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Message-ID: <20190128054138.GA12761@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 28 Jan 2019 00:41:38 -0500
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: AT&T outage affecting Texas customers in Callahan, Jones,
Shackleford counties
by Jamie Burch
CLYDE, Texas - An outage is affecting AT&T customers in Callahan,
Jones and Shackleford counties.
A KTXS photojournalist who lives in Callahan County first noticed the
outage around 2 p.m.
Callahan County said the outage is due to a fiber cut near Eula.
https://ktxs.com/news/big-country/att-outage-affecting-customers-in-callahan-jones-shackleford-counties
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
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Message-ID: <20190127160028.10592.qmail@submit.iecc.com>
Date: 27 Jan 2019 16:00:28 -0500
From: "bernieS" <bernies@panix.com>
Subject: Tonga utility striving to lift capacity after undersea
cable cut
Outage forces Tongan govt to restrict internet
1:53 pm on 23 January 2019
Indira Stewart, NZI Journalist
@Indira_on_tweet
indira.stewart@radionz.co.nz
When Tonga lost all cell phone and internet connection to the outside
world on Sunday evening, Paula Piveni Piukala, the country's cable
director happened to be attending a regional Telecommunications
conference in Hawai'i.
When he received news that something was wrong, he said he was lucky
to be in the right place at the right time.
The Tonga Cable, a subsea cable providing the kingdom's broadband
connection, broke down on Sunday evening resulting in an outage that
took out all the kingdom's domestic and international cell phone and
internet coverage.
(See <
https://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/380627/internet-cable-down-in-tonga>)
Mr Piukala received news of the outage on Monday morning.
"I was lucky that I was here at the Pacific Telecommunications Council
meeting in Hawai'i and this is where all the satellite providers and
the cable and submarine cable providers were at," he said.
"And I happened to walk straight in and I saw these 'Kacific' guys and
I explained the issue to them."
Kacific Broadband Satellites is a satellite operator with a special
focus on the Pacific and Mr Piukala said they had just recently
acquired a new client in Tonga, Ezinet, which had access to one of
their satellites.
So with the help of Kacific, engineers began working to reconnect
Tonga with the rest of the world through the smaller local service
provider, Ezinet.
The government-owned internet service provider, Tonga Communications
Corporation, will tap into Ezinet's satellite access while officials
work to fix the main cable.
"They are the saving grace for these issues," said Mr Piukala of
Ezinet.
"We owe them. Their existence with a satellite communication really
saved and cut the losses and made us able to put up connectivity in a
much shorter time."
Internet and mobile connections were expected to be restored by
Tuesday evening but were delayed into Wednesday, with the company
promising the satellite would be aligned "very soon".
At most, locals were travelling into town to use a phone connection
through Ezinet to contact relatives overseas but Tongans overseas said
the service had been busy and the connection slow at best.
Contact among locals remains difficult.
Mr Piukala said once Tonga's connections are fully restored, officials
will look at blocking access to social media websites over the next
few weeks while they work to resolve issues with the country's
submarine cable.
"We are forced under the circumstances to prioritise traffic and put
higher priority on things that matter," explained Mr Piukala.
"We have been informed that 80 percent of our international traffic is
from social media so that gives us a little comfort. If they told us
that 80 percent of our traffic were to do with government and business
and all these other important functions then we would be very
worried," he said.
"So what we are trying to do now is we may block Facebook, Youtube and
social media, in the mean time, so that we can maximise the small
bandwidth that we have from the satellite on what is important for the
country."
Mr Piukala said any satellite connections that could be activated in
Tonga were welcome as the current satellite connection isn't enough to
provide the country's network redundancy requirement.
In the lead up to the outage Mr Piukala said engineers had been
working on a network redundancy process to ensure network availability
in the case of such an outage, but the services were not yet ready.
"This is a wake up call for small countries like us in the Pacific,"
he said, "We don't even know yet how much it will cost to fix this
problem.
"But if it can happen to us, it can happen to anybody and other small
countries in the region need to be more prepared."
https://www.radionz.co.nz/news/pacific/380725/outage-forces-tongan-govt-to-restrict-internet
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Message-ID: <0cc688fd9c397f07a221656c4b8086dc.squirrel@mai.hallikainen.org>
Date: 28 Jan 2019 08:07:26 -0800
From: "Harold Hallikainen" <harold@mai.hallikainen.org>
Subject: Can you answer a question about Visible?
Does anyone have info on Visible (
https://www.visible.com/ )?
1. Does this use cellular voice, or is it an application transmitting
voice over "cellular broadband data?"
2 If using "cellular broadband data," which the FCC has declared is
not a public mobile service but, instead, a private mobile service,
is this a common carrier subject to CPNI privacy and other common
carrier regulations?
https://www.visible.com/legal/privacy makes no
mention of CPNI.
THANKS!
Harold
--
FCC Rules Updated Daily at
http://www.hallikainen.com
Not sent from an iPhone.
***** Moderator's Note *****
I checked the Visible site, and the only contact info I saw was a chat
screen. Someone named "Eugene" typed that he would send the question
to the "PR team," and that they would get back to me RSN.
Bill Horne
Moderator
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End of telecom Digest Tue, 29 Jan 2019