Vonage 911 Deadline Passed
An anonymous reader writes "Yahoo is reporting that the FCC may block any new customers wishing to sign up with Vonage. The internet phone service company has passed the Monday deadline that was given to them to provide reliable 911 service. From the article: "The company -- which has more than 1 million subscribers -- said it was capable of transmitting a call back number and location for 100 percent of its subscribers, but that it still was waiting for cooperation from competitors that control the 911 network."
Shouldn't the uncooperative companies be fined/sued? After all, they were supposed to cooperate and they didn't.
If you like what I've said here, and want to read more, go to http://www.krillrblog.com
So I spend most of my Skype time "on the road" (as in, coffeeshops). How's a 911 dispatcher ever going to find me? Why would I expect one to without providing additional information? There's no infrastructure for tracing the location of IPs/MACs (and thank God for that).
If your IP phone is nailed to a wall, sure, this makes sense.
Otherwise, what, I have to have a GPS card plugged into my laptop and make all my calls outdoors?
For the most part, that's what VoIP providers do. However, there are some issues with this system, the one of which is that some areas have more than one local phone number associated with the 911 service, usually based on the local schedule of the PSAP personnel. For example, 911 might connect to one number during the day and another at night. Normally, 911 calls are routed at the local switch, and so these rules can be programmed on a case-by-case basic, but with VoIP it's difficult to compile a complete list of PSAP numbers and the routing rules that they correspond to.
As has been pointed out elsewhere, however, the issue here is the current address of the caller is not readily available to VoIP providers. For example, a VoIP customer could sign up in one area, providing an address for 911 service. Later that customer could move to a new area with a completely different 911 service. As far as the VoIP provider is concerned, nothing has changed. The customer can still make calls normally. However, if the customer tries to call 911, the call would be routed to the wrong call center.
"The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
Most likely because unlike Vonage, Speakeasy's VOIP is basically tied to their DSL service.
Since DSL is offered over the copper phone lines, Speakeasy probably already has numerous agreements in place with local telcos regarding information about the telephone infrastructure.
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
You know, what they ought to do is stick a GPS tranceiver in the Vonage adapter and be done with it!
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
The problem with location identification is that we are focusing at the wrong location. ISPs should be the ones responsible for giving general locations to the VOIP provider. The VOIP provider doesn't know where the ISPs networks are, and making the VOIP provider responsible for this is going to fail miserably.
Again, yet another wonderful ideal from the morons in charge.
--WooooHoooo--