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Message-ID: <Pine.NEB.4.64.1602181644040.17429@panix5.panix.com>
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 2016 16:44:28 -0500
From: Danny Burstein <dannyb@panix.com>
Subject: Today's "get out of jail free" card price: 795 Million
That's dollars, not rubles.
(Although the press release suggsts there's a spot
of additional change being seized as well).
[DOJ press release]
Global Telecommunications Company And Its Subsidiary Charged In
Massive Bribery Scheme Involving Uzbek Official; Company To Pay $795
Million In Penalties
...
[US Attorney] Preet Bharara ... announced today the filing of criminal
charges against VimpelCom Limited ("VimpelCom"), the world's
sixth-largest telecommunications company, with securities publicly
traded in New York, and its wholly owned Uzbek subsidiary, Unitel LLC
("Unitel") for conspiring to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
("FCPA") by paying more than $114 million in bribes to a government
official in Uzbekistan.
...
DOJ also filed a civil complaint today seeking forfeiture of $550
million held in Swiss bank accounts which represent proceeds of
illegal bribes paid, or property involved in the laundering of those
payments, to the Uzbek official by VimpelCom and two other
telecommunications companies operating in Uzbekistan.
=========
rest:
http://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/global-telecommunications-company-and-its-subsidiary-charged-massive-bribery-scheme
_____________________________________________________
Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
dannyb@panix.com
[to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]
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Message-ID: <na4m2d$icg$1@panix2.panix.com>
Date: 18 Feb 2016 09:56:13 -0500
From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Subject: Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US
David Clayton <dc33box-cdt@yahoo.com.au> wrote:
>
>Do people actually realise that companies will not ever have heaps of
>people sitting around 99.9% of the time just in case there is a rare
>major outage simply to pander to their need for "support" (which usually
>means just telling them that the problem is being worked on)?
No, a prerecorded message that people can call in is just fine. BUT, this
works only if the message actually answers the customer's question.
"We have outages in X, Y, and Z which were caused by a backhoe incident in
W, and we expect to have service restored in some areas by N o'clock and
all service restored my M o'clock" answers most questions.
But in order for this to work, first of all the company has to get the
information about what is going on to the call center, and get the message
up on the call center system, AND they have to get customers to the point
where they actually trust the message. To do that requires a few years of
presenting accurate information.
People will ONLY call through to an actual person if they think there is
more information that they aren't getting, or if they don't believe the
information being given. However, with a company like Comcast, it's likely
that is 100% of the callers. THAT is the problem that needs to be fixed.
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
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Message-ID: <bd793a29-e888-4db0-8492-b08932da1854@googlegroups.com>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 15:01:47 -0800 (PST)
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US
On Tuesday, February 16, 2016 at 6:09:27 PM UTC-5, David Clayton wrote:
> Do people actually realise that companies will not ever have heaps of
> people sitting around 99.9% of the time just in case there is a rare
> major outage simply to pander to their need for "support" (which usually
> means just telling them that the problem is being worked on)?
In my opinion...
I don't think it would require "heaps of people sitting around" to
maintain greater reliability, just better monitoring centers, and a
bit more redundancy. Also, there are routine maintenance needs that
staff could work on and be reassigned to deal with an emergency.
Often critical employees are on-call in case of rare emergency. There
is also the issue of strengthening the infrastructure to prevent
outages in the first place.
Would it bankrupt Verizon to provide eight hour batteries instead of
four-hour to its FIOS installations, so customers can keep phone
service during power outages?
AFAIK, Comcast did not disclose the specific cause of the outage.
Since it is a public service with monopoly or near monopoly status, I
think more information should be available to the public. ("Sunshine
being the best disinfectant".)
In the case of the old Bell System, they did manage to generally
provide a high reliability of service, even in electro-mechanical
days.
In the case of Verizon's many long term outages, it wasn't an issue of
having standby staff, but rather the company's refusal to fix a
problem. For example, a neighborhood in Philadelphia lost landline
service. Verizon claimed it couldn't get a permit to dig up the
street for repairs, which was nonsense. As recent posts here
illustrated, Verizon responded to problems by merely sending town
officials a nasty letter. That behavior and disrespect should not be
tolerated.
Aggressive cost cutting was a factor in the old Bell Systems service
troubles in New York City in the 1970s.
> I suppose if people are willing to pay 3 or 4 times what they pay
> now for this luxury then it could happen, but I doubt that they will
> take that option.
The Philadelphia Electric Company got flack for a slow response time
storm damage repair. Part of the criticism was that they had ceased
pruning back trees near suburban power lines, allowing broken trees to
more likely take down a power line, which happened in the last storm.
The public said it was willing to pay more for better service
reliability. Rates went up only slightly, certainly not "3 or 4
times", and tree trimming was resumed. In the last major storm, there
were very few outages.
Unfortunately, part of the lack of reliability has come from very
aggressive cost cutting by the carriers. Both Verizon and Comcast
have closed local facilities in favor of centralized centers, which
aren't as responsive to local needs. (CSX railroad had problems due
to centralizing all of its far flung operations to Jacksonville).
Verizon seeks to eliminate all remaining Bell System legacy personnel,
which is probably a bad idea given their talent and experience.
I had regular dealings with my local cable company prior to Comcast
buying it up. There's a world of difference between what they
provided and what Comcast provided. Despite officially low inflation
and the improvements of technology, Comcast requires rate increases
every year.
The Philadelphia Inquirer routinely reports that Comcast has record
profits. I dare say some of that money could be used to improve
service reliability.
http://www.philly.com/philly/business/20150724_NBCUniversal__Internet_boost_Comcast_profit.html
As we know, there have been reports of widespread customer
dissatisfaction. I can't speak for others, but personally I buy only
what I absolutely have to (monopoly or oligopoly offering) from these
carriers. Unfortunately, for me, my choices are between Verizon and
Comcast.
------------------------------
Message-ID: <na3i0d$7q8$1@blue-new.rahul.net>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 20:41:19 -0800
From: John David Galt <jdg@diogenes.sacramento.ca.us>
Subject: Re: Comcast outages anger thousands across US
>> On Mon, 15 Feb 2016 22:22:16 -0500, Bill Horne quoted Jackie Wattles:
>>> Comcast service outages sent social media ablaze with complaints from
>>> areas all across the country.
>>>
>>> The TV and Internet provider's customer service account, @comcastcares,
>>> was responding to an onslaught of unhappy customers on Monday.
>>>
>>> "[G]et more employees and offer same day help when there's a problem.
>>> It's 2016, we aren't sending snail mail for help," one Twitter user
>>> wrote.
>>>
http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/15/news/companies/comcast-service-outage/index.html
> David Clayton <dc33box-cdt@yahoo.com.au> writes:
>> Do people actually realise that companies will not ever have heaps of
>> people sitting around 99.9% of the time just in case there is a rare
>> major outage simply to pander to their need for "support" (which usually
>> means just telling them that the problem is being worked on)?
On 2016-02-16 21:42, Doug McIntyre wrote:
> They could easily contract out for reserve call-center workers to be
> enabled and brought online for a major outage, if anything just to
> admit there are major issues, and take a message to pass along.
>
> There are call-centers who hotel for many different companies already
> that could absorb some of the load. But this takes planning,
> contracts, and still paying for some sort of outsourcing service.
I don't want my phone company spending (and charging me) big bucks just
to operate (or pay for, even temporarily) a call center to baby people.
Simply putting up a web page saying we know there's an outage (using a
backup data center if necessary) should satisfy most people, and all
companies should already be easily capable of doing it.
One step up from that would be a web site that allows users to open
trouble tickets for themselves, thus giving the company detailed,
searchable information about each affected customer (and giving the
end-user a confirmation number, which lets them prove later that they
reported the issue) without requiring a human to answer each call. In
the customer's seat I would appreciate such a system because it frees as
many of the company's technical personnel as possible to get busy fixing
the actual bug ASAP. Which is what I want them to be doing.
My neighborhood ISP has had this working for decades now, so I refuse to
believe Verizon or AT&T is incapable of it.
Of course this isn't workable with a POTS line as the input device. But
it makes loads of sense in any situation where the customers have the
ability to send either e-mail or text messages.
*********************************************
End of telecom Digest Fri, 19 Feb 2016