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The Telecom Digest for December 24, 2010
Volume 29 : Issue 347 : "text" Format

Messages in this Issue:

ZIP Codes and barcodes (was: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal) (Adam H. Kerman)
Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright (David Clayton)
Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright (Robert Bonomi)
Re: Zip codes (Was:Re: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal) (Robert Bonomi)
ZIP Codes and barcodes(Adam H. Kerman)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (Robert Bonomi)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (John Levine)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (Adam H. Kerman)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (Sam Spade)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (John Levine)
Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy (John Levine)
Re: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal(Wes Leatherock)
Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright (Wes Leatherock)
Re: Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests Standalone Devices (John David Galt)


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Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 08:03:15 +0000 (UTC) From: "Adam H. Kerman" <ahk@chinet.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: ZIP Codes and barcodes (was: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal) Message-ID: <ieuvo3$oh2$1@news.albasani.net> Lisa or Jeff <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote: >On Dec 20, 11:15 pm, "Adam H. Kerman" <a...@chinet.com> wrote: >>The United States Postal Service ZIP Code directory is copyrighted and >>competing directories are published under license. I suppose since the >>post office does the actual work assigning ZIP Codes that it's possible >>to copyright? ZIP Codes are basic information incorporated into any >>demographic and transporation routing database without license, so I'm >>not sure how it's possible to prevent someone else from publishing a ZIP >>Code directory. >I thought the US Govt wasn't allowed to copyright anything? Or is the >Post Office exempt from that since it is now a separate "Service" as >opposed to a regular Department of the govt? The copyright notice appears on ZIP Code directories from the 1960's, when the post office was still an executive department and not an independent agency. >M/S Word has long had a facility to print a bar code above an address >with the zip or zip+5 code in it. They removed support for the POSTNET barcode several versions ago. POSTNET barcode represents a 12-digit number: 11-digit Delivery Point ZIP Code plus a check digit. The Delivery Point ZIP Code includes 9 digits for the ZIP+4 and two additional digits to allow sequencing by delivery point. The delivery point digits were initially calculated with a simple algorithm, the last two digits of the street address. The current algorith is much more complicated to allow sequencing of mail by secondary address element (apartment and suite number) required in certain multiple unit buildings (although not typically in buildings with three apartments or fewer). A lookup in the Address Information System database is required to know which buildings require encoding of secondary address elements. When the algorithm changed, the post office requested that Microsoft remove the feature as it didn't want the lookup and encoding performed without the use of certified software. Microsoft didn't want to compete in the commercial mailing list and address management software market and never published certified software to perform these functions. A kludge, if you really really want Microsoft Word's mail merge function to print qualifying barcodes on your letters, is to provide numeric representations of the barcode to an outdated version of Microsoft Word after having the lookup performed with certified software. Saves you from buying expensive new software or learning how to program, although the barcode itself is readily handled as a font. The POSTNET barcode is a 2-state barcode made up of 62 bars, 2 frame bars plus sequences of five bars representing 11 digits plus the check digit. The bars themselves are full and half bars above a baseline. The baseline is significant as the tall bars have ascenders and there are no descenders. Starting in May, 2011, unless it gets delayed again, Intelligent Mail Barcodes will be required on letters and flats claiming automation discounts, and the POSTNET barcode will no longer be used when preparing mail. These are 4-state barcodes, encoding 31 digits and comprising 65 bars. As the bars come in four flavors (four states) instead of two, more information may be encoded. The four states are tracker (short bar), tracker with ascender, tracker with descender, and full bar (tracker with ascender and descender). The barcode will be used to encode data from a number of different programs in addition to the Delivery Point ZIP Code, some of which currently use a second POSTNET barcode in the address block. Yes, it can include a serial number assigned by the mailer to the mailpiece. More information than you want to know is here: https://ribbs.usps.gov/index.cfm?page=intellmailmailpieces >I once heard that the post office has people working out of their >homes sorting mail that isn't machine readable (eg handwritten letters >and postcards). An image of the front of a letter is displayed on the >computer screen and the person keys in the address and the proper zip >code/routing information is bar coded on the mail. The technology to >do this sort of thing is certainly easy. Anyone know if they actually >do this? It's certainly possible that such remote encoding work can be performed at home, instead of in a datacenter. I don't know where the work is performed any more. There used to be a great many remote encoding centers, one for several major plants, set up temporarily till optical character recognition technology improved to the point that fewer and fewer human eyes were required to encode the address block. By the way, letters that have been through remote encoding have a red barcode on the back, which is an ID number, to match the piece to the machine that sprays on the barcode for the Delivery Point ZIP Code. >Returning to telecom, at one time some other countries had their post >office also run their telephone system. Is that still the case today? It's typical in Europe that the government telephone monopoly was through the postal and telecom administration, but many of these have been partly or fully privatized, including the some privatization of post office functions. Travelers would know to use the banks of pay phones at the post office to make cheaper calls than in their hotel rooms. I don't know where these government telecom monopolies through the post office continue to exist.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 16:25:42 +1100 From: David Clayton <dcstar@myrealbox.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright Message-ID: <pan.2010.12.23.05.25.41.82704@myrealbox.com> On Wed, 22 Dec 2010 19:13:46 -0800, Richard wrote: > On Wed, 22 Dec 2010 13:51:00 -0800 (PST), Lisa or Jeff > <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote: > >>I suspect telcos will not accept ads for illegal activities such as drug >>dealers or prostitution. > > Prostitution is listed, but not by that name. It is called "escort > services" or "models". ........ What?, I thought it was listed in the "Political Lobbyist" section? Old age is obviously confusing me....... -- Regards, David. David Clayton Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Knowledge is a measure of how many answers you have, intelligence is a measure of how many questions you have.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 03:14:58 -0600 From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright Message-ID: <Ft2dnRiado6Pjo7QnZ2dnUVZ_tGdnZ2d@posted.nuvoxcommunications> In article <26abb623-4b78-47ae-a3d2-50c9659b110c@g26g2000vbi.googlegroups.com>, Lisa or Jeff <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote: >On Dec 15, 9:58 pm, bon...@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) wrote: > >> Under U.S. copyright law, 'facts of nature' are not >> copyrightable. For a thing to be copyrightable, it must embody a >> degree of 'creative effort'. That 'creativity' is what is >> protected. . . . A "selective' compilation of facts, may qualify >> for a compilation copyright, where the necessary 'creativity' is in >> the selection of which facts to include, and which to exclude. > >White Pages may include: >1) Dialing instructions for local and toll calls; >2) Dialing instructions for special feature services (ie disable > call waiting) >3) Special listing sections for government numbers, broken down > by federal, state, and local, and social service help listings. > >It would seem to me all of the above would meet the defintion for >creative work and be copyrightable. ANY work, _taken_as_a_whole_ may exhibit the required creativity and be eligible for copyright on th work TAKEN AS A WHOLE. The fact that some portions of a work exhibit the requisite degree of creativity does -not- mean that -everything- in said work is automatically so protected. ONLY the 'creative expression' component in a work is protected by copyright. Any and all 'facts of nature' embodied in that work are =NOT= protected by that copyright. >Suppose a scientist discovers a new law of nature. Would it be >correct to say that if he merely published the law it would not be >copyrightable because it was a 'fact'; but if he wrote up his research >to show how he discovered the new law that would be copyrightable >since it was his 'creative effort'? *REGARDLESS* of what he publishes, or how he says it, the 'facts' of the "law of nature" itself are not protected by any valid copyright on the work that describes them. It's not that you can't claim copyright on a publication that contains 'facts', but that copyright on the publication does not extend to any 'facts' contained within that publication. Copyright does -not- protect the 'ideas' underlying any publication, only that particular _creative_expression_ of those ideas. Facts are not protectible/protected because everyone will/does express them in essentially the same way. In Feist v Rural Tel. it was claimed that someone who extracted the, names, addresses, and phone numbers, from the white pages of a telco- published directory, and used those 'facts' to produce their own directory was infringing on the copyright of the publishing telco. The U.S. Sup. Ct. held, regarding white pages directory listings, which were found to be (a) only a compilation of 'facts' (not subject to copyright protection, in and of themselves) and (b) being organized by an entirely mechanical process based on a 'natural' ordering, That there was "no infringement" if someone: (a) 'copied' those _facts_, and (b) applied the same 'natural' ordering thereunto. Obviously, it the 'same' natural ordering was non-infringing, then neither would be a 'similar, but not identical' one -- being 'less close' to the original than the action already determined to be non-infringing.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 02:26:38 -0600 From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Zip codes (Was:Re: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal) Message-ID: <DuudnZyfydIjmo7QnZ2dnUVZ_r6dnZ2d@posted.nuvoxcommunications> In article <480000.77750.qm@web111715.mail.gq1.yahoo.com>, Wes Leatherock <wleathus@yahoo.com> wrote: > >--- On Tue, 12/21/10, Free Lunch <lunch@nofreelunch.us> wrote: > >> The USPS's concern is for their electronic program. They want >> complete accuracy if they are going to give junk mail and bills a >> discount. Even though the software that verifies Zip+4 or Carrier >> Route presort is not sold by the USPS, they want to make sure that >> it is accurate. > >The Zip code system has been extended, first with the +4, which mainly >identifies usually a block of house numbrs, or a specific post office >box, with another three digits which are the last two digits of your >house number, plus a check digit. NOT EXACTLY. At least where multi-unit dwellings (apt bldgs,etc.) are concerned. Last condo building I lived in, there were THREE separate, valid ZIP+4 codes I could use for my mail. (still are, according to the USPS zip-code locater web-page.) One was valid for any building with an odd-numbered address with in the same 'hundreds', the second uniquely identified the building, _only_, and the third identified a block of units within the building. The additional digits mentioned are -not- part of the 'ZIP' coding system, but are a two digit 'delivery point' and a check digit that are encoded into the Postnet DPBC (delivery point bar code), or IMC (intelligent mail barcode) The delivery-point ID and the ZIP+4 may change *independently* of each other. In the early days of the DBP, the 2-digit value _was_"typically", the last two digits the street address. This is NO LONGER a valid assumption, as the DPB values have been refined to differentiate between recipients at the same street address (office suites, apts, etc.) Not to mention the fact that the DPB value for a particular 'mailbox' will differ depending on which of the multiple valid ZIP+4 codes is used for that mailbox address.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 23:06:52 +0000 (UTC) From: "Adam H. Kerman" <ahk@chinet.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: ZIP Codes and barcodes Message-ID: <if0kmc$90f$1@news.albasani.net> Robert Bonomi <bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote: >Wes Leatherock <wleathus@yahoo.com> wrote: >>On Tue, 12/21/10, Free Lunch <lunch@nofreelunch.us> wrote: >>>The USPS's concern is for their electronic program. They want >>>complete accuracy if they are going to give junk mail and bills a >>>discount. Even though the software that verifies Zip+4 or Carrier >>>Route presort is not sold by the USPS, they want to make sure that >>>it is accurate. >>The Zip code system has been extended, first with the +4, which mainly >>identifies usually a block of house numbrs, or a specific post office >>box, with another three digits which are the last two digits of your >>house number, plus a check digit. >NOT EXACTLY. >At least where multi-unit dwellings (apt bldgs,etc.) are concerned. >Last condo building I lived in, there were THREE separate, valid ZIP+4 codes >I could use for my mail. (still are, according to the USPS zip-code locater >web-page.) One was valid for any building with an odd-numbered address with >in the same 'hundreds', the second uniquely identified the building, _only_, >and the third identified a block of units within the building. You correctly observe the hierarchical nature of the database. In city delivery, the default encoding is either "blockface", one side of the street between intersections, or "hundreds", one side of the street until there is an increment to the next hundreds group, whichever is smaller. By default, a street address (not necessarily a building) with at least four units gets a ZIP+4, and there can be finer encodings if there are a great many units. If a firm has a lot of incoming mail, it might get one or more ZIP+4 codes, but this has become less necessary with encoding to delivery point. Encoding to a firm would be the finest encoding of all. You're not correct that each ZIP+4 is valid, for grosser encodings aren't used where finer encodings are available. If you gave a correspondent the ZIP+4 of the blockface but a different ZIP+4 is used specific to a small group of apartments, the system should print a barcode of the finest sortation level, otherwise sequencing is more difficult and they try to avoid having the carrier do any at all. In fact, a mailer claiming qualification for automation discounts MUST use the finest sortation available, which means that if a secondary address element is missing, he must obtain it, or remove the piece from the presort and send it as a residual piece. In that case, it's smarter to send the unsortable pieces at single-piece first-class rates, which happen to be the same as residual rates anyway, to receive First-Class service. >The additional digits mentioned are -not- part of the 'ZIP' coding system, >but are a two digit 'delivery point' and a check digit that are encoded into >the Postnet DPBC (delivery point bar code), or IMC (intelligent mail barcode) >The delivery-point ID and the ZIP+4 may change *independently* of each other. Uh, yes, the eleven digits are a Delivery Point ZIP Code. >Not to mention the fact that the DPB value for a particular 'mailbox' will >*differ* depending on which of the multiple valid ZIP+4 codes is used for >that mailbox address. That's not correct. If enough address elements are known, then when the lookup is performed, the ZIP+4 code for the finest sortation level is returned (even though the lookup returns ZIP+4 codes for grosser sortation levels). If necessary address elements are missing, such as the apartment number in a high-rise building, then the mailpiece isn't encoded to the delivery point (mailbox) and if the system hasn't corrected it, it'll be in a group of unsequenced pieces for the address.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 03:38:22 -0600 From: bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <jd2dnVux45wThY7QnZ2dnUVZ_gSdnZ2d@posted.nuvoxcommunications> In article <ietvtc$ces$1@news.albasani.net>, Adam H. Kerman <ahk@chinet.com> wrote: >John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> wrote: > >John, please correctly attribute quotes of my remarks to me. If I was sloppy >in phrasing my question, then the error is on me and shouldn't be assumed >to be on anyone else. > >>>What happens to the ported numbers? Is routing to the pool simply shut down? >>>I assume that there is no obligation by the incumbent telephone company to >>>switch those virtual lines. > >>You seem to be confusing porting with call forwarding. > >I was not. > >I assumed that a call would be routed to the default network and, if >the number was ported, the database of ported numbers would be consulted for >routing instructions. Assumption is incorrect. Originating switch does a database dip to find appropriate destination switch, and routes directly to that destination switch. This is desirable/necessary because the 'native' switch, and 'ported number destination switch' may require -different- inter-carrier routing to get to the destination. Case in point, if call origin is on the same network as the ported destination, and where ported destination is not the same as the 'native' network, does it make sense for origination network to hand call off to 'native' network only to have that network hand it back for final delivery? And how do you do the 'settlement' for that call? Does the 'native network' get something for a 'zero miles' hand-off? >What happens to telephone numbers ported out of a pool when the pool is >eliminated due to the demise of the telephone company authorized to assign >numbers from it? I theorized that the incumbent local exchange carrier >might be temporarily assigned as the default network for the pool (until >the pool is reassigned to another phone company that's run out of numbers), >doing nothing more than referring queries to those remaining numbers ported >out of the pool to the ported number database, but I assumed that the ILEC >had no such obligation in the regulatory scheme. No, I should not have said >"switch". The 'native' LEC, defunct or otherwise, has -nothing- to do with the routing of calls to 'ported away' numbers. an independent third party maintains the consolidated database. >John kindly explained that we use an All Call Query scheme, in which case >the ported number database is queried to learn if the number is indeed >ported, instead of a Query on Release scheme, in which case the ported >number database is queried only if the number was ported out of the >default network's pool. In ACQ, I can see how routing instructions to >numbers ported out of a pool that no longer exists could survive the >demise of the pool. One can either query before every call, or attempt a call set-up to the 'native' network, and if that set-up fails (for pretty much any reason other than 'circuit in use'), do the (third-party maintained) master database dip, and re-try. Note: if the 'native' network has gone defunct, the above logic will work because the required info is still in the 3rd-party maintained database. The 'critical' element in making this stuff work, regardless of how it is done, is having the "ported number database" operated and maintained by a third party, with the funding for that operation/maintenance coming from all the 'interested parties' -- so that loss of revenue from some network operator does -not- result in the 'loss' of the information about numbers that 'used to' belong to that operator.
Date: 23 Dec 2010 16:25:59 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <20101223162559.70035.qmail@joyce.lan> >Originating switch does a database dip to find appropriate destination switch, >and routes directly to that destination switch. > >This is desirable/necessary because the 'native' switch, and 'ported number >destination switch' may require -different- inter-carrier routing to get >to the destination. The FCC laid it out quite clearly in 1996. They did not want calls to ported numbers to depend in any way on cooperation from the target number's former switch. That would give the ILECs a huge incentive to screw it up, since they would almost always be the former switch. > And how do you do the 'settlement' for that call? Does the >'native network' get something for a 'zero miles' hand-off? That's actually not the problem. LECs do local transit for other reasons, and they do some sort of settlements. >The 'critical' element in making this stuff work, regardless of how it is >done, is having the "ported number database" operated and maintained by a >third party, with the funding for that operation/maintenance coming from >_all_ the 'interested parties' Right. That would be Neustar. R's, John
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 22:11:21 +0000 (UTC) From: "Adam H. Kerman" <ahk@chinet.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <if0he9$4am$1@news.albasani.net> Robert Bonomi <bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote: >Adam H. Kerman <ahk@chinet.com> wrote: >>John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> wrote: >>John, please correctly attribute quotes of my remarks to me. If I was sloppy >>in phrasing my question, then the error is on me and shouldn't be assumed >>to be on anyone else. >>>>What happens to the ported numbers? Is routing to the pool simply >>>>shut down? I assume that there is no obligation by the incumbent >>>>telephone company to switch those virtual lines. >>>You seem to be confusing porting with call forwarding. >>I was not. >>I assumed that a call would be routed to the default network and, if >>the number was ported, the database of ported numbers would be consulted for >>routing instructions. >Assumption is incorrect. >Originating switch does a database dip to find appropriate destination switch, >and routes directly to that destination switch. >This is desirable/necessary because the 'native' switch, and 'ported number >destination switch' may require -different- inter-carrier routing to get >to the destination. >Case in point, if call origin is on the same network as the ported >destination, and where ported destination is not the same as the >'native' network, does it make sense for origination network to hand >call off to 'native' network only to have that network hand it back for >final delivery? My assumption was that the originating network would query the default destination network for routing instructions, and if informed by the default destination network that the number has been ported out of its pool, then the originating network would query the ported number database for routing instructions. >And how do you do the 'settlement' for that call? Does the 'native >network' get something for a 'zero miles' hand-off? Same as they settle up for any database dips. >>John kindly explained that we use an All Call Query scheme, in which case >>the ported number database is queried to learn if the number is indeed >>ported, instead of a Query on Release scheme, in which case the ported >>number database is queried only if the number was ported out of the >>default network's pool. In ACQ, I can see how routing instructions to >>numbers ported out of a pool that no longer exists could survive the >>demise of the pool. >One can either query before every call, or attempt a call set-up to >the 'native' network, and if that set-up fails (for pretty much any >reason other than 'circuit in use'), do the (third-party maintained) >master database dip, and re-try. That seems like a truly bad idea. Under a Query on Release scheme, the referral to the ported number database should take place for ported numbers, only, and not for any other reason, especially not for "number not in use". >Note: if the 'native' network has gone defunct, the above logic will >work because the required info is still in the 3rd-party maintained >database. Yes, the information exists, but if every switch in the world has been informed that the pool of numbers no longer exists, then no attempts should be made to route calls into that pool. If QoR were in effect, you'd have to assign the entire pool to the network on which the ported number database lived, which seems wasteful when you might have a mere handful of numbers living on due to number porting. An interesting situation would occur if that defunct pool of numbers were reactivated and assigned to a completely different rate center. Any remaining ported numbers would have their rate center changed, a bizarre circumstance. The RFC John Levine came up with said QoR is a possible scheme but didn't state where it's implemented, so I'm really curious how they'd handle my hypothetical.
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 07:49:17 -0800 From: Sam Spade <sam@coldmail.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <HJydnaZBfIXj8o7QnZ2dnUVZ_t2dnZ2d@giganews.com> Adam H. Kerman wrote: > A hypothetical VoIP service doesn't resell line numbers from bandwidth.com > or one of its competitors that do nothing but provide line numbers at > needed rate centers. Instead, the VoIP company obtains its own pool > of line numbers and an adequate physical presence at various telephone > company central offices and participates in number portability following > existing telco rate center polygons. > In non-technical terms it is my understanding that I still "own" my ported number if it is ported from a wireline or wireless carrier to a different wireline or wireless carrier. My duty is to not disconnect the former service until the new service is established and my porting request has been completed. But, with Vonage (which I have) I understand any number I port to them is probably lost should I choose to discontinue my Vonage account. I am speaking of a directly number I ported from my former wireline or wireless carrier, not a number Vonage assigned to me. Can anyone clarify or explain it better?
Date: 23 Dec 2010 19:56:47 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <20101223195647.23101.qmail@joyce.lan> >But, with Vonage (which I have) I understand any number I port to them >is probably lost should I choose to discontinue my Vonage account. I am >speaking of a directly number I ported from my former wireline or >wireless carrier, not a number Vonage assigned to me. That's not unique to Vonage. If you cancel your service without porting your number away first, the number is available and is returned to the original carrier. By the way, has anyone else managed to port a number away from Vonage? I did it, but they didn't make it easy. Regards, John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly ***** Moderator's Note ***** John, did you have to order Neustar to force the change, or did Vonage give up before then? Bill Horne Moderator
Date: 23 Dec 2010 22:01:33 -0000 From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Number portability and the demise of line number pools in bankruptcy Message-ID: <20101223220133.54376.qmail@joyce.lan> >By the way, has anyone else managed to port a number away from Vonage? >I did it, but they didn't make it easy. >***** Moderator's Note ***** > >John, did you have to order Neustar to force the change, or did Vonage >give up before then? That was back in the chaotic era when you couldn't even get them on the phone, so I ported it to another VoIP provider which completed before they noticed. Then I changed my credit card number, which made it easier to get their attention and cancel my account. ("Sir, we will have to cancel your account if you don't pay." "Cancel the account, I've been telling you that for months." "Uh, er, I'll have to call you back.") Much later I simultaneously started getting notices from a collection agency due to Vonage trying to collect for months after I cancelled, along with junk mail in which Vonage told me how much they wanted me back. About a year after I cancelled, I started getting some odd calls from an old guy whose daughter was in college near here, and realized that chaos still reigned: they had attempted to reassign my number to the daughter. What this meant was that my number showed up on the caller-id when she called home, any non-Vonage customer who tried to call her got me, and any Vonage customer who tried to call me got her. Fortunately, at that time I realized I knew one of the guys on their board of directors, sent him an e-mail, and a couple of days later got a call from a very nervous flack assuring me at great length that everything was fixed and they wouldn't be bothering me any more. That would have been fine except that I was in England that week with my number forwarded to my cell phone, so it was costing me about $1 per minute to listen to him. And I haven't heard from them since. If I hadn't had the connection to the board member, who knows whether I'd ever have been able to get the girl's number changed. So anyway, if anyone was asking, no, I would not recommend Vonage for your telephone service. R's, John
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 06:51:51 -0800 (PST) From: Wes Leatherock <wleathus@yahoo.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Telstra loses directory copyright appeal Message-ID: <293337.60595.qm@web111710.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> --- On Wed, 12/22/10, Lisa or Jeff <hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com> wrote: > Returning to telecom, at one time some other countries had their > post office also run their telephone system. Is that still the case > today? It was true in many (most?) countries at one time. Usually by a department of government ending with the letters PTT. (Post, telegraph, telephone). Privately owned telegraph and telephone companies were once a rarity in many countries of the world. Wes Leatherock wleathus@yahoo.com wesrock@aol.com
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 07:01:59 -0800 (PST) From: Wes Leatherock <wleathus@yahoo.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Australian phone book content not protected by copyright Message-ID: <696989.67260.qm@web111710.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> --- On Wed, 12/22/10, John Mayson <john@mayson.us> wrote: > About 15 years ago an entry appeared in the Melbourne/Palm Bay (FL) > white pages published by BellSouth. The name was Jablome Haywood, > but the first and last names were swapped as is always the case with > personal names in the white pages. Needless to say it didn't appear > the following year. Not connected with abortion in any way, we once were friends [with a woman] whose husbnad's father was Richard Long, [and he] went by "Dick", and had an insurance agency in Wichita Falls, Texas. They told us his agency was listed as "Long Dick Insurance Agency." We later visited them in Wichita Falls and of course I looked to see if it were true. It was -- big as life in the Wichita Falls diredtory. They said the telco had tried to get him to list it several other ways, but he refused. After all, it was the legal name of his business. Wes Leatherock wleathus@yahoo.com wesrock@aol.com
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 12:54:10 -0800 From: John David Galt <jdg@diogenes.sacramento.ca.us> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Navigon MobileNavigator App Bests Standalone Devices Message-ID: <if0ctp$77l$1@blue.rahul.net> Sam Spade wrote: > Yet another quick trip to a horrific car crash. > > Yee gads, haven't we debated endlessly the hazards of voice and text > wireless in the automobile?! Show me numbers, before and after the ban. Until then we don't know.
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