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Message-ID: <eaabf80c-df0e-4885-b580-d0170588eb67@googlegroups.com>
Date: 4 May 2019 11:02:08 -0700
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: Arizona joins majority of nation in enacting texting
while driving ban
On Friday, May 3, 2019 at 3:56:46 PM UTC-4, Barry Margolin wrote:
> A number of states also have laws that say you can only talk with
> hands-free phones.
The idea of hands-free communication is being pushed hard as
the safer alternative in some states.
In my opinion however, it is the _conversation_, not holding
the phone itself, that is the distraction and danger. A
cell phone conversation is not the same as talking to a
passenger in the car; a very different dynamic.
The problem is that virtually everyone talks on their cell phone
while driving, so I can't see people giving this up.
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Message-ID: <F9FCF6D7-517D-4FFB-A6D7-45D92A994503@roscom.com>
Date: 4 May 2019 18:34:30 -0400
From: "Monty Solomon" <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Would You Let the Police Search Your Phone?
We are much more likely to give consent than we think.
By Roseanna Sommers and Vanessa K. Bohns
Law enforcement officers on the doorstep threatening to "come back
with a warrant" is a clich=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD of police procedural dramas. T=
hings are
much less dramatic in real life: The officers ask if they can take a
look around, and the civilians say yes without putting up a fight.
A key question in so-called "consent-search" cases is why people so
readily agree to allow intrusions into their privacy. The answer, as
we argue in a forthcoming article in The Yale Law Journal, is that
psychologically, it's much harder to refuse consent than it seems. The
degree of pressure needed to get people to comply is shockingly
minimal - and our ability to recognize this fact is limited.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/30/opinion/police-phone-privacy.html
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Message-ID: <9DF189BE-11C3-4492-AFAF-283BCCA250C9@roscom.com>
Date: 3 May 2019 21:34:34 -0400
From: "Monty Solomon" <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Congress Is Ready to Attack a Common Enemy: Robocallers
Swamped by angry constituents demanding action and bedeviled themselves by
obnoxious and fraudulent robocalls, Congress is springing to action.
By Catie Edmondson
WASHINGTON - Representative Darren Soto's phone rang just a half-hour
into the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing this week on
the surge of robocalls clogging the nation's cellphone lines. He
ducked off to take the call only to hear a recorded voice float a
lucrative offer to buy his home.
"We're all being inundated," Mr. Soto, Democrat of Florida, said
plaintively when his turn came to speak at the hearing.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/03/us/politics/stop-robocalls-congress.html
***** Moderator's Note *****
I disagree with Ms. Edmondson: Congress is not "springing" into
*ANYTHING*. It is oozing toward another round of hearings and press
releases and new bills "introduced" by every representative that wants
some free ink for their biennial exercise in what Barney Frank called
"Sloping the hogs."
There are certain exchange codes in the Washington, D.C. area that
*EVERY* marketing company knows are off-limits, and the phones served
by those exchanges *NEVER* get robocalls. Those phone numbers are
reserved for those who can actually hurt the profiteers, not for hoi
polloi, and Mr. Soto will no doubt be changing his cell phone number
from whatever it used to be in Florida to one of those reserved for
the hog farmers who pick low-lying fruit and money off the trees.
You and me, dear reader: *WE* are the hogs.
Bill Horne
Moderator
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End of telecom Digest Sun, 05 May 2019