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Message-ID: <barmar-82D30F.03360406052019@reader443.eternal-september.org>
Date: 6 May 2019 03:36:04 -0400
From: "Barry Margolin" <barmar@alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Re: You Can't Stop Robocalls. You Shouldn't Have To.
In article <9c85c6a0-b029-4524-9e78-f03abebe7904@googlegroups.com>,
HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org> wrote:
> > Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu wrote:
>
> > A few weeks ago I discovered the setting on my cellphone to not ring
> > if the call is from someone not on my contact list. That's been a
> > blessing.
>
> It is sad that so many people today now use a 'whitelist' to control
> incoming calls. It can be harmful.
>
> I came upon someone in distress and lent them my cellphone to call for
> help (their phone was dead). But since my phone wasn't on their
> friend's 'whitelist', the call wasn't answered. Further, today,
> people don't listen to messages, so leaving a message didn't help. A
> cop came along and helped.
My cellphone is not my primary phone, I practically never get real calls
on it. I'm also not anyone's emergency contact, as far as I know (I have
no spouse or kids). So I have no fear that my whitelist is going to
cause me to miss an important call.
I wouldn't use a setting like this on my landline.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
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Message-ID: <20190506154513.GA27187@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 6 May 2019 15:45:13 +0000
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: Lawmakers hit speed dial on legislation to cut down on
robocalls
Lawmakers hit speed dial on legislation to cut down on robocalls - or,
how I learned to stop worrying and love the hype
Lawmakers, fed up with the seemingly constant barrage of nuisance
and scam calls plaguing them, their families and their
constituents, have launched a bipartisan broadside against
robocalls.
"I think that I'm like everybody else that has cellphones and is
constantly, constantly interrupted by these nuisance calls," [a
Republican Senator], told NBC News.
Legislative efforts underway in both the House and the Senate
would go further than past measures to crack down on a problem
that has become significantly worse in recent years. The efforts
would ramp up penalties for violations, put the onus on major cell
service providers to do a better job of authenticating calls, and
offer ways to block neighborhood "spoofers," where scammers trick
a caller ID into believing that a call is coming from the
recipient's area code.
(Rest at
https://kvoa.com/news/2019/05/06/lawmakers-hit-speed-dial-on-legislation-to-cut-down-on-robocalls/ )
... and blah-blah-blah-your-civil-servants-are-on-the-job-blah-blah-blah.
It starts earlier every time. It's only May of 2019, but fluff pieces
like this one crowd the net more and more by the day. There is no way
to quantify how deep the mire has gotten: going "further than past
measures" is as vague a phrase as I've ever read anywhere.
Why, I wonder, do we put up with this avalanche of excrement? Why is
such frippery accepted as "news," of any sort, at any time?
Sigh. I am getting old, and crotchety, and tired of seeing what used
to be called "jouralism" perverted for no better purpose than selling
soap. The press, it seems, is free not only to report the news, but
also to pervert the constitutional protections it enjoys on behalf of
the sellers of packaged goods, and also for the benefit of an arrogant
group of sycophants who style themselves as leaders.
Joseph Pulitzer is spinning in his grave.
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
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Message-ID: <20190505163617.53106.qmail@submit.iecc.com>
Date: 5 May 2019 16:36:17 -0400
From: "David B. Horvath, CCP" <dhorvath@cobs.com>
Subject: I got one of those letters
I still have POTS at home (long story). I got a letter from Verizon
yesterday that they are upgrading their facilities and that I have to
move to fiber. "This means that if you have not scheduled an
appointment to transfer your services, your Verizon services will be
suspended on or after June 17, 2019. THIS LETTER SERVES AS NOTICE OF
SUSPENSION."
www.verizon.com/fiberupgrade
I'll be off Verizon by then...
- David
***** Moderator's Note *****
The web site David's URL points to contains this paragraph:
Your service will be migrated by our expert technician to our
100% fiber-optic network at NO charge to you. The pricing and
features of your current voice service will not change. And, if
you have High Speed Internet service, you can upgrade to Fios
Internet at a special rate - just ask about this offer and our
other Fios products when you schedule your installation
appointment.
... which means that, although his voice service is still under
tariff, David's data service is not.
Of course, David's cost-per-byte is going to skyrocket RSN: he can
"upgrade at a special rate," but will, inevitably, find himself
shelling out more for every keystroke. His options for getting away
from Verizon will be severely limited, since the ILEC doesn't have to
share Fios with CLECs, and cell or satellite-based sevices cost more
already.
The part Verizon doesn't mention is that Fios is an unreliable
technology when the power fails, since it requires local battery power
to work when the power is out. David's phone is going to be returned
to the days when Pa Kettle had his crank phone on the wall of the
farmhouse, and local batteries to power it in the box at the
bottom. It doesn't matter if he switches to a competitor of Verizon -
the batteries are still there, no matter if they are in a cell phone
or a pedestal.
That, you may think, is not a big deal: we're all so used to
battery-powered devices that the side-effects of that dependence have
been forgotten. As ever, there ARE side-effects, and Verizon is, as
ever, not mentioning them: David's insurance rates are going to rise.
The National Fire Danger Rating for a neighborhood goes up when
long-term power outages cause widespread telephone service failures:
it's as inevitable as the smug looks on the faces of Verizon's
executives the day after they get yet another rate increase.
Bill Horne
Moderator
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End of telecom Digest Tue, 07 May 2019