I forgot that the welcome letter does not include an activation code and that they verify only with the online info. Still, at least you'd know if you were missing important mail that day and could get a jump on any fraud that might be happening.
The best way to prevent this is to be the first to sign up. That way you are already associated first. If they let allow multiple accounts for one address....well...at least you'll get advance notice when they deliver the activation code for the new account.
Not unsuitable. Just unlikely to be selected. This is the corollary to the executive branch's selective enforcement. It's an important part of the checks and balances.
They know the numbers that they assigned to that line that the call is coming from. Anything not in the DID list shouldn't complete that call on that line.
This is the fundamental disagreement. If I want to try out a new terminating provider for outbound calls, I shouldn't have to port my number. Google Voice entirely relies on call spoofing in both directions as well - they spoof incoming calls to match the number of the original caller rather than show your GV number on the caller ID.
The problem is not domestic. The problem calls with spoofing are not happening here - the laws take care of that just fine. The problem is overseas call centers that are tied to scammers and not legitimate businesses here. So the solution should not harm domestic usage either.
you can be assured that they know with absolute certainty what DIDs I SHOULD be passing out legitimately.
No they don't. You can have numbers from several different providers. You can make outbound calls with your cell phone's number. All legitimate use cases and not able to be authenticated by the terminating provider
Solar noon is all that matters? So it's a different time 20 miles west of me? That doesn't sound the least bit chaotic and useless? I set my DVR to record, but it's 13 minutes later over at the broadcast tower...
Instead, the plaintiff's lawyers arranged for the settlement money to be funneled into groups to which they or their friends belong.
How do you divide 5 million dollars between 129 million people? The postage alone eats the money in full. If you want to argue that the settlement amount was too small, I won't argue with that. But if you want to argue that a bunch of empty envelopes should have been mailed to half the settlement class before the money ran out, I don't see how we're in a better place than we're starting.
Yes - this is one thing I give them points for. And it makes Asterisk happy. Every time my IP would change, my SIP provider would reject me as a duplicate registration. But Charter is using junk for modems. I had a terrible Technicolor modem that I bought a faster modem with more channels to replace. It actually had more downstream channels available than what Charter modems did, but oddly Charter does provision those extra channels. So I have some lanes on the highway practically to myself.
It takes time to acquire and process signal. It's probably just saying "signal lost" rather than explain the details that no location data is available yet because it's still working on it. This is as opposed to the cell tower assisted GPS that's also used for E911.
That's a Mac running Linux. Their point is that OS X is only allowed by license to be virtualized on Mac host hardware.
You only need your /boot partition in that format for EFI boot. Use a separate partition for /.
Still, the relevant problem here is not being able to use the built in SSD and being forced to use an external drive for dual-boot.
I forgot that the welcome letter does not include an activation code and that they verify only with the online info. Still, at least you'd know if you were missing important mail that day and could get a jump on any fraud that might be happening.
And when a credit card you already have is due to expire, a new one gets mailed out. This helps prevent someone from intercepting it.
Of course you shouldn't have to. But that doesn't change the fact that it will help protect you.
The best way to prevent this is to be the first to sign up. That way you are already associated first. If they let allow multiple accounts for one address....well...at least you'll get advance notice when they deliver the activation code for the new account.
Here's your reminder.
They don't photograph the package, but they do give you all the tracking numbers - even if the seller/shipper didn't.
If I'm ever asked, I won't lie under oath. But I will say "What's that?" and they can assume whatever they will.
Not unsuitable. Just unlikely to be selected. This is the corollary to the executive branch's selective enforcement. It's an important part of the checks and balances.
While true, sociopaths are often very charming. You have to back that up with research.
Please back candidates that support ranked choice voting. It's the only easy to get out of the closed loop we are in.
I guess that is less divisive than kissing babies.
In that case, register Democrat and make sure your voice is heard in the primaries. Still better than doing nothing.
They know the numbers that they assigned to that line that the call is coming from. Anything not in the DID list shouldn't complete that call on that line.
This is the fundamental disagreement. If I want to try out a new terminating provider for outbound calls, I shouldn't have to port my number. Google Voice entirely relies on call spoofing in both directions as well - they spoof incoming calls to match the number of the original caller rather than show your GV number on the caller ID.
The problem is not domestic. The problem calls with spoofing are not happening here - the laws take care of that just fine. The problem is overseas call centers that are tied to scammers and not legitimate businesses here. So the solution should not harm domestic usage either.
you can be assured that they know with absolute certainty what DIDs I SHOULD be passing out legitimately.
No they don't. You can have numbers from several different providers. You can make outbound calls with your cell phone's number. All legitimate use cases and not able to be authenticated by the terminating provider
Solar noon is all that matters? So it's a different time 20 miles west of me? That doesn't sound the least bit chaotic and useless? I set my DVR to record, but it's 13 minutes later over at the broadcast tower...
This would be a win. Otherwise I'll just fight to keep DST and deal with a miniscule inconvenience twice a year.
You've got those numbers reversed. It's 3.8 cents per each of 129 million victims.
Instead, the plaintiff's lawyers arranged for the settlement money to be funneled into groups to which they or their friends belong.
How do you divide 5 million dollars between 129 million people? The postage alone eats the money in full. If you want to argue that the settlement amount was too small, I won't argue with that. But if you want to argue that a bunch of empty envelopes should have been mailed to half the settlement class before the money ran out, I don't see how we're in a better place than we're starting.
Yes - this is one thing I give them points for. And it makes Asterisk happy. Every time my IP would change, my SIP provider would reject me as a duplicate registration. But Charter is using junk for modems. I had a terrible Technicolor modem that I bought a faster modem with more channels to replace. It actually had more downstream channels available than what Charter modems did, but oddly Charter does provision those extra channels. So I have some lanes on the highway practically to myself.
They certainly fight GPS usage - just about everything uses less battery. Even some very convoluted stuff.
Their residential modems are junk. I have residential service and bought my own modem to avoid the dropouts I was getting with theirs.
Comcast allows you a modem. In Charter territory, the forced modem is a modem/router. This is where the problem comes in, honestly.
It takes time to acquire and process signal. It's probably just saying "signal lost" rather than explain the details that no location data is available yet because it's still working on it. This is as opposed to the cell tower assisted GPS that's also used for E911.