----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message-ID: <18eeb7cf-41f4-4b79-b553-f266c5ef32de@googlegroups.com>
Date: 8 Jan 2019 13:50:22 -0800
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: New Jersey diverts 911 fees elsewhere
NJ.COM reported that New Jersey continues to be one of the country's
worst offenders when it comes to taking much-needed taxpayer funds
for the state's ailing 911 infrastructure and spending it elsewhere,
as reported by the FCC.
[There is a] detailed article describing the finances and possible new
911 technology (NextGen911) at:
https://www.nj.com/news/2019/01/a-tiny-fee-on-your-monthly-phone-bill-is-worth-more-than-1b-but-youre-not-getting-what-you-pay-for-nj.html
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190108221433.GA546@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 8 Jan 2019 17:14:33 -0500
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile selling customers' real-time
locations: report
Data ends up in hands of property managers, bail agents, 'bounty
hunters,' report says.
By Ethan Baron
If like most people you keep your cell phone handy, your mobile-
service provider knows where you are nearly all the time. And
several major cell companies are selling that information to firms
that sell it onward in a practice that could let stalkers and
criminals find out your location in real time, according to a new
report.
"A wide variety of companies can access cell phone location data, and
... the information trickles down from cell phone providers to a wide
array of smaller players, who don't necessarily have the correct
safeguards in place to protect that data," Motherboard reported
Jan. 8.
https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/01/08/att-sprint-t-mobile-selling-customers-real-time-locations-report/
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <q12b57$b5p$1@dont-email.me>
Date: 8 Jan 2019 09:12:50 -0500
From: "Fred Goldstein" <fg_es@removeQRM.ionary.com>
Subject: Re: CenturyLink's 911 Outage + One Bad Network Card?
On 1/7/2019 4:23 PM, HAncock4 wrote:
...
>>
>>
http://www.govtech.com/em/emergency-blogs/disaster-zone/centurylinks-911-outage--one-bad-network-card.html
>
> When the Bell System introduced automation 100 years ago,
> reliability was a key issue. Dial equipment included a full
> set of testing facilities and alarms.
>
> When ESS was introduced 50 years ago, again reliability was
> an issue. The CPU was duplicated and the backup CPU was always
> ready in case the first failed. Further, a good deal of the
> software that controlled the ESS contained testing and diagnostic
> instructions so that circuit failures could be quickly identified,
> isolated, and repaired.
>
Every piece of major network equipment has redundancy built in, and
networks themselves have redundancy in their backbone routes. Even a
company as hapless as CTL knows that. Singing praises of Old Ma Bell and
her primitive 1ESS does nothing to advance the art.
> Failures happen. They always will. The question for CenturyLink
> isn't that something failed, but rather why did a failure propagate
> through its network and why did it take so long to be identified
> and resolved.
>
Any system with redundancy has to have some mechanism that invokes it, a
switchover mechanism of some sort. Even the 1ESS had to know when to
switch. In a network with redundant routes, there needs to be some
mechanism to determine what route to use, based on knowledge of which
links are working and which aren't.
What failed at CTL was the mechanism for implementing that redundancy. A
control card in an optical multiplexor in Denver seems to have sent out
"packets of death", malformed packets on a management channel.
Apparently a bug in the system's code did not discard these upon receipt
but propagated them, causing them to spread across the network. And they
went out on the "secondary" (redundant) paths too.
So we have a hardware failure (bad card) and a software failure (not
discarding bad packets), and together they caused the mechanism for
implementing redundancy (the control plane) to malfunction. I've seen
similar things happen elsewhere. (I investigate E911 failures for state
regulators.)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20190108222628.GA766@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 8 Jan 2019 17:26:28 -0500
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: AT&T leaving downtown Syracuse, taking 150 jobs to Florida
AT&T confirms its call center on South Clinton St. in Syracuse is
closing and will be moving 150 jobs out of Syracuse in April.
"The lease is expiring on the location and we are consolidating the
work into another company facility in Orange Park, Florida to increase
efficiency and make the most effective use of our facilities," said
AT&T Spokesperson Jim Kimberly. "We'll also be doing some hiring in
Orange Park, in addition to those employees who elect to go there from
Syracuse."
https://fingerlakes1.com/2019/01/08/att-leaving-downtown-syracuse-taking-150-jobs-to-florida/
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
*********************************************
End of telecom Digest Wed, 09 Jan 2019