----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190228171111.GA25791@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2019 17:11:11 +0000
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: Missouri 911 centers deal with phone issue
WEST PLAINS, Mo. - Area 911 operations are dealing with a service
outage Thursday morning.
Howell County 911 Administrator Steve Gleghorn told Ozark Radio News
that issues have been confirmed in Howell, Texas, and Wright County,
with issues in Howell County starting around 7 am. Those 911 offices
are working on getting calls routed to their business lines.
https://www.ozarkradionews.com/local-news/area-911s-deal-with-phone-issues
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190228171836.GA25882@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2019 17:18:36 +0000
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: WYOMING: NIOBRARA COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' SPECIAL MEETING
NIOBRARA COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' SPECIAL MEETING NIOBRARA COUNTY,
WYOMING February 8, 2019
The purpose of the meeting was to meet with Russ Elliott, State of
Wyoming Broadband Manager to inform the council, mayor, and landowners
and interested parties on what is happening with broadband in Niobrara
County. Chairman Wade gave background information on why broadband is
becoming a necessity in this area. CenturyLink is providing little to
no service for residents in the Hat Creek area and landowners have
experienced issues with the phone lines such as ghost 911 calls, lack
of service, and/or no service for days. The idea behind using
broadband would allow residents affected by CenturyLink's lack of
service to be able to use Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP).
https://luskherald.com/article/public-notice-no-5213
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190228152045.GA25195@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2019 15:20:45 +0000
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: United States: DOJ Sued Over Its Reinterpretation Of The
Wire Act
by James G. Gatto
It didn't take long. The New Hampshire Lottery has sued the Department
of Justice (DOJ) to prevent enforcement of the DOJ's opinion (issued
last month) reinterpreting the Wire Act. As we reported last month,
the DOJ reversed the position it took in 2011 that the entirety of the
Wire Act is limited to sports betting. It newly concludes that only
one of four parts of the Wire Act apply to sports betting, while the
other three apply to any online betting.
http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=784162&email_access=on
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <12AC71A6-A6B5-4407-9FAA-E82DD6D7F84D@mishmash.com>
Date: 27 Feb 2019 13:39:16 -0700
From: "Fred Atkinson" <fatkinson.remove-this@and-this-too.mishmash.com>
Subject: Fwd: Crucial.com Cancels Legitimate Orders
From: "Fred Atkinson" <fatkinson.remove-this@and-this-too.mishmash.com>
> Date: February 26, 2019 at 6:33:19 AM MST
> To: telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org.
> Subject: Crucial.com Cancels Legitimate Orders
> Reply-To: "Fred Atkinson" <fatkinson.remove-this@and-this-too.mishmash.com>
>
> Over the last weekend, I ordered thirty-two gigabytes of memory
> for my personal Windows 2016 server I am running on my home network.
> I gave the vendor a shipping address where I routinely receive
> personal deliveries.
<snip>
Well, they told me to send my order through and it would go through
this time so long as I used the same address I used on the last one.
So I did.
Guess what? They canceled it, too!
I got on the phone with them and read them the riot act. I was told
to submit it again and they would see that it went through.
I did call AMEX and I had them add my street address to my card as a
shipping address only. Maybe that mitigated things some.
I checked my order status this morning. It appeared to have been
approved. But they've made a skeptic out of me. So I called a few
minutes ago. They told me it was finalized and was waiting to be
shipped today. They also told me it was slated to go via UPS.
They gave me free overnight shipping for all of the aggravation I've
suffered.
Haven't these people ever heard of Juran, Deming, Crosby, and Taguchi?
Hopefully, I will have my memory sticks by tomorrow.
I imagine AMEX is wondering why there are four pending charges
against my credit card for that rather large amount. Supposedly, the
other three will drop off shortly.
I wonder if they will include some Alka Seltzer in the shipment? At
least that would mitigate it some <smirk>. They sure know how to
give their customers an ulcer.
I am looking forward to doing their customer satisfaction survey!
Yee-Ow! But I wonder if they even bother with those things [judging
by my experience with them].
Fred
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190228205046.C7648200F72FFF@ary.local>
Date: 28 Feb 2019 15:50:46 -0500
From: "John Levine" <johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Crucial.com Cancels Legitimate Orders
In article <26EF2AF0-2438-4244-8850-C430DA675422@mishmash.com> you write:
> Have anyone else here ever heard of anything so utterly
>ridiculous?
All the time. My credit card banks have both my PO Box and my street
address so the authorization usually works, but there are a lot of
broken systems that either freak out when they see something like this:
John L
PO Box 123
456 Hummingbird Lane
Anytown USA 96943
They can't deal with a PO Box even if there is also a street address.
Or sometimes they just accept the PO Box and give it to UPS or Fedex,
who should reject it, but sometimes they accept the shipment anyway
and it bounces around until it's sent back. One particularly clever
time UPS e-mailed me to say this address is no good, can you fix it,
and they gave me the option of changing the "street name" (PO Box) or
the number (123) but not both.
R's,
John
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190228213943.953CA11E5@telecom2018.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2019 21:39:43 +0000 (UTC)
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: Updated FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions for The Telecom Digest
Last update February 28, 2019
This is the list of frequently-asked questions for The Telecom Digest,
and it is sent to new subscribers automatically. It is also posted in
the Digest whenever there's a major change.
Q. What is The Telecom Digest?
A. The Telecom Digest is the oldest continuously published mailing
list on the Internet. It was started before Usenet existed, but is
now available via the Usenet group comp.dcom.telecom.
Q. Who's in charge?
A. The current Moderator is Bill Horne, and you may reach him by
sending email to telecomdigestsubmissions atsign telecom-digest.org
Q. How do I subscribe?
A. If you want to receive The Telecom Digest via email, send a "plain
text" email message to sympa.atsign.telecom-digest.org, with the
command "subscribe telecom" in the subject line, followed by the
"quit" command in the message body, so you don't have to worry
about any signature or other automatically-added content, which
might confuse the SYMPA robot. You may choose to receive posts in a
daily digest, with all the posts for the day included in a single
email, or you may choose to have each post sent to your email
address as soon as it is approved: the later option is the default,
but if you prefer to get the digest verion in your email, wait
until your subscription has been confirmed, and then send a new
email to sympa.atsign.telecom-digest.org, with the command "help"
in the subject of the message, followed by the "quit" command on
the first line of the message body. You'll receive a help message,
which will tell you what other options are available.
If you want to subscribe an address OTHER THAN the one you are
sending the subscription request from, then you need to send an
email to the moderator, and include details of the request. Any
email sent from an address which is obfuscated, incorrect, or
which goes to a challenge-response system will be ignored.
You may also receive and post to The Telecom Digest via the Usenet
group comp.dcom.telecom, either using NNTP or through portals such
as Google or Yahoo.
Q. What topics does The Telecom Digest cover?
A. The Telecom Digest is primarily, but not exclusively, focused on
the world's telephone systems, networks, and companies. Our
readers talk about regulations, technical matters, rates,
numbering plans, tariffs, the prices charged for various services,
alternatives to the traditional telephone network (such as VoIP),
and related issues.
Q. What do I do if I want to talk about something else?
A. The Internet is a big place: it's impossible to list all the
telecommunications-related groups available on Google and Yahoo
and Usenet in this FAQ. If you're looking for a place to talk
about two-way radios or ship's blinker lights or surplus military
gear, the best way to go about finding a mailing list, group, or
website for your interest is to do a Google search for the
specific equipment you're looking for, and backtrack from that to
the places where others who are interested in it hang out.
Q. How do I get something published in The Telecom Digest?
A. There are three ways to contribute original posts or to reply to
posts made by others. ALL POSTS ARE SENT TO THE SAME INBOX and are
evaluated by the same rules, so there's no need to worry about
which one you use. Choose from these ways:
1. Send an email to
telecomdigestsubmissions.atsign.telecom-digest.org.
2. Use an NNTP client, such as pine, or a combined email/nntp
program, such as Mozilla Thunderbird, to send posts to the
Telecom Digest via a Usenet server. If your ISP doesn't have a
Usenet server, there are free ones available, such as the one
at eternal-september.org.
3. Use a commercial portal, such as Google or Yahoo, to access the
Usenet group comp.dcom.telecom. You will have to have an
account with the portal's owner in order to do this, but
they're usually issued without charge.
No matter which way you send a message to The Telecom Digest, each
message's "Subject" line must contain one of the following tags in
order to be excepted from our spam-prevention process. There is no
guarantee that a message without one of these tags will ever be
read. The brackets around each tag must be included, but the
quotes are not required.
1. "" if your post can be published verbatim.
2. "[nfp]" (Not For Publication) if your email is only for the
Moderator's eyes.
3. "[obfuscate]" if you want the Moderator to modify your email
address before publishing your post so that it cannot be used
without being changed, i.e., so that it can't be copied by a
spambot and used to send you spam. If you are a frequent Digest
contributor, you may request that your email address be
automatically obfuscated anytime you send a post, so that you
may submit contributions without the need for the "[obfuscate]"
tag.
4. "[Anonymous]" if you want all traces of your identity removed
from the post before it is published. (See rules about
anonymous postings, shown below.)
For example:
Subject: Re: FCC refuses to take action on cramming [Anonymous]
Subject: Eleven-digit phone numbers are coming
Subject: Cell phone SMS spam is getting worse [Obfuscate]
Subject: I haven't seen my post yet [nfp]
Please note that the keywords in the tags are not case sensitive.
Q. What are the Moderator's criteria for acceptable posts?
A. In general, the Moderator approves posts which meet the guidelines
shown here. The Moderator's decisions are binding, but readers are
always welcome to argue their case for an exception or for special
treatment: in other words, if a post is rejected, a contributor may
ask the Moderator to reconsider. The Moderator, in turn, may ask
that potential posts be modified so as to make them acceptable, or
may refuse to reconsider a decision to reject. The Moderator's
decision is not subject to appeal, and The Telecom Digest does not
allow "Meta" discussions about moderation policies or decisions.
Q. What are the rules about content?
A. There are very few rules. The most important are listed here:
1. Netiquette is both encouraged and enforced. The Telecom Digest
does not allow ad hominem attacks, unwarranted sarcasm, foul
language, undocumented allegations of illegal or improper
conduct, or other kinds of viciousness. The Moderator reserves
the right to be completely arbitrary and capricious when making
decisions about posts which, in the Moderator's sole and
exclusive judgement, are inappropriate for publication.
2. Posts must concern telecommunications using the spoken word or
keyboards, i.e., they should be about the ways, people,
politics, instruments, equipment, inventions, costs, history,
and regulations that bear on spoken or text-based conversations
between human beings.
3. Posts which bear on other aspects of the PSTN are allowed if
they are germane to discussion about the worldwide telephone
network in some other way: e.g., a post about "texting" while
driving would be OK, and a post about the use of phones while
on an airline flight would also be acceptable.
4. The Moderator enjoys the privilege of modifying both spelling
and grammar when, in the Moderator's judgement, a post is not
clear enough to read without changes. Posts which require
extensive rewriting are usually rejected and returned to their
authors for rework, but in cases where the author cannot be
contacted (e.g., when a poster does not use a valid email
address), then the Moderator may choose to step in and modify a
post rather than delete it.
Q. What are the formatting and style rules?
A. The Digest has both formatting rules and style guidelines. Here are
the rules:
1. Your post must be written in English. Although it may contain
words or phrases that are commonly used by non-English speaking
peoples, such entries must be generally acceptable in the
English-speaking online world.
2. Any post submitted with base64 or other encoding which isn't
readable "as is" will be rejected.
3. No attachments of any sort are ever accepted. MIME emails are
always converted to plain text before they are reviewed for
publication, so HTML is always converted to plain text as
well. MIME content such as V-Cards, and images such as corporate
logos, are also removed.
4. You may include URLs in your posts so long as they contain a
valid domain name and point to a server which is currently
online and where the page is available for inspection prior to
publication. IP addresses are never allowed in place of domain
names, and the Moderator reserves the right to delete any URL
that does not point to a well-known domain in a free country.
5. Since some readers use software which cannot automatically wrap
long lines to fit the computer screen, please include a "hard"
newline at the end of every line of your post. Posts that have
"run-on" lines will be either rejected or reformatted, at the
Moderator's option, to comply with this convention.
6. Please do not use "Quoted Printable" encoding. Some Usenet=20
clients cannot decode it, which leaves the readers who use
them=20 with a jumble of strange characters that they must try
to=20 interpret by sight.
7. The "Official" character set of The Telecom Digest is
ISO-8859-1; US-ASCII is also acceptable. If you submit a post
that uses another character set, such as UTF-8, it might be
rejected.
8. You must clearly identify the source(s) of quoted material.
9. Any quotes which the Moderator deems to be excessively long are
subject to trimming.
10. Advertisements, even those automatically added to posts by
"free" email/Usenet servers without a poster's consent, are
unacceptable and may be removed.
11. "Cartooney" legal statements which purport to limit the legal
rights of someone who reads a post will always be deleted, or
the post rejected. I don't care if your company email server
adds them automatically: color them gone.
Q. Are there any guidelines about the style of posts?
A. Yes, and they are listed here. The Moderator reserves the right to
modify non-compliant posts before publication if he chooses.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890
1. Please remember that The Telecom Digest has a worldwide
audience, and that not all people use the email formatting
customs which are common in the United States, and not all
readers have access to high-definition computer screens that
can show hundreds of characters per line, and not all readers
have young eyes. The above ruler is a reminder to keep the
lines of your posts within an seventy-column right margin, so
as to allow room for quote marks in the left margin of followup
posts.
2. Please don't include "ASCII art" in your posts, including
signature lines: don't forget that these sorts of decoration
depend on fixed-width fonts to be readable, and that each
Digest reader gets to choose the font (s)he prefers.
3. Please do not use "leetspeak" or other childish misspellings.
4. Excessive capitalization or using inappropriate mixtures of
upper and lower case is frowned upon.
5. Please limit the size of ".sig" files, and avoid pretentious
quoting. Less _IS_ more.
Q. Does The Telecom Digest accept anonymous posts?
A. Sometimes, but reluctantly. Posters who request anonymity must add
the "[anonymous]" tag to the subject line of their posts, and the
Moderator makes a judgement on a case-by-case basis. Posters who
request anonymity will please provide a brief reason for the
request in a clearly-separated section of the email, e.g.,
******************************************************************
Please publish this anonymously. My country is arresting those who
discuss this subject publicly.
******************************************************************
Keep in mind that, if your request for an anonymous post is
accepted, ALL information which might point to your identity
will be deleted from your post. The post will appear with a
different message-id than the one it arrived with, and all headers
will be stripped, so you must include anything you want published
in the body of your post. Of course, if you request an anonymous
post but you want to include a website address, a product name, or
other items of commercial value, then the post will be evaluated
with an eye toward that and will almost always be rejected.
Don't even think of asking the Moderator to serve as a postman
for encrypted emails: if you want to have someone encrypt their
emails to you, then you must use a publicly-reachable email address
and request encrypted replies in your post. Of course, you'll have
to offer to trade X.509 or PGP keys in private emails, or have a
PGP key available on a public key-server, such as pgp.mit.edu: the
Telecom Digest does not publish PGP keys.
Q. May I "spam-proof" my email address?
A. Yes. It's OK to make your address "human readable", so that readers
can send replies directly to you, but spam robots can't pick your
address off our website and use it to spam you.
However -
If your email address is indecipherable, then your post will be
reviewed more stringently than posts sent by those who are willing
to receive direct emails. There is, of course, a grey area between
having a "spam-proof" address and having an unusable one, and the
Moderator makes decisions on a case-by-case basis as to whether
posts with invalid email addresses are acceptable.
Q. Where are the archives of old posts?
A. Some are available on the Telecom Digest website, which is at
http://www.telecom-digest.org/, but editions of the Digest
produced before 2007 might not be online in a format that you can
search or obtain with a web browser. As time allows, the Moderator
is finding ways to make them more easy to use, and I welcome help
with this project.
Q. Can we write about things that came before telephones?
A. Posts about things like semaphore signalling, Morse Code, The Pony
Express, and Carrier Pigeons are discouraged. Such subjects may,
however, be mentioned by posters who choose to illustrate the
history, technology, regulations, and social forces which formed
the PSTN we use today, but posts may not focus exclusively on
them.
Q. Can I post a story about things which might come after telephones?
A. Not unless you are speculating in a believable way about the future
direction the PSTN will take. The Telecom Digest is not a venue
for Science Fiction, so if you want to post about phones on other
planets, or other ways of communication which haven't been
discovered yet, then you'll need to find a more appropriate place
for your work.
Q. Since the line between "Data" and "Telephone" gets more blurry
every day, how do you draw the line between VoIP services such as
Vonage and Skype, and the more traditional telephone network?
A. If it concerns people using electronic means to talk to each other,
it's fair game, provided that the method(s) being used are capable
of connecting to the PSTN or are provided by a recognized common
carrier. When there is room for doubt, each post is judged on its
own merits.
Q. If I can sign up to receive each post separately, why is it called
"The Telecom Digest"?
A. The original Telecom Digest was a compilation of emails that were
received by the Moderator each day. The Moderator assembled each
day's digest by hand, and sent it out manually, so there was no
other subscription option besides the "digest" version. When The
Telecom Digest was made available to Usenet readers, that changed,
but the original title of the publication remained, so it is still
called "The Telecom Digest".
Up until 2007, the email version of The Telecom Digest was still
assembled by hand each day, and was thus available only in digest
form, even though it was, by that time, sent out using an
automated email robot located at John Levine's server in New
York. The email robot in use is "Sympa", which allows subscribers
to choose either digest or individual emails, and since Usenet
readers already enjoyed the option of seeing individual posts,
Sympa is programmed to give email subscribers the same choice.
Q. What are the options available to subscribers using the email
robot?
A. There are too many to list here: to get started on them, send a
"plain text" email to sympa.atsign.telecom-digest.org with the
word "help" in the subject line.
Q. How do I unsubscribe?
A. Send an email to sympa.atsign.telecom-digest.org, with the command
"unsubscribe telecom" in the subject line of the message. If you
no longer have access to the email account from which you
subscribed, use the command "unsubscribe telecom
<old.email.address>".
If you don't have the password for an old account, and no longer
have access to it to send emails to the SYMPA robot, then you may
ask the Moderator to intercede and unsubscribe an old address on
your behalf. Such requests are always verified.
Please note: the SYMPA robot will AUTOMATICALLY unsubscribe any
email address that is "bouncing" emails FOR ANY REASON. If your
mailbox is full, you might lose your subscription, so PLEASE turn
off delivery of the Digest when you go on vacation!
Q. How do I turn off delivery of the Telecom Digest while I'm on
vacation?
A. You need only send a "set" command to the email robot, with the
appropriate option. See the help file for more info.
Example: if you send an email to sympa.atsign.telecom-digest.org,
and put
set * nomail
... in the message, Sympa will stop delivery of ALL your
subscriptions (Not just the Telecom Digest) until you send another
"set" command to restart them.
Please note that all robot commands need to be confirmed, so
you'll get a "challenge" email from the Sympa robot, containing
instructions on how to confirm the command. If you prefer, you may
send commands that are validated with your Sympa password, and
they will be executed without need for confirmation: see the Sympa
help files for info.
End of the Telecom Digest FAQ.
------------------------------
*********************************************
End of telecom Digest Fri, 01 Mar 2019