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Message-ID: <5B12BC1D-4E83-411E-82D2-36B77F142016@roscom.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2016 00:51:15 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Subpoenas and Gag Orders Show Government Overreach, Tech
Companies Argue
By Nicole Perlroth and Katie Benner
Open Whisper Systems received a subpoena for information on
[subscribers to] its "Signal" app and an order not to talk about it, a
practice Microsoft and others say is too prevalent, and
unconstitutional.
SAN FRANCISCO - It has been six months since the Justice Department
backed off on demands that Apple help the F.B.I. break the security of
a locked iPhone.
But the government has not given up the fight with the tech
industry. Open Whisper Systems, a maker of a widely used encryption
app called "Signal", received a subpoena in the first half of the year
for subscriber information and other details associated with two phone
numbers that came up in a federal grand jury investigation in
Virginia.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/05/technology/subpoenas-and-gag-orders-show-government-overreach-tech-companies-argue.html
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Message-ID: <F3C1762C-7CE5-45DD-823C-C95695BC9DB9@roscom.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2016 02:32:52 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Replaced Galaxy Note 7 explodes on a Southwest flight
Replaced Galaxy Note 7 explodes on a Southwest flight
It looks like Samsung's exploding battery woes may not be behind it
just yet. According to a report from The Verge, a Southwest Airlines
flight was evacuated this morning when a Galaxy Note 7 began smoking
in a passenger's pocket. Worryingly, the phone wasn't actually one of
the recalled defective units - it was a new model that had already
been replaced by AT&T just a couple of weeks before.
The plane was still at the gate when the Note 7 caught fire, and all
passengers were successfully evacuated with no reported injuries.
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/10/a-replacement-galaxy-note-7-catches-fire-on-a-plane/
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Message-ID: <9FFB4110-6610-48A9-AC79-0925AEB57A7A@roscom.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2016 02:12:15 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Verizon workers can now be fired if they fix copper phone
lines
Verizon workers can now be fired if they fix copper phone lines
Verizon has told its field technicians in Pennsylvania that they can
be fired if they try to fix broken copper phone lines. Instead,
employees must try to replace copper lines with a device that connects
to Verizon Wireless's cell phone network.
This directive came in a memo from Verizon to workers on September 20.
"Failure to follow this directive may result in disciplinary
action up to and including dismissal," the memo said. It isn't clear
whether this policy has been applied to Verizon workers outside of
Pennsylvania.
The memo and other documents were made public by the Communications
Workers of America (CWA) union, which asked the Pennsylvania Public
Utility Commission to put a stop to the forced copper-to-wireless
conversions.
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/10/verizon-workers-can-now-be-fired-if-they-fix-copper-phone-lines/
***** Moderator's Note *****
And so it begins: the phone companies are adopting the third-world
practice of installing cellular-only phone systems, as a prelude to
the final chapter of their union-busting saga. There might be several
parallel agendas here:
1. Forcing POTS users to accept the lower quality and reliability of
cellular connections, so as to deny potential cellular users any
standard of comparison by which to judge cellular.
2. Squeezing those oh-so-expensive and oh-so-ornery union workers out
on to the streets where they can learn to bow before their betters.
3. Throwing some business to their friends in the insurance industry,
since less-reliable phone connections means higher insurance
premiums.
4. Cashing in on the copper network, by carting off old cables to the
junk dealers - some of whom have side deals with executives at
ILECS, by the way.
My brother used to do contract work in South America, installing
buildings at cell sites, and he told me that the most amazing thing
about his time there was how open the cell workers were about the need
to secure the sites against sabotage from revolutionaries. Many of the
installations were on remote mountaintops, inaccessible by any means
other than helicopters, and the engineers there made it clear that it
was by design.
One man's revolutionary, as they say ...
Bill Horne
Moderator
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End of telecom Digest Sun, 09 Oct 2016