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FCC Fines Company for Blocking Access to VoIP

peg0cjs writes "According to PCPro, the FCC has handed out a $15,000 fine to Madison River Communications Corp for blocking access to VoIP calls. The action is seen as a warning to other telcos not to prevent the growth of VoIP over their networks. The complaint was made to the FCC by two companies Vonage Holdings and Nuvio, which specialise in VoIP services. It appears that Vonage CEO Jeffrey Citron was willing to act on his earlier tirade about VoIP blocking." From the article: "The action is seen as a warning to other telcos not to prevent the growth of VoIP over their networks. Many of these companies see VoIP as a threat to their landline revenues as calls made over the internet can be made to anywhere in the world for the price of a local call."

4 of 294 comments (clear)

  1. Re:15 grand to a telco company... by southpolesammy · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not the size of the fine, but the precedent it sets that is important here.

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    Rule #1 -- Politics always trumps technology.
  2. Re:Only fools block VoIP by therevolution · · Score: 3, Informative

    Somebody's been reading Cringely's latest article...

  3. Re:Mail and Web Servers by PepeGSay · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a common misconception that the origianl issues with blocked VoIP calls originated at the ISP level. Let me repeat: "It did not occur at the ISP level.". It was blocked inside the phone network of the Telco, which is entirely different on many many levels. This precedence is unrelated to your ISP's regulation of your ports.

  4. Re:Fine Money? by The-Perl-CD-Bookshel · · Score: 3, Informative
    The regulatory offices are included in the budget and they total around 29billion worth of spending. However, they usually levy enough fines to pay for themselves and then some. If you look at the federal income statement there is a section for revenues from regulations (though they don't explicitly call it that). Pretty much, it suppliments your tax dollers for such programs so that beurocrats (non-elected officials) can spend more.

    The whole idea of regulations, while necessary because corporations always try to defeat them, are kind of circular. We are paying to protect ourselves...from ourselves!

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    I don't keep a lid on my coffee so when I walk around I look busy -me