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Message Digest 
Volume 29 : Issue 56 : "text" Format

Messages in this Issue:
 Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told 
 Re: Pay phone nostalgia 
 Re: Fonts and Editors 
 Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told 
 Re: Pay phone nostalgia 
 Re: Pay phone nostalgia 
 Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told 


====== 28 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ====== Telecom and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) Digest for the Internet. All contents here are copyrighted by Patrick Townson and the individual writers/correspondents. Articles may be used in other journals or newsgroups, provided the writer's name and the Digest are included in the fair use quote. By using -any name or email address- included herein for -any- reason other than responding to an article herein, you agree to pay a hundred dollars to the recipients of the email. =========================== Addresses herein are not to be added to any mailing list, nor to be sold or given away without explicit written consent. Chain letters, viruses, porn, spam, and miscellaneous junk are definitely unwelcome. We must fight spam for the same reason we fight crime: not because we are naive enough to believe that we will ever stamp it out, but because we do not want the kind of world that results when no one stands against crime. Geoffrey Welsh =========================== See the bottom of this issue for subscription and archive details and the name of our lawyer, and other stuff of interest.
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 20:36:23 -0600 (CST) From: Robert Bonomi <bonomi@mail.r-bonomi.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told Message-ID: <201002240236.o1O2aNU9003237@mail.r-bonomi.com> In article <zsidnVsoa7a97h3WnZ2dnUVZ_rednZ2d@posted.nuvoxcommunications>, >***** Moderator's Note ***** > > I'm both surprised and fascinated by the ways that technology > changes society, and especially by the fact that humans seem to have > a blind spot when it comes to seeing change coming. > > The cameras that appeared in cell phones a few years back enabled > teenagers to take X-rated pictures of themselves and to share them > with their friends: in theory, that's no different than the > capability of the earliest Kodak camera, but in practice it cuts out > the middleman - the film developer - Of course, Ed Land, of Polaroid fame, did that decades before cell phone camareas existed. > ... and so encourages more abuse. Using a webcam by remote control > is different: AFAIK, there's no capability to turn cell-phone > cameras on by remote control. > > I don't want to have a debate about the usefullness of "social > contracts". Aside from the fact that they are the Holy Grail of > certain political camps, long experience, over hundreds of years, > has shown that there are some things people should not be allowed to > do, even by their own free will. > > * You can't sell yourself into slavery, whether you want to or not. Last I knew, "Indentured Servitude" was legal. > * You can't hire someone to commit a crime. Sure you can. It happens regularly. You just can't "enforce" the contractual arrangement if they renege on it. <grin> ***** Moderator's Note ***** IANALB I think the only thing that's currently even close to Indentured Servitude is a military enlistment (at least in the U.S.), and any contract for personal services must be made by adults: parents can not "indenture" their children. Of course, slavery is not a contractual arrangement, since the penalty for breaking a contract cannot be death or maiming. I said "you can't hire someone to commit a crime" in a social and (I hope) legal context, not a physical one. It is illegal to entice another to violate the law by promise of reward, ergo you "can't" do it. People may choose to flaunt the law, but hiring someone to commit a crime is not a "contractual arrangement": it's another crime. But, as I said, I don't want to get into a debate about Social Contracts. The point I was trying to make is that an inferior government entity, such as a school district, cannot require students (or their parents) to surrender their fundamental rights in order to attend school. If students at a certain school are required to use laptops provided by the school, those students still retain their constitutional right of privacy, no matter what the school's rules are are what "contracts" anyone signed.
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 18:06:45 -0800 From: Sam Spade <sam@coldmail.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Pay phone nostalgia Message-ID: <WQ%gn.12110$Ab2.2356@newsfe23.iad> PV wrote: > hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes: > >> I don't think people minded paying the 50c for a local call. > > You would be very, very wrong. Payphones as a market pretty much > destroyed themselves, cellphones just helped a bit. > > As soon as COCOT "money trap" phones started to appear, they were no > longer trustworthy as a whole, because sometimes the COCOT operators > worked very hard to make their phones look like telco phones, to the > point of sometimes using RBOC housings and signage. Ah yes, some of the COCOT folks bought WE pay stations, then spend a lot more to put the logic inside the enclosure because the LEC wouldn't provide them with all the end office equal access features. I think I recall that correctly. I suspect some small venture capitalists lost their backside in COCOT ventures. Sort of like Tupperware multipled by a factor of 10, 50, or perhaps 100. ***** Moderator's Note ***** COCOT vendors used "fortress" phones because they were the least expensive equipment available when considering that they usually replaced Ma Bell's own phone, and thus that they had to use the same mounting, which the COCOT vendor would purchase from Ma Bell in situ. They usually purchased such phones from OEM companies with logic already installed, because it was more profitable to use "business" (e.g., 1MB) lines rather than "pubcom" service (I don't recall the USOC). One vendor even tried to claim that he should be getting Centrex rates, with Extensions-off-premise to all his COCOT phones! The logic inside the COCOT instruments was usually under the control of the OEM, not the vendor, and the vendors had to pay their suppliers for every change to the software: every company along the supply chain wanted to dip their hand into the supposed river of gold on which they thought Ma Bell had been sailing. They all found out the hard way that it has always been a low-margin business, but the COCOT vendors just didn't count on how ornery their customers could be, and how quickly they would "opt out" of being ripped off. Bill Horne Moderator
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 18:11:04 -0800 From: Sam Spade <sam@coldmail.com> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Fonts and Editors Message-ID: <ZU%gn.12111$Ab2.11005@newsfe23.iad> Neal McLain wrote: > Sam Spade wrote: > >> Bill Gates "[Deity] Complex" notwithstanding, his three programs, >> Notepad, Wordpad, and even his full-blown word processor program >> indeed can, and will, work at the basic ASCII level. Problem is, >> too many users do not get it. > > > Notepad won't correct slanty quotes. Here's a snippet from a Word > document I received; I copied it into Notepad, then copied the Notepad > version into this message. If Bill doesn't "correct" it for me, you'll > see what slanty quotes do: > > [quote] Please “don’t be a no show.” [unquote] > > Neal McLain > > ***** Moderator's Note ***** > > In case the editor and/or the reader's news/mail client doesn't > reproduce the quote accurately, or renders the "incorrect" characters > "correctly", the offending characters have octal values of 223 and > 224, which are respectively, 147 and 148 decimal. > > Those are, of course, the "open quote" and "close quote" characters > from the Windows-1252 character set. ISO-8859-1 doesn't have an > equivalent that I could find: it does, however, offer «chevron style > quotes». C'est la guerre. Are we now counting angels on the head of a telephonic pin? ;-) ***** Modertor's Note ***** Let's think of it as the Usenet Mesa, instead of the telephonic pin. ;-) I asked the contributors not to cut-and-paste from sources with proprietary font codes, since I must edit such things by hand. Someone else said that Microsoft's low-end text editors could work with ASCII. Neal pointed out that Microsoft's products work with the Microsoft character set, and that they will include non-standard characters in saved files or cut/copied text. It's an old problem, and we're not going to solve it here. Suffice to say that ISO-8859-1 is the "standard" character set for the Telecom Digest. This is relevent to telecom because we have to agree on a character set in order to discuss telecom issues. You might not care which hotel a trade conference is held at, but you'll obviously care that all the attendees go to the same one. Bill Horne Moderator
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 20:51:59 -0500 From: Ron <ron@see.below> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told Message-ID: <6919o5dvk8b54ett3qdpm8uo52innj6fd8@4ax.com> hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote: >On Feb 22, 10:03 pm, Ron <r...@see.below> wrote: >> You are incorrect. There are federal regulations about unlawful >> interception of Email. > > I'm confused--do you mean that an employer does not have the right > to inspect messages going through his own email system of his > company on computers he provides on his premises? The answer is, "it depends". The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 has a lot of details about when they may or may not inspect. If they are providing the mail servers on their own premises, then the answer is that they probably can monitor. If they're using a third party, they have more limitations. There's a good discussion about this at http://www.lectlaw.com/files/emp41.htm -- Ron (user telnom.for.plume in domain antichef.com) ***** Moderator's Note ***** There are some industries - mostly the financial sector - where employers are required to monitor and even to keep copies of all employee emails: in Investment Banking, for example, firms have "blackout" periods for months before a stock is first offered to the public, and they must record all emails during those times. Speaking as someone who has had to wade through swamps of both "good" and "bad" email in order to properly "train" Spamassassin filters, I can attest to the incredible lack of thought that most corporate employees put into security. I'm not talking about any "James Bond" fiction here: I've seen emails between spouses that revealed fresh-from-the-negotiating-table details about seven-figure RFPs. The primary focus of those who send such emails seems to be that they're trying to impress someone who has neither the right, nor the need, to know anything about the negotiations in the first place, and companies would obviously be foolish to allow such use. Bill Horne Moderator
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 18:57:47 -0800 (PST) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Pay phone nostalgia Message-ID: <de0f69c2-5c5c-4853-aa33-30f02f996838@m37g2000yqf.googlegroups.com> On Feb 23, 2:26 pm, pv+use...@pobox.com (PV) wrote: > hanco...@bbs.cpcn.com writes: > > I don't think people minded paying the 50c for a local call. > > You would be very, very wrong. Payphones as a market pretty much > destroyed themselves, cellphones just helped a bit. > > As soon as COCOT "money trap" phones started to appear, they were no > longer trustworthy as a whole, because sometimes the COCOT operators > worked very hard to make their phones look like telco phones, to the > point of sometimes using RBOC housings and signage. You are correct that COCOTs (and alternative operator services gouging) were a mess. But that is a separate issue from the 50c local call charge. I submit that if payphones remained as baby bell property and toll calls from them had reasonable charges, then the market loss would've been from cell phones.
Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2010 03:15:03 -0500 From: T <kd1s.nospam@cox.nospam.net> To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: Pay phone nostalgia Message-ID: <MPG.25eeaa0d6ae0bd92989ca1@news.eternal-september.org> In article <v-idnUgKu_drthnWnZ2dnUVZ_g1i4p2d@supernews.com>, pv+usenet@pobox.com says... > > hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com writes: > > > I don't think people minded paying the 50c for a local call. > > You would be very, very wrong. Payphones as a market pretty much > destroyed themselves, cellphones just helped a bit. > > As soon as COCOT "money trap" phones started to appear, they were no > longer trustworthy as a whole, because sometimes the COCOT operators > worked very hard to make their phones look like telco phones, to the > point of sometimes using RBOC housings and signage. I've got a good mind to stick my 1D2 on the side of the building and charge 10 cents a call. Hook it up to a VoIP provider and a basic controller and I'm golden.
Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2010 06:57:24 -0800 (PST) From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com To: telecomdigestmoderator.remove-this@and-this-too.telecom-digest.org. Subject: Re: US school district spied on students through webcams, court told Message-ID: <ed3a86e8-3af7-4b9f-8a85-e774cdc4ca97@g10g2000yqh.googlegroups.com> On Feb 19, 11:08 am, Monty Solomon <mo...@roscom.com> wrote: > Pennsylvania district accused of using remote-control laptops to > photograph teenage students at home without their knowledge Local news reports as of Wednesday morning, 2/24/10: Parents from the school district are quoted as being opposed to the lawsuit and the circumstances in which it was filed. At a school district meeting the district was not able to say too much: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/home_region/20100224_Court_order_limits_talk_of_laptops_at_L__Merion_meeting.html A local columnist for the Inquirer: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/columnists/20100224_Monica_Yant_Kinney__Time_to_cool_L__Merion_s_digital_drama.html In response to other posters, I believe the student's allegations -- what the administrator may have said to him and what documentation he may have offered -- have been not confirmed as fact. Rather, they are the student's own version of the events. News reported also noted that the parents waited three months after the alleged incident before filing a Federal lawsuit, and the parents did not notify local, state, or federal law enforcement officials about the incident.
TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly to telecom- munications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to Usenet, where it appears as the moderated newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. TELECOM Digest is a not-for-profit, mostly non-commercial educational service offered to the Internet by Bill Horne. All the contents of the Digest are compilation-copyrighted. You may reprint articles in some other media on an occasional basis, but please attribute my work and that of the original author. The Telecom Digest is moderated by Bill Horne. Contact information: Bill Horne Telecom Digest 43 Deerfield Road Sharon MA 02067-2301 781-784-7287 bill at horne dot net Subscribe: telecom-request@telecom-digest.org?body=subscribe telecom Unsubscribe: telecom-request@telecom-digest.org?body=unsubscribe telecom This Digest is the oldest continuing e-journal about telecomm- unications on the Internet, having been founded in August, 1981 and published continuously since then. Our archives are available for your review/research. We believe we are the oldest e-zine/mailing list on the internet in any category! URL information: http://telecom-digest.org Copyright (C) 2009 TELECOM Digest. All rights reserved. Our attorney is Bill Levant, of Blue Bell, PA. --------------------------------------------------------------- Finally, the Digest is funded by gifts from generous readers such as yourself who provide funding in amounts deemed appropriate. Your help is important and appreciated. A suggested donation of fifty dollars per year per reader is considered appropriate. See our address above. Please make at least a single donation to cover the cost of processing your name to the mailing list. All opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages should not be considered any official expression by the organization.
End of The Telecom digest (7 messages)

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