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- From telecom@eecs.nwu.edu Sat Nov 3 16:08:57 1990
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- id AA07691; Sat, 3 Nov 90 16:08:30 EST
- Date: Sat, 3 Nov 90 15:09:02 CST
- From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- To: ptownson@gaak.LCS.MIT.EDU
- Subject: Telecom Blocking
- Message-Id: <9011031509.aa12657@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
- Status: R
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa01401;
- 22 Oct 90 18:51 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:26:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: wilson-2.msg
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010221851.aa01401@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
-
- Message No. 136 was left on 09-06-88 22:42 <PUBLIC> <RECEIVED>
- To....... : Jim Schmickley
- From..... : Bruce Wilson
- Subject.. : TELECONNECT
- See also message number 118.
- Message Area #2 "Open Discussion"
-
- Having now read BLOCKER.DOC and BLOCKER2.TXT, I'll probably stop over
- at the Utilities Board offices to take a look at the actual file, if
- I can. In the meantime, your attention is directed to Section 477.6,
- Code of Iowa:
-
- CHAPTER 477
- TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE LINES AND COMPANIES
-
- ***
-
- 477.6 - Delay - willful error - revealing contents.
- Any person employed in transmitting messages by
- telegraph or telephone must do so with fidelity and
- without unreasonable delay, and if anyone willfully
- fails thus to transmit them, or intentionally transmits
- a message erroneously, or makes known the contents
- of any message sent or received to any person except
- the person to whom it is addressed, or such person's
- agent or attorney, or willfully or wrongly takes or
- receives any telegraph or telephone message, the per-
- son is guilty of a simple misdemeanor.
-
- Not being aware of it, I don't suppose you've considered asking the
- Linn County Attorney to prosecute Teleconnect under this provision.
- That seems to be the proper venue, by virtue of Teleconnect having
- its headquarters there and the "blocking" presumably having taken
- place there or at the direction of company personnel working out of
- its Cedar Rapids headquarters. I didn't see anything in the Chapter
- which leaves it to the Utilities Board to initiate a prosecution.
-
- This Code provision, in one form or another, has apparently been part of the
- law of Iowa since the Code of 1873. However, the provision we're concerned
- with doesn't seem to have ever been tested in court. If it was, it never got
- as far as a published appellate court decision. The only Iowa case dealing
- with this section at all is an 1880 case dealing with the disclosure
- provision; and in that case the telegraph operator had been subpoenaed into
- cort and ordered to testify and produce copies of telegrams.
-
- Title 47, US Code (the Communications Act), also has some seemingly pertinent
- provisions at sections 201, 202, 206, and 207.
-
-
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa19826;
- 22 Oct 90 19:14 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:22:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: Sue W's files
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010221915.aa19826@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
- In the next several messages, I am sending the raw text files that would
- not pass through yesterday. The subjects will be the original file names.
-
- Good Day! JSW
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa19826;
- 22 Oct 90 19:15 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:23:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: blocking.doc
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010221915.aa19826@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
-
- BLOCKING OF LONG-DISTANCE CALLS
- by Jim Schmickley
- Hawkeye PC, Cedar Rapids, Iowa
-
-
-
- SUMMARY. This article describes the "blocking" by one long-distance
- telephone company of access through their system to certain telephone numbers,
- particularly BBS numbers. The blocking is applied in a very arbitrary manner,
- and the company arrogantly asserts that BBS SYSOPS and anyone who uses a
- computer modem are "hackers."
-
- The company doesn't really want to discuss the situation, but it appears
- the following scenario occurred. The proverbial "person or persons unknown"
- identified one or more "valid" long-distance account numbers, and subsequently
- used those numbers on one or more occasions to fraudulently call a legitimate
- computer bulletin board system (BBS). When the long-distance company
- discovered the fraudulent charges, they "blocked" the line without bothering
- to investigate or contacting the BBS System Operator to obtain his assistance.
- In fact, the company did not even determine the SYSOP's name.
-
- The long-distance carrier would like to pretend that the incident which
- triggered the actions described in this article was an isolated situation, not
- related to anything else in the world. However, there are major principles of
- free, uninhibited communications and individual rights deeply interwoven into
- the issue. And, there is still the lingering question, "If one long-distance
- company is interfering with their customers' communications on little more
- than a whim, are other long-distant companies also interfering with the
- American public's right of free 'electronic speech'?"
-
- SETTING THE SCENE. Teleconnect is a long-distance carrier and telephone
- direct marketing company headquartered in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The company is
- about eight years old, and has a long-distance business base of approximately
- 200,000 customers. Teleconnect has just completed its first public stock
- offering, and is presently (August 1988) involved in a merger which will make
- it the nation's fourth-largest long-distance carrier. It is a very rapidly-
- growing company, having achieved its spectacular growth by offering long-
- distance service at rates advertised as being 15% to 30% below AT&T's rates.
-
- When Teleconnect started out in the telephone interconnection business,
- few, if any, exchanges were set up for "equal access", so the company set up a
- network of local access numbers (essentially just unlisted local PABXs -
- private automatic branch exchanges) and assigned a six-digit account number to
- each customer. Later, a seventh "security" digit was added to all account
- numbers. (I know what you're thinking - what could be easier for a war-games
- dialer than to seek out "valid" seven-digit numbers?) Teleconnect now offers
- direct "equal access" dialing on most exchanges. But, the older access
- number/account code system is still in place for those exchanges which do not
- offer "equal access." And, that system is still very useful for customers who
- place calls from their offices or other locations away from home.
-
- "BLOCKING" DISCOVERED. In early April 1988, a friend mentioned that
- Teleconnect was "blocking" certain telephone lines where they detected
- computer tone. In particular, he had been unable to call Curt Kyhl's Stock
- Exchange BBS in Waterloo, Iowa. This sounded like something I should
- certainly look into, so I tried to call Curt's BBS.
-
- CONTACT WITH TELECONNECT. Teleconnect would not allow my call to go
- through. Instead, I got a recorded voice message stating that the call was
- a local call from my location. A second attempt got the same recorded
- message. At least, they were consistent.
-
- I called my Teleconnect service representative and asked just what the
- problem was. After I explained what happened, she suggested that it must be a
- local call. I explained that I really didn't think a 70 mile call from Cedar
- Rapids to Waterloo was a local call. She checked on the situation and
- informed me that the line was being "blocked." I asked why, and she "supposed
- it was at the customer's request." After being advised that statement made no
- sense, she admitted she really didn't know why. So, on to her supervisor.
-
- The first level supervisor verified the line was being "blocked by
- Teleconnect security", but she couldn't or wouldn't say why. Then, she
- challenged, "Why do you want to call that number?" That was the wrong
- question to ask this unhappy customer, and the lady quickly discovered that
- bit of information was none of her business, And, on to her supervisor.
-
- The second level supervisor refused to reveal any information of value to
- a mere customer, but she did suggest that any line Teleconnect was blocking
- could still be reached through AT&T or Northwestern Bell by dialing 10288-1.
- When questioned why Teleconnect, which for years had sold its long-distance
- service on the basis of a cost-saving over AT&T rates, was now suggesting that
- customers use AT&T, the lady had no answer.
-
- I was then informed that, if I needed more information, I should contact
- Dan Rogers, Teleconnect's Vice President for Customer Service. That sounded
- good; "Please connect me." Then, "I'm sorry, but Mr. Rogers is out of town,
- and won't be back until next week." "Next week?" "But he does call in
- regularly. Maybe he could call you back before that." Mr. Rogers did call me
- back, later that day, from Washington, D.C. where he and some Teleconnect
- "security people" were attending a conference on telephone security.
-
- TELECONNECT RESPONDS, A LITTLE. Dan Rogers prefaced his conversation
- with, "I'm just the mouthpiece; I don't understand all the technical details.
- But, our security people are blocking that number because we've had some
- problems with it in the past." I protested that the allegation of "problems"
- didn't make sense because the number was for a computer bulletin board system
- operated by a reputable businessman, Curt Kyhl.
-
- Mr. Rogers said that I had just given Teleconnect new information; they
- had not been able to determine whose number they were blocking. "Our people
- are good, but they're not that good. Northwestern Bell won't release
- subscriber information to us." And, when he got back to his office the
- following Monday, he would have the security people check to see if the block
- could be removed.
-
- The following Monday, another woman from Teleconnect called to inform me
- that they had checked the line, and they were removing the block from it. She
- added the comment that this was the first time in four years that anyone had
- requested that a line be unblocked. I suggested that it probably wouldn't be
- the last time.
-
- In a later telephone conversation, Dan Rogers verified that the block had
- been removed from Curt Kyhl's line, but warned that the line would be blocked
- again "if there were any more problems with it." A brief, non-conclusive
- discussion of Teleconnect's right to take such action then ensued. I added
- that the fact that Teleconnect "security" had been unable to determine the
- identity of the SYSOP of the blocked board just didn't make sense; that it
- didn't sound as if the "security people" were very competent. Mr. Rogers then
- admitted that every time the security people tried to call the number, they
- got a busy signal (and, although Mr. Rogers didn't admit it, they just "gave
- up", and arbitrarily blocked the line.) Oh, yes, the lying voice message,
- "This is a local call...", was not intended to deceive anyone according to Dan
- Rogers. It was just that Teleconnect could only put so many messages on their
- equipment, and that was the one they selected for blocked lines.
-
- BEGINNING THE PAPER TRAIL. Obviously, Teleconnect was not going to pay
- much attention to telephone calls from mere customers. On April 22, Ben
- Blackstock, practicing attorney and veteran SYSOP, wrote to Mr. Rogers urging
- that Teleconnect permit their customers to call whatever numbers they desired.
- Ben questioned Teleconnect's authority to block calls, and suggested that such
- action had serious overlays of "big brother." He also noted that "you cannot
- punish the innocent to get at someone who is apparently causing Teleconnect
- difficulty."
-
- Casey D. Mahon, Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Teleconnect,
- replied to Ben Blackstock's letter on April 28th. This response was the start
- of Teleconnect's seemingly endless stream of vague, general allegations
- regarding "hackers" and "computer billboards." Teleconnect insisted they did
- have authority to block access to telephone lines, and cited 18 USC
- 2511(2)(a)(i) as an example of the authority. The Teleconnect position was
- summed up in the letter:
-
- "Finally, please be advised the company is willing to 'unblock' the line
- in order to ascertain whether or not illegal hacking has ceased. In the
- event, however, that theft of Teleconnect long distance services through use
- of the bulletin board resumes, we will certainly block access through the
- Teleconnect network again and use our authority under federal law to ascertain
- the identity of the hacker or hackers."
-
- THE GAUNTLET IS PICKED UP. Mr. Blackstock checked the cited section of
- the U.S. Code, and discovered that it related only to "interception" of
- communications, but had nothing to do with "blocking". He advised me of his
- opinion and also wrote back to Casey Mahon challenging her interpretation of
- that section of federal law.
-
- In his letter, Ben noted that, "Either Teleconnect is providing a
- communication service that is not discriminatory, or it is not." He added
- that he would "become upset, to say the least" if he discovered that
- Teleconnect was blocking access to his BBS. Mr. Blackstock concluded by
- offering to cooperate with Teleconnect in seeking a declaratory judgment
- regarding their "right" to block a telephone number based upon the actions of
- some third party. To date, Teleconnect has not responded to that offer.
-
- On May 13th, I sent my own reply to Casey Mahon, and answered the issues
- of her letter point by point. I noted that even I, not an attorney, knew the
- difference between "interception" and "blocking", and if Teleconnect didn't,
- they could check with any football fan. My letter concluded:
-
- "Since Teleconnect's 'blocking' policies are ill-conceived, thoughtlessly
- arbitrary, anti-consumer, and of questionable legality, they need to be
- corrected immediately. Please advise me how Teleconnect is revising these
- policies to ensure that I and all other legitimate subscribers will have
- uninhibited access to any and all long-distance numbers we choose to call."
-
- Casey Mahon replied on June 3rd. Not unexpectedly, she brushed aside all
- my arguments. She also presented the first of the sweeping generalizations,
- with total avoidance of specifics, which we have since come to recognize as a
- Teleconnect trademark. One paragraph neatly sums Casey Mahon's letter:
-
- "While I appreciate the time and thought that obviously went into your
- letter, I do not agree with your conclusion that Teleconnect's efforts to
- prevent theft of its services are in any way inappropriate. The inter-
- exchange industry has been plagued, throughout its history, by individuals who
- devote substantial ingenuity to the theft of long distance services. It is
- not unheard of for an interexchange company to lose as much as $500,000 a
- month to theft. As you can imagine, such losses, over a period of time, could
- drive a company out of business."
-
- ESCALATION. By this time it was very obvious that Teleconnect was going
- to remain recalcitrant until some third party, preferably a regulatory agency,
- convinced them of the error of their ways. Accordingly, I assembled the file
- and added a letter of complaint addressed to the Iowa Utilities Board. The
- complaint simply asked that Teleconnect be directed to institute appropriate
- safeguards to ensure that "innocent third parties" would no longer be
- adversely affected by Teleconnect's arbitrary "blocking" policies.
-
- My letter of complaint was dated July 7th, and the Iowa Utilities Board
- replied on July 13th. The reply stated that Teleconnect was required to
- respond to my complaint by August 2nd, and the Board would then propose a
- resolution. If the proposed resolution was not satisfactory, I could request
- that the file be reopened and the complaint be reconsidered. If the results
- of that action were not satisfactory, a formal hearing could be requested.
-
- After filing the complaint, I also sent a copy of the file to Congressman
- Tom Tauke. Mr. Tauke represents the Second Congressional District of Iowa,
- which includes Cedar Rapids, and is also a member of the House Telecommunica-
- tions Subcommittee. I have subsequently had a personal conversation with Mr.
- Tauke as well as additional correspondence on the subject. He seems to have a
- deep and genuine interest in the issue, but at my request, is simply an
- interested observer at this time. It is our hope that the Iowa Utilities
- Board will propose an acceptable resolution without additional help.
-
- AN UNRESPONSIVE RESPONSE. Teleconnect's "response" to the Iowa Utilities
- Board was filed July 29th. As anticipated, it was a mass of vague
- generalities and unsubstantiated allegations. However, it offered one item of
- new, and shocking, information; Curt Kyhl's BBS had been blocked for ten
- months, from June 6, 1987 to mid-April 1988. (At this point it should be
- noted that Teleconnect's customers had no idea that the company was blocking
- some of our calls. We just assumed that calls weren't going through because
- of Teleconnect's technical problems.)
-
- Teleconnect avoided putting any specific, or even relevant, information
- in their letter. However, they did offer to whisper in the staff's ear;
- "Teleconnect would be willing to share detailed information regarding this
- specific case, and hacking in general, with the Board's staff, as it has in
- the past with various federal and local law enforcement agencies, including
- the United States Secret Service. Teleconnect respectfully requests, however,
- that the board agree to keep such information confidential, as to do otherwise
- would involve public disclosure of ongoing investigations of criminal conduct
- and the methods by which interexchange carriers, including Teleconnect, detect
- such theft."
-
- There is no indication of whether anyone felt that such a "confidential"
- meeting would violate Iowa's Open Meetings Law. And, nobody apparently
- questioned why, during a ten-months long "ongoing investigation", Teleconnect
- seemed unable to determine the name of the individual whose line they were
- blocking. Of course, whatever they did was justified because (in their own
- words), "Teleconnect had suffered substantial dollar losses as a result of the
- theft of long distance services by means of computer 'hacking' utilizing the
- computer billboard which is available at that number."
-
- Teleconnect's most vile allegation was, "Many times, the hacker will
- enter the stolen authorization code on computer billboards, allowing others to
- steal long distance services by utilizing the code." But no harm was done by
- the blocking of the BBS number because, "During the ten month period the
- number was blocked, Teleconnect received no complaints from anyone claiming to
- be the party to whom the number was assigned." The fact that Curt Kyhl had no
- way of knowing his line was being blocked might have had something to do with
- the fact that he didn't complain.
-
- It was also pointed out that I really had no right to complain since,
- "First, and foremost, Mr. Schmickley is not the subscriber to the number."
- That's true; I'm just a long-time Teleconnect customer who was refused service
- because of an alleged act performed by an unknown third party.
-
- Then Teleconnect dumped on the Utilities Board staff a copy of a seven
- page article from Business Week Magazine, entitled "Is Your Computer Secure?"
- This article was totally unrelated to the theft of long-distance service,
- except for an excerpt from a sidebar story about a West German hackers' club.
- The story reported that, "In 1984, Chaos uncovered a security hole in the
- videotex system that the German telephone authority, the Deutsche Bundespost,
- was building. When the agency ignored club warnings that messages in a
- customer's private electronic mailbox weren't secure, Chaos members set out to
- prove the point. They logged on to computers at Hamburger Sparkasse, a
- savings bank, and programmed them to make thousands of videotex calls to Chaos
- headquarters on one weekend. After only two days of this, the bank owed the
- Bundespost $75,000 in telephone charges."
-
- RESOLUTION WITH A RUBBER STAMP. The staff of the Iowa Utilities Board
- replied to my complaint by letter on August 19th. They apparently accepted
- the vague innuendo submitted by Teleconnect without any verification;
- "Considering the illegal actions reportedly to be taking place on number (319)
- 236-0834, it appears the blocking was reasonable. However, we believe the
- Board should be notified shortly after the blocking and permission should be
- obtained to continue the blocking for any period of time."
-
- However, it was also noted that, "Iowa Code 476.20 (1) (1987) states, 'A
- utility shall not, except in cases of emergency, discontinue, reduce, or
- impair service to a community or a part of a community, except for nonpayment
- of account or violation of rules and regulations, unless and until permission
- to do so is obtained from the Board." The letter further clarified, "Although
- the Iowa Code is subject to interpretation, it appears to staff that
- 'emergengy' refers to a relatively short time..."
-
- CONSIDER THE EVIDENCE. Since it appeared obvious that the Utilities
- Board staff had not questioned or investigated a single one of Teleconnect's
- allegations, the staff's response was absolutely astounding. Accordingly, I
- filed a request for reconsideration on August 22nd.
-
- Three points were raised in the request for reconsideration: (1) The
- staff's evaluation should have been focused on the denial of service to me and
- countless others of Teleconnect's 200,000 customers, and not just on the
- blocking of incoming calls to one BBS. (2) The staff accepted all of
- Teleconnect's allegations as fact, although not one bit of hard evidence was
- presented in support of those allegations. (3) In the words of the staff's
- own citation, it appeared that Teleconnect had violated Iowa Code 476.20 (1)
- (1987) continuously over a ten months' period, perhaps as long as four years.
-
- Since Teleconnect had dumped a seven page irrelevant magazine article on
- the staff, it seemed only fair to now offer a two page completely relevant
- story to them. This was "On Your Computer - Bulletin Boards", from the June
- 1988 issue of "Changing Times". This excellent article cited nine BBSs as
- "good places to get started". Among the nine listed BBSs was Curt Kyhl's
- "Stock Exchange, Waterloo, Iowa (319-236-0834)." Even the geniuses at
- Teleconnect ought to be able to recognize that this BBS, recommended by a
- national magazine, is the very same one they blocked for ten months.
-
- ONCE MORE THROUGH THE DO-LOOP, THEN EXIT. The Utilities Board Staff went
- through the same motions again, and came to the same conclusion, again.
- Essentially, the staff concluded that, because Teleconnect insisted that it
- had evidence to justify its actions, but that evidence was competition-
- sensitive and could not be revealed, the staff would have to "take
- Teleconnect's word for it" and uphold the company's actions.
-
- At this point it was painfully obvious that the staff of the Utilities
- Board was more than willing to buy any vapor-ware Teleconnect offered them.
- The only way to get the issue out of the staff's hands and before the Iowa
- State Utilities Board was to request a formal hearing. The request was filed.
-
- FORMAL HEARING ORDERED. On November 2, 1988, the Board ordered that the
- complaint be docketed for a formal hearing. After four months, it was acknow-
- ledged that the "blocking" issue had sufficient substance to merit a hearing.
- As of this date (November 15, 1988), the case has not been assigned to an
- Administrative Law Judge, nor has a hearing date been set.
-
- THE SECOND FRONT OPENS. A few months ago, we were able to verify that
- Teleconnect was blocking interstate (Iowa to Illinois, in this case) calls,
- and a complaint was filed with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
- In late October, the FCC informed Teleconnect of the complaint, and ordered
- Teleconnect to respond.
-
- While it appears that this also could be a slow process, it is expected
- that the FCC will much more responsive that the staff of the Iowa Board, for
- whom this was a very new issue. In addition, Congressman Tom Tauke has
- expressed his interest in the matter. Mr. Tauke, representing the Second
- District of Iowa (including Cedar Rapids), is a member of the House
- Telecommunications Subcommittee, and was recently reelected for a sixth term.
-
- Recently, we have been able to verify that Teleconnect is blocking two
- other eastern BBS lines. It might be possible to use these verifications to
- establish a pattern to escalate the FCC complaint to formal complaint status.
-
- STATUS. And now, as of November 15, 1988, here's where we are:
-
- We are starting to prepare questions for an interrogatory to Teleconnect
- for the Iowa hearing. Finally, after six months, we finally have hopes of
- getting straight answers (or even any answer) to questions on blocking. We
- will try to keep you informed (through BBSs, etc.) about the hearing date, as
- soon as it is scheduled, and other developments.
-
- We are also beginning to run up some expenses, and need the help of
- concerned groups and individuals in defraying expenses in this fight for
- communications freedom. An expense fund has been authorized by Hawkeye PC,
- and will be administered by the treasurer. Contributions are requested to be
- sent to: Hawkeye PC Users' Group, Anti-Blocking Expense Fund, c/o Pat Alden,
- Treasurer, 840 Maggard, Iowa City, Iowa 52240.
-
- The complaint on the interstate aspect of the blocking problem is just
- beginning to slowly wend its way through the FCC.
-
- Teleconnect has effectively completed its merger. Now, it is a major
- component of a new company, Telecom*USA, which is the fourth largest American
- long-distance company. This company now has long-distance operations in over
- half of the states plus the District of Columbia.
-
- Curt Kyhl, whose Stock Exchange BBS was blocked by Teleconnect for ten
- months (June 1987 to April 1988) even though they didn't even know his name,
- has accepted a new business opportunity and moved to Des Moines. Curt is
- now operating his excellent BBS at (515) 226-0680.
-
- And, in an unexpected development, Teleconnect Vice President for
- Customer Service, Dan Rogers, has requested an opportunity to discuss the
- company's "blocking policy". He is scheduled to do so at Hawkeye PC's
- November 28th meeting in Iowa City.
-
- UPDATE, January 4, 1989:
-
- Dan Rogers addressed Hawkeye PC in Iowa City on Nov. 28th. To summarize,
- the assembled members did NOT accept Teleconnect's explanation that blocking
- was necessary to protect revenues for the good of all their customers. The
- assembled group included professional people, university students, and four
- Sysops, Ben Blackstock, Al Chapman, John Friel III (author of QModem), and
- John Oren. It appeared Dan Rogers was impressed by the fact that this was
- not a group of hackers (a term which Teleconnect had been bandying about
- rather freely.) The high point of the evening was an eloquent sermon
- delivered by John Oren, in which he pointed that the idea of "the greater good
- of all" to the disadvantage of individuals did not work for Immanuel Kant, and
- it certainly wasn't going to play for Teleconnect.
-
- On December 19th, Bruce Wilson and I participated in a pre-hearing
- conference before an administrative law judge in Des Moines as the initial
- step in the formal complaint procedure with the Iowa Utilities Board. Casey
- Mahon, Teleconnect's senior vice president and general counsel, represented
- the company. Curt Kyhl, Sysop of the Stock Exchange BBS, attended as a very
- interested observer. The judge gave instructions to the attorneys to reduce
- the significant points of the case to writing and report back to him on Jan.
- 18th. He also suggested that a rules-making procedure would be in order to
- establish rules by which the Utilities Board could decide any future cases of
- this type which it might encounter. Bruce Wilson had already prepared a
- rules-making petition for filing at a later time. (The rules-making petition
- will be filed as soon as this complaint is resolved.)
-
- Following the conference, Bruce Wilson, Casey Mahon, Curt Kyhl, and I met
- informally and discussed possible resolution of the complaint. There is a
- reasonable expectation of reaching an "out of court" resolution of the issue
- without compromising the principles involved. Regrettably, however, nothing
- further along the line of a settlement has occurred in the ensuing two weeks.
-
- On December 22nd, I set up my computer in the offices of Teleconnect,
- and demonstrated communication via modem to Dan Rogers and some of his
- security staff. The intent was to make those people much more knowledgable
- of modems and BBSs, and they seemed to be genuinely impressed by the
- professional quality of the boards I called. We also had an extensive
- discussion on the high standards, caller verification, and self-regulation
- practiced by the Sysops.
-
- Meanwhile, in Washington, Teleconnect's D.C. law firm had replied to the
- FCC on the interstate blocking complaint I had filed. The response was,
- unfortunately, a rehash of the same generalizations and pleas of "revenue
- loss" which they had submitted to the Iowa Utilities Board. The FCC has not
- acted yet, but there is some indication that they recognize that they have
- never before received a complaint of this type, and it could become a
- precedent setter to some extent.
-
- And, the situation is now receiving national publicity. Senior Editor
- Art Brodsky of "Communications Daily" read about it on a BBS, and contacted me
- for more information, as well as checking with the FCC. He wrote an excellent
- article which was published on December 16th. Dana Blankenhorn picked up on
- Mr. Brodsky's article and published an item in NEWS BYTES, an on-line service
- of The Source. It appears now that other publications will also pick up the
- story.
-
- Meanwhile, we are preparing to continue with the formal hearing before
- the Iowa Utilities Board's administrative law judge.
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa29299;
- 22 Oct 90 19:17 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:24:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: bwletter.txt
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010221917.aa29299@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
- Bruce L. Wilson
- Attorney at Law
- 677 - 61st Street
- Des Moines, Iowa 50312
- (515) 277-4904 (voice)
- (515) 280-9107 (data)
-
- June 26, 1988
-
-
-
- Mr. Arnold H. Garson
- Managing Editor
- Des Moines Register
- 715 Locust Street
- Des Moines, IA 50309
-
- Re: "Electronic hotshots are suffering terminal addiction," by
- Patrick Beach, illustration by Tom Weinman, page 1-T, Satur-
- day, June 25, 1988,
-
- Dear Mr. Garson:
-
- Unfortunately for most users and operators of computer bul-
- letin board systems, Mr. Beach, not being a computer user him-
- self, wasn't able to thoroughly research his story before writing
- it. I've spoken with Mr. Beach, who now realizes that he has
- only seen the tip of a very large and diverse iceberg. Just as
- the exposed portion of an iceberg can be deceiving, he was quite
- mislead by his minimal exposure to today's computer bulletin
- board systems.
- Most bulletin board users and system operators are male, but
- more and more women are becoming involved with computers and con-
- currently with computer bulletin boards. One Des Moines area
- board is operated by a mother and daughter, something which, if
- not unique in the entire U.S., is quite uncommon.
- Although it's not as evident around here as in other parts
- of the country, attorneys have probably made the greatest use of
- computer bulletin board systems of any profession. The American
- Bar Association's ABA-net is a computer bulletin board system.
- A seminar on computer bulletin boards was part of this
- year's annual meeting of the Iowa State Bar Association.
- There are systems operated by bar associations and indivi-
- dual lawyers all over the country and a number of articles about
- them have appeared in the National Law Journal. Operators in-
- clude DePaul University College of Law, the Houston North Bar
- Association, and the Lawyers' Microcomputer User Group (LawMUG)
- in Chicago, whose was the first lawyers' computer bulletin board
- system in the country.
- Many systems are operated by governmental agencies at both
- the state and Federal level. The Iowa Department of General Ser-
- vices operates one. The U.S. Department of Education operates
- one with a nation-wide toll-free number for educators to communi-
- cate with each other.
- At least one newspaper operates a bulletin board, as shown
- by the following message, posted on another system:
-
- Date: 06-24-88 (02:53) Number: 545
- To: ALL Refer#: 550
- From: DAVID LEVINSON Read: (N/A)
- Subj: HOWDY Status: PUBLIC MESSAGE
-
- If you have an urge to tell Southern Californians a
- thing or two -- advice on earthquakes, voting in Novem-
- ber as well as more laid-back topics is always welcome
- -- call The Electric Newspaper at 213-432-3592. We're
- PC Pursuitable at 1200 baud. We run PC Board 12.1/D
- but don't have much in the way of files. Our primary
- interest is letters to the editor and freelance arti-
- cles for our op-ed page at the Long Beach Press-Tele-
- gram, a Knight-Ridder newspaper (like the Miami Herald,
- but there is a good deal less of us).
-
- There are literally thousands of computer bulletin board
- systems scattered across the country. Some are organized in net-
- works which exchange messages, allowing someone in Des Moines to
- engage in roundtable discussions with others in all parts of the
- country by entering his or her message on the local board, for
- example.
- Boards in over 25 major U.S. cities can be called cheaply
- and directly from Des Moines by using a service of Telenet called
- PC Pursuit. For a flat fee of $25 a month, Telenet allows its
- data lines to be used at night and on weekends, when they'd
- otherwise be idle.
- All it takes is a local call to connect to Telenet and
- through it to Chicago, Boston, Dallas, Miami, Los Angeles, Port-
- land, New York City, DC, or any other "PC Pursuitable" city.
- Bulletin board systems serve as a means of distribution for
- high-quality computer programming, comparable to anything found
- on the shelves of computer stores and in some cases superior to
- it. The concept is known as "shareware," which enables program-
- mers to inexpensively distribute their work and users to "try
- before you buy."
- Shareware programs include spreadsheets comparable to Lotus
- 1-2-3, data base management programs comparable to DBase III, and
- word processing programs comparable to WordPerfect, all commer-
- cial programs retailing for hundreds of dollars.
- Authors of shareware programs transmit (upload) them to the
- bulletin boards. Board users receive (download) them, use them,
- and only send a nominal payment if they choose to keep and con-
- tinue to use them beyond the trial period.
- Unlike that to which Mr. Beach was exposed, the vast majo-
- rity of computer bulletin boards do not permit the use of any-
- thing but verifiable real names. Some use elaborate procedures
- to assure the operator that a user is, in fact, who he or she
- claims to be.
- Even if the use of "handles" is permitted, the exchange of
- copies of commercial software or information about illegal or
- questionable activities is not.
- The operators of these systems may have thousands of their
- own dollars invested in the hardware and software. They spend
- many hours in the operation and maintenance of their systems and
- are not about to risk losing it all.
- A number of system operators showed their concern on May 7
- by attending a conference in Chicago on the legal aspects of run-
- ning and using their systems. Paul Bernstein, founder of LawMUG,
- summarized the conference on the LawMUG board and in its online
- newsletter:
-
- On Saturday, May 7, 1988, The John Marshall Law
- School Center for Informatics Law and LAWMUG co-spon-
- sored a conference for electronic bulletin board opera-
- tors to examine possible liability exposure in opera-
- ting a board. People traveled from as far as Washing-
- ton, DC, Arizona, Iowa, Michigan, Indiana, and Tennes-
- see, for the day-long conference held at the Law School
- in Chicago.
- The Center is exploring the possibility of serving
- as a law clinic resource for sysops with specific legal
- questions concerning the operation of their boards.
- It was founded at The John Marshall Law School in
- 1983. It examines information and communications tech-
- nologies in the context of our legal system, with em-
- phasis on the protection of personal privacy and human
- dignity in today's information-oriented environment.
- Professor Trubow has been professor of law at The
- John Marshall Law School since 1976 and is Director of
- the Center. He teaches torts and seminars on privacy,
- computer law, and information law and policy. He was
- general counsel from 1974-76 to the Committee on the
- Right of Privacy, Executive Office of the President.
- Professor Trubow and Paul Bernstein, Esq., began
- the conference with an overview of the principal legal
- problems facing sysops. He presented an examination of
- federal and state civil law and regulation.
- Cathy Pilkington, Esq., Counsel to the Inspector
- General, Illinois Department of Public Aid, spoke on
- computer crime. Ms. Pilkington, a principal drafter of
- Illinois' new Computer Crime Prevention Law, frequently
- prosecutes cases of computer abuse.
- A panel of attorneys and system operators presen-
- ted alternative views on how "sysops" should conduct
- their systems to minimize liability exposure in the
- afternoon. Professor Trubow moderated the discussion
- and posed questions for the panelists to consider.
-
- Dan Buda, operator of the board sponsored by the local chap-
- ter of the First Osborne (user) Group (FOG), Jim Borchard, opera-
- tor of the Iowa DGS board, and I attended this conference.
- I suggest you arrange to provide Mr. Beach with an IBM or
- IBM-compatible personal computer, modem, and a subscription to PC
- Pursuit (or access to a nation-wide WATS line), so that he can
- fully explore the range of resources provided by bulletin board
- systems and develop a more accurate image of what they are. I
- would be happy to provide a copy of an excellent shareware com-
- munications program, directories of bulletin board phone numbers,
- and technical advice to get him started. (The commercial com-
- munications programs are a major waste of money.)
-
- Sincerely,
-
-
-
- Bruce L. Wilson
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa25979;
- 22 Oct 90 19:34 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:25:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: iowa.sto
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010221934.aa25979@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
- Jim:
-
- Here's what I wrote about your discussions with Teleconnect.
-
- Dana Blankenhorn
-
- PHONE COMPANIES are trying to crack down on pirate BBS systems,
- and getting on legitimate users' nerves. An informal complaint
- before the FCC asks it to decide basic issues involving the
- rights of phone companies to refuse to serve Bulletin Board
- Systems (BBSs). James Schmickley of Cedar Rapids, Iowa asked for
- the ruling after Teleconnect of Cedar Rapids, a long-distance
- carrier now owned by SouthernNet of Atlanta, blocked his call to
- a Waterloo BBS in April. Teleconnect's disconnect was based on
- what General Counsel Casey Mahon called "its good-faith belief
- that theft of Teleconnect services was being accomplished through
- misuse of the number by parties unknown to Teleconnect." The
- threat -- that all BBS operators would be refused service because
- hackers use their systems to commit crimes -- needed to be
- addressed, thought Schmickley.
-
- Schmickley told the Hotline his own case may be on its way to a
- solution. "We had a pre-hearing conference before an
- administrative law judge in Des Moines this past Monday, the
- 19th." Schmickley is represented by Bruce Wilson, a former Iowa
- board staff member, a lawyer, and co-SYSOP of the Cirus
- Cybernetics board in Des Moines. Mahon represented Teleconnect.
- The judge asked for a list of facts by January 18, and asked
- the parties to talk things over. It looks now, Schmickley adds,
- "like we'll be able to talk this out." Teleconnect blocks on The
- Stock Exchange and Computer Direct in Barrington, IL, another
- reputable board Schmickley had been blocked from calling, were
- removed.
-
- "I know I can go through AT&T," and make calls Teleconnect
- won't, Schmickley concludes. "I'm an engineer, I'm not totally
- stupid. But what kind of games are we going to play -- I refuse
- to operate that way." God bless you, Jim Schmickley.
-
-
- NOTE: This is a news story written by Dana Blankenhorn for NEWS
- BYTES, an on-line news service of The Source.
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa27819;
- 22 Oct 90 20:01 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:25:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: flatt-01.txt
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010222001.aa27819@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
- Fron Andy Flatt's NightHawk BBS, Bulletin #7, 9-7-88
- ========================================================
-
- Why YOU should be concerned with Teleconnect's long-distance policies, or,
- "Why, in my view, Teleconnect is scum".
-
- If you use Teleconnect for your long-distance calls, OR if you give a damn
- about the First Amendment, read on. It's only a couple screens long.
-
- Basically, the short version of the story is: Teleconnect has admitted to
- blocking calls through its system to certain BBS systems because at least once
- a hacker has used an unauthorized access code to call those systems. (The long
- version of all this is contained in BLOCKERS.ARC and BLOCKER2.ARC; download
- these for specifics on the case.)
-
- "So what?" you may be saying. Think about it. For reasons that Teleconnect
- only has to justify to themselves, they decided to prohibit certain calls from
- being placed through their system, on the grounds that SOME calls have at one
- time been made fraudulently.
-
- Specifically, one or more people had (according to Teleconnect) figured out how
- to hack a seven-digit "access code" and used it to call various BBSs. One of
- these was Curt Kyhl's Stock Exchange BBS in Waterloo. So, in response to the
- fraud, Teleconnect took the easy way out. Rather than try to identify the
- fraudulent caller, and (and this is the big one) RATHER THAN COOPERATE WITH THE
- SYSOP in finding the caller, they simply told their switch not to complete ANY
- calls to the number. And, they gave the caller a recording saying "this is a
- local call from your dialing area". (Yeah, sure. They won't even ADMIT they
- refuse to place the call, causing confusion to the caller.)
-
- AND, Teleconnect NEVER even told Curt Kyhl that they were taking this action.
- In fact, they have admitted that they never even completed a CALL to the
- number, to see whose number it was they were blocking!!
-
- So, here we have a "common carrier", a utility allegedly regulated by the ICC,
- DECIDING FOR ITSELF who it will place calls to. In this case, it was a BBS
- they blocked calls to. (In Teleconnect's eyes, people who call "computer
- billboards" [their words] are all hackers, anyway.) But do they have the
- right to prohibit free and uninhibited exchange of information between honest
- parties?
-
- And related to this whole argument is the question: Why is it BBSs have such a
- strange reputation? Because we're esoteric? Nobody has much sympathy for
- "computer geeks" with pale skin and green eyes, anyway, I guess.
-
- But I tell ya what. If Teleconnect (just as arbitrarily) decided to block
- calls to a pool hall, for whatever reason, would that be right? What if they
- decided not to place a call to Mr. XXXXX because he worked for AT&T? Or
- because he were black? But it was "just a BBS". So that's OK.
-
- There's a dangerous precedent being set here, gang. Believe me, I do NOT
- support toll fraud. It is wrong, and it is theft. And violators should be
- punished. But dammit, Curt Kyhl and his BBS had NOTHING to do with the theft.
- He should not have incoming calls restricted due to the actions of some
- criminal third party.
-
- And I think, on top of all this, Teleconnect's lack of cooperation with the
- Commission, and to its customers who demanded an explanation (myself included)
- of its blocking policies, stinks!
-
- So, download BLOCKERS.ARC and BLOCKER2.ARC and read the specifics. If this
- bothers you, then write that letter! But by God, don't take this sitting down.
- I'm not a troublemaker or a hell-raiser, but this kind of power-wielding must
- be stopped, and it's gonna take grass-roots resistance to make a dent.
-
- At the very least, call Teleconnect toll-free at 1-800-REACH-US and ask for
- Dan Rogers. Explain to him that you're a law-abiding, legal, legit person...
- AND you call BBSs. And ask him to explain why and how they block calls. Make
- him justify and explain their position to you. (They don't think many people
- even KNOW about this policy!) Don't take a flunkie or a customer service type
- for your answer; ask for Dan Rogers. Give 'em hell. And WRITE THAT LETTER!
- We need political clout in this one, too.
-
- Finally, if you have any comments or suggestions, leave an open message here.
- (Have you ever gotten that recording about it being a local call, even when
- it was not?)
-
- Oh, and if you read this far, you get extra credit points for putting up with
- me. Thanks!
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id ab27819;
- 22 Oct 90 20:01 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:25:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: gannett.bbs
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010222001.ab27819@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- This Bulletin Board is sponsored by the Gannett Co., Inc.
- We operate 24 Hours a day, 7 days a week at (703)524-3982
-
- For all Gannett/USA Today Employees, and other computer users.
- The Gannett Information Center, the 23rd floor of Tower II.
-
-
-
- Bulletin 1 - Upload Download Statistics. Just be fair.....
- Bulletin 2 - A short message on current Board Procedures.
- Bulletin 3 - You can now upload your resume for Gannett or USA Today
- Bulletin 4 - Letter to our users.
-
-
-
- Welcome to the Gannett Help Screen
-
- As you are a new user, we will ask that you register before access
- is granted. You will be able to look around the board on this first
- call, register for access and leave a comment to the Sysop.
-
- Gannett Co., Inc. callers can call Bob Ison at x6113 to be
- granted immediate access. You will still need to register during
- this first call.
-
- Please leave comments to the Sysop concerning improvements you would
- like to see on this system. All comments are appreciated.
-
-
-
-
- Note! Now 20 Meg IBM XT for the Help Screen BBS...
-
-
- Our system now consists of:
- IBM PC/XT
- Color Graphics Adapter/Monitor
- One 20 Meg IBM Fixed Drive
- Hayes 2400 Baud SmartModem
-
-
- 20 Megs
- Online! Running PCBoard Software
- 24 hours a day..
- 7 days a week!
-
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa06094;
- 22 Oct 90 23:58 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:23:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: brodsky1.txt
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010222358.aa06094@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
-
- COMMUNICATIONS DAILY Warren Publishing
- The Authoritative News Service 43
- of Electronic Communications Years of Excellence
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- A Service of Warren Publishing, Inc.
- 2115 Ward Court, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037. Phone: 202-872-9200
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1988 Vol. 8, No. 242
-
- Today:
-
- FCC ASKED TO SET COMPUTER BULLETIN BOARD BLOCKING: Ia. consumer argues Tele-
- connect wasn't right in blocking board called with stolen number. Teleconnect
- says blocking is necessary to cut losses. (P. 3)
-
-
- Preventing Income Loss
- ----------------------
- FCC ASKED TO CONSIDER BULLETIN-BOARD BLOCKING COMPLAINT
-
- FCC has been asked to decide complaint that involves fundamental issues
- surrounding nature of computer bulletin board (BBS) operations, ability of
- carriers to protect themselves from theft, and when blocking of services is
- appropriate.
-
- Informal complaint was filed by James Schmickley, engineer with Rockwell
- International in Cedar Rapids, Ia., who took the case to FCC after having been
- rebuffed at Ia. Utilities Board. Case started in April when Schmickley tried
- to call Stock Exchange bulletin board in Waterloo, Ia., and found call blocked
- by Teleconnect, his long distance carrier. Teleconnect Gen. Counsel Casey
- Mahon told Schmickley's attorney, Benjamin Blackstock, in April 28 letter that
- company had blocked number to bulletin board "in its good-faith belief that
- theft of Teleconnect services was being accomplished through misuse of the
- number by parties unknown to Teleconnect."
-
- Schmickley was advised to dial 10288, area code and local number or to
- change long distance carrier. Mahon's letter didn't mention that 10288 is
- equal access code for AT&T. (Mahon later disclosed that information in
- correspondence to Ia. Utilities Board, which looked into issue.) Mahon added
- that while Schmickley said Curtis Kyhl, system operator of Stock Exchange, is
- responsible individual, "even reputable operators of computer bulletin boards
- cannot always prevent 'hacking' by others." Teleconnect said it couldn't
- determine identity of bulletin board operator.
-
- Teleconnect kept block on for 10 months, telling Ia. Utilities Board in
- July 29 letter that company "Had suffered substantial dollar losses as a
- result of the theft of long distance services by means of computer 'hacking'
- utilizing the computer billboard [sic] which is available to that number."
- Mahon advised Utilities Board: A computer billboard can be used in other ways
- to facilitate theft of long distance services." Board on Aug. 19 agreed with
- Teleconnect, saying that company could block lines in emergency situation and
- that carrier's response "appears to suggest that there was an emergency due to
- revenue loss. The company chose to reduce the service to this one number by
- blocking calls through its system."
-
- Schmickley took same complaint to FCC Sept. 19, citing blocking not only
- to Stock Exchange bulletin board, but also on interstate call Sept. 14 to
- computer buying service bulletin board. He said question is whether carrier
- has right to block bulletin board, which is a computer service, because of
- other unrelated computer activities: "If they can do as they damn well
- please, it's a serious threat to free communications." He said responses from
- Teleconnect and Ia. regulators indicate lack of understanding of computer
- communications. In Dec. 2 response to Schmickley, Teleconnect said it tried
- to contact Stock Exchange bulletin board, but couldn't "because of software
- incompatibility." He responded: "That's a crock." He noted that Stock
- Exchange number had been published in June 1988 issue of Changing Times
- magazine as "a good place to get started," and said Teleconnect had never
- exhibited good-faith effort to identify source of problem.
-
- Schmickley noted that first screen on Stock Exchange lists Kyhl as system
- operator, so that fact should have been easy for Teleconnect to determine.
- Number in Barrington, Ill., that Teleconnect blocked was to Computer Direct
- Inc., which sells computer equipment. Printout of screens from Computer
- Direct show that it has posted rules that include: (1) "NO [emphasis by
- author] conversations involving Phreaking (defrauding the phone company)."
- (2) "NO conversations involving defrauding any other Company." Conferences
- include Christian Ethics discussion, and users are logged off with quotation
- from Bible.
-
- For Teleconnect, issue is protection of network and defense against
- revenue losses. In Dec. 2 response to Schmickley's informal complaint,
- company said blocking is required to prevent "fraudulent use of the network by
- computer 'hackers.'" Its actions were "neither arbitrary nor wrong,"
- Teleconnect said, noting that calls to bulletin boards at issue "exhibited
- patterns which clearly indicated that theft of telecommunications services was
- occurring." Teleconnect said it blocks calls "only when clear signs of
- hacking and other unauthorized use are present." It said its regulations on
- blocking are reasonable. Citing Carlin Communications v. Mountain Bell dial-
- a-porn case, Teleconnect added that "carrier may institute blocking even if
- the offending access is not illegal."
-
-
- ***********************************************
- * The preceding article by Senior Editor
- * Art Brodsky was reproduced by permission. *
- ***********************************************
-
- Received: from zeus.unomaha.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa27237;
- 23 Oct 90 2:41 CDT
- Date: 22 Oct 90 18:24:00 CDT
- From: JOHN WINSLADE <winslade@zeus.unomaha.edu>
- Subject: chgtimes.doc
- To: telecom <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Message-ID: <9010230241.aa27237@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
-
-
- The following article about Computer bulletin
- boards appeared in the June, 1988 issue of
- The Kiplinger Magazine "CHANGING TIMES"
-
-
-
- <<< Note: The STOCK EXCHANGE, listed in Waterloo, has been
- relocated to Des Moines, Iowa (515-226-0680)
- because SYSOP Curt Khyl has changed jobs.
-
-
-
-
- ON YOUR COMPUTER
-
-
- BULLETIN BOARDS
- Computer bulletin boards get a bad rap. If you've never
- explored one, they must seem b-o-r-i-n-g---a bunch of hacker nerds
- earnestly arguing through their PCs the merits of Intel's 80386 chip
- over Motorola's 68020 or engaged in other trivial pursuits. Too bad,
- because for the computer owner the bulletin board (or BBS) is heaven
- on earth---a quick source of thousands of software programs. All of
- them yours for the asking. All of them free, or the next thing to it.
-
- If these programs were just games or new ways to count the
- number of angels that can dance on the head of a pin, you could
- dismiss the hundreds of BBSs. But ask yourself: If you (or your
- college-bound child) needed a good writing program, would you rather
- pay $360 for MultiMate or $250 for WordPerfect, or grab any one of
- numerous full-feature writing programs from a bulletin board and pay
- little or nothing? If you wanted to catalog your recipes or wines,
- would you rather pay $400 for dBase III (and struggle with its
- complexities) or grab PC-File from a BBS and accomplish the same,
- gratis? The same goes for communications programs, spreadsheet
- programs, investment programs, tax programs and any number of
- utility programs that improve your computer's operation or add to
- its friendliness.
-
- WHAT YOU'LL NEED.
- One special piece of hardware is necessary: a modem, the
- device that allows your computer to talk to another computer via
- telephone lines. Modems, which can be freestanding or installed
- inside a computer, sell for $100 to $500, depending on their speed,
- or baud rate. Avoid the cheapest modems, which operate at 300 bauds,
- or 300 bits of data per minute. Buy a 1200-baud, or a 2400-baud if
- you can, because the higher speeds save time and long-distance bills.
-
- To run the modem, you'll need a communications program, too.
- Some good ones, such as ProComm, are offered on bulletin boards.
- So before spending more money, borrow a friend's communications
- software, use it to call a BBS or two, and see whether a program
- offered on one of them suits your needs. For most boards, you
- should set communications parameters in the software to eight
- data bits, one stop bit and not parity.
-
- WHAT YOU'LL FIND.
- Now you're ready, but how do they work? Most BBS cost
- nothing to use. The programs themselves are free, too, although
- some are what's called shareware---if you find the software useful,
- you send a nominal sum to its creator and become a registered user.
- Some flawed programs appear on the boards, but a great deal of what
- you'll find is superior to commercial software and is regularly
- updated. It's up to you to separate wheat from chaff.
-
- You've got a friend when it comes to that task. Quality
- control is just one of the duties performed by the SYSOPs--
- -system operators---who monitor the contents of their bulletin
- boards. They SYSOPs are generally computer enthusiasts who run
- their BBSs on a nonprofit basis. Their ranks include programmers,
- hobbyists and professional organizations that operate BBSs for
- members and newcomers alike. Good SYSOPs are professional and
- are often available for on-line chats. They also provide etiquette
- guidelines---no pseudonyms, profanity or libel--to new users. Some
- SYSOPs verify your identity and, if you disobey the rules, will
- deny you access. A few charge annual membership fees in the $15
- to $50 range.
-
- Don't feel intimidated about plunging in. Most boards are
- quite easy to use. They use menu-driven instructions and prompts.
- It's a good idea to write down or print the main menu or exit
- instructions, in case you get lost in a maze of commands. to
- minimize download time and to pack all files associated with a
- program together, boards squeeze them into an "archive" file that
- carries the extension ".ARC." To unsqueeze and unbundle them, you'll
- need a special program. The best of the lot---usually found under
- the name PKX35A35.EXE---is available on most bulletin boards. Make
- this the first program you transfer to your computer and save it.
-
- The boards mentioned below are good places to get started
- on your search for BBS gold. A few are exceptionally large general
- -interest boards, and the others will appeal to investors and users
- of financial software. Unless state otherwise, all are for IBM-style
- personal computers.
-
- THE MARKET, Potomac, Md. (301-299-8667). Its 20 directories
- of files include sections on home finance (amortization, retirement
- and real estate program), business logos, letters and sales-tracking
- systems) and investment programs (stock valuation and tracking with
- buy and sell signals). There are also utility programs for such
- things as hard disks and keyboards. Don't look for games here.
-
- INVESTOR'S ONLINE, Bellevue, Wash. (206-285-5359).
- This service is devoted almost entirely to the stock market.
- SYSOP Don Shepherdson says the board serves as in "idea exchange"
- for investors. He also makes available 235 files for registered
- users.
-
- COMPUTERIZED INVESTING, Chicago (312-280-8764). Run by
- a magazine published by the American Association of Individual
- Investors, it offers more than 200 programs that emphasize investing,
- portfolio management, valuation and amortization calculations and
- investment analysis. There are separate libraries of files for
- IBM, Apple, MacIntosh and Commodore users.
-
- TAX ASSISTANCE, Arlington, VA (703-237-8430).
- It's nicknames "Ask Roger," because Washington, D.C.,
- CPA Roger Stanley answers questions about tax matters for his
- registered users. Early in 1988 he put software on his BBS for
- preparing federal, Maryland, Virginia and D.C. tax returns for 1987
- (asking $25 to $50 for its use). There's loads of other free tax
- and business software available on this superb BBS.
-
- STOCK EXCHANGE, Waterloo, Iowa (319-236-0834).
- Nearly 1,000 files are organized under ten general headings,
- including a section devoted to financial applications for Lotus
- spreadsheets. It also offers dozens of demonstration programs of
- commercial financial software and more than 100 other finance and
- data programs, including market averages and mutual fund rankings.
-
- STOCKS 'N' SUCH, Madison, N.J. (201-377-2526).
- It holds 17 file areas, including ones devoted to finance,
- accounting, business and marketing. For a break, check out
- the files on humor, music and color pictures. Despite the name,
- there's something for everyone.
-
- ROYALINK I, Westlake, Cal. (805-484-9343).
- Here's a top-notch, general-interest BBS on the West Coast that
- offers more than 900 files, divided into 16 categories, from games
- to utilities.
-
- The FILE CABINET, Philadelphia (215-678-9334).
- Aptly names, it contains more than 7,700 files and has nine phone
- lines to handle incoming calls. files are organized by the year of
- their release. This BBS covers the entire range of computer software.
-
- RAILROAD BBS, Long Island, N.Y. (516-741-6914).
- Another enormous East Coast BBS, it offers more than 600 utility
- programs, plus hundreds of others dealing with communications,
- word processing,data-base management and computer languages.
- But it's light on business and financial software. An the only
- program we found relating to choo-choos was a game that lets you
- control an imaginary model railroad layout.
-
- For other BBSs, we found the most up-to-date list of boards
- for users of IMB-style PCs on the BBS run by PC Magazine. Download,
- or receive, its list (and numerous free utility programs) by calling
- 212-696-0360 on the East Coast or 415-598-9100 in the West. Apple
- owners can get help finding a local BBS by calling the Apple user
- group's hot line at 800-538-9696.
-
- If wanderlust won't let you settle for a local BBS, a way
- to avoid sky-high long-distance bills if Telenet's PC Pursuit
- service. For a one-time registration fee of $25 plus $25 a month,
- billed to your credit card, you can call bulletin boards in 25 major
- cities during evenings and weekends. It takes longer to transfer
- data using PC Pursuit, but you're paying only the flat fee. For
- more information, call 800-835-3638 or dial the PC Pursuit BBS
- at 800-835-3001.
-
- One more caveat---if possible, disable call waiting while
- you're on-line; otherwise, an incoming call will break your
- connection with a BBS. Check with your local phone company to see
- whether "cancel call waiting" is available.
-
- A WAY TO TALK
- How easily you can talk with computer bulletin boards hinges
- in part on the software you use to do the talking. Expensive
- communications program like Crosstalk and Smartcom, both of which
- cost more than $200 but are often discounted, do the job well. Yet
- why spend the money when there's ProComm, a "shareware" program
- available on the boards? It costs you nothing to try and just $25
- to become a registered user.
-
- We gave version 2.42 of ProComm a torture test while
- preparing the above item on bulletin boards, and we award it
- high marks. It's slickly put together, with "exploding" screens
- and sound effects. More to the point, it's a breeze to use.
- The instructions occupy 106 pages when printed, but we got it up
- and running without ever looking at them. When you seek to transfer
- a file from a BBS to your computer, ProComm prompts you through the
- steps---you couldn't ask for an easier way. And experienced
- computer users can construct special files that automatically
- log them on to particular boards or data bases they use regularly.
-
- PC-Talk, the granddaddy of shareware communications programs,
- now costs $100. ProComm goes it one better in cost, utility and
- ease of use. You can find the program on numerous bulletin boards,
- including Royalink I (see above) and ProComm's own BBS (314-449-9401).
- Or register and obtain disks directly from Datastorm Technologies,
- Box 1471, Columbia, Mo 65205, for $10/disk.
-
-
- By Marshall Rens
- Research: Joan Goldwasser
- The Kiplinger Magazine
- CHANGING TIMES
- 1729 H Street, N.W.
- Washinbgton D.C. 20006
-
-
-
- From telecom@eecs.nwu.edu Mon Nov 19 01:53:50 1990
- Received: from hub.eecs.nwu.edu by gaak.LCS.MIT.EDU via TCP with SMTP
- id AA16769; Mon, 19 Nov 90 01:53:38 EST
- Resent-Message-Id: <9011190653.AA16769@gaak.LCS.MIT.EDU>
- Received: from hoss.unl.edu by delta.eecs.nwu.edu id aa29602;
- 12 Nov 90 21:57 CST
- Received: by hoss.unl.edu; Mon, 12 Nov 90 21:59:53 cst
- Date: Mon, 12 Nov 90 21:59:53 cst
- From: "Michael H. Riddle" <riddle@hoss.unl.edu>
- To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Subject: Follow-up to Teleconect Call Blocking in Iowa
- Cc: riddle@hoss.unl.edu
- Message-Id: <9011122157.aa29602@delta.eecs.nwu.edu>
- Resent-Date: Mon, 19 Nov 90 0:55:35 CST
- Resent-From: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Resent-To: ptownson@gaak.LCS.MIT.EDU
- Status: R
-
-
- Bruce L. Wilson, Esq., a BBS-literate attorney in Des Moines, Iowa,
- who represented Jim Schmickley in the formal complaint proceedings
- before the Iowa Utilities Board against Teleconnect concerning its
- blocking activities, was gracious enough to provide the following
- update for us:
-
- "I didn't review it in great detail, but the 'special edition'appears
- to be primarily the text files which Jim Schmickley wrote and uploa-
- ded as BLOCKER.ARC and similar names, with the last dated reference
- being December 22, 1988. I don't know what, if anything, happened
- after that with respect to the FCC complaint. As far as that filed
- with the Iowa Utilities Board, a chronological listing of what took
- place until the complaint was finally dismissed in September, 1990,
- follows this discussion. The reason for that dismissal was that the
- Board had effectively given all the prospective relief Jim could ask
- for and expect to get from the complaint proceeding by adopting rules
- concerning the blocking of terminating access by a long-distance car-
- rier (applicable to Iowa intrastate traffic only, of course).
-
- "From the beginning, it was apparent that this was an undefined situ-
- ation as far as both the Board's rules and Teleconnect's tariffs were
- concerned. When it came to denial of service, both were only con-
- cerned with a carrier's relations with its customer, simply defined
- as 'he who pays the bill,' not with those between a carrier and any
- non-customer third party. Although Jim Schmickley was a Teleconnect
- customer, what Teleconnect had done was cut off access over its lines
- to the number of someone who had no relationship with it whatsoever.
- As far as giving notice of its having 'disconnected' someone, it was
- only required by the existing rules to give notice of a disconnection
- to its customers; and it didn't know who the number belonged to any-
- way because the information was nonpublished and the local exchange
- carrier wouldn't tell it. The real solution would be for the Board
- to fill in this gap by adopting new rules which would deal with the
- matter on an industry-wide basis."
-
- "However, the Board's rules and Teleconnect's tariffs weren't the
- only source of authority to support Jim's position that what the com-
- pany had done was wrong. Virtually unchanged since 1873, the Code of
- Iowa has contained what is now Chapter 477. Specifically, Section
- 477.6 states that anyone employed in the business of doing so *shall*
- transmit telephone and telegraph messages, without exception. The
- argument was that the Chapter and Section set forth the policy of the
- State of Iowa and that the later-enacted Chapter 476 which sets forth
- the Utilities Board's power and the Board's rules enacted pursuant to
- it must be interpreted consistently with that policy, which is to say
- that the Board's rules permitting disconnection of service constitute
- exceptions to that policy and that a company's actions in denying
- service must clearly be within one of those exceptions or be illegal.
-
- "At the initial 'pre-trial conference,' the parties were ordered to
- come up with an agreed stipulation of facts and statement of legal
- issues presented in the complaint proceeding. In the course of try-
- ing to come up with a stipulation of facts, I found Teleconnect had
- an 'interesting' philosophy with respect to 'participation' in toll
- fraud. From the beginning, in its filings with the Utilities Board,
- it had appeared to at least suggest that the bbs and sysop in ques-
- tion had some involvement with the theft of Teleconnect service. The
- company kept resisting the simple factual statement that a person or
- persons unknown had committed toll fraud by calling the bbs number in
- question by saying 'but there's 'more to it than that' and was fi-
- nally told flat out that the bbs records for the period in question
- were available, would be produced, and the company would have to ei-
- ther put up or shut up with respect to its insinuating that the bbs
- and its sysop had somehow been participating in the toll fraud. It
- turned out that this 'participation' in the company's view was simply
- that the bbs provided the means for a fraudulent call to be completed
- even though the sysop had no way of knowing how calls to his system
- were being made. Anyone, not just a bbs sysop, was a 'participant'
- in toll fraud, according to the company, simply by answering a call
- being fraudulently made, whether the person picking up the phone had
- any idea that was how it was being made or not.
-
- "We finally got a stipulation; and Teleconnect promptly ignored it in
- its prehearing brief, prompting a motion to strike that brief which
- was sustained by the Administrative Law Judge after a phone confe-
- rence call hearing.
-
- "The agreed procedure followed the customary procedure in utility
- rate cases. The company would file prepared, written direct testi-
- mony and exhibits of its witness, the complainant would then file his
- direct testimony and that of his witness, and the company would file
- its rebuttal testimony. A hearing would be held for the purpose of
- cross-examining the various witnesses, briefs would be filed, and a
- proposed decision rendered by the ALJ. The company's testimony ex-
- tensively discussed the problem of toll fraud and why its actions had
- been justified, then it filed a motion in limine in an attempt to
- prevent *any* cross-examination of its witness about those aspects of
- its witness' testimony. The response was both to resist the motion
- and, in the alternative if the motion were to be granted, to strike
- the witness' testimony and exhibits concerning the "taboo" subject.
-
- "In the course of a hearing on the pending motion in limine, the mat-
- ter of what Jim could hope to get in the way of relief through the
- complaint proceeding was discussed. Should the ALJ agree that any
- existing statute or Board rule had been violated, all he would be
- able to give in the way of relief would be an order that this parti-
- cular company not do it again; he couldn't fashion any sort of rules
- for the entire industry, nor could he fill in the gap in the existing
- rules by making new ones. Any relief to be given by the ALJ in the
- complaint proceeding would be prospective in nature and only affect
- Teleconnect, but the Board could address the matter on an industry-
- wide basis and afford even better prospective relief by adopting
- rules that everyone would have to follow in the future. It was
- therefor agreed that both sides would petition the Utilities Board to
- adopt rules concerning blocking and the complaint proceeding would be
- stayed pending the Board's action on the petitions.
-
- "Both sides filed rulemaking petitions. (That filed on behalf of Jim
- Schmickley follows the chronology.) The Board ultimately denied both
- petitions. Over a month after a motion to get the show on the road
- again was filed and a month after a resistance to that motion was
- filed, the Board began a rulemaking proceeding on its own. (Copies
- of the Board's Notice of Intended Action and Order Commencing Rule
- Making Proceeding follow the Schmickley petition.) The motion was
- therefor withdrawn. The ALJ issued an order continuing the stay and
- proposing to dismiss the complaint now that the Board had begun a
- rulemaking on the subject. Dismissal was resisted on the grounds
- that no one could know in advance how the rulemaking would affect the
- complaint proceeding -- what, if any, rules the board would adopt.
- As a result, the stay was simply continued to see what action the
- Board would take in the rulemaking proceeding.
-
- "Comments were filed in the rulemaking proceeding; and the Board ul-
- timately adopted rules substantially the same as the proposed rules
- to govern the blocking of Iowa intrastate terminating access by a
- long-distance carrier, providing the long-distance carrier with the
- name and address of the customer whose number was being blocked, and
- notice to that customer of the fact of the blocking and of the oppor-
- tunity for a hearing before the Board. I tried to conclude the com-
- plaint proceeding by filing a motion for summary judgment, asking the
- ALJ to issue an order to the company to the effect that 'thou hast
- sinned, now go thou and sin no more,' but the ALJ wouldn't buy it and
- ordered that the proceeding be dismissed as moot after the adoption
- of rules by the Board."
-
-
- Schmickley v. Teleconnect Chronology
-
- Date
- 11/09/88 Utilities Board Order Granting Formal Complaint Pro-
- ceedings and Assigning to Administrative Law Judge
- 11/29/88 ALJ's Order Scheduling Prehearing Conference
- 12/23/88 ALJ's Conference Report
- 01/13/89 Complainant's Motion for Extension of Time
- 01/20/89 Joint Statement of Legal Issues and Stipulation of
- Facts
- 01/27/89 ALJ's Order Establishing Briefing Schedule
- 02/22/89 Company's Prehearing Brief
- 03/17/89 Complainant's Prehearing Brief
- 03/17/89 Complainant's Motion to Strike Company's Brief
- 03/17/89 Consumer Advocate's Prehearing Brief
- 04/06/89 ALJ's Order Granting Motion to Strike and Establishing
- Procedural Schedule
- Appearance by Phil Stoffregen for Company
- 05/15/89 Company's Prepared Direct Testimony and Exhibits
- 06/06/89 Company's Motion in Limine
- 06/08/89 Complainant's Resistance to Motion in Limine and
- Motion to Strike (Company's) Testimony
- 06/13/89 Company's Resistance to Motion to Strike Testimony
- and Reply in Support of Motion in Limine
- 06/15/89 Complainant's Motion for Extension of Time
- 06/19/89 Complainant's Prepared Direct Testimony
- 06/19/89 Prepared Direct Testimony and Exhibits of Complai-
- nant's Witness
- 06/27/89 Company's Motions Concerning Hearing Schedule
- 07/06/89 Company's Prepared Rebuttal Testimony and Exhibits
- 07/11/89 ALJ's Order Scheduling Hearing on Motions and Re-
- scheduling Evidentiary Hearing
- 07/13/89 Company's Brief in Support of Motion in Limine
- 07/14/89 Complainant's Brief and Argument Against Motion in
- Limine and in Support of Motion to Strike Testimony
- 07/27/89 ALJ's Order Granting Stay
- 08/04/89 Complainant's Petition for Rulemaking
- 08/04/89 Company's Petition for Rulemaking
- 08/07/89 Board's Letter acknowledging receipt of
- Complainant's Petition for Rulemaking
- 10/03/89 Board's Order Denying Petitions for Rulemaking
- 10/18/89 Complainant's Motion to Reopen Record
- 10/25/89 Company's Resistance to Motion to Reopen Record
- 11/27/89 Board's Order Commencing Rulemaking, Docket RMU-89-30
- 12/05/89 Complainant's Withdrawal of Motion to Reopen Record
- 12/12/89 ALJ's Order Continuing Stay
- 12/27/89 Complainant's Response to Order Continuing Stay,
- Objecting to Dismissal, Motion to Reopen Record, and
- Motion for Summary Judgment
- Complainant's Comments filed in RMU-89-30
- 01/10/90 Company's Resistance to Complainant's Motions
- 01/12/90 Complainant's Additional Comments filed in RMU-89-30
- 04/26/90 ALJ's Order Continuing Stay and Denying Motions to
- Reopen Record and for Summary Judgment
- 07/20/90 Board's Order Adopting Rules in RMU-89-30
- 08/02/90 Counsel's Letter to Chairman Nagel, re: notice of
- oral presentation on proposed rules
- 08/03/90 Complainant's Motion for Summary Judgment and to Re-
- open Record for Entry of Summary Judgment
- 08/20/90 Reply letter from Chairman Nagel to Counsel
- 09/11/90 ALJ's Proposed Decision and Order Dismissing
- Complaint
- 09/18/90 ALJ's Errata Order
-
-
-
- STATE OF IOWA
-
- DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
-
- UTILITIES DIVISON
-
- _________________________________________________________________________
- )
- IN RE: )
- ) DOCKET NO. RMU-89-30
- BLOCKING TERMINATING ACCESS )
- ____________________________________)____________________________________
-
- ORDER COMMENCING RULE MAKING
-
- (Issued November 27, 1989)
-
- Pursuant to the authority of IOWA CODE 476.1, 476.2, 476.8, and
-
- 17A.4 (1989), the Utilities Board proposes the amendments to IOWA ADMIN.
-
- CODE 199-22.4 attached to an incorporated by reference in this order.
-
- This rule would be known as IOWA ADMIN. CODE 199-22.5(13). The reasons
-
- for proposing this rule are set forth in the attached notice of intended
-
- action.
-
- IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED:
-
- 1. A rule making proceeding under IOWA CODE 17A.4 (1989),
-
- identified as RMU-89-30, is commenced for the purpose of receiving comment
-
- upon the proposed rules attached to this order.
-
- 2. The Executive Secretary of the Utilities Board is directed to
-
- submit for publication in the Iowa Administrative Bulletin a notice in the
-
- form attached to and incorporated by reference in this order.
-
- UTILITIES BOARD
-
- _/s/__Dennis_J._Nagel_____________
-
- _/s/__Paul_Franzenburg____________
- ATTEST:
- ________________________________ _/s/__Nancy_Shimanek_Boyd_________
- Executive Secretary
-
- Dated at Des Moines, Iowa, this 27th day of November, 1989.
-
-
- UTILITIES DIVISION [199]
-
- NOTICE OF INTENDED ACTION
-
- The Iowa State Utilities Board hereby gives notice that on November 27,
-
- 1989, the Board issued an order in Docket No. RMU-89-30, In Re: Blocking
-
- Terminating Access, "Order Commencing Rule Making," pursuant to the
-
- authority of IOWA CODE sections 476.1, 476.2, 476.8, and 17A.4 (1989), to
-
- consider the adoption of a new rule, IOWA ADMIN. CODE 199-22.5(13) (1989).
-
- This rule would address some of the problems surrounding fraudulent use
-
- of the telephone network by providing a manner in which telephone
-
- companies must deal with subscribers whose lines the company suspects may
-
- be subject to use for telephone fraud. A recent complaint case before the
-
- Board has brought this matter to the Board's attention.
-
- Under IOWA CODE sections 17A.4(1)"a" and "b" (1989), all interested
-
- persons may file written comments on the proposed rule no later than
-
- January 2, 1990, by filing an original and ten copies of the comments
-
- substantially complying with the form prescribed in IOWA ADMIN. CODE 199-
-
- 2.2(2) (1989). All written statements should clearly state the author's
-
- name and address and should make specific reference to this docket. All
-
- communications should be directed to the Executive Secretary, Iowa State
-
- Utilities Board, Lucas State Office Building, Des Moines, Iowa 50319.
-
- 1
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________
-
- ITEM 1. Add the following new rule, 199-22.5(13):
-
- Blocking.
-
- a. No rate regulated or non-rate regulated local exchange utility or
-
- interexchange utility shall block terminating access to an individual
-
- number of a current residential or business subscriber, except as allowed
-
- in subrule 22.5(13).
-
- b. If a provider of long distance services desires, because of
-
- suspected toll fraud, to block the completion of calls to an individual
-
- access number or line number, that provider shall commence blocking only:
-
- 1. Twenty-four hours after delivery to an overnight delivery
-
- service of notice of the blocking addressed to the named subscriber; or
-
- 2. Seventy-two hours after delivery to a U.S. post office, for
-
- mailing by registered mail, of notice of the blocking addressed to the
-
- named subscriber.
-
- Compliance with subrule 22.5(13)"b"(1) shall be shown by a receipt
-
- showing the time and date, and compliance with subrule 22.5(13)"b"(2)
-
- shall be shown by a receipt showing the date. The long distance provider
-
- performing the blocking or directing the local exchange utility to perform
-
- the blocking shall be responsible for proper delivery of the notice of
-
- blocking.
-
- c. The notice of blocking shall:
-
- 2
-
-
- 1. Inform the subscriber of the line to be blocked that it has the
-
- right to receive a complete copy of the long distance provider's records
-
- of the instances where the provider suspects that its facilities have been
-
- or are being used for purposes of toll fraud;
-
- 2. State the name and address to which any written request for
-
- information may be mailed;
-
- 3. State that the subscriber, after receiving information from the
-
- blocking utility, has the right to file a written complaint with the Iowa
-
- State Utilities Board regarding this blocking;
-
- 4. State the address of the Iowa State Utilities Board;
-
- 5. State that the suspected toll fraud may not have been committed
-
- by the subscriber and that the blocking implies no impropriety by the
-
- subscriber;
-
- The long distance provider performing the blocking or requesting the
-
- blocking by a local exchange utility shall provide complete copies of all
-
- the requested materials to the line subscriber within 24 hours of receipt
-
- of the written request.
-
- d. All utilities providing regulated telecommunication services in Iowa
-
- shall designate individuals, who shall be available during all daytime
-
- working hours, to be responsible for either requesting or receiving the
-
- names and addresses of individuals whose line numbers are suspected of
-
- being used for toll fraud. Names and addresses shall be released by one
-
- 3
-
-
- utility to another within 24 hours of receipt of a written request and
-
- only for the specific purpose of providing notice of the blocking to the
-
- subscriber. Within 24 hours of receipt of the requested information, the
-
- requesting utility shall commence notification procedures under
-
- 22.5(13)"b". This requirement to provide data includes all non-listed and
-
- non-published numbers and customer address designations. All utilities
-
- exchanging data under this subrule shall specifically agree that the
-
- information shall be used only for the limited purpose of providing notice
-
- of the blocking to the subscriber and that the information shall not be
-
- released to any third parties.
-
- e. Any utility desiring to implement blocking shall have tariffs on
-
- file indicating that its long distance service to a given number may from
-
- time to time be blocked by the utility because of suspected toll fraud.
-
- The tariff shall state that a recorded message will be announced on the
-
- identified line indicating that the line has been blocked.
-
- November 27, 1989
-
-
-
- _/s/__Dennis_J._Nagel______
- Dennis J. Nagel
- Chairperson
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 4
-
-
- Following is the petition for rule making submitted by James
- Schmickley that was denied by the Utilities Board:
-
- ================================================================
- STATE OF IOWA
- BEFORE THE IOWA UTILITIES BOARD
- ________________________________________________________________
- )
- IN RE: Rules Relating to )
- Denial of Service by Iowa ) DOCKET NO. RMU-89-19
- Telephone Utility Companies )
- to Other Than Their Own ) PETITION FOR RULE MAKING
- Customers. )
- ________________________________)________________________________
-
- COMES NOW James Schmickley, the complainant in Docket No.
-
- FCU-88-5 (C-88-61), by his undersigned counsel, pursuant to the
-
- Order Granting Stay issued by Administrative Law Judge Edmund
-
- Schlak, Jr., in that proceeding and for his petition states:
-
- Rules to Be Amended or Adopted
-
- 1. Amend the board's rules at 199 Iowa Administrative Code
-
- Chapter 22 by:
-
- a. Renumbering section 22.15(1) as 22.15(1)"a"; renumbering
-
- section 22.15(2) as 22.15(1)"b"; renumbering section 22.15(3) as
-
- 22.15(1)"c"; and adding as new 22.15(1) the words "Connections
-
- with local exchange services or facilities."
-
- b. Adding as new 22.15(2) the words "Standards of service to
-
- the public."
-
- c. Adding as new 22.15(2)"a" the words "An interexchange
-
- utility shall comply with the board's rules found at 199 IAC 22.4
-
- with respect to relations with its customers as such are defined
-
- at 199 IAC 22.1(3)."
-
- d. Adding as new 22.15(2)"b" the words "An interexchange
-
- utility shall not, on its own, without an order either of a court
-
- of competent jurisdiction or of a law enforcement agent or agency
-
- acting pursuant to such an order or to statutory authority, refuse
-
- to allow calls to be made through its facilities by its customers
-
- from any point within the State of Iowa to any other point within
-
- the State of Iowa."
-
- e. Adding as new 22.15(2)"c" the words "Every interexchange
-
- utility blocking access to a number pursuant to an order of a
-
- court or of a law enforcement agent or agency shall configure its
-
- equipment so that the call of anyone attempting to call any such
-
- number shall be intercepted by either an operator or a device
-
- which transmits a recorded announcement to the caller. The caller
-
- shall be advised by such operator or recorded announcement that
-
- the call cannot be completed and shall be given a local or toll-
-
- free number to call for more information from the utility and the
-
- name of a company representative at such number with whom to
-
- speak. Such company representative shall make such disclosure of
-
- the reasons the call could not be completed as may be made without
-
- impeding an active investigation or prosecution and shall advise
-
- the caller that a complaint may be made to the board if the caller
-
- is dissatisfied with the company's response, giving the address
-
- and telephone number of the board. On receiving any such
-
- complaint, the board shall investigate and advise the complainant
-
- whether the company's action is in accordance with the board's
-
- rules and applicable law and proceed against the company if it
-
- finds a violation.
-
- e. Adding as new 22.15(2)"d" the words "Every interexchange
-
- utility shall file with the board, within thirty (30) days after
-
- adoption of these rules, a report showing the name of or number
-
- assigned to any and all entities not its customers to which it has
-
- denied access through its facilities on its own, contrary to
-
- 22.15(2)"b", the reasons for denying access, the period during
-
- which access was denied, and the date on which such blocking
-
- ceased, unless the blocking is being continued in accordance with
-
- 22.15(2)"b", in which case the utility shall report the quantity
-
- of affected telephone numbers and cite the authority under which
-
- it is acting without revealing the specific numbers affected by
-
- each order, or unless the utility has not engaged in such bloc-
-
- king, in which case the utility shall so state. Any utility re-
-
- quired to make a report by this section may petition the board for
-
- an order that the contents of such report shall not be disclosed
-
- to the public, giving good and sufficient reasons therein why the
-
- request should be granted and citing authority in support of its
-
- argument.
-
- f. Adding as new 22.15(3) the words "Cooperation in toll
-
- fraud investigations."
-
- g. Adding as new section 22.15(3)"a" the words "Every in-
-
- terexchange and intraexchange telephone utility shall cooperate
-
- with every other interexchange and intraexchange telephone utility
-
- in the conduct of investigations into the use of any such
-
- utility's facilities (1) in a manner the purpose or effect of
-
- which is to avoid payment of lawful charges for such use or (2) in
-
- furtherance of any scheme the purpose or effect of which is to
-
- avoid payment of lawful charges for such use."
-
- h. Adding as new section 22.15(3)"b" the words "Any inter-
-
- exchange or intraexchange telephone utility which the board finds
-
- has refused to cooperate without good cause in an investigation
-
- described in 22.15(3)"a" shall be in willful violation of board
-
- rules."
-
- Supporting Argument
-
- 2.a. This rulemaking proposal is a direct result of the dis-
-
- covery that the Teleconnect Company of Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
-
- blocked, and maintains that it has the power to block at its sole
-
- discretion, its customers within the State of Iowa with whom it
-
- had no complaint from using its facilities to place interexchange
-
- calls to a number assigned to someone within the State of Iowa who
-
- was not its customer simply because some third party may have com-
-
- mitted toll fraud by calling the number using a Teleconnect access
-
- code which was stolen or discovered simply by trying various num-
-
- bers until finding one that worked. The blocking was done en-
-
- tirely by the company on its own, not in compliance with any court
-
- order or in cooperation with any law enforcement agent or agency,
-
- to the best of the petitioner's knowledge. The company has pro-
-
- duced no evidence that the person responsible for the number to
-
- which access was denied himself had any active involvement with
-
- the fraudulent use of the company's facilities.
-
- b. The parties in Docket No. FCU-88-5 have recognized that
-
- Teleconnect is not the only interexchange carrier operating within
-
- Iowa; it is simply the only one discovered so far to be doing what
-
- it was doing. It may or may not be the only interexchange carrier
-
- which has been or is denying access in this manner; and no order
-
- entered in Docket No. FCU-88-5 can deal with the matter on a
-
- statewide basis by affecting any company other than Teleconnect.
-
- There is no effective way to find out how widespread the use of
-
- this procedure is or has been other than by requiring every in-
-
- terexchange carrier to report such actions to the Board; and there
-
- appears to be no way to deal with the very real, practical
-
- problems encountered by Teleconnect in conducting a toll fraud
-
- investigation other than by the Board's requiring cooperation
-
- between the carriers in the conduct of such investigations.
-
- c. The situation prompting this rulemaking proposal is a
-
- direct result of recent changes in the provision of interexchange
-
- telephone service. While the local exchange companies, particu-
-
- larly the Bell Operating Companies, and the American Telephone and
-
- Telegraph Company formed an integrated, exclusive telephone
-
- network, the customer of one was the customer of both; and the
-
- actions complained of with respect to Teleconnect simply could not
-
- have occurred. A fraud perpetrated upon the one was perpetrated
-
- upon them all and information could and would be exchanged to
-
- identify the culprit.
-
- d. The board's rules have simply failed to keep pace with
-
- the changes that have taken place in the provision of interex-
-
- change service. The rules contained in 190 IAC Chapter 22 only
-
- deal with relations between a utility and its customer, defined as
-
- whoever pays the bill, as do the utilities' tariffs. Teleconnect
-
- gave no notice of its actions to anyone because it had no one to
-
- notify, it used an intercept which wrongly advised its customers
-
- who attempted to call the blocked number that theirs were local
-
- calls, and it used the fact that no one complained to further
-
- defend its actions. The proposed rules are designed to fill this
-
- gap.
-
- e. The policy of the State has been expressed since the
-
- 1800's (Code of 1873, Sec. 1328) in what is now Code Section
-
- 477.6, which provides, in pertinent part, that any person employed
-
- in transmitting messages by telegraph or telephone who willfully
-
- refuses to do so shall be guilty of a simple misdemeanor. The
-
- Board is not charged with enforcement of Chapter 477, but Chapter
-
- 476 and the Board's Rules should be interpreted in pari materia
-
- with Section 477.6. The proposed rules are designed to further
-
- the policy stated in Code Section 477.6 and should be adopted
-
- notwithstanding any decision by the Board to de-regulate Iowa
-
- intrastate toll telephone service because it has become com-
-
- petitive.
-
- f. The proposed rules are in no way to be interpreted as a
-
- defense of the perpetrators of telephone toll fraud. Notwith-
-
- standing the separation of interexchange and intraexchange car-
-
- riers in recent years, the perpetrators of telephone toll fraud
-
- commit an offense against all paying telephone customers. It is
-
- in the public interest that perpetrators of telephone toll fraud
-
- be identified and apprehended. The proposed rules will not, in
-
- any way, impede a toll fraud investigation by law enforcement
-
- authorities or by the companies themselves. They may, in fact,
-
- encourage the companies to initiate and cooperate in such inves-
-
- tigations by denying them the ability to simply foist the problem
-
- off onto another carrier. When its denial of access was chal-
-
- lenged, Teleconnect, for example, advised its customers they had
-
- the option to make the call via AT&T.
-
- g. In defense of its actions, Teleconnect has stated that
-
- denying access was the only thing it could do; that it was unable
-
- to ascertain the identity of the entity to which the number being
-
- blocked was assigned, that entity not being itself one of the com-
-
- pany's customers, because the local exchange carrier of which the
-
- entity was a customer could not or would not divulge the informa-
-
- tion. Without that information, it could not contact the entity
-
- to enlist its aid in ascertaining the identity of the toll fraud
-
- perpetrator. Pertinent provisions of the proposed rules are
-
- designed to mandate cooperation in furtherance of the common goal,
-
- for the benefit of all Iowa ratepayers.
-
- WHEREFORE, James Schmickley, prays that the Board institute a
-
- rulemaking proceeding to amend its rules as hereinbefore set
-
- forth.
-
- Respectfully submitted,
-
-
-
- _____________________________
- Bruce L. Wilson
- Attorney for Petitioner
- 677 - 61st Street
- Des Moines, Iowa 50312
- (515) 277-4904
-
-
- From telecom@eecs.nwu.edu Mon Nov 19 01:53:04 1990
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- Date: Thu, 8 Nov 90 10:30:08 cst
- From: Network News Administer <news@hoss.unl.edu>
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- Resent-Date: Mon, 19 Nov 90 0:55:01 CST
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- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Path: hoss.unl.edu!riddle
- >From: riddle@hoss.unl.edu (Michael H. Riddle)
- Subject: Re: Blocking of Long Distance Calls - Part II
- Message-ID: <1990Nov08.163001.16424@hoss.unl.edu>
- Sender: news@hoss.unl.edu (Network News Administer)
- Organization: University of Nebraska, Computing Resource Center
- References: <14299@accuvax.nwu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 08 Nov 90 16:30:01 GMT
-
- In Message-ID: <14299@accuvax.nwu.edu>
- Date: 3 Nov 90 23:37:00 GMT regarding
- TELECOM Digest Sat, 3 Nov 90 17:37:00 CST Blocking LD Calls - Part II
-
- the Moderator writes:
-
- > [Moderator's Note: My thanks to Mr. Winslade for sending this along.
- > Now we need an update: what has happened over the past two years? We
- > know of course that Telecom*USA is now part of MCI.
-
-
- Bruce Wilson, Esq., a BBS-literate attorney who was involved in
- the Teleconnect blocking case in Iowa, was gratious enough to
- provide the following update for us:
-
- "The [special edition] appears to be primarily the text files
- which Jim Schmickley wrote and uploaded as BLOCKER.ARC and similar
- names, with the last dated reference being December 22, 1988. I
- don't know what, if anything, happened after that with respect to
- the FCC complaint. As far as that filed with the Iowa Utilities
- Board, [a] chronological listing [follows at the end] of what
- took place until the complaint was finally dismissed in September,
- 1990. The reason for that dismissal was that the Board had
- effectively given all the prospective relief Jim could ask for and
- expect to get from the complaint proceeding by adopting rules
- concerning the blocking of terminating access by a long-distance
- carrier (applicable to Iowa intrastate traffic only, of course).
-
- "In the course of trying to come up with a stipulation of facts, I
- found Teleconnect had an "interesting" philosophy with respect to
- "participation" in toll fraud. From the beginning, in its filings
- with the Utilities Board, it had appeared to at least suggest that
- the bbs and sysop in question had some involvement with the theft
- of Teleconnect service. The company kept resisting the simple
- factual statement that a person or persons unknown had committed
- toll fraud by calling the bbs number in question and was finally
- told the bbs records for the period in question were available,
- would be produced, and the company would have to either put up or
- shut up with respect to its insinuating that the bbs and its sysop
- had somehow been participating in the toll fraud. It turned out
- that this "participation" in the company's view was simply that the
- bbs provided the means for a fraudulent call to be terminated, even
- though the sysop had no way of knowing how calls to his system were
- being made. Anyone, not just a bbs sysop, was a "participant" in
- toll fraud, according to the company, simply by answering a call
- being fraudulently made, whether the person picking up the phone
- knew that was how it was being made or not.
-
- "We finally got a stipulation; and Teleconnect promptly ignored it
- in its prehearing brief, prompting a motion to strike that brief
- which was sustained by the Administrative Law Judge after a phone
- conference call hearing.
-
- "The agreed procedure followed the customary procedure in utility
- rate cases. The company would file prepared, written direct
- testimony and exhibits of its witness, the complainant would then
- file his direct testimony and that of his witness, and the company
- would file its rebuttal testimony. A hearing would be held for the
- purpose of cross-examining the various witnesses, briefs would be
- filed, and a proposed decision rendered by the ALJ. The company's
- testimony extensively discussed the problem of toll fraud and why
- its actions had been justified, then it filed a motion in limine in
- an attempt to prevent any cross-examination of its witness about
- those aspects of its witness' testimony. The response was to
- resist the motion and, in the alternative if the motion were to be
- granted, to strike the witness' testimony and exhibits concerning
- the "taboo" subject.
-
- "In the course of a hearing on the pending motion in limine, the
- matter of what Jim could hope to get in the way of relief through
- the complaint proceeding was discussed. What Teleconnect had been
- caught doing simply wasn't covered in the Board's rules or company
- tariffs. Should the ALJ agree that any existing statute or Board
- rule had been violated, all he would be able to give in the way of
- relief would be an order that this particular company not do it
- again; he couldn't fashion any sort of rules for the entire
- industry, nor could he fill in the gap in the existing rules by
- making new ones. Any relief to be given by the ALJ in the
- complaint proceeding would be prospective in nature and only affect
- Teleconnect, but the Board could address the matter on an industry-
- wide basis and afford even better prospective relief by adopting
- rules that everyone would have to follow in the future. It was
- therefor agreed that both sides would petition the Utilities Board
- to adopt rules concerning blocking and the complaint proceeding
- would be stayed pending the Board's action on the petitions.
-
- "Both sides filed rulemaking petitions; and the Board ultimately
- denied both petitions. Over a month after a motion to get the show
- on the road again was filed and a month after a resistance to that
- motion was filed, the Board began the rulemaking proceeding on its
- own motion, so the motion was withdrawn. The ALJ issued an order
- continuing the stay and proposing to dismiss the complaint now that
- the Board had begun a rulemaking on the subject. This was resisted
- on the grounds that no one could know in advance how the rulemaking
- would affect the complaint proceeding -- what, if any, rules the
- board would adopt. As a result, the stay was simply continued to
- see what action the Board would take in the rulemaking proceeding.
-
- "Comments were filed in the rulemaking proceeding; and the Board
- ultimately adopted rules to govern the blocking of Iowa intrastate
- terminating access by a long-distance carrier, providing the long-
- distance carrier with the name and address of the customer whose
- number was being blocked, and notice to that customer of the fact
- of the blocking and of the opportunity for a hearing before the
- Board. I tried to conclude the complaint proceeding by filing a
- motion for summary judgment, asking the ALJ to issue an order to
- the company to the effect that "thou hast sinned, now go thou and
- sin no more," but the ALJ wouldn't buy it and effectively ordered
- that the proceeding be dismissed as moot with the adoption of rules
- by the Board."
-
- Schmickley v. Teleconnect
-
- Date
- 11/09/88 Utilities Board Order Granting Formal Complaint Pro-
- ceedings and Assigning to Administrative Law Judge
- 11/29/88 ALJ's Order Scheduling Prehearing Conference
- 12/23/88 ALJ's Conference Report
- 01/13/89 Complainant's Motion for Extension of Time
- 01/20/89 Joint Statement of Legal Issues and Stipulation of
- Facts
- 01/27/89 ALJ's Order Establishing Briefing Schedule
- 02/22/89 Company's Prehearing Brief
- 03/17/89 Complainant's Prehearing Brief
- 03/17/89 Complainant's Motion to Strike Company's Brief
- 03/17/89 Consumer Advocate's Prehearing Brief
- 04/06/89 ALJ's Order Granting Motion to Strike and Establishing
- Procedural Schedule
- Appearance by Phil Stoffregen for Company
- 05/15/89 Company's Prepared Direct Testimony and Exhibits
- 06/06/89 Company's Motion in Limine
- 06/08/89 Complainant's Resistance to Motion in Limine and
- Motion to Strike (Company's) Testimony
- 06/13/89 Company's Resistance to Motion to Strike Testimony
- and Reply in Support of Motion in Limine
- 06/15/89 Complainant's Motion for Extension of Time
- 06/19/89 Complainant's Prepared Direct Testimony
- 06/19/89 Prepared Direct Testimony and Exhibits of Complai-
- nant's Witness
- 06/27/89 Company's Motions Concerning Hearing Schedule
- 07/06/89 Company's Prepared Rebuttal Testimony and Exhibits
- 07/11/89 ALJ's Order Scheduling Hearing on Motions and Re-
- scheduling Evidentiary Hearing
- 07/13/89 Company's Brief in Support of Motion in Limine
- 07/14/89 Complainant's Brief and Argument Against Motion in
- Limine and in Support of Motion to Strike Testimony
- 07/27/89 ALJ's Order Granting Stay
- 08/04/89 Complainant's Petition for Rulemaking
- 08/04/89 Company's Petition for Rulemaking
- 08/07/89 Board's Letter acknowledging receipt of
- Complainant's Petition for Rulemaking
- 10/03/89 Board's Order Denying Petitions for Rulemaking
- 10/18/89 Complainant's Motion to Reopen Record
- 10/25/89 Company's Resistance to Motion to Reopen Record
- 11/27/89 Board's Order Commencing Rulemaking, Docket RMU-89-30
- 12/05/89 Complainant's Withdrawal of Motion to Reopen Record
- 12/12/89 ALJ's Order Continuing Stay
- 12/27/89 Complainant's Response to Order Continuing Stay,
- Objecting to Dismissal, Motion to Reopen Record, and
- Motion for Summary Judgment
- Complainant's Comments filed in RMU-89-30
- 01/10/90 Company's Resistance to Complainant's Motions
- 01/12/90 Complainant's Additional Comments filed in RMU-89-30
- 04/26/90 ALJ's Order Continuing Stay and Denying Motions to
- Reopen Record and for Summary Judgment
- 07/20/90 Board's Order Adopting Rules in RMU-89-30
- 08/02/90 Counsel's Letter to Chairman Nagel, re: notice of
- oral presentation on proposed rules
- 08/03/90 Complainant's Motion for Summary Judgment and to Re-
- open Record for Entry of Summary Judgment
- 08/20/90 Reply letter from Chairman Nagel to Counsel
- 09/11/90 ALJ's Proposed Decision and Order Dismissing
- Complaint
- 09/18/90 ALJ's Errata Order
-
-
- My thanks to Bruce for his update.
- --
- riddle@hoss.unl.edu | University of Nebraska
- riddle@crchpux.unl.edu | College of Law
- mike.riddle@f27.n285.z1.fidonet.org | Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
-
-