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Message-ID: <75385169-b577-93e7-aa59-03f34b47ad74@hotmail.com>
Date: Sun, 24 Sep 2017 19:59:01 -0400
From: carlb <carlb613@hotmail.com>
Subject: FCC may be about to give huge gift to the toll-free
typosquatters
It's been difficult to get a good vanity freephone number in the North
American Numbering Plan for several years now.
A "yuge" part of the problem, as exposed by the Associated Press in a
scathing April 19, 2011 piece "Porn Company Has Snatched Up Nearly 25%
of 1-800 Numbers in U.S., Canada", is mass misdial marketers creating
captive RespOrgs, using them to hoover up millions of toll-free
numbers and then parking prerecorded adverts on each.
Telecom Digest mentioned the scheme at
http://telecom.csail.mit.edu/telecom-archives/archives/back.issues/recent.single.issues/archive2.php?volume=30&issue=102
... citing an AP piece ...
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/04/19/porn-company-amassing-1-800-numbers.html
... which ran in hundreds of newspapers as far afield as the Sydney
Morning Herald (Australia) and the Daily Mail (UK), along with most of
the domestic broadsheets.
Unfortunately, nothing has changed. Two or three freephone area code
launches have come and gone (1-855 in 2011, 1-844 in 2013 and now
1-833 in 2017) but the same usual suspects who were hoarding and
warehousing every other toll-free number have merely doubled down and
continued with the same antics to the new area codes.
Why wouldn't they? The FCC has done remarkably little to enforce
47CFR 52.105 and 52.107, the US federal regulations which are supposed
to prevent this sort of behaviour.
There has been one token enforcement action, against a relatively
small player who sold a few numbers to pharmaceutical manufacturer
Bristol-Myers (BMY) for an inflated price, but the worst offenders
continue to operate with impunity.
And now things look like they're about to get a whole lot worse. There
are currently about 17000 valuable toll-free numbers from the new 1-833
freephone code which have been sitting in limbo since May 2017 as
multiple resporgs have requested the same number. Some are patterns
(like 833-333-3333), some are generic vanity numbers (like
1-833-LAWYERS). Quite a few look like they really should be set aside
for public safety use in the various NANP countries, like 833-TORNADO,
833-SUICIDE, 833-CYCLONE, 833-POISONS. Unfortunately, there's no sign
that anyone has even consulted the Canadian, Bermudan or Caribbean
governments whose citizens are affected by this issue.
If the FCC gets their way, this proposal
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2017/db0907/DOC-346588A1.pdf
... will put many of those numbers up for auction.
It will also undermine or repeal the existing regulations on pro-
hibited warehousing, hoarding, and brokering of toll free numbers in
an attempt to create a "secondary market".
That's a problem if the claim that the Commission's rules prohibit the
practice of "hoarding" - the acquisition by a toll free subscriber from a
RespOrg of more toll free numbers than the toll free subscriber intends
to use for the provision of toll free service - is already meaningless.
Millions of numbers are already being hoarded and the only "provision of
toll-free service" on most of these (if they work at all) has been to
park the same pre-recorded advertisements on each.
Any relaxation in the existing FCC regulations will reward the folks
already hoarding numbers, possibly by hundreds of millions of dollars,
maybe more. Every number, instead of being returned to the available
pool, will be inevitably up for grabs at prices that will make the
average stadium "ticket scalper" cringe.
The "numbers to the highest bidder" approach will likely eventually be
applied to numbers in existing codes which become available as
subscribers cancel service.
That should make acquiring a toll-free number more expensive for many
small and medium-sized enterprises. Thank you, FCC.
The matter is still nominally up for comment; the FCC will be
discussing this supposed "Toll Free Assignment Modernization" (WC
Docket No. 17-192) to "Toll Free Service Access Codes" (CC Docket
No. 95-155) at its meeting on Tuesday, Sept 26. Unfortunately, the
wording of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) does suggest that
the Commission has its heart set on an auction and, if at all
possible, on undermining every regulation currently restraining
RespOrgs from blatant ticket scalping of vanity freephone numbers.
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?q=(proceedings.name:((17-192)%20OR%20(95-155))%20OR%20proceedings.description:((17-192)%20OR%20(95-155)))&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
That should be quite the windfall for those already thumbing their
noses at the Commission by parking ads on millions of numbers. It's
just like winning the lottery.
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Message-ID: <20170926222927.GA7684@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2017 18:29:27 -0400
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: Re: RoboCaller now Showing Legitimate Numbers in CallerID
On Mon, Sep 25, 2017 at 12:24:28AM +0000, Garrett Wollman wrote:
> Most (?) carriers will still allow you to configure busy/no-answer
> forwarding to another number. I have my cell set to forward to my
> home phone ...
I only have a cell phone: I chose not to put in a POTS line when I
moved to North Carolina, since my new job requried the cell phone and
I didn't want to be encumbered with two separate voice-mail
systems.
Since I've just left that job, I have considered going back to POTS
and ditching the cell phone. There's zero chance I'd buy a traditional
twisted-pair, which costs more than the cellular service, but I'd
consider VoIP if my Internet usage remains high enough to justify the
cable-based Internet connection I have now.
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
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Message-ID: <oq9ibs$1ub0$1@grapevine.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2017 00:24:28 +0000 (UTC)
From: wollman@bimajority.org (Garrett Wollman)
Subject: Re: RoboCaller now Showing Legitimate Numbers in CallerID
In article <20170924200119.GA25370@telecom.csail.mit.edu>,
Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net> wrote:
>I have voice mail now, because there is no cell-phone plan which does
>not include it.
Most (?) carriers will still allow you to configure busy/no-answer
forwarding to another number. I have my cell set to forward to my
home phone, so when I get a call I can't/don't want to deal with, they
end up on the home answering machine. Most of the time they don't
bother to leave a message anyway. (However, I also make a policy of
not giving out my cell number to anyone who might be making a list, so
I almost never get calls of any kind on my cell -- wrong numbers are
more common than any kind of marketer.)
-GAWollman
--
Garrett A. Wollman | "Act to avoid constraining the future; if you can,
wollman@bimajority.org| act to remove constraint from the future. This is
Opinions not shared by| a thing you can do, are able to do, to do together."
my employers. | - Graydon Saunders, _A Succession of Bad Days_ (2015)
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End of telecom Digest Wed, 27 Sep 2017