are any closer to humanlike consciousness than they were 50
> years ago.

> Note that the study was done by management and public opinion
> consultants, not AI scientists.

> What fundamental breakthrough do these people think is on the horizon?
> "The achievement of artificial intelligence"?  That's newspaperspeak,
> not anything you ever actually hear in the AI research community.  And
> it seems to be based on 1950s science(-fiction), the notion that there
> is a single, one-dimensional quality called "intelligence" and if you
> achieve it, you have something that can think like a human.

> There's been tremendous progress in robotics and AI, but it hasn't
> been aimed at achieving humanlike consciousness.  Why should it be?
> We're building tools, not dolls.  An example of an AI success is
> Mapquest automated directions.  Another is computer translation of
> human languages.  Not to mention hundreds of machines of all types
> that are subtly smarter and safer than they used to be.  Forklifts
> that won't run into you, electrocardiographs that issue a tentative
> diagnosis ...

I think what you're classifying as robots are more expert systems.
You're right though, an expert system for example couldn't know about
the missing chain and sign that led to the death of James
Kim. Elsewise it could have warned him about it.

> Rather than robots, I am much more concerned about ensuring full human
> rights for human beings who are conceived by cloning.  Although I
> don't approve of it, there are going to be human clones.  They will be
> perfectly normal human beings just like the rest of us.
> Unfortunately, science fiction and popular culture have set people up
> to think of clones as some kind of slaves or sub-human entities with
> no rights.

I agree, and what most people don't realize is that nature already
creates its own clones. They've been among us forever.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Date: 27 Dec 2006 07:39:10 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Sharon Gaudin wrote:

> A report out of the U.K. contends that in about 50 years, robots will
> be given the same rights as humans and even will be expected to vote
> and pay taxes.

Go back 50 years and look at some of the absurb stuff predicted about
computers (then known as "electronic brains") then never came to pass
nor ever will.

We have learned that while it is easy for computers to automate
repetitive mundane tasks (like doing the payroll), it is far, far
harder to automate subtle human thinking processes.  For example,
companies that use voice recognition to drive automated response
systems are flooded with consumer complaints.

Computers can assist but cannot replace human abstract analytical
observation, thinking, and decision making.  Computers are ALWAYS
locked into the pre-programmed selection; if an observation or
decision is not on the pre-existing list, the computer simply can not
and will not deal with it.  A human is required to handle them.  When
a business automates any process, it will be ok as long as it has a
qualified human on standby for those unexpected unusual situations.
The problem is today companies are so intent on cost-cutting they
leave out the people.

Thus, when I had to call an out of state Blue Cross agency I had
trouble getting through since I was neither their subscriber or
provider; the only two choices on the menu.  It didn't occur to the
programmer to accomodate reciprocal agreements with out of state
agencies.  (And people wonder why I'm a Luddite).

What's funny about predicting future technology is that predictions
not only mess up on what technology can do, they also miss
technologies that do occur.

I doubt in 1967 anyone would've predicted consumers would use Star
Trek's computer diskettes or telephones only 25 years later, for
example, and definitely not dirt cheap.

They did predict widespread computer use, but via simple terminals (a
la Touch Tone phone) to big central computers, not powerful individual
computers.

I don't think anyone predicted telephone long distance "too cheap to
meter" like we have today.  They expected a drop in cost but not so
radical.

The most important issue to remember is that technologies do not occur
in a vacuum.  They require consumer acceptance and a workable business
model.  How many unused Bell Picturephones are sitting in a warehouse?

Public replies please [2]

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

Reply-To: Steve Stone <zzspfleck@citlink.netyy>
From: Steve Stone <zzspfleck@citlink.netzz>
Subject: Re: But They Never Say 'Can You Hear Me Now?'
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 02:21:24 GMT


Monty Solomon quoted the writer saying:

> But the copious data gathered by the companies is not available to
> consumers, and advertising claims based on studies by third parties
> have led to contentious legal battles. Last week, state Senator
> Michael W. Morrissey, a Boston Democrat, began a push for more
> transparency.

The data is available to large business customers who just may sign
multimillion dollar contracts with them if the numbers are right.

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 08:36:54 -0500


In article <telecom25.425.10@telecom-digest.org>, dont@bother.com 
says:

> AES <siegman@stanford.edu> wrote:

>> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
>> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
>> features)

>> What's the agenda behind this?

> Business 101. In a declining market, you raise prices to preserve
> profitability (think cigarettes).

> It's not just VOIP -- that's more a future threat. It started with big
> minute cell phone plans. While the rate of decline has lessened, all
> the wireline carriers are continuing to lose physical lines.

But in both AT&T and Verizon's cases they also have significant cellular 
holdings. I guess they can't comingle the funds between the operating 
units. 

In article <telecom25.425.9@telecom-digest.org>, Sam@coldmail.com
says:

> AES wrote:

>> Just got several mailings re our AT&T residential service in Palo
>> Alto/Stanford CA area announcing *big* rate increases on POTS service:
>> 5% to 10% increases on package plans, up to 30% each on a long list of
>> individual features (Caller ID, Call Waiting, etc. etc).

>> What's going on here?  Response to more and more people shifting to
>> VOIP is to _raise_ their POTS rates?  (especially on automated
>> features)

>> What's the agenda behind this?

> Those folks run on the same mentality as the Post Office (aka United 
> States Postal "Service").  The Postal Service has seen its first class 
> mail revenues fail significantly.  So, they raise rates to force 
> revenues to remain relatively stable.

> Caller ID, for example, is terribly overpriced by the wireline
> carriers.  It is part of standard service with wireless and VOIP
> service providers.

> In the case of California those funny folks called the PUC have hated
> Caller ID since its inception (remember, they were the nut cases that
> sued the FCC to stop the implementation of Caller ID).  So, if Pacific
> Telephone, a unit of AT&T, nay Pacific Bell, nay SBC, nay AT&T wanted
> to charge $40 a month for Caller ID, the PUC would approve it.  It is
> like a cigerette tax to those folks.

The only issue is that caller-ID is mostly useless these days because
there are so many ways to obfuscate ones number. What I find more
amusing is that Bell knew how to do CLID back in 1972. Just took some
time to roll it out.

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

From: harold@hallikainen.com <harold@hallikainen.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: 27 Dec 2006 05:47:06 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


> It sure looks that way. I've heard through the grapevine that Verizon
> has lost approximately one third of it's business since 1996.

I wonder how the move to DSL and Cable Modem has decreased the demand
for lines for modems and fax machines, and the demand for lines for
modem lines (or T-1s) at ISPs? For a while there, there was a
tremendous peak in demand for POTS lines (and POTS minutes). A fair
amount of this was served by CLECs, but I think ILECs handled a fair
amount of it. Between that peak, competing wired services (VoIP over
DSL and Cable Modem), and substitution of cellular for wired, I can see
a drop in demand for POTS. I think the FCC publishes figures on POTS
usage, but have not really looked at them.

Harold

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

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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 #426
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Dec 28 16:46:41 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #427
Message-Id: <20061228214640.946F922A0@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 16:46:40 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 28 Dec 2006 16:50:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 427

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Old Phones Cannot be Activated Anymore (support@sellcom.com)
    Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB (Emily)
    Ad Costs on the Web Are Rising, Perhaps a Bit Irrationally (Monty Solomon)
    Cybercrooks Deliver Trouble / Spam Filters Working Overtime (Monty Solomon)
    Cellphones Know Where Buddies Roam  (Monty Solomon)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (mc)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (Rick Merrill)
    Re: AT&T REsidential Rate Increases? (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (Sam Spade)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (John Levine)
    New Twist in Hutchison Essar Takeover Tussle (USTelecom dailyLead)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: support@sellcom.com
Subject: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 22:59:00 -0500
Organization: www.sellcom.com


We were told by Alltel that they could not re-activate any of our old
phones because they did not have GPS for the E911.  The ones we have
are Motorola V.60 phones not antiques.

They said it is a new Federal law.

So don't plan on using older phones for much of anything.

(I believed 'em so we have a rack of new Razors on the way.)

Older phones that are already activated are grandfathered in but
you can't change the number or anything.


Steve

www.sellcom.com for firewood splitters, ergonomic chairs, 
office phone systems, "non-mov" surge protection, Exabyte, 
CA, Minuteman, Brave Products, Fisch, TMC, Panasonic and more
http://www.phonelabs.biz cellphone docking now here!

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

From: Emily <emilymoberg@hotmail.com>
Subject: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 20:41:00 GMT


Is it true that one MUST use ONLY the EXACT USB charger that comes
with their cell phone? Are USB chargers really not interchangable?

The T-Mobile store told me I could only use their T-Mobile charger for
my new USB based cellphone. After showing me the charger for the
Motorola V195 which is 5.9 volts 375ma, they then opened a desk drawer
and handed me three melted USB chargers, one at 5.0 volts, 750ma;
another at 5.0 volts, 550 ma, and yet another at 5.2 volts 450 ma.

Can we swap these supposedly USB chargers or not?
- Blackberry TCPRIM2ULSSN   5.0vdc 750mA
- Motorola   PSM5037B       5.9vdc 375mA
- Motorola   DCH3-05US-0300 5.0vdc 550mA
- Motorola   FMP5185B       5.2vdc 450mA

Why is Blackberry USB different than Motorola USB which is different in and 
of itself? Can we swap these USB chargers or must we stick to the charger 
that came with the device?

Emily

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 20:20:30 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Ad Costs on the Web Are Rising, but Perhaps a Bit Irrationally


E-COMMERCE REPORT

Ad Costs on the Web Are Rising, but Perhaps a Bit Irrationally

By BOB TEDESCHI
December 25, 2006

MEDIA executives and investors get a pleasant neck ache from watching
the skyward path of online advertising revenues. But for those who
have to pay for advertising, the trend is bringing some anxiety.

Prices for some online advertising are going up, and some retailers
and brand marketers say the big question mark hanging over 2007 is
whether publishers will be so emboldened by a strong advertising
market that they will raise the prices of ads sharply.

"Everybody's excited about online advertising," said Mark Vadon, chief
executive of the online jeweler Blue Nile. "But the rates keep going
up and up and up."

Joanne Bradford, MSN's corporate vice president and chief media
officer, would not specify the extent to which her site will raise
prices next year, but she said that during the last two years "there's
been unbelievable price pressure."

For instance, Ms. Bradford said that for the front pages of some
popular MSN sections, prices rose tenfold. "That settled down quite a
bit, and now we're starting to see price pressure more evenly spread
across the network," she said.

According to Greg Stuart, chief executive of the Interactive
Advertising Bureau, an industry group that represents online media
companies, there are no reliable statistics on average advertising
rates, in part because advertising agencies often negotiate special
rates with publishers and keep those deals close to the vest. "Rates
are going up, but effectiveness is going up too," he said, suggesting
consumers were now more likely to make a purchase or request
additional information than in previous years.

Online advertising revenues are expected to grow by 31 percent to
$16.4 billion this year, according to a report by eMarketer, an
Internet consultancy. That spending represents 6 percent of the
overall advertising market. Revenues for 2007, eMarketer said, would
most likely rise 19 percent, to $19.5 billion.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/25/technology/25ecom.html?ex=1324702800&en=c4cec944363d8c98&ei=5090

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 20:53:15 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Cybercrooks Deliver Trouble / With Spam Filters Working Overtime,


Cybercrooks Deliver Trouble
With Spam Filters Working Overtime, Security Experts See No Letup in '07

By Brian Krebs
washingtonpost.com staff writer
Wednesday, December 27, 2006; D01

It was the year of computing dangerously, and next year could be worse.

That is the assessment of computer security experts, who said 2006 was
marked by an unprecedented spike in junk e-mail and more sophisticated
Internet attacks by cybercrooks.

Few believe 2007 will be any brighter for consumers, who already are
struggling to avoid the clever scams they encounter while banking,
shopping or just surfing online. Experts say online criminals are
growing smarter about hiding personal data they have stolen on the
Internet and are using new methods for attacking computers that are
harder to detect.

"Criminals have gone from trying to hit as many machines as possible
to focusing on techniques that allow them to remain undetected on
infected machines longer," said Vincent Weafer, director of security
response at Symantec, an Internet security firm in Cuptertino, Calif.

One of the best measures of the rise in cybercrime is junk e-mail, or
spam, because much of it is relayed by computers controlled by
Internet criminals, experts said. More than 90 percent of all e-mail
sent online in October was unsolicited junk mail, according to
Postini, an e-mail security firm in San Carlos, Calif. Spam volumes
monitored by Postini rose 73 percent in the past two months as
spammers began embedding their messages in images to evade junk e-mail
filters that search for particular words and phrases. In November,
Postini's spam filters, used by many large companies, blocked 22
billion junk-mail messages, up from about 12 billion in September.

The result is putting pressure on network administrators and corporate
technology departments, because junk mail laden with images typically
requires three times as much storage space and Internet bandwidth as a
text message, said Daniel Druker, Postini's vice president for
marketing.

  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/26/AR2006122600922.html

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 23:51:42 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Cellphones Know Where Buddies Roam / GPS Technology Aiding Social


Cellphones know where buddies roam
GPS technology aiding social lives

By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff  |  December 3, 2006

When Shannon Bullard wants to hang out, she doesn't call her
friends. She uses her phone as a beacon to broadcast a quick text
message about her location: "@ MFA," she reports, when she's not
dancing on Lansdowne Street or relaxing at home in Brookline.

Some people show up, others ping back with their locations, and -- if
a friend of a friend is close by -- Bullard's phone will receive a
message with their photo, name, and a suggestion that they meet.

Within a few minutes, Bullard can instantly pinpoint 25 of her friends
through a form of mobile socializing that is evolving rapidly as GPS
technology becomes standard in more cellphones. A slew of new programs
gives people the option of knowing where their friends are at all
times, helping connections that form in the online world blossom into
new social networks in the real world.

"We're getting more and more invested in these objects we put in our
pockets," said Ted Selker , associate professor in the Media Lab at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who works on developing
social technologies. "The idea of figuring out how to make the
cellphone enhance social engagements is, in some sense, what the phone
is about."

Last week, Boost Mobile, a division of Sprint Nextel Corp. , made its
friend-tracking service Boost loopt available to 4 million customers,
and about 40,000 people nationwide have already signed up, according
to the company. Last month, Helio, a joint venture of SK Telecom and
EarthLink , began offering its competing Buddy Beacon function that
also allows users across the country to track the movement of their
friends on cellphone screens.

"Kids these days and their cellphones -- it's crazy," said Jason Uechi
, 38, who cofounded Mologogo , a year-old software program that can be
downloaded onto a GPS-enabled phone. "It's a part of who you are; it's
part of your personality. It's that kind of leap. The cellphone is
usurping the computer."

Mobile phones are beginning to play an expanded role because the
technology is finally in place. To comply with federal 911
requirements, emergency personnel must be able to locate callers.

Many cellphone companies have met this requirement by building GPS
technology, which pinpoints a user's location by using signals from
satellites, directly into the phone.

http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/articles/2006/12/03/cellphones_know_where_buddies_roam/

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 00:26:58 -0500


T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.426.5@telecom-digest.org:

> In article <telecom25.425.12@telecom-digest.org>,
> look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address says:

>> Harumph.  As an artificial intelligence researcher, I don't think
>> robots are any closer to humanlike consciousness than they were 50
>> years ago.

> I think what you're classifying as robots are more expert systems.

Yes, real robots are even farther from humanlike mental activity than
the examples I gave.

<hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.426.6@telecom-digest.org:

> Sharon Gaudin wrote:

>> A report out of the U.K. contends that in about 50 years, robots will
>> be given the same rights as humans and even will be expected to vote
>> and pay taxes.

> Go back 50 years and look at some of the absurb stuff predicted about
> computers (then known as "electronic brains") then never came to pass
> nor ever will.

And the things that *weren't* predicted, such as word processing, or
CPUs in wristwatches!

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

Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2006 17:18:18 -0500
From: Rick Merrill <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans


mc wrote:

> Harumph.  As an artificial intelligence researcher, I don't think
> robots are any closer to humanlike consciousness than they were 50
> years ago.

> Note that the study was done by management and public opinion
> consultants, not AI scientists.

> What fundamental breakthrough do these people think is on the horizon?
> "The achievement of artificial intelligence"?  That's newspaperspeak,
> not anything you ever actually hear in the AI research community.  And
> it seems to be based on 1950s science(-fiction), the notion that there
> is a single, one-dimensional quality called "intelligence" and if you
> achieve it, you have something that can think like a human.

> There's been tremendous progress in robotics and AI, but it hasn't
> been aimed at achieving humanlike consciousness.  Why should it be?
> We're building tools, not dolls.  An example of an AI success is
> Mapquest automated directions.  Another is computer translation of
> human languages.  Not to mention hundreds of machines of all types
> that are subtly smarter and safer than they used to be.  Forklifts
> that won't run into you, electrocardiographs that issue a tentative
> diagnosis ...

Networked intelligence >> AI?

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: 28 Dec 2006 11:48:41 -0800


T wrote:

> But in both AT&T and Verizon's cases they also have significant cellular
> holdings. I guess they can't comingle the funds between the operating
> units.

On a low level, traditional regulated lines of business must be kept
separate from unregulated lines of business.  Basic plain old telephone
service is still regulated; though many optional features are no
longer.  Wireless is not regulated.

I can't help but suspect that wireless service is quite profitable for
them.

> The only issue is that caller-ID is mostly useless these days because
> there are so many ways to obfuscate ones number. What I find more
> amusing is that Bell knew how to do CLID back in 1972. Just took some
> time to roll it out.

Other than the call block (*67) feature, what other ways are there to
do blur it?

I'm not sure what you mean by "1972".  Automatic Number Identification
was developed far earlier than that (IIRC 1940s).  It was gradually
implemented system wide over the years, though in 1973 I made calls
that still had ONI.  The No. 4 ESS for toll had provisions for TSPS
entry of ONI when necessary.

In any event, having ANI for internal purposes is completely different
than delivering to the subscriber.  ANI in electro-mechanical
exchanges required considerable expensive add-on electronic gear,
which is why ONI survived so long despite the labor costs and fraud
risk.

Having a deliverable CID required not only ESS (impractical
otherwise), but also data trunks between COs so the number would be
transmitted from distant offices.  The data trunking was a completely
new arrangement between offices and took time to implement (as did
ESS).

Lastly, CID required an affordable readout device at the subscriber.
We take cheap electronics for granted these days, but in your year,
1972, such a readout box would've cost easily $150 (mass produced) in
1972 dollars.  Don't forget the microprocessor wasn't widely available
cheaply (wasn't it invented in 1974?)

As a reminder, the cost of providing telephone service--of any
type -- is a big beneficiary of the enormous bang-for-buck change in
electronics.  The telephone network uses massive amounts of
electronics; and in 1972 that stuff was still quite, quite expensive.
To put it another way, how much do you think you'd have to pay for a
1972 computer that could do everything your little Pentium does for
you now?  You'd need a decent sized mini, strong enough to drive fancy
screen graphics.  We're talking $10-20,000 or more in 1972 dollars,
more than a modest house cost in those days.

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

From: Sam Spade <Sam@coldmail.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 07:15:14 -0800
Organization: Cox


T wrote:

>> In the case of California those funny folks called the PUC have hated
>> Caller ID since its inception (remember, they were the nut cases that
>> sued the FCC to stop the implementation of Caller ID).  So, if Pacific
>> Telephone, a unit of AT&T, nay Pacific Bell, nay SBC, nay AT&T wanted
>> to charge $40 a month for Caller ID, the PUC would approve it.  It is
>> like a cigerette tax to those folks.

> The only issue is that caller-ID is mostly useless these days because
> there are so many ways to obfuscate ones number. What I find more
> amusing is that Bell knew how to do CLID back in 1972. Just took some
> time to roll it out.

Thought that is certainly technically possible, my personal experience
has been zero bogus number deliveries.  I suspect that would be true
in the vast majority of residential cases.

And, if we don't recognize the number we don't answer the phone; rather 
let it go to the answering machine.

On balance Caller ID has been very useful to the vast majority of those 
who subscribe to it.

As to CLID in 1972, how would have have been accomplished throughout
the network without CCIS or SS7?  And, if it had been done when CCIS
was in use, it seems it would have tied up a lot of resources.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In order to let it go to the answering
machine or voice mail, one first needs to know *WHO IS CALLING*, and
while my caller ID display is several yards away from where I am
sitting, a cordless phone is right at hand. So, should I get myself
up (brain aneurysms cause some slow downs, you know) or should I just
reach over and pick up the phone?  I guess I could invest in a few 
more caller ID devices, and have one near at hand and in view of 
every phone.   PAT]

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

Date: 27 Dec 2006 21:41:20 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?


> But in both AT&T and Verizon's cases they also have significant
> cellular holdings. I guess they can't comingle the funds between the
> operating units.

Verizon Wireless is owned 55% by Verizon and 45% by Vodafone, so it
really is a separate company even though it is co-marketed with a lot
of Verizon's own products.  I hear Verizon would like to buy the other
45% but Vodafone doesn't want to sell.

Cingular is an LLC that is owned about 2/3 by what is now AT&T and 1/3
by Bellsouth.  If the merger happens, then I presume they will
integrate it in, and I have heard reports that they plan to rename
Cingular to AT&T Wireless. (Presumably this will let them use up all
the old stationery they have lying around from the last great
renaming.)

Nonetheless, both are well placed to weather the shift from landline
to wireless although you wouldn't know it from the way they whine.

R's,

John

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 11:10:54 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: New Twist in Hutchison Essar Takeover Tussle


USTelecom dailyLead
December 28, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fRksfDtusXjczWCibuddpJrE


TODAY'S HEADLINES


NEWS OF THE DAY
* New twist in Hutchison Essar takeover tussle
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Verizon to expand FiOS to apartment market
* AT&T embraces three-screen concept
* Vodafone to launch mobile-TV service in Spain
* Fox to offer downloads of college bowl games
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* India's market for telecom equipment set to triple
* Colombia awards WiMAX licenses
* UpSnap, Sporting News Radio to launch mobile service
* Xchange's top technology trends for 2007
REGULATORY & LEGISLATIVE
* Commentary: Wireline competition for cable is overdue

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

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

End of TELECOM Digest V25 #427
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Thu Dec 28 23:14:08 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 86D1D227B; Thu, 28 Dec 2006 23:14:07 -0500 (EST)
To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #428
Message-Id: <20061229041407.86D1D227B@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 23:14:07 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: R

TELECOM Digest     Thu, 28 Dec 2006 23:15:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 428

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Asia Mostly Back on Line After Earthquake, Access Still Spotty (M Shanley)
    Taiwan Earthquake Shakes Confidence in Underseas Cables (Jon Herskovitz)
    Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business (Anick Jesdanun, AP)
    Search Engine Frustration - Automatic Assumptions (Lisa Hancock)
    Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Dan Lanciani)
    Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore (Steven J. Sobol)
    Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore (nonoise)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (Sam Spade)
    Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB? (DevilsPGD)
    Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool (Emily)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 21:15:02 -0600
From: Mia Shanley, Reuters  <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Asia Mostly Back on Line After Earthquake, But Access Still Spotty


By Mia Shanley

Asia's telecommunications services were partly restored on Thursday
after earthquakes off Taiwan cut undersea cables and knocked millions
of users offline, but with few alternative routes, access was slow and
patchy. Many callers received 'fast busies' or 'no circuits available
now' recordings. 

Telephone traffic was back to normal in some parts of Asia but many
operators in North Asia struggled to get up to full speed a day after
business and home users from Seoul to Sydney were hit by one of the
worst tech disruptions in Asia.

Internet access in many countries had also improved by Thursday
although many customers complained of slow connections. A newspaper
cartoon describing the incident showed a man sitting at his computer,
with whiskers growing on his chin, spider webs and the message, 'World
Wide Wait'.

Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan's top phone company, said it could take up to
three weeks to repair six submarine cables owned by a consortium of
telecoms firms.

Two powerful quakes off Taiwan on Tuesday, one of magnitude 7.1
according to the U.S. Geological Survey, severed the cables.

At least five maintenance ships based in the region are heading for
the waters near southern Taiwan to repair the undersea cables, Hong
Kong's telecoms regulator said.

"In general, it requires about five to seven days to repair the
cables," the regulator said in a statement. "However, due to the
earthquake, the seabed may have been damaged and there may be further
earthquakes that will affect the maintenance work."

The main quake struck off Taiwan's southern coast at 1226 GMT on
Tuesday, killing two people and leading to aftershocks that sparked
chaos on Wednesday. Businesses across the region ground to a halt,
although many said it was fortunate that the breakdown happened in the
middle of the quiet holiday period.

"Voice services to the United States, Japan, Canada, China and
Singapore have been restored as of 1 pm (0500 GMT)," an official at
Chunghwa said.  However, services to Hong Kong remain seriously
disrupted, with only 27.6 percent functioning, while those to
Southeast Asia were about 50 percent.

TRAFFIC DIVERTED

Regional operators scrambled to divert traffic through other lines or
via satellite. But the switch to alternative cables put additional
pressure on Asia's networks, causing slow Internet access and problems
dialing abroad.

KDDI Corp., Japan's second-largest telecoms firm, said that while its
international phone services had switched to alternative routes, about
177 of its corporate network lines remained affected, compared with
290 lines on Wednesday.

NTT Communications, a unit of Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp.,
said in a statement that 87 percent of its 243 corporate data
transmission lines had recovered by mid-morning while some of its
Internet services continued to be slow.

KT Corp., South Korea's top fixed-line and broadband operator, had
restored most of the telephone services but broadband services for
some clients, including banks and the country's foreign ministry,
remained unavailable.

Local media reported that 36 foreign bank branches in South Korea had
been affected.

Sofyan Djalil, Indonesia's information and communications minister,
told a press conference the government would ease its restrictions on
the use of foreign satellite links after serious disruption to the
nation's Internet service.

"A lot of fiber-optic cables are still broken. This affects the entire
area including Indonesia. The effects are mainly seen in the banking
sector, by users of international ATMs and the internet," he said.

Hong Kong's dominant fixed-line and broadband provider PCCW Ltd. said
it would take days to recover lost capacity but did not provide
further details.

SHAKY, BUT BETTER

By Thursday afternoon, business across the tech-savvy region appeared
to be suffering from fewer disruptions. Regional stock markets
continued their strong year-end run after a record close on Wall
Street.

Several Fortune 500 firms in Singapore, Southeast Asia's financial
center, had been hit by the disruption on Wednesday, with Internet
access completely down or slowing to a crawl.

"It's getting better because more traffic is being diverted to other
cables right now," said a spokesman at StarHub, Singapore's
second-largest telecoms firm.

Singapore Telecommunications, Southeast Asia's top phone company, also
said services were progressively being restored, and that it was
working closely with the submarine cable consortium members.

CAT Telecom, Thailand's Internet regulator and sole controller of the
international gateway, said four of its eight optical networks had
been affected, causing its speed to drop by 70 percent. The problem
was expected to continue for seven to 10 days, a spokeswoman said.

Telekom Malaysia said international call services to countries
including Taiwan, Japan, China, Hong Kong, South Korea and the United
States had been affected but that it was working closely with other
Asian telecoms firms on the repairs.

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 21:21:14 -0600
From: Jon Herskovitz & Rhee So-eui <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Taiwan Earthquake Shakes Confidence in Underseas Cables 


By Jon Herskovitz and Rhee So-eui
 
The earthquakes that hit Taiwan on Tuesday rocked communications in
Asia and underscored the vulnerabilities of a system where huge
amounts of data speed through the region in cables laid deep beneath
the sea.

Banks and brokerages from Seoul to Sydney were affected by the outage,
with analysts saying that even though a single glitch can trigger
global problems, there is little choice but to rely on this underwater
network.

"Right now, there's no other network that can compete with submarine 
fiber-optic cables in terms of reliability," said Jin Chang-whan, an 
analyst at CJ Investment & Securities in Seoul.

The cables, which for the most part lie unprotected on the ocean
floor, can be damaged by ship anchors, fish nets that scrape the sea
bottom and even in one case, sharks that gnawed on a line apparently
due to its electromagnetic pulse, said policy think tank Rand
Corporation (www.rand.org) in a recent report.

The report predicted troubles in Taiwan could lead to major
disruptions because it would be difficult to reroute data overland on
the island.

Experts said there should be few problems in the cable systems as long
as there are backup routes and carriers can cooperate in times of
crisis.

Analysts said the disruption showed that most of the region's cable
networks run along earthquake-prone geographic zones.

"People will start to say we can't let this happen again," said Frank
Dzubeck, president of Washington D.C.-based telecoms consultancy
Communications Networks Architects.

"The issue here is parallelism. You've really got to have multiple
paths. You can't lay all the cables in the same place."

Dzubeck added that the Internet bust in 2001 had hit expensive plans
by various companies to lay undersea cables along new paths that were
less likely to be affected by earthquakes.

Earthquakes occur frequently around Taiwan and Japan, which lie on a
seismically active stretch of the Pacific basin.

Undersea fiber-optic cables account for more than 95 percent of
international telecommunications thanks to their strength, capacity
and connection quality, according to South Korean provider KT
Submarine Corp.

One alternative would be satellites, which are costlier and do not
provide as much capacity or quality of transmission as fiber-optic
cables, analysts said.

Just last week, Verizon Communications Inc. and five Asian companies
agreed to invest $500 million to build a new cable network to directly
link China and the United States.

BETTER THAN PIGEONS

Submarine cables have been around for about 150 years, with the some
of the first lines being a well-insulated copper wire running under
the English Channel. One alternative used at the time to transmit data
was the carrier pigeon.

Now the cables hold a mass of tightly packed, flexible glass lines
that can handle millions of telephone calls, which means that any
damage can lead to major disruptions.

A country such as South Korea, the world's 11th largest economy, has
10 main undersea cables connecting it to the world, said KT Corp., the
country's top fixed-line and broadband service provider. Seven of them
were damaged by the quake.

India was highly vulnerable from damage to undersea cable links
because it receives 80 percent to 90 percent of its bandwidth from the
undersea network, industry officials said.

And neighboring Pakistan's sole undersea fiber-optic cable link with
the outside world developed a serious fault in June 2005, virtually
crippling data feeds, including the Internet, for 11 days.

"Internet service providers should think like bus companies," said
Mohamed Shahril Tarmizi, executive director at Malaysian technology
consulting company BinaFikir.

"Instead of using just one route to get to a destination, it's more
useful to have many routes."

(With additional reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee in Bangalore, Niluksi
Koswanage in Kuala Lumpor, Baker Li in Taipei, Sachi Izumi in Tokyo
and Yinka Adegoke 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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/internet-news.html

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 21:25:11 -0600
From: Anick Jesdanun, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business


Anti-spam tool ceases as spammers evolve 
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

The Open Relay Database, a tool e-mail service providers used for
years to help curb the spread of spam, is ceasing operations, a death
partly attributable to its own success. It was 5.

For years, spammers exploited e-mail servers with open relays -- those 
that accept mail from anywhere for relaying to anywhere else -- to pass 
along their junk pitches.

Service providers responded by using lists like the ORDB to block all 
mail -- including legitimate messages -- passing through open-relay 
servers, in turn pressuring operators of such relays to accept outbound 
mail only from their own customers.

Mail-server software also has been shipping with the relays closed by
default, such that open relays aren't as big of a threat today. These
days, spammers instead use zombie computers, generally home computers
taken over by viruses and other malicious software to relay spam such
that messages appear to come from legitimate customers.

"ORDB was a holdover from the past era when open relays were a major
vector for spam," said John Levine, co-author of "Fighting Spam for
Dummies." "Now the vast majority of spam is sent by virus-controlled
zombie computers. There's way more of them (than) there ever were
open relays."

Lists that target zombies as well, such as one from the Spamhaus
Project, have in recent times been more effective, Levine said.

The number of open relays listed at ORDB dropped in late 2004 and has
largely leveled off at about 225,000 servers since then.

The Danish volunteers who ran ORDB ultimately decided to shut down the
project rather than expand it to include zombies -- something that
would have taken a lot more work without adding much to resources
already available from Spamhaus and elsewhere, said Andreas Plesner
Jacobsen, one of the database's operators.

The decision was made a year ago, "but nobody got around to executing
it," he said Wednesday.

Jacobsen added that so few rely solely on ORDB to fight spam these
days that people shouldn't suddenly see more junk in their inboxes.

In a Dec. 18 farewell note, the database's operators said open-relay
lists "are no longer the most effective way of preventing spam from
entering your network as spammers have changed tactics in recent
years, as have the anti-spam community."

Operators plan to shut down the Web site on Sunday.

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

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Search Engine Frustration - Automatic Assumptions
Date: 28 Dec 2006 08:09:59 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


I had two experiences of frustration with search engines, in which they
wouldn't do what I wanted.

The first was a Proquest (a newspaper archive) search on the word
"supporter".  Proquest searched for that word, but also included a
synonym word "booster".  The use of "booster" generated a great many
hits, too many to wade through and not what I was looking for.

The second was Google Usenet in seeking the reference "90%".  It
dropped the "%" character and gave me all references to "90" which
also gave a great many hits, too many to wade through.

In both examples I couldn't find any way to override.

As computers have become more advanced and used by untrained
individuals, software intentionally has assists such as this built in.
For example, MS Word will automatically convert as you type 1/2 to 
(the one-half character, ascii 171).

But as illustrated above, sometimes we don't want substitutions, we
want exactly what we're looking for.

As a technical writer I often use technical acronyms.  It is
frustrating and irritating when typing to have software automatically
"correct" things to something I don't want.  I eventually figured out
how to turn off the auto correct, but it was annoying.  When I got a
new release of the software, I had to learn new options and figure it
out all over again.  This is not productivity, but a hinderance.
Before I resolve this, I was so frustrated I turned off the PC and used
a plain typewriter for my writeup.  (I am worried about Vista which is
supposed to be very different).

The lesson for those who design such software is to be real careful
when you start assuming what your users really are seeking.  Some auto
fixes are ok, but there should always be an EASY option to use a
literal as a literal.

Back in the 1960s auto makers built cars with lots of chrome,
wraparound glass, and little gadgets.  They were desperate to add
glitz and glamour to sell more cars.  The curve glass actually made
visibility worse, the chrome would fall off or cause sun glare, and
the gadgets would soon break and be worthless.  The industry ended up
under nasty attack (Ralph Nader's book).

This is a lesson for today's software and hardware industry.  You sure
don't want an articulate critic writing a popular book "Unsafe at any
speed" about computers.  The youngers who develop this stuff are too
young to remember the attacks on autos.  Further, as computerization
increased in the 1960s, many people resented being reduced to a punch
card "do not fold staple or mutilate"; popular writers criticized
computers.

[public replies, please]

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 15:54:57 EST
From: Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com>
Subject: Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree


bbc@telecom-digest.org (Mark Ward, BBC) wrote:

> The type of spam being sent has also changed, said Mr Druker. In 2004
> only a small percentage of junk mail messages had images in them. Now,
> said Mr Druker, the figure is 25%.

> "A lot of spam is in the form of images and HTML documents that are
> designed to get beyond the filters," he said.

> Filters are good at analysing plain text to spot the tell-tale signs
> of spam but they struggle if the text is in an image. Techniques are
> being developed to help them read images but none are widely deployed
> yet.

Interesting.  I assume that a message with an image from someone I
don't know is likely spam and bounce it with an appropriate error.  Is
the use of images with text in anything _but_ spam common enough that
learning to read them is important?

Dan Lanciani
ddl@danlan.*com

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What about when someone emails a
screen-scraping to you of an html page (that you may have requested)?
Chances are likely there will be .jpg or .gif files on that page with
some text in them. You cannot really risk throwing it all away unseen.
PAT]

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

From: Steven J. Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net>
Subject: Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 22:47:55 UTC
Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com


In article <telecom25.427.1@telecom-digest.org>, support@sellcom.com wrote:

> We were told by Alltel that they could not re-activate any of our old
> phones because they did not have GPS for the E911.  The ones we have
> are Motorola V.60 phones not antiques.

> They said it is a new Federal law.

That's correct. It's been a federal requirement for a while now.

Steve Sobol, Professional Geek ** Java/VB/VC/PHP/Perl ** Linux/*BSD/Windows
Victorville, California     PGP:0xE3AE35ED

It's all fun and games until someone starts a bonfire in the living room.

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 19:26:41 -0500
From: nonoise <william_warren_nonoise\@speakeasy.net>
Subject: Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore


support@sellcom.com wrote:

> We were told by Alltel that they could not re-activate any of our old
> phones because they did not have GPS for the E911.  The ones we have
> are Motorola V.60 phones not antiques.

> They said it is a new Federal law.

> So don't plan on using older phones for much of anything.

> (I believed 'em so we have a rack of new Razors on the way.)

> Older phones that are already activated are grandfathered in but
> you can't change the number or anything.

The law they mentioned required cellular providers to update to the
"E911" system, i.e., it requires that your cell company deliver
location information to the E911 center when you call 911. Some
Cellular providers, such as Verizon, chose to externalize the costs of
providing location service for mobile phones by making their customers
buy GPS-equipped products, while others used a tower-based technology
which doesn't require any changes to the phones.

The question of what that says about certain providers and their 
attitudes toward their customers is left as an exercise for the reader.

You may either switch to another provider that doesn't use the
GPS-based tech, or donate the phones for use by charitable
organizations.

William

    A little learning is a dang'rous thing;
    Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring;
    There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
    And drinking largely sobers us again.
                      -- Alexander Pope, Essay on Criticism

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

From: Sam Spade <Sam@coldmail.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 16:29:58 -0800
Organization: Cox


Sam Spade wrote:

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: In order to let it go to the answering
> machine or voice mail, one first needs to know *WHO IS CALLING*, and
> while my caller ID display is several yards away from where I am
> sitting, a cordless phone is right at hand. So, should I get myself
> up (brain aneurysms cause some slow downs, you know) or should I just
> reach over and pick up the phone?  I guess I could invest in a few 
> more caller ID devices, and have one near at hand and in view of 
> every phone.   PAT]

The area where we spend most of our time has NORTEL 9516s; i.e., talking 
and visual CID. ;-)

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: That's not a bad idea. I should look
into getting one or two of those devices. As I think about it now, it
seems to me Radio Shack has a Caller ID product like that.  PAT]

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 01:46:56 GMT


In message <telecom25.427.2@telecom-digest.org> Emily
<emilymoberg@hotmail.com> wrote:

> Is it true that one MUST use ONLY the EXACT USB charger that comes
> with their cell phone? Are USB chargers really not interchangable?

> The T-Mobile store told me I could only use their T-Mobile charger for
> my new USB based cellphone. After showing me the charger for the
> Motorola V195 which is 5.9 volts 375ma, they then opened a desk drawer
> and handed me three melted USB chargers, one at 5.0 volts, 750ma;
> another at 5.0 volts, 550 ma, and yet another at 5.2 volts 450 ma.

> Can we swap these supposedly USB chargers or not?
> - Blackberry TCPRIM2ULSSN   5.0vdc 750mA
> - Motorola   PSM5037B       5.9vdc 375mA
> - Motorola   DCH3-05US-0300 5.0vdc 550mA
> - Motorola   FMP5185B       5.2vdc 450mA

> Why is Blackberry USB different than Motorola USB which is different in and 
> of itself? Can we swap these USB chargers or must we stick to the charger 
> that came with the device?

The problem is that many devices draw more current then the USB spec
permits, so unless the device can communicate with the PC to get
permission to use more power, the device won't charge.

In order for this to work the device needs to identify it's charger
separately from a PC.

Depending on the device design, the chargers may or may not be
interchangeable.  I'm currently charging my girlfriend's Blackberry on
a Motorola USB charger I purchased for my Razr.

One can't make an omelette without breaking eggs, but it's amazing
how many eggs one can break without making a decent omelette.

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

From: Emily <emilymoberg@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 02:53:32 GMT


On Mon, 04 Dec 2006 04:48:38 -0000, ellis@no.spam wrote:

> I wondered how long it'd take for that to start happening.  Will the
> criminals catch on and start taking the batteries out of their phones?

Can the FBI remotely power the phone even without the batteries being in?

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

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecomm-
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******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec 29 17:24:40 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #429
Message-Id: <20061229222439.02AAE2283@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:24:39 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:25:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 429

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    Asia Mends Data Cables, Plans Aternative Routings (Jon Herskovitz)
    It May Happen This Year; AT&T Offers New Concessions to Prompt Merger (AP)
    AT&T Makes New Offer on BellSouth Deal (USTelecom dailyLead)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (mc)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans(Scott Dorsey)
    Re: Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone (Henry)
    Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB? (Emily)
    Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases? (gb)
    Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool (mc)
    Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business (Gordon S. Hlavenka)
    Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Herb Oxley)
    Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Danny Burstein)
    Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Tom Horsley)
    Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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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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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 14:35:08 -0600
From: Jon Herskovitz, Reuters <reuters@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Asia Mends Data Cables, Plans Aternative Routings


By Jon Herskovitz

Ships set sail on Friday to mend cables damaged by earthquakes off
Taiwan that cut communication in Asia, while companies found new
routes for their data to flow to prevent another disruption.

Service was back to normal on the last business day of the year with
telecoms companies securing new routes via land and satellite to
restore communication -- ending outages that affected banks and
brokerages from Seoul to Sydney.

In the wake of the crisis, many were wondering how to keep
communication flowing in a world where submarine cables are the
lifeblood of telecommunications and where one glitch can cause global
problems.

Communications companies said it might be time to bolster an undersea
network that was built during the telecoms boom of the late 1990s but
where construction has since mostly been dormant.

Financial service companies said they would start the new year by
tweaking their contingency plans with the lessons learned from the
outage.

An official at KT Corp., South Korea's top fixed line and broadband
provider, said construction of submarine cable lines had mostly
stalled since about 2000 when the air starting leaking out of the
telecoms bubble.

"Since then there had been little need to build more, until recently,"
the official said, adding that a new line would be built to connect a
booming China with the United States, and this could pave the way for
renewed construction.

While some telecoms firms are considering laying more of the cables
that bunch masses of thin, flexible glass fibers, the process is
costly and requires international cooperation.

Standard Chartered said in a research note the quake had revealed the
increased fragility of financial markets in Asia, where economies rely
heavily on technology and Internet firms to spur growth.

"Losses in telecoms revenue are estimated at hundreds of million of
dollars, depending on how quickly the cables are repaired and normal
traffic restored," it said.

"All in all, the impact should be low, but the risks nevertheless
warrant attention."

Analysts said the disruption had brought increased attention to the
dangers in the region where cable networks run in the same direction,
along earthquake-prone geographic lines.

Telecom operators dispatched or will soon send ships to repair the
cables, with estimates saying they could be fixed in two to three
weeks.

A banking source in Asia saw no major financial firms dumping their
current providers because of the troubles offshore from Taiwan or any
other drastic changes.

"All the banks have contingency plans. You can't help it if a cable
snaps," the source said. "But we are all going to be reviewing our
plans."

(With additional reporting by Rhee So-eui in Seoul)

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, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 14:55:31 -0600
From: John Dunbar, AP <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: It May Happen This Year; AT&T Offers New Concessions to Prompt Merger


By JOHN DUNBAR, Associated Press Writer

While much of Washington enjoyed a holiday break, lawyers for AT&T
Inc. and the government worked marathon hours to forge an agreement
that would allow the company to complete its $85 billion purchase of
BellSouth Corp.

The proposed deal could lead to the largest telecommunications merger
in U.S. history.

AT&T on Thursday night put forth what is expected to be its last and
best offer, and it appeared it was good enough to lead to a vote on
the merger by the Federal Communications Commission as early as
Friday.

AT&T has offered concessions beyond what it had promised in October, 
including a significant pledge to observe standards regarding network 
neutrality -- basically, equal treatment for all Internet traffic. This 
issue appeared to be the biggest roadblock to a deal.

Among the other concessions were an offer of affordable stand-alone
digital subscriber line service and a pledge to "repatriate" 3,000
jobs that had been outsourced by BellSouth.

Final approval requires a vote of the commissioners. An open meeting is 
not required; rules allow them to vote via computer.

AT&T offered the concessions after a little more than a week of marathon 
negotiations with lawyers who work for the commission's two Democrats, 
Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein, documents show.

Consumer advocates praised the compromise.

Gene Kimmelman, vice president of federal and international affairs
for Consumers Union, who has worked closely with the Democrats, said
AT&T's new concessions are "an enormous improvement from where we were
a month ago."

Ben Scott, legislative director for Free Press, a reform group that
has fought the merger, said the network neutrality provision was a
"big step forward for the supporters of an open Internet."

The agreement came together 10 days after Republican Commissioner
Robert McDowell announced he would not vote on the deal, despite being
authorized to do so by the FCC's general counsel.

McDowell had decided to recuse himself because of his former position
as a lobbyist for Comptel, a trade organization that opposes the
merger.

FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, a Republican, who supported approval of the
merger without conditions, had bet that McDowell would vote for the
deal following the legal opinion and break a 2-2 partisan deadlock.

But with McDowell's firm declaration that he would not vote, the
pressure shifted to AT&T, which had hoped to close the transaction by
the end of the year. The development put the two Democrats in a much
stronger position.

In an effort to get the merger approved, AT&T submitted a set of
concessions on Oct. 13, but the Democrats rejected them as
insufficient.

AT&T's letter of commitment, written by Robert W. Quinn Jr., the
company's senior vice president for regulatory affairs, noted that the
new concessions were "significantly more extensive than those
submitted on Oct. 13."

Among the promises made by the company:

_An offer of stand-alone, high-speed Internet service to customers in
its service area for $19.95 per month for a total of 30 months. The
"naked DSL (digital subscriber line)" offer would allow those who live
in AT&T and BellSouth's service areas to sign up for fast Internet
access without being required to buy a package of other services.

_A greater commitment to network neutrality, or nondiscrimination
involving Internet traffic. AT&T said it would "maintain a neutral
network and neutral routing in its wireline broadband Internet access
service" for two years.

_To freeze rates for "special access" customers, usually competitors
and large businesses that pay to connect directly to a regional phone
company's central office via a dedicated fiber optic line, for 48
months.

_To "assign and/or transfer to an unaffiliated third party" all of its
2.5 GHZ spectrum currently licensed to BellSouth within one year of
the merger closing date.

_To "repatriate" 3,000 jobs that were outsourced by BellSouth outside
the U.S. by Dec. 31, 2008, with at least 200 of them to be located in
New Orleans.

The Justice Department on Oct. 11 approved creation of the new
telecommunications giant without conditions.

The combination of San Antonio-based AT&T and Atlanta-based BellSouth
would have operations in 22 states. AT&T estimates that about 10,000
jobs would be phased out over three years.

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

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 10:37:27 CST
From: USTelecom dailyLead <ustelecom@dailylead.com>
Subject: AT&T Makes New Offer on BellSouth Deal


USTelecom dailyLead
December 29, 2006
http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fScofDtusXjfkDCibuddDkRi

TODAY'S HEADLINES


NEWS OF THE DAY
* AT&T makes new offer on BellSouth deal
BUSINESS & INDUSTRY WATCH
* Buyout firms have Alltel's number
* Sprint may pick Nokia as WiMAX gear supplier
* Cingular forecasts 500 billion minutes of use
* Sprint not only distributes, but also creates, TV content
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS
* Analysis: Carriers must focus on quality amid new technologies
* China's phone users reach 830 million
* Short message codes aren't just for youth anymore
VOIP DOWNLOAD
* Enterprises turn to VoIP
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.smartbrief.com/resp/fScofDtusXjfkDCibuddDkRi

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Date: 29 Dec 2006 16:56:17 -0500
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


If a system passes the Turing test, does it deserve the same rights as
a human being?

If so, what about people who do not pass the Turing test?  Do they
deserve the rights they currently have?

As Eliza always said, "Tell me more about the Turing test."
--scott

"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 00:23:22 -0500


"Rick Merrill" <rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.427.7@telecom-digest.org:

> mc wrote:

>> There's been tremendous progress in robotics and AI, but it hasn't
>> been aimed at achieving humanlike consciousness.  Why should it be?
>> We're building tools, not dolls.

> Networked intelligence >> AI?

No closer to "unlocking the secret of consciousness," and anyhow, we're 
building tools, not dolls.

The human brian is not a Von Neumann CPU, but it is also not an Ethernet.

As Weizenbaum pointed out with ELIZA in 1966, it's easy to build
machines that fool people into thinking the machines are conscious.
But that's just fooling around.

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

Subject: Re: Emailing to a Computer-Free Zone
From: henry999@eircom.net (Henry)
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 07:47:58 +0200
Organization: Saunalahti Customer


mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote:

> Won't spam kill this thing immediately?

> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I was thinking the same thing; 
 ....

> I certainly would not want one of those printers around here, mainly
> because who can afford to keep the paper stocked for it.   PAT]

Erm ... no.

In the original article (follow the link), it explained that this device

"... will receive messages only from those whose names and emails
are added to a list so as to prevent spam or unwanted email."

cheers,

Henry

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

From: Emily <emilymoberg@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 08:01:08 GMT


On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 01:46:56 GMT, DevilsPGD wrote:

> Depending on the device design, the chargers may or may not be
> interchangeable.  I'm currently charging my girlfriend's Blackberry on
> a Motorola USB charger I purchased for my Razr.

Hi DevilsPGD,

The part of your statement that gets me is the part that says U S B.
If it's USB, then it should be USB. Right?

For example, like you, I also have a Blackberry and a Motorola Razr.

Here is a pairing of USB DEVICE requirements with the USB POWER
SUPPLY capabilities:
DEVICE = Blackberry 8700  SUPPLY = TCPRIM2ULSSN   5.0vdc 750mA
DEVICE = Motorola V195    SUPPLY = PSM5037B       5.9vdc 375mA
DEVICE = Motorola RAZR    SUPPLY = DCH3-05US-0300 5.0vdc 550mA
DEVICE = Motorola Earbud  SUPPLY = FMP5185B       5.2vdc 450mA

Can I "assume" if I hook the Motorola V195's USB power supply (5.9vdc
375mA) to the Blackberry 8700 device, that the Blackberry will be getting
more voltage than it 'expected' and that the current it will try to suck
out of the charger will be more than expected (due to the higher voltage),
yet the current the power supply can supply will be half of what it
expected (due to the 375 mA limitation of the power supply).

If this is true, this implies that USB chargers are NOT interchangable!
(The T-Mobile store clerks just might have been right.)

But, what irks me is they all have the SAME CONNECTIONS!
They all "LOOK" the same to me!

Does EVERYONE label all their USB chargers so they don't mix them up?
Or am I missing something fundamental here.  If it says it's a USB
charger, but that we can't use them interchangably, then are they
REALLY USB power supplies?

I'm still confused on the fact that the charger advertises it is USB but
it's not USB if it doesn't fit all USB devices. 

Can someone clear up the USB part of the confusion here?
Emily


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Actually, Emily, they do _not_ all
'look the same' or 'have the same connections'. If you look closely at
the pin from the power supply unit to the unit, you will see that many
of them _do_ look a lot alike, but the tip will have a different
colored ring on the bottom; and usually the sleeve is a bit too large
or a bit too small to fit into the entrance of the unit being powered.
I think the street parlance for those little differences is to make
the units 'idiot-proof' against people who would otherwise pick up the
incorrect power supply to use with one external device or another. I
have three cellular phones here; and three external power supplies to
use with them. Not one of the three power supplies will work with the
other two phones. Or maybe they would if I was able to trim down the
sleeve a wee bit, or expand the hole (being plugged into) a wee bit,
but I am unwilling to be patient enough to work with those microscopic
little things. Regards the varying degrees of power supplied, I do
not think there is any 'standard' for USB. PAT]

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

From: gb <georgeb944@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T Residential Rate Increases?
Date: 29 Dec 2006 04:38:04 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Strangely enough, on ATT CallVantage (their VOIP service), they have
lowered their rates for the unlimited plan.

What used to be $29.95 is now $24.95.  The funny thing is that they
didn't make the announcement to existing customers, so an existing
customer has to change the plan to get the lower price, otherwise it
stays at the higher price.

New customers are only offered the lower price.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Be grateful all you have to do is close 
one plan and open a new one to get the reduced price. In my instance
here, CableOne talks all day long on television about 'the new reduced
rates' for cable television subscribers, about ten dollars per month
less than what I pay. I asked at the local office here on Penn Street
and the lady told me I would have to disconnect my cable and _stay
disconnected for ninety days_ then reapply as a 'new' customer to get
the 'new customer' special deals.  PAT]

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 00:20:14 -0500


Emily <emilymoberg@hotmail.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.428.10@telecom-digest.org:

> On Mon, 04 Dec 2006 04:48:38 -0000, ellis@no.spam wrote:

>> I wondered how long it'd take for that to start happening.  Will the
>> criminals catch on and start taking the batteries out of their phones?

> Can the FBI remotely power the phone even without the batteries being in?

Not without *some* kind of batteries.  They might hide something inside so 
the externally visible battery could be removed, I suppose.

This reminds me of an old Sun Workstation eavesdropping trick, back when 
soundcards were new.  Every Sun had a soundcard and a microphone.  But every 
Sun ran multi-user UNIX.  So you log on remotely, record a sound file, 
download it, and play it.  (Or, if more clever, stream it to yourself in 
real time.)  And so you hear whatever is going on in the room where the 
computer is.

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

Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 23:52:06 -0600
From: Gordon S. Hlavenka <nospam@crashelex.com>
Reply-To: nospam@crashelex.com
Organization: Crash Electronics
Subject: Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business


Anick Jesdanun wrote:

> The Open Relay Database, a tool e-mail service providers used for
> years to help curb the spread of spam, is ceasing operations

 ... And good riddance too.

ORDB and various blackhole databases have been the bane of my email 
existence since they were invented.  Much as I hate spam (and I do) I 
hate having strangers filter my email even more.

Many times I have had emails I sent bounced, just because someone else
at my ISP had an open relay or was infected with something, or perhaps
was actually evil.  But why is that _my_ problem?  Yet these lists
make it my problem; I get my emails bounced back, through no fault of
my own.  I don't choose my IP address, nor do I choose my IP
neighbors.

And it breaks in the other direction, too -- emails sent to me may
simply never arrive, just because some sanctimonious so-and-so decided
to "fix" spam.  Bleah.  A pox on them all.

Before various ISPs decided to help me with my spam problem, I used to
get around 300 to 400 emails daily, about 50 of them legit.  Today,
thanks to the efforts of misguided do-gooders worldwide I get about 50
emails daily, with maybe 6 or 10 of them spam.  At first blush this
seems to be an improvement, but in fact I'm losing a handful of emails
_every_ _day_ which did not happen when I was getting all the spam.

Spam?  Sucks, no question about it.  But let ME decide what is spam for 
myself; the rest of you keep your paws out of my mailbox.


Gordon S. Hlavenka           http://www.crashelectronics.com
        What if there were no hypothetical situations?

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

From: nospam4me@mytrashmail.com (Herb Oxley)
Subject: Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 20:50:03 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC



> [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: What about when someone emails a
> screen-scraping to you of an html page (that you may have requested)?
> Chances are likely there will be .jpg or .gif files on that page with
> some text in them. You cannot really risk throwing it all away unseen.
> PAT]

Watch for the next releases of mail clients such as Outlook Express etc.
to give mail users more control over emails containing in-line images,
such as mail rules to filter any such emails where the sender is unknown.

Of course at the rate things are going pretty soon no one is going to be
accepting emails from "strangers".

 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
 Herb Oxley
 From: address IS Valid.

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

From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 04:52:12 UTC
Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC


In <telecom25.428.5@telecom-digest.org> Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com>
writes:

 [ snip ]

> Interesting.  I assume that a message with an image from someone I
> don't know is likely spam and bounce it with an appropriate error. 

Unless you're doing this at the initial SMTP server contact, please
stop. If you're making the bounces based on the reply-to or return or
"from" addresses, those are quite likely forged, and all a bounce to
them is doing is making things worse.

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

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Well, a little bit of guerilla (or do
you say 'gorilla') warfare always feels good. As many of you may know,
my bane in life is a dozen or more spams/scams each day from PayPal
imposters. Some of them are simple requests to 'confirm my identity'
least my PayPal account be closed, but lately they are trying a new
routine where I am advised that 'I have sent payment in the amount of
several hundred dollars' to some innocent bystander company, and 'if
this is in dispute, please contact the 'PayPal Team' by sending all
my identification to them, etc. What I have been doing is emailing the
innocent bystander company with a demand letter for 'full refund' of
the 'money sent to them in error' by PayPal. And as 'proof' that they
did get the money I enclose a copy of the shyster/huckster's letter in
which _he_ purports to be the 'PayPal Team'. I just use a template 
letter I keep on file for it. Naturally, I also send the original
charlatan's letter to me (telling me [a] how my account is closed
pending correct ID or [b] advising me that some outrageous sum of
momey was paid on my behalf) to 'spoof@paypal.com' for their handling
as well. Last I noticed, PayPal and the innocent bystanders were
banging on each other pretty well. I suggest we all do what we can
to make internet commerce as difficult and discouraging as possible;
hopefully it will go away entirely sometime in the future.  PAT] 

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

From: Tom Horsley <tom.horsley@att.net>
Subject: Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree
Organization: AT&T Worldnet
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 12:42:11 GMT


On Thu, 28 Dec 2006 15:54:57 EST Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com> wrote:

> I assume that a message with an image from someone I
> don't know is likely spam and bounce it with an appropriate error.

People who "bounce" messages only make the volume of traffic higher
and contribute to the spam problem by sending their "helpful" bounces
back to the forged sender address where the bounce is just more spam
for the person who never actually sent the message. The universe would
be a much nicer place if all bounces stopped happening :-).

It is particularly irresponsible that there are commercial products
which are configured out of the box to send bounces (especially the
anti-spam tools which recognize particular viruses known to forge mail
headers and bounce them back to the "sender" anyway).

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Old Phones Can't be Activated Anymore
Date: 29 Dec 2006 08:01:51 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


nonoise wrote:

> donate the phones for use by charitable organizations.

I often hear pitches to donate old cell phones to charity, such as
shelters.

If the carriers won't activate old phones, how can a charitable
organization use them?


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Many of those older phones can
dial 911 in any event, so the users who are able to speak for
themselves can converse with police dispatchers, etc.  PAT]

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

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End of TELECOM Digest V25 #429
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Fri Dec 29 20:10:29 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
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Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 8EF7522D7; Fri, 29 Dec 2006 20:09:38 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #430
Message-Id: <20061230010938.8EF7522D7@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 20:09:38 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Fri, 29 Dec 2006 20:10:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 430

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (TELECOM Digest Editor)
    Consumer Effects of AT&T-Bell South Combination (Peter Svensson)
    Asian Telecoms Say Will Not Invest More in Backup Lines (AP News Wire)
    Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB? (DevilsPGD)
    Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business (Steven J. Sobol)
    Last Laugh! Man Arrested in California for Phone Threats (Henry K. Lee)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 

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

Subject: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 19:25:59 EST
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)


AT&T _mostly_ got its way very late Friday afternoon when the Federal
Communications voted to agree to the merger between AT&T and
BellSouth. Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

More in the next message today from Associated Press wires.

PAT

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 18:16:53 -0600
From: Peter Svensson, AP Technology <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Consumer Effects of AT&T-Bell South Combination


By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer

The concessions AT&T Inc. made to win regulatory approval of its
mammoth merger with BellSouth Corp. has many implications for
consumers.

With Friday's approval of the plan by the Federal Communications
Commission, here's what consumers can expect in the combined company's
service areas in 22 states:

*   DSL to new customers for $10 a month, for 30 months. This looks like
a good deal for high-speed Internet, as the Digital Subscriber Line is
even cheaper than the cheapest plan AT&T now has, at $15 a month. It's
even better in BellSouth's territory, where the company has kept
prices higher than other phone companies -- BellSouth's cheapest plan
is now $25 a month. AT&T is likely to lose money on this because
current DSL plans are no cash cows. However, to be eligible, you must
never have had AT&T or BellSouth DSL, and you need local phone
service.

*   Free broadband modem to those who replace AT&T or BellSouth dial-up
services with DSL. This is not a major benefit, and there's nothing to
prevent AT&T from recouping the cost by raising general prices (except
on the mandated $10 plan). AT&T is currently offering a mail-in rebate
that covers the cost of a DSL modem.

*   A pledge to offer broadband wherever the new AT&T is the local phone
company. This sounds good, but AT&T is allowed to use satellite
broadband, which is comparatively slow and expensive, to cover the
last 15 percent of homes. This means rural homes that are too far from
phone-switching stations may still not get DSL.

AT&T already sells satellite broadband in partnership with WildBlue
Communications Inc. Service starts at $50 a month for downloads at up
to 512 kilobits per second, slower than AT&T's $15 DSL plan. The
equipment costs $300. One emerging alternative: fixed wireless
broadband, which is cheaper than satellite, but is only available in a
few areas so far.

*   DSL service without local phone service. This is something consumer
advocates have fought for because many broadband users make phone
calls over that connection and feel no need for a traditional
landline. But so-called "naked" DSL is something that appeals mostly
to the technically sophisticated, and they're unlikely to be thrilled
by the relatively slow plan that AT&T has offered to sell, with a
download speed of 768 kilobits per second. At $20 a month or less,
it'll cost a bit more than the cheapest DSL plans but you can drop
charges for phone services. This pledge will be good for 30
months. After that, there's a good chance AT&T won't make any new
demands of current customers, but there's no promise.

*   A pledge to sell wireless broadband licenses held by BellSouth. This 
is intended to open up competition in providing broadband to the home, a 
market that now has only two main competitors in each area: the phone 
company and the cable company. BellSouth already uses this spectrum to 
provide broadband service in parts of 15 cities in eight states. The 
technology is similar to that used in Wi-Fi hotspots, but allows for 
longer range.

Cell-phone carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. has announced plans to build a
competing wireless network and would probably love to get its hands on
the frequencies to be surrendered by BellSouth. But there's nothing in
AT&T's offer that says it has to sell the frequencies in an open
process, so it may well chose a less-threatening buyer.

*   A pledge to uphold "net neutrality" principles. This is the most
abstract promise, but some consumer groups say it's the most
important.  The major phone companies -- most prominently AT&T -- have
suggested they would like to be able to charge large Web companies
like Google Inc. and Amazon Inc. for preferential treatment of their
traffic, ensuring that, for instance, online movies they sell don't
stutter or break up because of Internet traffic jams.

In a sometimes vehement debate over the past year, the Web companies
and consumer advocates have fought this idea, saying it runs counter
to the egalitarian and public nature of the Internet and will stifle
innovation when smaller companies can't afford the extra Internet
tolls.

When SBC bought AT&T Corp. to become AT&T Inc. and when Verizon
Communications Inc. bought MCI, they both promised to uphold certain
loose principles of "net neutrality," but that promise expires next
year. AT&T is now offering the FCC to go even further and to refrain
from offering any service that prioritizes or degrades any Internet
data based on its source, ownership or destination. This would apply
for two years after merger.

AT&T's IPTV service, a competitor to cable TV, would be exempt, as
would the Internet backbone. But "network neutrality" proponents were
largely pleased with the offer on Friday.

"This is a major step forward for supporters of an open Internet and a
great improvement on the conditions applied to the earlier mergers,"
said Ben Scott at Free Press, a nonprofit that promotes freedom of
speech.

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

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:51:25 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Asian Telecoms Say Will Not Invest More in Backup Lines


TAIPEI, Dec 29 (AP): Asian telecom companies said Friday they 
will not invest more in backup lines to protect against disasters like 
the recent earthquake that snarled telephone and Internet service across 
Asia, and as far as the United States (US).

The quake, which damaged undersea cables off Taiwan Tuesday, was so rare 
that there is no need to spend money on extra lines, said Wu Chih-ming, 
a senior official at Chunghwa Telecom Company, Taiwan's biggest 
telecommunications company.

Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau measured the quake at magnitude 6.7 
while the US Geological Survey put it at 7.1.

"We won't consider laying more backup cables for now because such an
incident might not happen in another 100 years", Wu said.  Companies
from Japan to Singapore Friday were still scrambling to fully restore
service. Since it will take weeks to repair the cables off Taiwan,
companies were rerouting traffic through satellites and cables that
were not damaged.

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:01:57 GMT


In message <telecom25.429.7@telecom-digest.org> Emily
<emilymoberg@hotmail.com> wrote:

> On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 01:46:56 GMT, DevilsPGD wrote:

>> Depending on the device design, the chargers may or may not be
>> interchangeable.  I'm currently charging my girlfriend's Blackberry on
>> a Motorola USB charger I purchased for my Razr.

> Hi DevilsPGD,

> The part of your statement that gets me is the part that says U S B.
> If it's USB, then it should be USB. Right?

Well -- There are a few factors.  First off, I'm going to assume we're
only talking the same USB connector, there are both 4-pin and 5-pin
versions of the typical mini-B connector.

USB male-A
http://www.computercablesource.com/images/usb-am-am-cable-white.jpg

USB male-B
http://www.computercablesource.com/images/usb-am-bm-cable-black.jpg

USB mini-B, 4pin
http://www.computercablesource.com/images/usb2-am-mb4-06.jpg

USB mini-B, 5pin
http://www.computercablesource.com/images/usb2-am-mb5-06.jpg

Most small portable devices these days use a mini-B 5pin, most
removable drives seem to use a male-B.  I have a few devices that
accept a male-A as well, typically cheap (non-manufacturer) cradles.

> For example, like you, I also have a Blackberry and a Motorola Razr.

> Here is a pairing of USB DEVICE requirements with the USB POWER
> SUPPLY capabilities:
> DEVICE = Blackberry 8700  SUPPLY = TCPRIM2ULSSN   5.0vdc 750mA
> DEVICE = Motorola V195    SUPPLY = PSM5037B       5.9vdc 375mA
> DEVICE = Motorola RAZR    SUPPLY = DCH3-05US-0300 5.0vdc 550mA
> DEVICE = Motorola Earbud  SUPPLY = FMP5185B       5.2vdc 450mA

> Can I "assume" if I hook the Motorola V195's USB power supply (5.9vdc
> 375mA) to the Blackberry 8700 device, that the Blackberry will be getting
> more voltage than it 'expected' and that the current it will try to suck
> out of the charger will be more than expected (due to the higher voltage),
> yet the current the power supply can supply will be half of what it
> expected (due to the 375 mA limitation of the power supply).

The USB spec requires 5.0vdc +/-0.25v (or +/-5%) -- So your Motorola
V195 charger isn't within spec.

The USB spec puts out a maximum of 500mA power.  However, there is no
harm in providing more mA then required as long as the voltage is
regulated to stay within spec under higher load.

In other words, the other power supplies are within spec.

Also note that many devices can accept a wide range of voltages.  I
definitely wouldn't recommend experimenting, you may fry equipment if
you go too high, or batteries if you charge a LiON too low, but it's
not uncommon for equipment to be able to accept a much wider range
then is printed on the device (largely to enable them to charge from a
PC)

> If this is true, this implies that USB chargers are NOT interchangable!
> (The T-Mobile store clerks just might have been right.)

> But, what irks me is they all have the SAME CONNECTIONS!
> They all "LOOK" the same to me!

Sure ... Read on though, I'll explain why :)

> Does EVERYONE label all their USB chargers so they don't mix them up?
> Or am I missing something fundamental here.  If it says it's a USB
> charger, but that we can't use them interchangably, then are they
> REALLY USB power supplies?

Yes -- They're supplying power via USB, therefore they are power
supplies with a USB end.

> I'm still confused on the fact that the charger advertises it is USB but
> it's not USB if it doesn't fit all USB devices. 

I think the problem, ultimately, is that there isn't a clearly defined
spec for USB as a power supply independent of USB as a data cable that
happens to provide a bit of power.

> Can someone clear up the USB part of the confusion here?

Besides a data link, USB provides 5 +/- 0.25 volts to power an
otherwise unpowered device or charge a battery in a self powered
device. A USB controller or hub is required to power one unit load
(100 mA, a low power load).

It can optionally power up to 5 unit loads (500 mA, a high power
load).  The spec is silent about intermediate loads, so I assume that
the sources deal with just the two cases. Either a load is low power
(like a keyboard or a mouse) or high power (like an iPod or PDA).

A device cannot assume that 500 mA is available until it gets
permission, when you're talking to a computer this is done over the
data connection.  In general, the way devices will handle this is to
only draw 100 mA (which is typically enough to run, but not to charge
a battery), link up, and once the driver is installed, ask the driver
for permission, then switch up to the 500 mA (or higher in many cases)
mode.

In practice, with modern USB ports in desktops, and powered hubs, you
can pretty safely draw well over 100 mA without asking, and over 500 mA
with permission.  However, this will actually overload some computers
(especially older laptops that were built to spec and not a penny over,
meaning that there was no current overload protection)

So what do you do when you hit a USB charger?  Well, per the spec, only
100mA can be drawn safely, which means no charging batteries.

One option would be to provide a second charger port, using the USB
port only for data and for charging when a PC was attached and using
the separate power connector as a safe charging port.  However, this
would incur additional costs, and is an additional component to get
damaged.

Another option, the one most well designed hardware uses, is to have
some way for the charger to identify itself to the device, giving the
device permission to safely draw more current.

The third option, the one many cheap "use your USB ports to charge
your device" works is to simply assume higher power capabilities are
present and charge.

So, in the real world, what does this mean?  Well, take my Treo 650.
It went with solution #1, it has separate data and charge connectors
(well, it's all one custom adapter, but you can connect a data and
power cable at the same time) -- As a result, it cannot USB charge
directly.  So now some aftermarket company comes out with a cable that
uses technique #3, it just hot-wires the Palm's 5V in to my USB power
and chargers.  Works great, although it potentially draws too much
current.

The Motorola Razr is a case of #2, it will only charge if it has
permission (drivers installed, or it detects a dedicated charger)

Another example is my MP3 player, a Zen Micro ... This is the ultimate
choice, as far as I'm concerned -- It uses solution #2, which means it
won't overload a PC with an underpowered USB port.  However, if you
switch the controls to "Lock", it will charge if there is power but no
driver connection -- This means I can charge off of any USB power
adapter if I want to force the issue, but when communicating with a
PC, it will only charge if authorized.

Now, with all that being said, I've yet to see a device capable of
charging off of USB that my Motorola Razr chargers won't power, so as
a result I've bought several of these on eBay (You can get genuine
Motorola ones for ~$10 on eBay on a good day), and haven't ever had an
issue.

Whew, hope that post wasn't too long :)


Going to war over religion is fighting to see who's got the 
better imaginary friend.

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

From: Steven J. Sobol <sjsobol@JustThe.net>
Subject: Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:18:22 UTC
Organization: Glorb Internet Services, http://www.glorb.com


In article <telecom25.429.10@telecom-digest.org>, Gordon S Hlavenka wrote:
 
> ORDB and various blackhole databases have been the bane of my email 
> existence since they were invented.  Much as I hate spam (and I do) I 
> hate having strangers filter my email even more.

Then your complaint is with the people using ORDB or any other
blacklist ... not the blacklist operators, at least not at first.

You're always welcome to choose an email service where the filtering
can be turned off. 

Steve Sobol, Professional Geek ** Java/VB/VC/PHP/Perl ** Linux/*BSD/Windows
Victorville, California     PGP:0xE3AE35ED

It's all fun and games until someone starts a bonfire in the living room.

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 16:45:50 -0600
From: Henry Lee, SF Chronicle <sfca@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Last Laugh! Crazy Man Arrested in California for Phone Threats


Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer

(12-29) 13:29 PST SACRAMENTO -- A Butte County man has been indicted
on federal charges for allegedly making a series of threatening phone
calls to hotels, a rabbi, a Jewish history museum and a church, saying
he planned to kill people or destroy buildings.

Scott Roberts Hudson, 52, of Paradise has a previous federal
conviction from 1999 for threatening to kill Randy Johnson, a pitcher
at the time for the Arizona Diamondbacks baseball team, and to cut off
his genitals, court records show. Hudson served 34 months in prison or
in a halfway house in that case.

The new charges, handed down Thursday by a federal grand jury in
Sacramento, accuse Hudson of calling people between August and
November.  The indictment includes seven counts of threats to use fire
or explosives and two counts of making threatening communications.

Hudson was arrested on Dec. 20. Earlier this year, his mother told
investigators that her son suffered from mental illness and "does not
take his medication," FBI Special Agent Kristy Martinez wrote in an
affidavit.

In August, the defendant allegedly called St. Mary's University in
Rochester, Minn., five times. In one call that was taped, Hudson said
a religious group in Germany was going to "burn to the ground"
St. Mary's buildings "in a shocking penetration of God's peace," the
affidavit said.

In August and September, the defendant threatened to kill Greg Laurie,
the pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside who is known
for his public evangelical events called Harvest Crusades, authorities
said.  In several phone calls, Hudson said he believed Laurie should
be "6 feet under" and that "I'm the one that can put him there," the
affidavit said.

On Sept. 3, when former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel
was visiting Philadelphia, the city's National Museum of Jewish
History received a phone call in which Hudson threatened to shoot a
museum official in the head and set fire to the building, authorities
said.

On Oct. 13, Hudson threatened to set fire to the Ben David Messianic
Jewish Congregation in Orange (Orange County), the indictment said.

On Oct. 29, Hudson called a Hilton hotel in New York City and said,
"Sunday I will bomb the Hilton New York and the new World Trade Center
will also come down. All Jews will also burn," the affidavit said. He
allegedly called the hotel two more times over the next week, making
similar threats, authorities said.

On Nov. 3, Hudson, claiming to be calling from Hamburg, Germany,
called the Westin Hotel in New York and said a bomb would go off on
Nov. 11, the affidavit said.

E-mail Henry K. Lee at hlee@sfchronicle.com.

URL: 
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/12/29/BAGC5NA29835.DTL

Copyright 2006 San Francisco Chronicle

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From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sat Dec 30 21:13:07 2006
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Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #431
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Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 21:13:06 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sat, 30 Dec 2006 21:15:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 431

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    NYC Taxicabs to Test Cell Signal Strength (David B. Caruso, AP)
    Re: Asia Mends Data Cables, Plans Aternative Routings (T)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (T)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (Sam Spade)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (David Wolff)
    Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans (mc)
    Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree (Dan Lanciani)
    Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB? (Robin Colleen Moore)
    Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool (Scott Dorsey)
    Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business (Scott Dorsey)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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
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, and why not
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 18:40:02 -0600
From: David B. Caruso, AP  <ap@telecom-digest.org> 
Subject: NYC Taxicabs to Test Cell Signal Strength


By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer

Ever wanted to stuff that "Can you hear me now?" guy into the trunk of
your car and take him on a tour of those maddening spots where your
cell phone won't work? One telecommunications company has a plan to do
the mechanical equivalent.

The Stockholm-based firm Ericsson recently got approval from New York's 
taxi commission to place mobile sensors in the trunks of at least 50 
cabs in an attempt to better map dead zones in mobile phone networks.

The small devices, about the size of a computer modem, will 
automatically feed information about signal strength and clarity to 
engineers.

Because taxis in New York are on the road all day and all night, and 
ostensibly travel into every corner of the city, company executives said 
they are a cheap way of covering vast amounts of territory with limited 
effort.

Similar programs have been launched in several other cities since the
1990s using a variety of vehicles, but this is the first time it will
be done in New York, the company said.

"Our favorite vehicle is the taxicab because of the randomness in its 
circulation," said Niklas Kylvag, Ericsson's manager of fleet services.

But, he added, "We have used trains, trucks, buses, delivery vehicles,
limousines, pretty much anything that is moving and has electricity in
it. I have myself done testing in the Swiss Alps with this on my back
at a ski resort."

The research program is being conducted on behalf of an undisclosed
wireless provider. Cab companies will be paid for participating. At
least one fleet has signed up to participate and others have expressed
interest, Kylvag said. The system, which will not be visible to
passengers, is scheduled to be in place sometime this winter.

New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission Chairman Matthew Daus said
the city has also opened cabs to other companies that wish to deploy a
similar system.

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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For more news and headlines, please go to:
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------------------------------

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: Asia Mends Data Cables, Plans Aternative Routings
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 19:25:17 -0500


In article <telecom25.429.1@telecom-digest.org>, reuters@telecom-
digest.org says:

> By Jon Herskovitz

> Ships set sail on Friday to mend cables damaged by earthquakes off
> Taiwan that cut communication in Asia, while companies found new
> routes for their data to flow to prevent another disruption.

> Service was back to normal on the last business day of the year with
> telecoms companies securing new routes via land and satellite to
> restore communication -- ending outages that affected banks and
> brokerages from Seoul to Sydney.

That's why there was a brief hiatus of spam in my inbox. I kept 
wondering why it dropped from a volume of over 100 per day to less than 
3 per day. 

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

From: T <nospam.kd1s@cox.nospam.net>
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Organization: The Ace Tomato and Cement Company
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:59:08 -0500


In article <telecom25.430.1@telecom-digest.org>, 
ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu says:

> AT&T _mostly_ got its way very late Friday afternoon when the Federal
> Communications voted to agree to the merger between AT&T and
> BellSouth. Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
> including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
> discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
> Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

Oh nice, so now it's AT&T and Verizon on the playing field. Like that'll 
matter for Net Neutrality. 

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

From: Sam Spade <Sam@coldmail.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 02:45:56 -0800
Organization: Cox


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> AT&T _mostly_ got its way very late Friday afternoon when the Federal
> Communications voted to agree to the merger between AT&T and
> BellSouth. Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
> including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
> discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
> Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

I read somewhere that this "Network Neutrality" promise is only for
two years.  Is that your understanding?

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: That's how I understand it also. And
AT&T whined about having to do that little for us.  PAT]

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Date: 30 Dec 2006 12:08:44 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> AT&T _mostly_ got its way very late Friday afternoon when the Federal
> Communications voted to agree to the merger between AT&T and
> BellSouth. Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
> including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
> discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
> Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

I'm not sure I understand why the FCC should be dictating policy in
this situation.

AT&T is not the old monolithic and powerful Bell System.  It is a
shadow of its former self, keeping the name for marketing purposes.
It's last power base, Long Distance, isn't worth much anymore with all
the cheap fibre and satellite circuits lots of others have installed.
As others have noted, even the traditional landline business is
falling off for companies like Verizon.

Consequently, I don't know why it should be forced to discount its
rates for wholesalers.  It should be free to do what every other
business does -- if it feels it's in its interest to discount, it will
do so, otherwise not.

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: AT&T wanted to be very pragmatic about
the whole thing and have the merger approved _sometime_ during the
lifetimes of its present executives. The Democrats (or do you know 
them as 'Demopublicans' or 'Republicrats'?) suggested "here is a way
to grease the American public's back orifice, and make it easier for
everyone to take your offering: Maintain the status quo so we can tell
everyone what good guys we are." AT&T apparently agreed that was a 
prudent way of handling things, by not offending more politicians. PAT]

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

From: dwolffxx@panix.com (David Wolff)
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 22:54:22 UTC
Organization: Public Access Networks Corp.


In article <telecom25.429.4@telecom-digest.org>, Scott Dorsey
<kludge@panix.com> wrote:

> If a system passes the Turing test, does it deserve the same rights as
> a human being?

> If so, what about people who do not pass the Turing test?  Do they
> deserve the rights they currently have?

> As Eliza always said, "Tell me more about the Turing test."
> --scott

I think _Analog_ (analogsf.com) had a story like this a year or two
ago.

If you couldn't pass the Turing test, you weren't allowed to vote.
Think about it.  If you can't convince a human being that *you're* a
human being ...

Thanks --

David

(Remove "xx" to reply.)

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

From: mc <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address>
Subject: Re: Robots Will Get Same Rights as Humans
Organization: BellSouth Internet Group
Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:17:33 -0500


Scott Dorsey <kludge@panix.com> wrote in message 
news:telecom25.429.4@telecom-digest.org:

> If a system passes the Turing test, does it deserve the same rights
> as a human being?

No, because the Turing test is arbitrary and rather silly.  It is not
based on any real theory of what consciousness is.  ELIZA passed a
Turing test of sorts.  Turing meant it only as a minimum threshold.

> If so, what about people who do not pass the Turing test?  Do they
> deserve the rights they currently have?

> As Eliza always said, "Tell me more about the Turing test."

ELIZA is a better conversationalist than some people at parties!

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

Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 20:08:37 -0500 (EST)
From: Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com>
Subject: Re: Spam Surge Drives Net Crime Spree


tom.horsley@att.net (Tom Horsley) wrote:

> On Thu, 28 Dec 2006 15:54:57 EST Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com> wrote:

>> I assume that a message with an image from someone I
>> don't know is likely spam and bounce it with an appropriate error.

> People who "bounce" messages only make the volume of traffic higher
> and contribute to the spam problem by sending their "helpful"
> bounces back to the forged sender address where the bounce is just
> more spam for the person who never actually sent the message.

No, a delivery error message is not spam.  And it is not sent "to the
forged sender address" or for that matter sent "to" any address at
all.

> The universe would be a much nicer place if all bounces stopped
> happening :-).

No, it would not.  Lack of an indication that mail has failed to be
delivered makes the system far less useful for anything other than
spam.

> dannyb@panix.com (Danny Burstein) wrote:

> In <telecom25.428.5@telecom-digest.org> Dan Lanciani <ddl@danlan.com>
> writes:

>> Interesting.  I assume that a message with an image from someone I
>> don't know is likely spam and bounce it with an appropriate error. 

> Unless you're doing this at the initial SMTP server contact, please
> stop.

Of course I'm doing it at the initial SMTP server contact.  I'm lucky
enough to be able to do that because I have my own server.  Many are
not so fortunate, though, and I would not quickly deny them their
bounces.

> If you're making the bounces based on the reply-to or return or
> "from" addresses, those are quite likely forged, and all a bounce to
> them is doing is making things worse.

Oh, good, then SPF is the solution. (ducks)

Dan Lanciani

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

From: Robin Colleen Moore <robin@mindspring.com>
Subject: Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Organization: SBC http://yahoo.sbc.com
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 07:51:16 GMT


On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:01:57 GMT, DevilsPGD wrote:

> In general, the way devices will handle this is to only draw 100 mA
> (which is typically enough to run, but not to charge a battery),
> link up, and once the driver is installed, ask the driver for
> permission, then switch up to the 500 mA (or higher in many cases)
> mode.

Aha! 

This seems to explain why the Motorola RAZR V3 can ONLY charge its
battery on a PC USB cable if the cell phone is turned on with enough
power to run the cell phone.

If the battery is so low that the cell phone can't "ask for
permission", then the usb cable to the PC won't charge the phone.

There must be enough energy left in the battery to power up the phone
so that the phone can ask for permission.

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: FBI Taps Cell Phone Mic as Eavesdropping Tool
Date: 30 Dec 2006 12:08:46 -0500
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


mc  <look@www.ai.uga.edu.for.address> wrote:

> This reminds me of an old Sun Workstation eavesdropping trick, back
> when soundcards were new.  Every Sun had a soundcard and a
> microphone.  But every Sun ran multi-user UNIX.  So you log on
> remotely, record a sound file, download it, and play it.  (Or, if
> more clever, stream it to yourself in real time.)  And so you hear
> whatever is going on in the room where the computer is.

It goes both ways.  The admin in another department once logged into a
machine in a public lab and catted a file to /dev/audio of himself
crying out, "Help me, I am trapped inside this computer."

Of course, I noticed the /etc/motd on _his_ server was world-writable.
Hilarity ensued.  Telecom content?  Nil.

scott

"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business
Date: 30 Dec 2006 12:14:00 -0500
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)


Gordon S. Hlavenka  <nospam@crashelex.com> wrote:

> ORDB and various blackhole databases have been the bane of my email 
> existence since they were invented.  Much as I hate spam (and I do) I 
> hate having strangers filter my email even more.

The problem is that people DO filter their email.  They either do it
manually, or they do it automatically.  Sometimes the automatic
systems have false positives.  Sometimes the manual systems have false
positives too ... when I was getting a couple thousand spam messages a
day and only a dozen or so legitimate messages, I was routinely
missing the legitimate traffic in the flood.  Now I use blocking lists
that keep it down to a couple dozen spam messages a day, which I can
deal with.

> Many times I have had emails I sent bounced, just because someone
> else at my ISP had an open relay or was infected with something, or
> perhaps was actually evil.  But why is that _my_ problem?  Yet these
> lists make it my problem; I get my emails bounced back, through no
> fault of my own.  I don't choose my IP address, nor do I choose my
> IP neighbors.

You _do_ choose your IP address and you _do_ choose your IP neighbors,
when you choose your ISP.  If you get service from an ISP with a bad
reputation, people will refuse to accept your traffic.

Twenty years ago, if a site had a problem, it would just get
disconnected from the upstream, and the problem would either be fixed
or the site would stay offline.  These days the large backbone
providers are not willing to do this, so the disconnection is being
done in a more crude fashion.

> And it breaks in the other direction, too -- emails sent to me may
> simply never arrive, just because some sanctimonious so-and-so decided
> to "fix" spam.  Bleah.  A pox on them all.

It's not a fix, it is a desperate measure employed because the problem
is so far out of hand.  I do not have a better one.

> Before various ISPs decided to help me with my spam problem, I used
> to get around 300 to 400 emails daily, about 50 of them legit.
> Today, thanks to the efforts of misguided do-gooders worldwide I get
> about 50 emails daily, with maybe 6 or 10 of them spam.  At first
> blush this seems to be an improvement, but in fact I'm losing a
> handful of emails _every_ _day_ which did not happen when I was
> getting all the spam.

So, if you don't LIKE the blocking lists, don't use them.

> Spam?  Sucks, no question about it.  But let ME decide what is spam for 
> myself; the rest of you keep your paws out of my mailbox.

If your ISP doesn't allow you to select how your mail is filtered, why
are you using it?

--scott
"C'est un Nagra.  C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

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

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 #431
******************************

    
    
From editor@telecom-digest.org  Sun Dec 31 18:03:59 2006
Return-Path: <editor@telecom-digest.org>
X-Original-To: ptownson
Delivered-To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu
Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (Postfix, from userid 11648)
	id 02BED22D6; Sun, 31 Dec 2006 18:03:58 -0500 (EST)
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Approved: patsnewlist
Subject: TELECOM Digest V25 #432
Message-Id: <20061231230358.02BED22D6@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 18:03:58 -0500 (EST)
From: editor@telecom-digest.org (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Status: RO

TELECOM Digest     Sun, 31 Dec 2006 18:05:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 432

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    China's Internet Out of Order Until January 15 (Associated Press Wire)
    As Deadline Nears, Banks Toughen Net Protections (Monty Solomon)
    Getting Howard Stern Off NPR (Monty Solomon)
    Simplifying the Cellphone Experience (Monty Solomon)
    Easy411 (Fred Atkinson)
    Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB? (DevilsPGD)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (Steven Lichter)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (Ron Kritzman)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (Fred Goldstein)
    Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business (hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com)

====== 25 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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, and why not
support Net Freedom Now http://www.freepress.net/netfreedom . 
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 15:23:21 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: China's Internet Out of Order Until January 15


China's Internet expected to be back to normal by Jan. 15

BEIJING (AP) Internet services in China will not be back to normal 
until mid-January after being disrupted by a powerful earthquake off 
Taiwan, a news report Sunday quoted the country's biggest telephone 
company as saying.

Internet and telephone services in China and many parts of Asia were
cut by Tuesday's quake, leaving telecommunications companies
scrambling to repair damaged undersea cables and switch voice and data
communications to satellites and undamaged cables.

The official Xinhua News Agency quoted an unidentified China Telecom 
Corp. official as saying Internet service would be back to normal on 
Jan. 15.

"Five vessels have been dispatched to repair the damaged lines, " the
official was quoted as saying. "But heavy seas have made the repair
work very difficult."

China Telecom said that by rerouting traffic through satellite
transmissions and landline cables connecting China and Europe, about
70% of overseas Internet connections had been reconnected.

But the official was quoted as saying the link to North America would
not be significantly improved until the undersea cables were repaired.

The magnitude 6.7 quake hit just off the Taiwanese town of Hengchun on
Dec. 26 -- the second anniversary of the devastating, earthquake-
triggered tsunami that took more than 230,000 lives in a dozen
countries.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
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 and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/AP.html  (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra.internet-news.html

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Does this mean spam from China will be
taking a two week holiday (albiet a forced one)?  PAT]

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

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 01:45:08 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: As Deadline Nears, Banks Toughen Net Protections


By Hiawatha Bray, Globe Staff  |  December 29, 2006

People who do their online banking with Cambridge Savings Bank will 
find it a little harder to log on in the New Year. But bank 
executives don't think the customers will mind. It's for their own 
good -- and besides, it's the law.

A federal regulation mandating tougher online financial security 
measures will take effect Monday. Banks, credit unions, and other 
financial institutions must begin using enhanced technologies to 
protect customer data against identity theft. Many of the nation's 
biggest banks, including Bank of America, have already introduced 
"multi factor" authentication systems that go well beyond the 
traditional user name and password approach to prevent Internet 
fraud. Other smaller banks, which buy their online banking services 
from independent contractors, are scrambling to meet the coming 
deadline.

Mark Tracy, senior vice president of back technology and operations 
at Cambridge Savings, said his company has been testing its new 
authentication system for the past two months, with help from 
customers who've agreed to try it. "It's been pretty successful so 
far," said Tracy. "In January, we'll be making it mandatory."

Cambridge Savings customers will receive a user name and password when
they sign up for the service. In addition, the first time a customer
uses his home or work computer to do some banking, the machine is
given a unique digital "fingerprint" associated with the customer's
password. Whenever he banks with that computer, the bank software
checks his user name, password, and computer fingerprint before
processing the transaction.

If someone tries to log in from a machine that isn't fingerprinted,
the bank will send a confirmation message to the customer's e-mail
address. A crook who's stolen somebody's user name and password
probably won't have access to the victim's e-mail account, so he can't
reply to the message, and won't be allowed to log in.

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/12/29/as_deadline_nears_banks_toughen_net_protections/

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

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 01:48:09 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Getting Howard Stern off NPR 


Getting Howard Stern off NPR; Regulators, device makers try to fix 
other signals 'bleeding' into FM

By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Staff  |  December 21, 2006

After last Christmas, public radio stations across the country were 
inundated with complaints from listeners who were shocked to hear 
Howard Stern interrupt "Morning Edition" or their classical music 
lineup.

The portable satellite radios, iPods, and DVD players that people had
received as gifts were playing on FM frequencies that interrupted
broadcasts at the left end of the radio dial, in violation of federal
regulations.

After a year of wrangling among broadcasters, regulators, and device
manufacturers, public radio listeners and officials are in a holding
pattern, waiting to see whether the problems the new media created for
old radio have been corrected before deciding whether to take further
action.

http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/articles/2006/12/21/getting_howard_stern_off_npr/

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

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 11:44:34 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Simplifying the Cellphone Experience


By Walter S. Mossberg and Katherine Boehret

You own a cellphone, but someone else added the names and numbers
stored in it. You don't keep your phone turned on, nor do you think to
charge it regularly. Your voicemail was set up by one of your kids or
grandchildren, and you don't know how to check it. You begged the
cellphone salesperson to sell you the most basic phone.

If you're nodding as you read this, either personally relating to the
challenges of using a cellphone or on behalf of someone you know,
you're not alone. Many people -- especially baby boomers and their
parents -- feel anxious about using these increasingly complicated
gadgets. These people are usually smart and capable, but just don't
know their way around a cellphone.

This week, we tested two new cellphones and a new cellphone service
designed to address this problem, by placing simplicity and
ease-of-use first. These $150 phones are called Jitterbugs, and they
come from a Del Mar, Calif., company called GreatCall Inc. Its phones
are physically and functionally different, emphasizing easy navigation
with large buttons and simple menus. And its service includes an
operator who acts as a concierge, optionally placing calls for you and
even remotely adding numbers to your phone's contact list.

http://ptech.wsj.com/archive/solution-20061101.html

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

From: Fred Atkinson <fatkinson@mishmash.com>
Subject: Easy411
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 14:18:24 -0500


Pat,

    What is with Easy411?  I can't use my service.

    I get as far as, "Please hold for your number" but it never gives me the
number.  Finally, I get a recording that says, "We are unable to complete
your call" despite the fact that my account is optioned not to complete
calls.

    I've called their customer service numbers today.  The ones I have tried
are giving disconnect recordings.

    Are you still using them?  Do they work for you?

    Regards,

    Fred Atkinson

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: The service does not work for me,
either. I have been able to track them down to this limited extent on
New Year's Eve:  Try http://www.smoothstone.com/contact.php  for some
information. That company, Smoothstone, deals in IP telephony, and is
located in Louisville, KY. I do not know the dispostion of Easy 411
however.  I doubt we will get anywhere on this at least until Tuesday
but if some of you want to work on it, please go ahead and try.  PAT]

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

From: DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net>
Subject: Re: Why is Motorola USB not Blackberry USB?
Organization: Disorganized
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 03:53:36 GMT


In message <telecom25.431.9@telecom-digest.org> Robin Colleen Moore
<robin@mindspring.com> wrote:

> On Fri, 29 Dec 2006 23:01:57 GMT, DevilsPGD wrote:

>> In general, the way devices will handle this is to only draw 100 mA
>> (which is typically enough to run, but not to charge a battery),
>> link up, and once the driver is installed, ask the driver for
>> permission, then switch up to the 500 mA (or higher in many cases)
>> mode.

> Aha! 

> This seems to explain why the Motorola RAZR V3 can ONLY charge its
> battery on a PC USB cable if the cell phone is turned on with enough
> power to run the cell phone.

> If the battery is so low that the cell phone can't "ask for
> permission", then the usb cable to the PC won't charge the phone.

> There must be enough energy left in the battery to power up the phone
> so that the phone can ask for permission.

Yup, also true, although in many cases 100mA is enough for the phone to
power up and ask for permission before starting to charge.

Still a pain though.

"The only British idiom I know is that fag means cigarette."
"Well then tell this cigarette to shut up"
 -- Family Guy

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

From: Steven Lichter <diespammers@ikillspammers.com>
Organization: I Kill Spammers, Inc.
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 05:41:30 GMT


T wrote:

> In article <telecom25.430.1@telecom-digest.org>, 
> ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu says:

>> AT&T _mostly_ got its way very late Friday afternoon when the Federal
>> Communications voted to agree to the merger between AT&T and
>> BellSouth. Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
>> including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
>> discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
>> Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

> Oh nice, so now it's AT&T and Verizon on the playing field. Like that'll 
> matter for Net Neutrality. 

You still have Quest, that is unless Verizon buys them up, or maybe 
Embarq (the former wire line of Sprint).  Sprint bought their cellular.


The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today? 
(c) 2006  I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co.

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

Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 20:12:35 -0600
From: Ron Kritzman <ron@dbOnayAmspaYmasters.com>
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved


TELECOM Digest Editor wrote:

> Democrats on the Commission held out for concessions,
> including among others, 'Network Neutrality' and a continued
> discounting in rates for wholesalers; i.e. the former Prairie Stream
> Communications and the existing Sage Telecom.

I read somewhere that unbundled DSL was supposed to be part of the
deal, but I'm willing to bet it won't cost any less that it did with
the dial tone.

Emoveray ethay Igpay Atinlay otay eplyray

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: It probably won't be any different than
a one-way, incoming calls only style line. I had a bunch of those in
a hunt group back in the 1970's with my recorded message
service. Those lines all had telephones on them of course, to answer
the incoming calls. If you picked up those phones other times, there 
was no dial tone, but you did hear 'battery' on the line. If the phone
was off hook when an incoming call received, the caller was given a
busy signal. Bell did not sell it cheaper than had they given you a
dial tone to go with it; in fact I think it may have been more
expensive since they knew they would not make any money from it
otherwise.   PAT]

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

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 13:08:27 -0500
From: Fred Goldstein <fgoldstein.SeeSigSpambait@wn2.wn.net>
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved


In V25I431, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote,

> I'm not sure I understand why the FCC should be dictating policy in
> this situation.

> AT&T is not the old monolithic and powerful Bell System.  It is a
> shadow of its former self, keeping the name for marketing purposes.
> It's last power base, Long Distance, isn't worth much anymore with all
> the cheap fibre and satellite circuits lots of others have installed.
> As others have noted, even the traditional landline business is
> falling off for companies like Verizon.

This is truly a bizarro apologetic.  Has Lisa been sleeping under a
rock this past year?  The company in question is not "AT&T Corp.", the
long distance company that was a shadow of its former self, the
failing residuary of the old Bell parent company.  That company failed
in 2005.  The company in question is "AT&T Inc.", formerly SBC
Communications, formerly Southwestern Bell.  It purchased the assets
of AT&T and the brand name.  It is the monopoly ILEC in 13 states
(pre-BellSouth) and majority owner of Cingular Wireless.  It faces a
little bit of competition, to be sure, but not a whole heck of a lot,
having bought out AT&T, and with Verizon owning the ex-MCI assets.
Those two do not compete very hard with each other, in case nobody's
noticed -- the Bells prefer to stick to their own turfs.  And the
standalone LD business, where they overlapped, is almost dead.

> Consequently, I don't know why it should be forced to discount its
> rates for wholesalers.  It should be free to do what every other
> business does -- if it feels it's in its interest to discount, it will
> do so, otherwise not.

Its network was built as a regulated utility, granted monopoly 
status.  Nowadays there is a legal right to compete but that doesn't 
overcome the "natural monopoly" advantage of owning the 
ratepayer-funded physical plant.  The Telecom Act of 1996 was a 
compromise, allowing the Bells into LD and other ventures in exchange 
for allowing competition, which explicitly included "wholesale" 
obligations.  Now they want out of that part of the deal?

Also note the "best" part of the merger concessions: In their
statement, Martin and Tate said that they did not like the conditions
and WOULD NOT ENFORCE THEM, and indeed might PREVENT them from taking
effect!  So the two Democrats on the FCC voted for conditions that the
Republican chairman then DISCLAIMED!  Since the Order has not yet been
formally drafted, the Democrats do have time to back out.  There are
also other legal ramifications; I wonder what the new Congress will
think.

Martin's statement referred to the "Democrat Commissioners", using the
word "Democrat" as an adjective in lieu of "Democratic", the proper
form.  Such usage is a common insult among southern Republicans,
reminiscent of Martin's mentor, Jesse Helms.  Rumor has it he is
aiming for a Senate seat from NC and is thus sucking up to Jesse's
base.

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

From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
Subject: Re: Anti-Spam Tool Going Out of Business
Date: 31 Dec 2006 11:38:22 -0800
Organization: http://groups.google.com


Gordon S. Hlavenka wrote:

> Many times I have had emails I sent bounced, just because someone else
> at my ISP had an open relay or was infected with something, or perhaps
> was actually evil.  But why is that _my_ problem?  Yet these lists
> make it my problem; I get my emails bounced back, through no fault of
> my own.  I don't choose my IP address, nor do I choose my IP
> neighbors.

I hate to sound cold and heartless, but you did choose your ISP, and
your ISP has to do more to control open relays or infections on
sub-systems it serves.

I don't understand how a home computer could be used as an "open
relay".  Why isn't protective software included when the home computer
was sold?

In any event, it seems to me that the ISP, as the front line in
providing service, has the responsibility that its customers are clean.
I understand some large ISPs do provide protective software for their
customers.  Further, a home customer receiving or sending a large
amount of traffic indicates an error condition that requires
investigation.

If that results in an addtional expense to the ISP and customers, so be
it.  That might be more than made up by all the wasted bandwidth and
server storage accomodating SPAM and viruses.

I can't help but wonder that ISPs are hiding their heads in the sand on
this problem and could be doing more, but don't want to spend the
money.  Some work would involve a intelligent human going through error
reports and contacting subscribers; and they seem to have aversion to
hiring people.  If it can't be automated they're not interested.

> ... I'm losing a handful of emails _every_ _day_ which did not
> happen when I was getting all the spam.

My employer has spam filtering but gives the recipient the option of
rejection.  Interestingly, some messages it flags are what I call
"semi-SPAM"--messages that were indeed "legitimate" and sent from
someone I know, but broadcast to a great many people and unsolicited.
I really don't care for such messags.  Some individuals feel compelled
to use their PC to broadcast their religious and/or political beliefs,
but I don't want to hear them.  Some businesses I have dealt with feel
the need to send me near daily ads.  (I bought a bathing suit on-line.
How many freakin' bathing suits does one person need, yet the vendor
emails me sales info all the time!)

[public replies, please]

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I do understand what Gordon is 
complaining about. I feel almost positive that some mail for this
Digest is lost each day midst the mountains of spam which are
received, and I am at a loss as to what more I can do about it. The
problem is _so many_ different hands are processing 'my' spam. In 
addition to lcs.mit.edu looking at it and disgarding what they feel
is spam, of course the telecom-digest.org server looks through the
mail as well. Then my own anti-spam tool (my local copy of spam 
assassin) picks through the remains, and even with all that picking
over it, quite a bit of spam still gets through each day and no doubt
some valid mail gets lost, probably because one of the intermediate
points along the way takes a disliking to the sending ISP or host
or whatever.  There has to be a better way, somehow.  PAT] 

Well, Happy New Year 2007 to all of you!  Tomorrow we will start
Volume 26 of the Digest if I am still around.  PAT]

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

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
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TELECOM Digest     Sun, 31 Dec 2006 22:44:00 EST    Volume 25 : Issue 433

Inside This Issue:                             Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    The Largest Telecom Merger in History (Associated Press News Wire)
    Edward E. Whitacre, AT&T Chairman - 21st Century Ted Vail? (Dennis Kneale)
    Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved (Steven Lichter)
    Re: As Deadline Nears, Banks Toughen Net Protections (Steven Lichter)
    Last Laugh! A Quaint Old Song We Used to Sing (TELECOM Digest Editor)

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Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 17:33:01 -0600
From: Associated Press News Wire <ap@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: The Largest Telecom Merger in History


Regulators OK AT&T-BellSouth merger
FCC OKs largest telecommunications merger in U.S. history
The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - AT&T Inc. extended its dominance as the nation's largest
provider of phone, wireless and broadband Internet services by
acquiring BellSouth Corp. in the largest telecommunications takeover
in U.S. history. It takes place officially on January 1, 2007.

The Federal Communications Commission unanimously approved the $86
billion buyout on Friday, a day after the company offered new
concessions for consumers and competitors.

Lawyers for AT&T and the two Democratic commissioners who had opposed
the merger hammered out a compromise, the details of which were
released Thursday night.

AT&T promised to observe 'network neutrality' -- not to favor Internet 
content providers who pay the company more money -- and to offer $19.95 
per month stand-alone digital subscriber line service. AT&T will also 
divest some wireless spectrum.

AT&T offered the concessions after a little more than a week of marathon 
negotiations with lawyers for the two Democrats on the commission, 
Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein. The lawyers hammered on AT&T
all of last week. 

The combination of San Antonio-based AT&T and Atlanta-based BellSouth
will have operations in 22 states. AT&T estimates that about 10,000
jobs will be phased out over three years.

Combined, the companies generate about $117 billion in revenue and
operate 68.7 million local phone lines stretching coast to coast
across the southern United States and up through the Midwest.

The buyout will also give AT&T complete control over Cingular Wireless, 
the nation's largest wireless telecommunications provider, which it had 
jointly owned with BellSouth. AT&T is also trying to roll out television 
service to compete with cable operators.

Adelstein said Friday he was pleased with the agreement.

"We got substantial concessions that are going to mitigate a lot of the 
harms that would otherwise have resulted from this merger," he said.

Copps said he was not fully satisfied with the deal that he and
Adelstein struck with AT&T, but he called the outcome 'a modest
victory for American consumers.'

But FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, a Republican who supported the merger
with no strings attachjed from early on, and fellow Republican Deborah
Taylor Tate complained that AT&T was forced to accept 'unnecessary'
conditions to win approval for the deal. He said that "AT&T was
bullied into going along with this."

Martin and Taylor Tate said the conditions "impose burdens that have 
nothing to do with the transaction, are discriminatory, and run contrary 
to commission policy and precedent."

Consumer advocates had opposed the merger from the start, but they put 
the best face on the compromise, pointing to AT&T's promise of network 
neutrality.

Mark Cooper, research director for the Consumer Federation of America, 
said neutrality would protect a 'free and open Internet.'

The intense negotiations between AT&T and the FCC came after one of the 
panel's three Republican members, Robert McDowell, removed himself 
because he had been a lobbyist for Comptel, a trade group that opposed 
the deal. That gave the two FCC Democrats more leverage.

McDowell said Friday he was delighted that a deal had been reached.

Under terms of the buyout, BellSouth shareholders will receive 1.325 
shares of AT&T stock for every share of BellSouth. In March, when the 
deal was announced, it was valued at $67 billion, but a runup in AT&T's 
stock price has raised the value to about $86 billion.

The FCC vote on Friday was the last regulatory hurdle. The Justice
Department approved the merger on Oct. 11 without conditions, a move
that angered many Democrats.

In an effort to win over Copps and Adelstein, AT&T offered some 
concessions in October, but they were rejected. AT&T's senior vice 
president for regulatory affairs, Robert W. Quinn Jr., called the 
conditions that were finally accepted Friday 'significantly more 
extensive' than those first offered by the company.

The new offer extends the lifespan of many conditions from 30 months to 
42 months or longer.

Among the promises that AT&T made:

1) An offer of stand-alone, DSL Internet service to customers in its 
service area for $19.95 per month for 30 months. The offer lets 
customers in AT&T and BellSouth service areas to sign up for high-speed 
Internet access without being forced to buy other services.

2) To cap rates for four years on 'special access' customers, usually 
competitors and large businesses that pay to connect directly to a 
regional phone company's central office via a dedicated fiber optic line.

3) To divest all of the 2.5 GHZ spectrum currently licensed to BellSouth 
within one year of the merger closing date.

4) To bring back to the United States by the end of 2008 some 3,000 jobs 
that were sent overseas by BellSouth, with at least 200 of the jobs to 
be in New Orleans.

The most difficult item in the negotiators was network neutrality.

1) AT&T promised to not to give an advantage to any content provider's 
traffic over its high-speed Internet network. Consumer activists and 
some Web sites had feared the company could have sold better-quality 
transmission service to Internet companies that would pay it the highest 
rates.

Martin was unconvinced the network neutrality provisions are
necessary.

"The conditions regarding net neutrality have very little to do with the 
merger at hand and very well may cause greater problems than the 
speculative problems they seek to address," he wrote. "These conditions 
are simply not warranted by current market conditions and may deter 
facilities investment."

Meanwhile, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., incoming chairman of the House 
Energy and Commerce Committee, indicated his displeasure in a statement 
that said the process followed by the FCC may be "suitable for committee 
review."

Earl Comstock, president and CEO of Comptel, a group that represents
competitors of AT&T, said he would have preferred to see more even
conditions placed on AT&T, and questioned why the compromise came so
quickly. He feels Democrats 'gave it away' to AT&T. 

"Compared to where it was in the fall, there was definite progress," he 
said of the deal. But given the negotiating position (of the Democrats) 
it could be better. Democrats should have demanded even more," 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
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------------------------------

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 17:41:10 -0600
From: Dennis Kneale, Forbes <forbes@telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Edward E. Whitacre, AT&T Chairman - 21st Century Version of Ted Vail?


'Whitacres way' put AT&T at top of list
He helps turn the Telcom into Forbes' Company of the Year for 2006

By Dennis Kneale, Forbes

On 4,000 sun-baked acres of mesquite, blackbrush and cactus 60 miles
south of San Antonio, Tex., AT&T Chairman Edward E. Whitacre Jr. keeps
a Texas-size ranch house, five man-made ponds stocked with hungry
bass, and a beaten-up bulldozer built in 1955. He pilots the
Caterpillar, ancient, ugly and creaky, to clear acres of thorny
thicket and scrub brush. "It still gets the job done," he says
protectively.

Whitacre takes a similar skinflint's approach as the new AT&T embarks
on a digital video revolution. In an audacious bid for new business
AT&T aims to sell a panoply of video programming to customers of its
phone services. It is building an all-Internet network, encompassing
40,000 miles of newly laid fiber-optic lines on the cheap.

AT&T's U.S. archrival, Verizon, is spending $18 billion in six years
to cover 18 million homes by 2010, digging up trees and tulips to lay
fiber to each and every house. AT&T will expend just $4.6 billion to
reach 19 million homes by year-end 2008, lacing fiber into
neighborhoods and using copper phone lines, already laid, to carry
video the last few thousand feet to homes. This means the AT&T network
won't be quite as fast or quite as fancy --but it will do. It will
get the job done.

A telco gone Hollywood, AT&T has signed distribution deals with more
than 300 cable channels. It has won approval to offer video in six
states plus ten other markets. It rolled out its new video service in
hometown San Antonio in June and, in some neighborhoods, snagged a
surprising 30 percent of homes; it just lit it up in Houston. It hopes
to be available to 1.9 million homes in 15 markets as the new year
unfolds. Video revenue, now a trickle at AT&T, could in a few years
hit $4 billion, including $2 billion in ad sales. "There's not much
growth in our business without a new product," Whitacre says. "Video
probably is that product."

AT&T's video ambitions will intensify as Whitacre closed the latest in
a string of big takeovers: the $86 billion buyout of BellSouth, the
last Bell standing. On Friday, he received the blessing of one last
holdout, the FCC. "It's a big, big milestone," he says, vowing to push
broadband services and digital video "much deeper into the American
public."

Since becoming chief executive in 1990, Whitacre has pulled off 13
deals with a combined price tag of about $290 billion, including
assumed debt (including the BellSouth deal). He started this buying
spree as chief executive of the former Southwestern Bell, the
unaccountably proud runt of the seven Baby Bells spun off from the old
AT&T monopoly that the government busted up in 1984. He has built the
regional utility into the renewed and renamed AT&T Inc., the largest
telecom company in the world, 28 percent bigger (in revenue) than
second-place Nippon Telegraph & Telephone.

Suddenly Wall Street -- harshly negative on telecom stocks since the
markets crashed in 2000 -- is impressed. AT&T's stock is up 44 percent
in the past year. Whitacre says it should be up even more. "Shoot,
even now it's way behind. It oughta be up 200 percent!" he says. "This
is a stock that sells way higher at some point."

That surge and other strong metrics -- its sales grew 46 percent and
per-share earnings 61 percent in 12 months; its shares more than
doubled the return of Verizon's -- combine to make AT&T the Forbes'
Company of the Year for 2006. It is a bit of sweet vindication for
Whitacre, who was pilloried in the press for raking in $135 million in
a six-year period in which the company's stock price fell 48 percent.

"You beat up on me a lot. Everyone did," Whitacre says. Forbes gave his 
board a grade of "D" in 2003, and in mid-2005 we put him on a "hit 
list": "Why well-paid, underperforming execs should be worried." (Five 
of the seven chief executives on that list no longer hold their jobs.) 
He still smarts from a piece in the New York Times Magazine that ran 
five years ago. The writer said Whitacre exemplified a stock-options 
system "shot through with hypocrisy" and "gradual corruption." "You know 
him?" Whitacre asks. "You tell him he's a sorry bastard." He grins.

The new AT&T, with BellSouth in hand, will possess a sweep and scale 
that few imagined when Whitacre began. It will serve 90 million 
accounts. It will have 68 million phone lines in 22 states, 12 million 
high-speed Internet access users and 59 million customers nationwide for 
Cingular (soon to be renamed AT&T). It will employ 300,000 people and 
have 1.8 million shareholders. It will be one of the nation's largest 
property owners, with 2,300 stores and a fleet of 35,000 trucks, each 
one a moving billboard. This rebuilt juggernaut will have annual revenue 
in 2007 near $110 billion and net income of $10 billion.

Wall Street worries that ever more copper-wire customers will quit and 
switch to cellular, with its expensive transmission towers and 
subsidized handsets. That may be overblown. This year the new AT&T will 
generate enough cash flow from operations (net income plus depreciation) 
to spend $16 billion on gear and capital projects, pay $5 billion in 
dividends and buy back $7 billion of its own stock. Whitacre vows that 
earnings per share will grow 10 percent or better for three years straight.

That will require Whitacre to mine new growth from all he has assembled 
-- even as he mulls pursuing one last big deal. He is 65 and has 16 
months left on his contract before driving his half-ton pickup truck off 
into the sunset on his arid, scrubby ranch in southern Texas. His likely 
heir, Chief Operating Officer Randall Stephenson, 46, is in place .

AT&T, Verizon and the cable giants thus finally are delivering on a 
vision first conjured up in the early 1990s, when cable and telecom were 
bent on breaking into each other's markets and consumers were wooed with 
promises of 500 channels. "It was an idea before its time then," says 
Whitacre.

Now its time has come, aided by the rise of the Internet and wireless
tech and the plunging costs of transmission and storage. "We're in
transport," Whitacre says simply, "and if you're good enough at it,
and ubiquitous enough, you can excel at it."

Maybe, but his path is rutted with a passel of imposing obstacles. In
six years AT&T's access lines are down 23 percent to 47 million
(though revenues grow because it owns the largest wireless carrier and
the largest broadband-access business). Cable rivals have raided 8.5
million homes for new phone service. And AT&T is in distribution, a
commodity business under unrelenting cost pressure; it owns scant
content, a higher-margin product that retains value even amidst
digital upheaval.  Moreover, a fight over network regulation --
known by the tag "net neutrality" -- has broken out. Google and
other tech darlings want federal law to guarantee them a free ride on
AT&T's new network. With the comeback of the Democrats, AT&T could
face new rules intruding on how it prices newfangled services and who
gets the bill.

Similar hurdles have hampered this telco in the past. For years Wall
Street had been downright hostile to the acquisitive ambitions of
Chairman Whitacre. Its shareholders endured six years of disinterest
and disdain in the markets, which disliked the industry for myriad
maladies -- overcapacity, crashing prices, onerous regulation,
takeover turmoil, imperiled monopolies and a decline in local phone
lines for the first time since phone service began a century ago.

Says he: "I've always felt my back is against the wall."

When he began this journey, Whitacre had no idea he would end up where 
he has. Once BellSouth is in place -- he had coveted it for years -- he 
will have reassembled six big pieces of what the feds broke up 23 years 
ago: four of the seven regional Bells, and the old AT&T's long-distance 
business and cellular service. But even this reanimation came more by 
happenstance. "Never thought about it," the laconic cowboy says.

He was born and bred in Ennis, Tex., 40 miles south of
Dallas. Whitacre joined the old AT&T's Texas subsidiary in 1963,
graduating from Texas Tech in Lubbock a year later. Southwestern Bell
split off from the old American Telephone & Telegraph Co. on Jan. 1,
1984; of the seven Baby Bells it had the fewest phone lines (10.3
million) and ranked sixth in sales ($7.75 billion). The Bell relied on
Texas for 60 percent of business, but the oil patch had gone bust,
banks were going under and real estate values were crashing. Six years
later, on Jan. 1, 1990, Whitacre, who started in hard labor and rose
through 20 jobs, became chief executive.

The digital crowd used to mock telephone company executives as
Bellheads. But this Bellhead grabbed first-mover advantage, plotted
strategy by gut and acted when the data confirmed his hunch. In late
1990 Southwestern Bell became the first Bell to invest outside the
U.S., paying $962 million for a 10 percent stake in Telmex, the
biggest telco in Mexico, controlled by billionaire Carlos Slim
Hel. That investment has grown to $10 billion, in the form of an
8.2 percent stake in Telmex, a 7.9 percent stake in its wireless
spinoff and $2 billion in equity sales -- plus 15 years of
dividends.

In 1992 Whitacre relocated the Bell from St. Louis, where it had been
for most of a century, to San Antonio, infusing it with cowboy swagger
and Texas-size ambitions. "The company needed shaking up; it had been
there for 100 years," Whitacre says. "You wanna say it's a new day,
but if you don't move, there isn't much stimulus to change your ways."

For their first decade, the seven Bells held state-granted monopolies on 
local phone service and were banned, by federal consent decree, from 
offering data services or long-distance calls. But in 1994 Southwestern 
Bell joined three siblings to begin a legal effort to vacate the decree. 
In 1995 the cowboy Bell rechristened itself SBC Communications to 
underscore its broader ambitions.

Following the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the FCC began to force
open the Bells' local monopolies. On Mar. 1, 1996 Whitacre brought
together nine senior execs for a now fabled gathering in Ojai, Calif.,
telling them the telecom world had changed forever. Brace for
consolidation, he advised, for at the end a handful of giants will
reign over hundreds of small, narrow players. Focus on service,
compliance and costs.

To some his intent was clear: It was buy or get bought, and SBC would
be a buyer. "There's no doubt in my mind that, from the very beginning,
Ed wanted to create the strongest, deepest entity in all of telecom,"
says his chief dealmaker, James S. Kahan, 59, who was at the Ojai
meeting that day and has worked closely with Whitacre for 16 years. 
Whitacre "is a survivor," Kahan says. "It's out of the question for 
him to lose, to sell, to fail."

BellSouth, for one, said it would go it alone; it started out with 32
percent more phone lines than SBC had. "They were big; we weren't,"
Whitacre says . If SBC hadn't started a buyout binge, he goes on, "we
would've been gone, very quickly." He set out knowing he should buy
more access lines, invest in wireless and prepare for video. His first
deal came a few months after the Ojai pep talk: a $16.2 billion bid
for Pacific Telesis in California. Whitacre also flirted with the old
AT&T, a dalliance that died instantly when then FCC Chairman Reed
Hundt labeled an SBC - AT&T merger "unthinkable."

Then came Southern New England Telephone in 1998; Ameritech, the
midwestern Bell, in 1999, for $73 billion in stock; and the cellular
merger with BellSouth in 2001 to form Cingular. SBC was the bigger
company back then, and it held 60 percent of the equity. But Whitacre
 -- against the advice of his cabinet -- gave BellSouth 50-50
control. One unstated motive: He saw, even then, that one day he might
want to buy BellSouth; SBC veterans are sure of this. "If I did know,
I wouldn't tell ya," Whitacre says.

BellSouth's chief then was (and still is) Duane Ackerman, and Whitacre
took a shine to his Sunbelt counterpart: "He's a good friend and a
great operator." Their relationship would be critical to pulling off
not one but two later deals for Whitacre's company.

As Cingular formed, SBC was snakebit. Tech stocks lost grace, and
telecom imploded. From early 2000, when the slump began, to year-end
2005, SBC stock fell 48 percent to $25. In this same six-year period
Whitacre earned $44 million in salary and bonuses, reaped $26 million
exercising options on 1.6 million shares and landed $65 million on
other items. Thus the towering Texan stuck out as an easy target for
critics of lavish executive pay.

The carping and his moribund stock gnawed at the white-maned Whitacre,
thick-skinned though he is. "I suffered every day. You bet I took it
personally," he says. "And I blamed the regulators; I blamed the
magazines; I blamed Selim [Bingol, his press spokesman]; I blamed my
wife. I kicked every dog in town." He didn't scream at his staff but
then, as one adviser says, "you're in more trouble when he kind of
lowers his voice."

The tech slump seemed unending, and onerous regulation made it worse. 
The Telecom Act and the FCC forced the Bells to lease out phone lines to 
rivals at prices far below cost. At one point SBC was losing 15,000 
lines a day to resellers. In Chicago it was forced to sell a line for $5 
a month when the real cost (so it figures) was $30; in Michigan it had 
to hand over lines at $14 a month, half the real cost.

In 2002 Whitacre directed his chief financial officer, Stephenson, to
chop the company's $11 billion in capital spending set for the coming
year. Cut it to $5 billion, he instructed, and use the savings to
shore up the balance sheet because cheap assets will come up for
sale. Then they went on a PowerPoint road show, warning state
regulators about what the FCC had wrought -- and how that would hurt
jobs and capital spending in their states.

SBC lawyers had filed a lawsuit challenging some portions of the
Telecom Act soon after it became law, and the FCC pricing rules were
found to be illegal or flawed four times in three federal courts. The
FCC backed down in 2005. By then SBC had lost 7 million phone lines to
resellers, but Whitacre's takeover spree had started up again. "He had
a conviction that we will work through this," says James Ellis, 63,
general counsel and a Whitacre ally for 20 years.

In February 2004 SBC and Cingular partner BellSouth agreed to pay $41 
billion for AT&T Wireless, in the largest all-cash deal in history. SBC 
had socked away so much cash from budget cuts that it borrowed only 
$8.75 billion of its share. The AT&T net, recently rebuilt, would mesh 
smoothly with Cingular's. Whitacre consulted frequently with BellSouth's 
Duane Ackerman, bonding them for the deal to come. "I trusted him; he 
trusted me," Whitacre says.

He knew he also wanted to buy AT&T Corp. (the old long-distance
business, which had spun off wireless in mid-2001) and
BellSouth. "There was never a question" of whether to do the deals;
"It was in what order," says Stephenson. Do it in the wrong sequence,
and regulators, politicians and consumer activists might shout down
AT&T's empire building.

Some of Whitacre's advisers wanted to take on the biggest deal first -- 
the buyout of BellSouth. Whitacre demurred, deciding to begin with AT&T 
and AT&T Wireless; their smaller scale wouldn't set off as many alarms. 
SBC and BellSouth closed the AT&T Wireless purchase in October 2004, 
getting it done in just eight months, and Cingular set plans to absorb 
it and kill the AT&T brand. In late 2004 and early 2005 bankers for SBC 
and BellSouth discussed merging, but they got nowhere. On Jan. 30, 2005 
SBC agreed to pay $16 billion in stock for AT&T Corp. What an FCC 
chairman had once dismissed as "unthinkable" now looked more like a 
rescue: The old AT&T had just abandoned the consumer market, and its 
revenue was declining 10 percent or more a year. Had Whitacre succeeded 
in buying it back in 1996, the price would have been far higher.

But AT&T Corp. had $24 billion a year in sales, a stronghold in 
corporate accounts and outposts in 127 countries. It will let the old 
SBC avoid more than $400 million a year in fees it now pays rivals for 
long-distance calls it can't complete on its own. And then there was the 
AT&T brand name. "It was a little battered, but it's a powerful 
worldwide brand. It still had status overseas," Whitacre says.

SBC, by contrast, had been marketing its brand for a decade, but many
people didn't know the name, and some thought it was short for
Southern Baptist Conference or Seattle's Best Coffee. And so on
Nov. 18, 2005 SBC closed the buyout of AT&T Corp., getting it approved
in less than ten months, and changed its name to AT&T Inc. On Dec. 1
it revived the renowned "T" stock ticker symbol, 20 months after it
had been dropped from the Dow Jones industrial average.

A month later Ed Whitacre began wooing Duane Ackerman and BellSouth.
Through an intermediary he offered 15 percent over BellSouth's recent
price; Ackerman said that wouldn't be enough. A day later Whitacre and
Ackerman met directly, and Whitacre suggested a premium of 15 percent
to 20 percent. It would have to be at least 20 percent, Ackerman told
him.  By March they had a deal at the 20 percent premium. The
BellSouth chief has sought no role at the combined company and instead
will leave with $9.2 million in cash and $37 million in stock.

The BellSouth deal has been cleared by regulators in 18 states and by
the U.S. Department of Justice. On Friday, Whitacre received word on
the final milestone, approval from the FCC. He already is eyeing one
last big takeover, some of his associates believe. Blunt and
plainspoken to a fault, he equivocates uncharacteristically when asked
about it. "For me, I think I've assembled what we need going forward,"
he says. Yet instantly he invokes the "never say never" cant. "Things
happen."

On Wall Street 18 brokerage firms now have a "buy" on AT&T -- New! 
Improved! -- and that is up from 10 a year ago. AT&T's stock price is up 
39 percent in two years (Verizon's is down 6.5 percent), and that makes 
up for some, but not all, of the ground that Whitacre lost earlier in 
his tenure. Whitacre insists, quite volubly, that his share price is far 
short of what it ought to be. AT&T is the only Bell to raise its 
dividend every year since 1984; since 2000 it has paid out $23 billion. 
In a lethal market it is surviving and then some.

By God, we have faith in this company, and we ought to let
shareholders know," Whitacre says. "We're in this for the long haul;
we're in the right, but it's hard." This comeback is not yet complete,
not for himself or for his shareholders, Whitacre allows. "No, but
it's damn good. It's a lot better.

Copyright 2006 Forbes.com

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://msnbc.com or
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/technews.html

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

From: Steven Lichter <diespammers@ikillspammers.com>
Organization: I Kill Spammers, Inc.
Subject: Re: AT&T 'Family' Reunion: Merger Approved
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 23:11:30 GMT


Fred Goldstein wrote:

> In V25I431, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote,

>> I'm not sure I understand why the FCC should be dictating policy in
>> this situation.

>> AT&T is not the old monolithic and powerful Bell System.  It is a
>> shadow of its former self, keeping the name for marketing purposes.
>> It's last power base, Long Distance, isn't worth much anymore with all
>> the cheap fibre and satellite circuits lots of others have installed.
>> As others have noted, even the traditional landline business is
>> falling off for companies like Verizon.

> This is truly a bizarro apologetic.  Has Lisa been sleeping under a
> rock this past year?  The company in question is not "AT&T Corp.", the
> long distance company that was a shadow of its former self, the
> failing residuary of the old Bell parent company.  That company failed
> in 2005.  The company in question is "AT&T Inc.", formerly SBC
> Communications, formerly Southwestern Bell.  It purchased the assets
> of AT&T and the brand name.  It is the monopoly ILEC in 13 states
> (pre-BellSouth) and majority owner of Cingular Wireless.  It faces a
> little bit of competition, to be sure, but not a whole heck of a lot,
> having bought out AT&T, and with Verizon owning the ex-MCI assets.
> Those two do not compete very hard with each other, in case nobody's
> noticed -- the Bells prefer to stick to their own turfs.  And the
> standalone LD business, where they overlapped, is almost dead.

>> Consequently, I don't know why it should be forced to discount its
>> rates for wholesalers.  It should be free to do what every other
>> business does -- if it feels it's in its interest to discount, it will
>> do so, otherwise not.

> Its network was built as a regulated utility, granted monopoly 
> status.  Nowadays there is a legal right to compete but that doesn't 
> overcome the "natural monopoly" advantage of owning the 
> ratepayer-funded physical plant.  The Telecom Act of 1996 was a 
> compromise, allowing the Bells into LD and other ventures in exchange 
> for allowing competition, which explicitly included "wholesale" 
> obligations.  Now they want out of that part of the deal?

> Also note the "best" part of the merger concessions: In their
> statement, Martin and Tate said that they did not like the conditions
> and WOULD NOT ENFORCE THEM, and indeed might PREVENT them from taking
> effect!  So the two Democrats on the FCC voted for conditions that the
> Republican chairman then DISCLAIMED!  Since the Order has not yet been
> formally drafted, the Democrats do have time to back out.  There are
> also other legal ramifications; I wonder what the new Congress will
> think.

> Martin's statement referred to the "Democrat Commissioners", using the
> word "Democrat" as an adjective in lieu of "Democratic", the proper
> form.  Such usage is a common insult among southern Republicans,
> reminiscent of Martin's mentor, Jesse Helms.  Rumor has it he is
> aiming for a Senate seat from NC and is thus sucking up to Jesse's
> base.

Verizon competes a lot with AT&T, they have  their payphone outside of 
most supermarkets and Drug stores all over the country and offer LD 
service outside of their service areas; in in some cases full phone 
services out side of the service area. Verizon used the old GTel unit as 
part of Verizon Business and they are in a lot of big business as 
government systems, the DOD for one.


The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today? 
(c) 2007  I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co.

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

From: Steven Lichter <diespammers@ikillspammers.com>
Organization: I Kill Spammers, Inc.
Subject: Re: As Deadline Nears, Banks Toughen Net Protections
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 23:05:08 GMT


Monty Solomon wrote:

> By Hiawatha Bray, Globe Staff  |  December 29, 2006

> People who do their online banking with Cambridge Savings Bank will 
> find it a little harder to log on in the New Year. But bank 
> executives don't think the customers will mind. It's for their own 
> good -- and besides, it's the law.

> A federal regulation mandating tougher online financial security 
> measures will take effect Monday. Banks, credit unions, and other 
> financial institutions must begin using enhanced technologies to 
> protect customer data against identity theft. Many of the nation's 
> biggest banks, including Bank of America, have already introduced 
> "multi factor" authentication systems that go well beyond the 
> traditional user name and password approach to prevent Internet 
> fraud. Other smaller banks, which buy their online banking services 
> from independent contractors, are scrambling to meet the coming 
> deadline.

> Mark Tracy, senior vice president of back technology and operations 
> at Cambridge Savings, said his company has been testing its new 
> authentication system for the past two months, with help from 
> customers who've agreed to try it. "It's been pretty successful so 
> far," said Tracy. "In January, we'll be making it mandatory."

> Cambridge Savings customers will receive a user name and password when
> they sign up for the service. In addition, the first time a customer
> uses his home or work computer to do some banking, the machine is
> given a unique digital "fingerprint" associated with the customer's
> password. Whenever he banks with that computer, the bank software
> checks his user name, password, and computer fingerprint before
> processing the transaction.

> If someone tries to log in from a machine that isn't fingerprinted,
> the bank will send a confirmation message to the customer's e-mail
> address. A crook who's stolen somebody's user name and password
> probably won't have access to the victim's e-mail account, so he can't
> reply to the message, and won't be allowed to log in.

> http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/12/29/as_deadline_nears_banks_toughen_net_protections/

Our credit union several months ago set up a requirement that will ask
you different questions when you log on, that you set up earlier, plus
now when you log on you will know it is th real site, since you can
setup a banner that will appear in your log on with the computer you
set it up with, I that is the fingerprint.  I use two computers with
my credit union and they each ID with the banner I set up, plus my
Palm Pilot Cell phone also has its own banner.  A while back I got an
e-mail that was supposed to be from my credit union, I don't link from
e-mails, I use my browsers links. Just for the heck of it, I used the
link and the site almost looked real, with the exception of the (c)
being the wrong year and a lot of misspelled words, like the 'hte' and
to 'ot'.  The credit union was aware of it and shortly the site went
away.  I get e-mail telling me by BofA account has problems, I don't
even use them.

The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today? 
(c) 2007  I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co.

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

Date: Sun, 31 Dec 2006 18:50:00 EST
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Subject: Last Laugh! A Quaint Old Song We Used to Sing


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Would you believe almost a quarter-
century has passed since Lauren Weinstein wrote this masterpiece of
satire?  To make a short story long, as of 1983, telco had been in our
lives for slightly over a century; deeply engrained and embedded. 
Telco was where things were at for many of us. Beginning about 1975,
the federal government started on one of its periodic campaigns to
bust up the Bell, which they finally succeeded in doing in 1983. To
celebrate (or commiserate, depending on your viewpoint) this historic
occassion, Lauren Weinstein wrote the nice item below. 

Now, I guess it belongs in a museum, like a lot of Handel's operatic
works, but back in 1983, when this Digest was _only_ a couple years old,
who would have suspected that like Freddie Krueger or Jason and the
'Nightmare on Elm Street', after just a few years, AT&T as we knew it,
would come back to life once again. Yes, AT&T is back again. Maybe 
Lauren or someone else will write us a revised version of what
follows.  PAT]

   12-Jul-83 09:14:32-PDT,4930;000000000001
   Return-path: <@LBL-CSAM:vortex!lauren@LBL-CSAM>
   Received: from LBL-CSAM by USC-ECLB; Tue 12 Jul 83 09:12:46-PDT
   Date: Tuesday, 12-Jul-83 01:18:19-PDT
   From: Lauren Weinstein <vortex!lauren@LBL-CSAM>
   Subject: "The Day Bell System Died"
   Return-Path: <vortex!lauren@LBL-CSAM>
   Message-Id: <8307121614.AA17341@LBL-CSAM.ARPA>
   Received: by LBL-CSAM.ARPA (3.327/3.21)
	id AA17341; 12 Jul 83 09:14:35 PDT (Tue)
   To: TELECOM@ECLB

Greetings.  With the massive changes now taking place in the
telecommunications industry, we're all being inundated with seemingly
endless news items and points of information regarding the various
effects now beginning to take place.  However, one important element
has been missing: a song!  Since the great Tom Lehrer has retired from
the composing world, I will now attempt to fill this void with my own
light-hearted, non-serious look at a possible future of
telecommunications.  This work is entirely satirical, and none of its
lyrics are meant to be interpreted in a non-satirical manner.  The
song should be sung to the tune of Don Mclean's classic "American
Pie".  I call my version "The Day Bell System Died"...

  --Lauren--

**************************************************************************
                   				                           
		   *==================================*
		   * Notice: This is a satirical work *
		   *==================================*
      

	                "The Day Bell System Died"         


              Lyrics Copyright (C) 1983 by Lauren Weinstein   
		                                           	
     	             (To the tune of "American Pie")      
		   
		     (With apologies to Don McLean)
   

  ARPA: vortex!lauren@LBL-CSAM
  UUCP: {decvax, ihnp4, harpo, ucbvax!lbl-csam, randvax}!vortex!lauren

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

Long, long, time ago,
I can still remember,
When the local calls were "free".
And I knew if I paid my bill,
And never wished them any ill,
That the phone company would let me be...

But Uncle Sam said he knew better,
Split 'em up, for all and ever!
We'll foster competition:
It's good capital-ism!

I can't remember if I cried,
When my phone bill first tripled in size.
But something touched me deep inside,
The day... Bell System... died.

And we were singing...

Bye, bye, Ma Bell, why did you die?
We get static from Sprint and echo from MCI,
"Our local calls have us in hock!" we all cry.
Oh Ma Bell why did you have to die?
Ma Bell why did you have to die?

Is your office Step by Step,
Or have you gotten some Crossbar yet?
Everybody used to ask...
Oh, is TSPS coming soon?
IDDD will be a boon!
And, I hope to get a Touch-Tone phone, real soon...

The color phones are really neat,
And direct dialing can't be beat!
My area code is "low":
The prestige way to go!

Oh, they just raised phone booths to a dime!
Well, I suppose it's about time.
I remember how the payphones chimed,
The day... Bell System... died.

And we were singing...

Bye, bye, Ma Bell, why did you die?
We get static from Sprint and echo from MCI,
"Our local calls have us in hock!" we all cry.
Oh Ma Bell why did you have to die?
Ma Bell why did you have to die?

Back then we were all at one rate,
Phone installs didn't cause debate,
About who'd put which wire where...
Installers came right out to you,
No "phone stores" with their ballyhoo,
And 411 was free, seemed very fair!

But FCC wanted it seems,
To let others skim long-distance creams,
No matter 'bout the locals,
They're mostly all just yokels!

And so one day it came to pass,
That the great Bell System did collapse,
In rubble now, we all do mass,
The day... Bell System... died.

So bye, bye, Ma Bell, why did you die?
We get static from Sprint and echo from MCI,
"Our local calls have us in hock!" we all cry.
Oh Ma Bell why did you have to die?
Ma Bell why did you have to die?

I drove on out to Murray Hill,
To see Bell Labs, some time to kill,
But the sign there said the Labs were gone.
I went back to my old CO,
Where I'd had my phone lines, years ago,
But it was empty, dark, and ever so forlorn...

No relays pulsed,
No data crooned,
No MF tones did play their tunes,
There wasn't a word spoken,
All carrier paths were broken...

And so that's how it all occurred,
Microwave horns just nests for birds,
Everything became so absurd,
The day... Bell System... died.

So bye, bye, Ma Bell, why did you die?
We get static from Sprint and echo from MCI,
"Our local calls have us in hock!" we all cry.
Oh Ma Bell why did you have to die?
Ma Bell why did you have to die?

We were singing:

Bye, bye, Ma Bell, why did you die?
We get static from Sprint and echo from MCI,
"Our local calls have us in hock!" we all cry.
Oh Ma Bell why did you have to die?

<End>

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: And Ma Bell said, "I didn't die, I was
just asleep, a lot like Freddie Krueger or Jason. Well now, Freddie
is back, and I suspect madder than hell. PAT

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

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