33 Years of the Digest ... founded August 21, 1981Copyright © 2015 E. William Horne. All Rights Reserved.The Telecom Digest for Apr 25, 2015
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We all agree that neither the Government nor political parties ought to interfere with religious sects. It is equally true that religious sects ought not to interfere with the Government or with political parties. We believe that the cause of good government and the cause of religion both suffer by all such interference. |
Rutherford B. Hayes |
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Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 21:58:56 -0700 From: John Reiser <jreiserfl@comcast.net> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Caller ID is my own name/number? Message-ID: <3umdnWO5DNUMUKTInZ2dnUVZ57ydnZ2d@giganews.com> >> [fake CallerID] is ALREADY against the law. What can passing more laws accomplish? >> >> Specifically, the Truth in Caller ID Act of 2009, aka Public Law >> 111-331 By itself, soliciting to induce a sale of goods or services is not fraud, does not cause harm, nor seek to obtain wrongfully something of value; and thus is not prohibited by that law. Often it is called "advertising." |
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 17:28:36 -0700 (PDT) From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: History - Western Union/Stuckey's motorist messaging Message-ID: <e39d0d70-d0dd-40b5-a53b-3c572e41130c@googlegroups.com> The following is paraphrased from the June 11, 1973, Western Union Newsletter. (I do not believe the newsletter is available on-line.) In 1973, the Stuckey's roadside restaurant chain implemented a computerized messaging service for motorists. "HELPS"--Highway Emergency Locating Paging Service utilized a Western Union private wire system to connect to its 350 outlets. At each outlet, there was a CRT terminal kisok. A party wishing to contact a traveller calls the HELPS message center in Eastman, GA. They give the phone number of the traveller and the number to be called. A traveller enters his home phone number into the terminal, and the system advised the phone number he is to call. The article did not indicate if any other information could be left in the message, or what the service fees were, if any. Anyone ever see this system in use? * * * * Western Union, as we know, once could accept telegrams at many railroad stations and airports. Further, at staffed Western Union desks and offices, travellers could receive cash wired to them by family or friends (money by wire is the service offered by today's Western Union.) While highway rest stops usually had a battery of pay phones, I always wondered if Western Union had desks, agent arrangements, or coin collectors at major turnpike service plazas (I don't recall seeing any.) |
Date: 24 Apr 2015 02:20:53 -0000 From: "John Levine" <johnl@iecc.com> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Caller ID is my own name/number? Message-ID: <20150424022053.15282.qmail@ary.lan> >Well, I am not a lawyer, so I can't argue the law. However, I doubt >that the current law(s) have any meaningful teeth in them, or the >problem wouldn't be occuring. Fake caller-id is a difficult technical problem. The FTC is giving it a lot of attention, and it'll be a large part of the agenda at the upcoming meeting of the intergovenmental London Action Plan in Dublin in June. The problem is that the SS7 signalling network was designed in an era when there were relatively few phone companies, and they were all well behaved. These days, anyone with a VoIP switch can inject CLID data and while most providers behave themselves, some don't, and the system provides no easy way to trace the bad data back to the source. Even worse, through the magic of the intertubes, even if the person calling you is in the US, the call may be routed through a sleazy provider in another country. The regulators are putting pressure on the telcos to clean up, and to provide the tools to catch the bad guys, but it's a long slog. People who work for the FTC get the same junk calls as anyone else and are just as annoyed by them as the rest of us. R's, John ***** Moderator's Note ***** Ironically, SS7 was put into service to reduce Blue Box fraud, which was made possible because those whom designed the network couldn't conceive of a future where someone would break the rules for commercial gain. It just wasn't in their world-view. Sort of like the Internet ... Bill Horne Moderator |
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 20:46:28 -0400 From: Denver Gingerich <denver@remove-this.ossguy.com> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Caller ID is my own name/number? Message-ID: <CAB7eHu3bn1Q64cQzgjUchG75SfH-U1yvzygjA5Ced3w6VaR-Ow@mail.gmail.com> On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 7:18 PM, Bill Horne <bill@horneqrm.net> wrote: > On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 04:07:27PM -0700, Duncan Smith wrote: >> On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 06:44:26PM -0400, Bill Horne wrote: >>> I suggest you write to your Congressman and Senators, and tell them >>> that you want them to pass a law making it illegal to falsify Caller >>> ID information. >> >> It's ALREADY against the law. What can passing more laws accomplish? >> >> Specifically, the Truth in Caller ID Act of 2009, aka Public Law >> 111-331, says: >> >> 111-331> It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States, >> 111-331> in connection with any telecommunications service or >> 111-331> IP-enabled voice service, to cause any caller identification >> 111-331> service to knowingly transmit misleading or inaccurate caller >> 111-331> identification information with the intent to defraud, cause >> 111-331> harm, or wrongfully obtain anything of value, unless such >> 111-331> transmission is exempted pursuant to paragraph (3)(B). > > Well, I am not a lawyer, so I can't argue the law. However, I doubt > that the current law(s) have any meaningful teeth in them, or the > problem wouldn't be occuring. To be fair, we haven't determined whether the OP was called by someone "with the intent to defraud, cause harm, or wrongfully obtain anything of value". Once we determine that, then we know if the call was illegal. Denver http://ossguy.com/ |
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 20:19:11 -0700 From: John David Galt <jdg@diogenes.sacramento.ca.us> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Caller ID is my own name/number? Message-ID: <mhccms$jqi$1@blue-new.rahul.net> >> On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 06:44:26PM -0400, Bill Horne wrote: >>> I suggest you write to your Congressman and Senators, and tell them >>> that you want them to pass a law making it illegal to falsify Caller >>> ID information. > On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 04:07:27PM -0700, Duncan Smith wrote: >> It's ALREADY against the law. What can passing more laws accomplish? >> >> Specifically, the Truth in Caller ID Act of 2009, aka Public Law >> 111-331, says: > [snip] On 2015-04-23 16:18, Bill Horne wrote: > Well, I am not a lawyer, so I can't argue the law. However, I doubt > that the current law(s) have any meaningful teeth in them, or the > problem wouldn't be occuring. The problem is that the average person receiving a call with faked CID has no way to find out where the call actually came from, nor even to give that info to law enforcement. The Custom Calling feature Call Trace is supposed to do the latter, but every telco I know about refuses to do their part of the job, since they regard junk calls of all types as paying traffic and refuse to cooperate in stopping it. Thus, if there's any law whose passage can help, it needs to be directed at compelling the victim's dial tone provider to cooperate in the tracing process -- or possibly at compelling telcos that serve businesses to authenticate (and if necessary change) the caller ID the business's PBX sends out. |
Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2015 08:00:54 -0400 From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Apple details how it rebuilt Siri on Mesos Message-ID: <5BB46F45-73E5-4F09-91A8-EBA5A0F91C7B@roscom.com> Apple details how it rebuilt Siri on Mesos Apple announced during a Wednesday night meetup at its Cupertino, California, headquarters that the company's popular Siri application is powered by Apache Mesos. We at Mesosphere are obviously thrilled about Apple's public validation of the technology on which our Datacenter Operating System is based. If Apple trusts Mesos to underpin Siri - a complex application that handles Apple-only-knows-how-many voice queries per day from hundreds of millions of iPhone and iPad users - that says a lot about how mature Mesos is and how ready it is to make a big impact in companies of all stripes. https://mesosphere.com/blog/2015/04/23/apple-details-j-a-r-v-i-s-the-mesos-framework-that-runs-siri/ -or- http://goo.gl/14y3C3 |
Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2015 06:29:01 -0400 From: "Elmo P. Shagnasty" <elmop@nastydesigns.com> To: telecomdigestsubmissions.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Caller ID is my own name/number? Message-ID: <elmop-49B6DE.06290124042015@88-209-239-213.giganet.hu> In article <20150423224426.GA23372@telecom.csail.mit.edu>, Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net> wrote: > I suggest you write to your Congressman and Senators, and tell them > that you want them to pass a law making it illegal to falsify Caller > ID information. I use Viatalk VoIP. Its control panel allows me to deal with inbound calls in a variety of ways. Whenever I get a scammer, I immediately go in and have that number redirected to my US senator's office. Should they call again, they'll go to him, not me. |
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