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Slashback: Stupidity, Telebastardy, Fast Search

Slashback tonight with updates and corrections on Overture's Fast Search acquisition (overstated in a previous story), sex.com's sordid adventures in California, the ongoing struggle involving telemarketers vs. your privacy, and more -- read on for the details. Just the parts that matter. Peter Gorman of FastSearch writes:
"I read your Overture/FAST story on Slashdot and wanted to make a clarification.

Your headline implies that Overture is completely acquiring FAST. This is completely incorrect. Overture has only acquired FAST's Internet business unit assets, which includes FAST WebSearch, FAST PartnerSite and FAST's popular search site, AlltheWeb.com."

Thanks for the correction, Peter.

Isn't that the stuff that sells? icantblvitsnotbutter writes "In what looks like a scoop, The Register has an article covering the latest in the ongoing battle between Gary Kremen and VeriSign. The High Court of California has rejected a request to consider the legal issue of whether a domain can legally be deemed as property. This is a huge help for (relatively) money-strapped Kremen, whose opponent VeriSign was evidently using the request as a delaying tactic. VeriSign previously had breathlessly warned that a wrong decision would 'cripple the Internet'."

And they made such a pleasant version of Debian, too ... robmered writes "Three years after receiving US$135M in cash from Microsoft, and one and a half years after Xandros bought Corel's Linux assets, The Age is reporting that Corel has finally removed all Linux software from its website. The end of an era, or a margin note in history? The Age thinks the former, but the strength of Open Office, Gimp and numerous desktop environment efforts seem to indicate that the Linux bandwagon will roll on regardless."

Certainly, I would like to talk at length about your business proposal. Would you like to know my fees in advance? KC7GR writes "There's an article running at DMNews about a company called Castel, Inc. that has, supposedly, developed software that can be used by automated dialing equipment to bypass a TeleZapper, or similar SIT generators, and get through to your phone no matter what.

It is also claimed that the software can deliver any type of text or phone number to a recipient's caller ID box, no matter if it's true or false, and that it can also bypass the anti-telemarketer blocks made available by some telephone companies, such as SBC and Qwest.

Granted, this software is not cheap (about $2,700.00 per calling position, apparently), and Castel is quick to claim that they created this stuff primarily for collection agencies to help them get through to deadbeats who use TeleZappers. Does anyone here really think that'll stop telemarketers from using the same crap, just because they can?"

Brevity is one antidote to stupidity. Yoda2 writes "Here is Part II of the Salon story on the Loebner Prize that Slashdot covered yesterday."

36 of 301 comments (clear)

  1. Caller ID faking... by MacGoldstein · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is that not illegal yet?

    1. Re:Caller ID faking... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Caller ID faking... Is that not illegal yet?"

      It'll become illegal when somebody finds a way to block telemarketers with it.

  2. I always knew the day would come... by alpha_1100001 · · Score: 5, Funny

    When someone invented a caller id blocker blocker blocker.

    1. Re:I always knew the day would come... by ctr2sprt · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're probably right, too. First there was radar to catch speeders. Then we got radar detectors, which are still illegal to use (if not to own) in some states. So the cops got radar detector detectors. To which my current radar detector is supposedly invisible... but it still features a radar detector detector detector. No joke.

  3. Er... by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Funny
    It is also claimed that the software can deliver any type of text or phone number to a recipient's caller ID box, no matter if it's true or false, and that it can also bypass the anti-telemarketer blocks made available by some telephone companies, such as SBC and Qwest.
    But can it get past the telephone answering machine I use to screen my calls, at the caller's expense?

    Er, nope.

    And people still fork out $5 a month for CLI. Meanwhile there's just no way a telemarketer can get through to my phone, and I don't breach the privacy of my friends and collegues (why should I force them to give me their phone number? I wouldn't force them to give me their address before letting them in the house...) and all because of a $15 piece of junk I got from the local branch of Wal*Mart.

    Bliss. And my electricity bill's lower too. Between this and my new Mac, I can power the entire house on my own smugness...

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Er... by pseudonymouse · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I heard there was a new thing where they call and leave an advertisement on your answering machine. I don't know if that's true, although I have received a fully automated telemarketing call (i.e. the calling party was a recording).

      And exactly how profitable would it be to spend $2700/seat for a system to telemarket to people who are going to great lengths to avoid telemarketers? Isn't that paying extra to reach the least profitable demographic? I can see collection agencies being interested, but telemarketers?

      --
      In a free society you are who you say you are. -- Mumford
  4. TeleZapper article, now with less /. effect by Tofino · · Score: 5, Informative

    A possibly less slashdotted version of the TeleZapper article can be found at http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20030225/1553220. shtml.

  5. I'm curious... by SubliminalLove · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I worked as a telemarketer once... for a week. I got paid full time for my training and then bailed and got a new job before ever making a call. So I know nothing about the industry.

    I'm curious, how long do you think it would take a telemarketing company to pay off the huge chunk of change they'd require to buy enough copies of this program to outfit their entire outfit? As I recall, there were several hundred stations at the place I worked.

    ~SL

    1. Re:I'm curious... by iabervon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The feature of ignoring TeleZapper is probably not useful to telemarketters, because anyone with a TeleZapper who gets a call from a telemarketter is likely to pissed and hang up (or be pissed and yell at the person). People tend to be nice to telemarketters because they don't want to be rude, but will probably feel that the telemarketter is being rude if the call goes through a TeleZapper.

      The thing evidentally can reduce the dead air before the caller is connected, which could help them avoid getting hung up on before they start talking.

      It also can set the caller ID. People block based on lack of caller ID, but telemarketters could leave caller ID enabled if they really cared; the issue is mainly that they don't want people to call them back at the call center (they want people to call the client's number), but people rarely call telemarketters back anyway. The fact that they don't provide caller ID information suggests that they aren't really trying to reach people who don't want to be reached. They're mainly going after people who can be convinced over the phone to buy stuff, and these people generally answer the phone when it rings.

  6. Re:Privacy by creative_name · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So does that mean if you fight for the right to have a free trial you are going to commit a crime? Is it not possible for someone to fight for something based purely on ideology rather than self-interest? What happened to standing up for what you believed because you believe it, and not because you gain from it?

    If you're not willing to fight for your privacy, you don't deserve it in the first place.

    --
    Posting as directed.
  7. This call is from POTUS. by $$$$$exyGal · · Score: 3, Funny
    Many call centers opt to transmit no caller-ID data instead. Because of this, calls from telemarketers often appear as "out of area" or "unavailable" on caller-ID boxes.

    This new technology allows the telemarketers to make any name appear that they want. Great. Now I'm going to get calls from "President Bush" and "Saddam Hussein" and "Michael Jackson", instead of "Unknown Out of Area Caller". Which is worse? ;-)

    --sex

    --
    Very popular slashdot journal for adul
    1. Re:This call is from POTUS. by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 4, Funny

      I've already had to block "President Bush", "Saddam Hussein" and "Michael Jackson", they just don't have anything interesting to say anymore.

  8. Re:Privacy by Myriad · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I side on the fence that if you care enough about privacy to make it your job to fight it, you clearly have something to hide.

    Since you claim to have nothing to hide, and there should be no concern for privacy, please post your full name and address. I'll be by shortly with a few miniature camera's to install in your bedroom, bathroom, and living room. A few taps for the phone, and other assorted recording and monitoring device. Please also pop the hood on your car so I can install the GPS tracking system. Got a cell phone? I'll need your ESN and number please.

    What? You don't want to provide that? Not even your name, phone number, and address? Why ever not? I though you didn't think privacy mattered!

    Gasp! You must have something to hide!

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
  9. Re:Incoming Call by $$$$$exyGal · · Score: 3, Funny
    You hit "Decline". On the other end, they see:
    Abort, Retry, Fail?

    --sex

    --
    Very popular slashdot journal for adul
  10. Faking callers id's always possible. by Monkeyman334 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If you have your own phone switch, you can send out any caller id you want. It's not authoritative, never has been. It's about the same as a reply-to address in email. It's a shame the poster didn't buy Kevin Mitnick's book after it was mentioned on slashdot so many times, because he does cover caller id spoofing for social engineering on people who do think caller id is a secure way to id the caller.

  11. Re:Incoming Call by The+Bungi · · Score: 3, Funny

    Incoming Call From: Richard Stallman
    GNU/Decline? ...

  12. I have something to hide by Rares+Marian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1.My kids' names
    2.Their ages
    3.Their birthdates
    4.The school they go to
    5.My address
    6.What they look like
    7.What route they take home from school
    8.Who their teachers are
    9.Where hteir soccer practice is held
    10.The secret password we use to authenticate and
    11.When I am home and when I am not

    authorize pick-up-the-kid-from-wherever functions

    Oh and privacy isn't just about secrecy, it's about private spaceand private property. Private property means control over that property.

    I think every address should have a public phone to which certain callers are restricted to only leaving messages. Kind of like how you can yell from across the street at me all you like, bu the minute you get on my property I cantell you to go away in which case refusal to do might cause your yell-from-across-the-street privileges to be legally revoked as well.

    Dinner time is highly private property. Weekends and afternoons are highly private property. Ho

    --
    The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  13. Deadbeats? by yoshi_mon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...and Castel is quick to claim that they created this stuff primarily for collection agencies to help them get through to deadbeats who use TeleZappers.

    Ok, so let me get this straight. I'm Joe deadbeat, but I still pay for a phone. But, since I've been labled a "deadbeat" by EQUIFAX or some rabid collecation agency, it's OK for them to spoof my CallerID or bypass means that I have put in place to try to require callers to present a valid call?

    This type of morality, it's OK to do X to Y beacuse they are Z, just sickens me. I personally think that anyone who subscribes to this kind of slipperly slope logic should get a punch in the mouth.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  14. Caller ID was already compromised... by unicorn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm in charge of the phones, among other things here at the office. And our Nortel switch can already transmit whatever the owner wants, for CID info, according to the company that handles our maitenance contract. The tech told me that it's childishly simple to change it to almost anything.

    And this system, is several years old.

    --
    "Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
  15. A Business Held Accountable? Oh My! by Myriad · · Score: 4, Insightful
    VeriSign stands to lose $100 million if the appeal court decides in favour of Kremen. It is doubly concerned however that the case will be used as a foundation for thousands of similar cases in which the registrar and owner of the .com top-level domain has acted negligently.

    Wow, a business being held accountable for their actions? Who would have thought!

    Of course VeriSign would have no problem nuking your domain should you fail to pay them for registering your domain name to you. By definition then you are paying for the domain name to be registered to you.

    If I purchased a car and the dealership turned around and gave my car to someone else do you think they'd get away with it for long?

    If I order food from a restaraunt and they make an error on my order do they turn around and tell my "Tough sh*t"?

    Why then, if someone were to pay VeriSign for a service, should VeriSign not be accountable for said paid for service?

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:A Business Held Accountable? Oh My! by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
      > Why then, if someone were to pay VeriSign for a service, should VeriSign not be accountable for said paid for service?

      Because if they'd really wanted a vendor who was accountable to the customer, and who delivered what was paid for, why the fuck'd they choose Verisign in the first place?

      Old joke:

      Q: How do you know someone in your office is talking to someone at Verisign?
      A: You hear someone three cubes away, screaming at the top of their lungs into the telephone "you dumb motherfucker!"

  16. Not in Texas (forged caller id) by parc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In Texas, law explicitly requires callers to identify themselves in CallerID with a phone number the business can be reached at (NOT attached to an autodialer), or if the equipment is not capable of presenting a number, they must state their company name and callback number in the first 30 seconds of a call.

    Note that by having ANY id, your equipment can obviously present callerID.

    For once, Texas has a useful law.

  17. Yet another (mostly) shameless plug... by Yoda2 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    In contrast to the chatterbot quest, I've been working on software to provide computers with a more humanlike understanding of language.

    Experience-Based Language Acquisition (EBLA) is an open source software system written in Java that enables a computer to learn simple language from scratch based on visual perception. It is the first "grounded" language system capable of learning both nouns and verbs. Moreover, once EBLA has established a vocabulary, it can perform basic scene analysis to generate descriptions of novel videos.

    A more detailed summary is available here and this is the project web site.

  18. Are we supposed to take Salon seriously? by chazzf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've always been intrigued by Salon's output, but I cannot honestly take this article seriously. The author has a very clear pro-Loebner bias that he doesn't even try to conceal. His hostility towards Minsky, Dennett, and the rest of the established academic community is so blatant (and unfounded) that it's embarrassing to read. Take this quote:

    Decision sciences, by the simplest possible definition, refers to computerized assistance in resource allocation. An example provided by a press release from MIT announcing the creation of a decision sciences program was "complex computer-based 'passenger yield management' systems and models that the airlines use to adjust pricing of each flight's seats in order to maximize revenue and profitability to the airline." That's a far cry from the bold claims made by A.I. visionaries in decades past. But focusing on such systems has a signal advantage for scientists who have been failing miserably at the Turing test. It gets them off the hook.

    And later: In other words, if you read between the lines what you come up with is that one reason "serious" A.I. scientists don't try to mimic human speech anymore is that they discovered they can't do it.

    Okay, so he's holding up the academics to ridicule because they abandoned the Turing Test. Why did they abandon the Turing Test. Will, according to the filty academic, it's because: ""The Turing test is not very useful for many A.I. scientists today because they work on projects that have nothing to do with human linguistic performance."

    So, the respectable AI people aren't working with the Turing Test because they aren't working with linguistics. Gosh, that seems fairly reasonable to me. I mean, I suppose it's possible that the entire AI academic community, en masse, chose to boycott a hack contest run by an East Coast elite who started the contest because "He's a hedonist who thinks work is an abomination and sloth is our greatest virtue. He got interested in A.I. because he hoped the day would come when robots and A.I.'s could do all the work and people could play all the time." The rich kid wants to play so those damn academics better make me a robot who can bake me a pie. But I digress....

    The contest focuses on a field that has been abandoned by current AI research. Why? Because we can't make it work yet. The hardware isn't there yet. So we're doing other stuff. Look at the progress of chess programs, mission-critical systems, UT bots. AI is getting better. A souped-up ELIZA isn't going to confirm that. They attack the AI people for not producing better entries for a contest the AI people don't find valid. Loebner and the author, who are obviously in the same camp, are trying to have it both ways. Bullshit. If Salon wants my money to stay afloat, they'll have to do better than this.

    ~Chazzf

    --
    No statement is true, not even this one.
    1. Re:Are we supposed to take Salon seriously? by Goldsmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Did you read the whole article?

      I had the same opinions throughout the first section, but at the end, he points out that the Turing test will likely be won by a program which is no smarter "than a bucket of hammers," and that real AI will come from the academic research.

      The main reason he likes Loebner is that he approves of his support of hobbyists and underdogs. At the same time he compares him to (the literary version of) Don Quixote, who was dangerous, silly, unreasonable and idiotic.

      At the same time, he appears to dislike the standoffish nature of the academics who appear unable to come to grips with the slow development in their field... whatever, I can understand that. Ivory tower science is not something I'm a big fan of, and I'm a scientest.

      My main problem with the article is that this all comes out in the last page. Kind of like "surprise, this is what I REALLY think".

  19. Re:Privacy by shepd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, then you should have no problem if I send you a set of envelope sized clear ziplock sandwich bags that you can use for your mail instead of wasting your money on envelopes, right?

    If I included postage on them would you use them? It's not a bad deal really. I mean, if you have nothing to hide, why should you worry if the postman you hate across the street opens all your mail (undetected, because it's ziplock!) and gives it a peruse. Maybe he can even report any mistakes you've made on paying your Visa to the credit agency for you, or errors on your income tax report to the IRS! How excellent!

    If you don't want that, well, you must have something to hide. I mean, it's not like it's even going to cost you anything to do this, you'd _make_ money, and your only cost is the privacy you don't value anyways!

    --
    If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  20. The worst people to call by macdaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Think about it this way. Why on Earth would you want to call the people who have gone out of their way to say they don't want to talk to you? It's not likely they are likely to buy anything from you just because their impressed you can ring through on their landline and around whatever means they have to block you. All you'll really accomplish is to piss them off even further.

    It might even be possible to say that by intentionally bypassing someone's blocks they put on your incoming calls that you're harassing them. IANAL though. I only play one on slashdot.

  21. phone teergrube/SPEWS by sleepingsquirrel · · Score: 3, Funny
    What we need to do is start apply spam principals to telemarketers, like a teergrube. I don't know if it would be possible to do, but I'd like to have a button next to my phone which I could press which wouldn't hang up the connection for an hour or two, thus clogging up their precious lines. I've heard that law enforcement has something like this to help in tracing calls. Or even better, have a machine setup which listens in and whenever it hears a pause on the other end of the line it would spit out a canned recording saying something like "hmmm.. that's interesting. Tell me more".

    And why exactly can't we have a SPEWS/blackhole type of call blocking list? I'm paitently waiting.

  22. Those that won't buy by phorm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The question remains:
    If people are willing to subscribe to/buy telezappers, block lists, do not call lists, etc...

    Can't telemarketers get the point that these people are not potential sales, they're only potential angry call recipients?

    Not only that, but wouldn't forging a phone number come under some sort of legal troubles... especially if you used a number that somebody else owns?

  23. DMCA Violation? by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't Castle, Inc's software a direct violation of the DMCA? It purposely gets around blocks AND can falsely report information to a caller id box. Sounds like it's time to pull out the lawyers.

    --
    "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
  24. Telezapper and other cheese by rot26 · · Score: 5, Informative

    All the telezapper does it emit the first of the three tones in a standard SIT signal... you know, the little "doo dee dweep the number you have dialed is no longer in service" thing you get from time to time. This tone is handled in the automated dialing software the same way that any other tones (1,2,3,#,etc) are... i.e. however the programmer wants to handle it, depending on the application. There's no magic involved in "getting around" a telezapper, it would involve one line of programming code to simply ignore it.

    by the way, you don't NEED a telezapper... if you use an answering machine, just record the SIT tone (or even the first 1/3rd of it) at the beginning of your outgoing message. Human callers expect weird noises from answering machines, they just ignore it. But automated dialers which are programmed to look for it assume the number is disconnected.

    To get the SIT tones, just google up sit.wav, you can find it all over the place.

    --



    To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
  25. Re:What about 911? by rot26 · · Score: 4, Informative

    But what about 911? They use something other than Caller ID, don't they? Something that can't be spoofed by the end user? If they don't, or it can in fact be spoofed as well, I can see quite a bit of abuse once this practice becomes mainstream. What is their "special" Caller ID called? How is it transmitted to them? Can regular people receive it?

    What you're talking about is ANI, which IIRC is "automated number information". It's out-of-band information (unlike caller ID) which is primarily used for billing purposes by whatever carriers lie between the caller and callee. It cannot be blocked (unless you're one of the rated carriers in the middle, then you're regulated out the ass anyway.)

    I used to write automated call software (incoming and outgoing) and I worked with this all the time. It used to REALLY piss off people who have their caller ID blocked (or have used *67) yet have their number recognized anyway. Hehehe.

    --



    To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
  26. Overcoming Telezapper Type Blocks by jmcharry · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since these devices answer, then play the SIT tones, a fair number of predictive dialers are immune to them anyway. The reason is that they detect answer supervision and move their tone detectors to another call. Real SITs are sent without answer supervision, and moving the detectors to the next call saves resources.

    As to sending false CLID, a PRI trunk can be made to do it, if the carrier doesn't enforce checking. For that much outbound calling, probably a lot of carriers would be more than happy, if they bother doing that in any case.

    I don't know, or perhaps don't recall, where the name lookup is done. If it is from the A end, it would be equally easy to fake. If it is done at the receiving telco, they would have to give the real number of the institution being faked.

    There is a plethora of discussion on Telezappers in comp.dcom.telecom. Check the Google archive.

  27. Better than blocking... maybe. by macX_rocks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A friend of mine lives in Denver and his phone has a service provided by Qwest (I think he got the service when they were still USWest) that plays a message stating that "this number does not accept solicitations... if you're a solicitor hang up and put this # on do-not-call list, otherwise press 1..." His phone doesn't ring unless the caller presses 1. There is also some legislation in Colorado that states, with a system like that, any solicitor who presses 1 to go through anyway can be sued for something like $10k per incident. My friend tells me there have been very few times when a solicitor comes through (where he then mentions the possible fine and they hang up abruptly).

    I wonder why there aren't more phone companies offering such a service and why more states don't back up the disturbances with hefty fines. Maybe the telemarketers' lobbyists are lining pockets... maybe(?).

  28. Re:How do you enforce that? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best thing you can do, to STOP them from calling someone else -- is to quicly say "OHHH! great, i was just looking ot buy a %whatever%. Can you hold a moment while I get a pad and paper".

    Then put the phone down until you hear it buzzing (they hang up).

    this stretches the calls out so they cant bother more people.

    pass it on ;)

  29. Telemarketers are fun! by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 4, Funny

    I simply do not understand people who duck telemarketers. They are the greatest free stress relievers in existance.

    Come home from work pissed (as in mad, not drunk), the phone rings, tear the jackass on the other end a new one. You don't know them, they are vermin, your karma is clean.

    I have made MCI telemarketers cry before.

    Hey, if they want respect they should pick up cans or work at MickeyD's...