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- TELECOM Digest Sun, 6 Mar 94 22:57:30 CST Volume 14 : Issue 116
-
- Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson
-
- Time Magazine on Clipper (Dave Banisar)
- Time Reports 80% Oppose Clipper Chip (Philip Elmer-DeWitt)
- Competition and Technology (Jerry Leichter)
- ISDN Deployment Data (Bob Larribeau)
- Re: Harrassing One-Ring Calls (Lance Ginner)
- Re: 810 Area Code Trouble? (John Palmer)
- Re: New Area Code Change Question (Carl Moore)
- Re: Starring Tom Cruise as Kevin Poulsen? (Carl Moore)
- Traffic Overloads in Manual Service Era (TELECOM Digest Editor)
-
- TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
- exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
- there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
- public service systems and networks including Compuserve and GEnie.
- Subscriptions are available at no charge to qualified organizations
- and individual readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:
-
- * telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu *
-
- The Digest is compilation-copyrighted by Patrick Townson Associates of
- Skokie, Illinois USA. We provide telecom consultation services and
- long distance resale services including calling cards and 800 numbers.
- To reach us: Post Office Box 1570, Chicago, IL 60690 or by phone
- at 708-329-0571 and fax at 708-329-0572. Email: ptownson@townson.com.
-
- ** Article submission address only: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu **
-
- Our archives are located at lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
- anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
- information service. For a copy of a helpful file explaining how to
- use the information service, just ask.
-
- TELECOM Digest is gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
- newsgroup comp.dcom.telecom. It has no connection with the unmoderated
- Usenet newsgroup comp.dcom.telecom.tech whose mailing list "Telecom-Tech
- Digest" shares archives resources at lcs.mit.edu for the convenience
- of users. Please *DO NOT* cross post articles between the groups. All
- opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
- organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
- should not be considered any official expression by the organization.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 1994 14:13:18 -0500
- From: Dave Banisar <banisar@washofc.cpsr.org>
- Subject: Time Magazine on Clipper
-
-
- {Time Magazine}, March 14, 1994
-
- TECHNOLOGY
-
- WHO SHOULD KEEP THE KEYS?
-
- The U.S. government wants the power to tap into every phone, fax and
- computer transmission
-
- BY PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT
-
- ... (general background)
-
- ... (general info on techo advances)
-
- Thus the stage was set for one of the most bizarre technology-policy
- battles ever waged: the Clipper Chip war. Lined up on one side are the
- three-letter cloak-and-dagger agencies -- the NSA, the CIA and the
- FBI -- and key policymakers in the Clinton Administration (who are
- taking a surprisingly hard line on the encryption issue). Opposing
- them is an equally unlikely coalition of computer firms, civil libertar-
- ians, conservative columnists and a strange breed of cryptoanarchists
- who call themselves the cypherpunks.
-
- At the center is the Clipper Chip, a semiconductor device that the
- NSA developed and wants installed in every telephone, computer modem
- and fax machine. The chip combines a powerful encryption algorithm
- with a "back door" -- the cryptographic equivalent of the master key
- that opens schoolchildren's padlocks when they forget their combinations.
- A "secure" phone equipped with the chip could, with proper authorization,
- be cracked by the government. Law-enforcement agencies say they need this
- capability to keep tabs on drug runners, terrorists and spies. Critics
- denounce the Clipper -- and a bill before Congress that would require
- phone companies to make it easy to tap the new digital phones -- as
- Big Brotherly tools that will strip citizens of whatever privacy they
- still have in the computer age.
-
- In a Time/CNN poll of 1,000 Americans conducted last week by Yankelovich
- Partners, two-thirds said it was more important to protect the privacy of
- phone calls than to preserve the ability of police to conduct wiretaps.
- When informed about the Clipper Chip, 80% said they opposed it.
-
- The battle lines were first drawn last April, when the
- Administration unveiled the Clipper plan and invited public comment.
- For nine months opponents railed against the scheme's many flaws:
- criminals wouldn't use phones equipped with the government's chip;
- foreign customers wouldn't buy communications gear for which the U.S.
- held the keys; the system for giving investigators access to the
- back-door master codes was open to abuse; there was no guarantee that
- some clever hacker wouldn't steal the keys. But in the end the
- Administration ignored the advice. In early February, after computer-
- industry leaders had made it clear that they wanted to adopt their own
- encryption standard, the Administration announced that it was putting
- the NSA plan into effect. Government agencies will phase in use of
- Clipper technology for all unclassified communications. Commercial use
- of the chip will be voluntary -- for now.
-
- It was tantamount to a declaration of war, not just to a small group
- of crypto-activists but to all citizens who value their privacy, as
- well as to telecommunications firms that sell their products abroad.
- Foreign customers won't want equipment that U.S. spies can tap into,
- particularly since powerful, uncompromised encryption is available
- overseas. "Industry is unanimous on this," says Jim Burger, a lobbyist
- for Apple Computer, one of two dozen companies and trade groups
- opposing the Clipper. A petition circulated on the Internet electronic
- network by Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility gathered
- 45,000 signatures, and some activists are planning to boycott
- companies that use the chips and thus, in effect, hand over their
- encryption keys to the government. "You can have my encryption
- algorithm," said John Perry Barlow, co-founder of the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, "when you pry my cold dead fingers from my
- private key."
-
- ... (history of Public Key encryption).
-
- ... (history of PGP)
-
- Rather than outlaw PGP and other such programs, a policy that would
- probably be unconstitutional, the Administration is taking a marketing
- approach. By using its purchasing power to lower the cost of Clipper
- technology, and by vigilantly enforcing restrictions against overseas
- sales of competing encryption systems, the government is trying to
- make it difficult for any alternative schemes to become widespread. If
- Clipper manages to establish itself as a market standard -- if, for
- example, it is built into almost every telephone, modem and fax machine
- sold -- people who buy a nonstandard system might find themselves with an
- untappable phone but no one to call.
-
- That's still a big if. Zimmermann is already working on a version of
- PGP for voice communications that could compete directly with Clipper,
- and if it finds a market, similar products are sure to follow. "The
- crypto genie is out of the bottle," says Steven Levy, who is writing
- a book about encryption. If that's true, even the NSA may not have the
- power to put it back.
-
-
- Reported by David S. Jackson/San Francisco and Suneel Ratan/Washington
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: ped@panix.com (Philip Elmer-DeWitt)
- Subject: TIME Reports 80% Oppose Clipper Chip
- Date: Sun, 06 Mar 1994 20:59:34 -0500
- Organization: TIME Magazine
-
-
- To accompany an article on the Clipper Chip in this week's TIME, the
- magazine commissioned a poll on public attitudes toward wiretap
- issues. The relevant graph:
-
- "In a Time/CNN poll of 1,000 Americans conducted last week by
- Yankelovich Partners, two-thirds said it was more important to protect
- the privacy of phone calls than to preserve the ability of police to
- conduct wiretaps. When informed about the Clipper Chip, 80% said they
- opposed it."
-
-
- Philip Elmer-DeWitt ped@well.com
- TIME Magazine ped@panix.com philiped@aol.com
- Read TIME on America Online, where we get paid to take abuse.
-
-
- [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Mr. Elmer-DeWitt, I thank you very much
- for okaying the use of your piece in {Time Magazine} in this issue of
- the Digest, and for your own contribution here. Please write to us on
- on a regular basis. PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 94 13:21:02 EDT
- From: Jerry Leichter <leichter@lrw.com>
- Subject: Competition and Technology
-
-
- A recent TELECOM Digest ran a transcript of Reed Hundt's statement to
- the Senate on telecommunications. It repeated a point that's always
- bothered me.
-
- Hundt says that when he was growing up, "the telephone was a black,
- rotary dial instrument". Starting with the Hush-a-phone case in the
- '50's, and culminating with the MFJ splitting up the Bell System in
- 1984, the FCC and the courts deregulated the telephone industry and
- "unleashed the forces of competition". Hundt lists the benefits of
- competition today as the ability to buy phones in all shapes, sizes
- and colors; phones with built-in answering machines, with memory, with
- speed dialing; cordless telephones; PBX's; fax machines.
-
- Now, what bothers me about this whole list is that *everything of
- significance on it is available due to technological advances, not
- deregulation*. Even in 1984, it would have been impossible to build
- most of the telephone variations listed. Oh, you could get different
- colors -- but think about what went into a touchtone keypad in those
- days. No IC tone generators, sorry. Memory? Using what memory
- chips? Oh, you could *buy* either, but at a very high cost. Cordless
- phones? How much would a cordless phone using 1984 electronics and
- battery technology have weighed, much less cost? Fax machines? Hah.
- PBX's? How many companies would have had the room to hold a switch of
- that era? How many would have been willing to hire the staff to keep
- it going?
-
- One of the things that gets overlooked is that, without competition,
- the telephone system developed from operator controlled to direct
- dialing, added long distance, got direct long-distance dialing; saw
- touchtone appear; and saw many other background developments.
-
- I have great respect for competition, but I have yet to see a sound
- argument that the advance in services available *since* deregulation
- is signficantly different from the advance *before* deregulation -
- AFTER CONTROLLING FOR THE EXTRAORDINARY ADVANCE IN APPLICABLE
- TECHNOLOGY. Competition has almost certainly brought the *price*
- down, at least for those services for which companies find it worth
- while to compete (coin calls have *theoretically* been open to
- competition for years...). But as for actual products available -- I'm
- not so sure.
-
-
- Jerry
-
-
- [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Some people maintain that without dereg-
- ulation and competition, the old Bell System -- as advanced in technology
- as it was -- had no real incentive to go much further or with any speed.
- I don't know if that is true or not. Some people believe that if we were
- still dealing with the old Bell System, half or more of what has become
- available in the past decade would not be available at any reasonable price
- or in any quantity. Like yourself, I think it would have been. but quite
- a few people believe Bell was growing stagnant and lazy; that they came out
- with what they have in the past few years only when there were threats by
- serious competitors. PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 06 Mar 94 08:58:46 -0800
- From: Bob Larribeau <p00136@psilink.com>
- Organization: Consultant
- Subject: ISDN Deployment Data
-
-
- I have presented the Telecom Archives with the Bellcore ISDN
- Deployment data as a ZIP file. It expands into a READ.ME explaining
- the headings and abbreviations. It has the data from each telco as a
- TXT file. These files are ASCII with TAB delimiters. You can read
- them with a word processor or a spread sheet. Thanks for putting this
- information in the archives.
-
- By the way, I have changed email addresses.
-
-
- Bob Larribeau I will be discountinuing my "p00136@psilink.com"
- Consultant mail box at the end of March.
- San Francisco Please use "blarrib@netcom.com" to contact me.
-
-
- [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thanks very much for this contribution
- to the archives. This morning I mailed out a revised copy of the
- directory to the archives, and your file is in the /technical sub-
- directory there. Readers are cautioned to remember that when this file
- is transferred using ftp, you'll need to set your session to 'I' for
- binary, and when you have this *LARGE* file at your site then you'll
- need to unzip it and prepare it for use. PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: lance@arasmith.com (Lance Ginner)
- Subject: Re: Harrassing One-Ring Calls
- Reply-To: lance@arasmith.com
- Organization: North Bay Network
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 1994 16:01:15 GMT
-
-
- I'm in California. It seems that we got all the disadvantages of
- Caller ID (everyone can read us but we can't read them) and none of the
- advantages. Am I missing something? I for one am not thrilled about
- the way it seemed to turn out.
-
-
- [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Neither are a lot of other people. What
- I do think you are missing however is that we *cannot* 'read' you either.
- Your Caller-ID is not coming here to Illinois for example. I don't know
- about all places, but we are not getting it. Is anyone getting Caller-ID
- data from Caifornia telephones? PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: jp@tygra.Michigan.COM (John Palmer)
- Subject: Re: 810 Area Code Trouble?
- Organization: John Palmer's Private Box
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 1994 17:08:23 GMT
-
-
- In article <telecom14.106.10@eecs.nwu.edu> Carl Moore <cmoore@BRL.MIL>
- writes:
-
- > Item sent to me:
-
- > Phones have been in the news this week. Some businesses in Michigan
- > are having trouble with the area code change over. Some equipment
- > does not recognize 810 as a viable area code. I have personally run
- > into this. I am sure it will all be corrected by the August official
- > implementation date.
-
- A couple points: people from areas out in GTE-Land (central California)
- are still getting an intercept after they dial +1-810 saying that
- "their call could not be completed as dialed" ...
-
- Also, Ameritech still hasn't gotten their act together. Some switches
- are still sending 313 as the area code in the Caller-ID data; others
- have it correct.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 94 17:27:42 EST
- From: Carl Moore <cmoore@BRL.MIL>
- Subject: Re: New Area Code Change Question
-
-
- As I recall reading, problems arose when a "strange" prefix (what was
- then 213-N0X/N1X) was in a phone number which had to be given to an
- operator for any reason.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 94 17:24:13 EST
- From: Carl Moore <cmoore@BRL.MIL>
- Subject: Re: Starring Tom Cruise as Kevin Poulsen?
-
-
- But what does ICM stand for?
-
-
- [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: I dunno, Carl. Maybe the original author
- can write and let us know. I wish Hollywood would quit glorifying people
- like that. PAT]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Mar 94 22:26:41 CST
- From: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
- Subject: Traffic Overloads in Manual Service Era
-
-
- Most people are aware of the way in which telephone service today gets
- bogged down during times of emergency situations such as natural
- disasters or important political news, assasinations, etc. The typical
- response today will be delayed dial tone -- a delay ranging anywhere
- from several seconds to upwards of two or three minutes under very
- severe conditions.
-
- We've also all experienced 'blocking'; a condition where the local telco
- in an area affected by an emergency simply turns away some percentage
- of the calls handed to it by a long distance carrier; the carrier in
- turn responds to its customer that 'all circuits are busy now; try your
- call again later please'. Or, there may be a very rapid 'busy signal'
- to indicate that all circuits are busy rather than the specific line
- of the called party.
-
- Overloaded conditions like that are nothing new; there have been many
- instances over the past 115 years since the telephone was first put
- into regular use with the ability to have calls switched between
- subscribers when the demand for service was so great that the telco
- literally 'ran out of equipment' to handle the call. Persons
- knowledgeable of how telephone switching systems operate know that
- telephone companies are generally only able to handle calls from about
- ten to fifteen percent of their subscribers at any given time ... and
- anytime when more than eight to ten percent of the subscribers want
- service all at the same time, traffic is considered quite heavy. If
- more than two or three percent of the total subscriber base attempt to
- make a call all at the very same instant -- or within a second or two
- of each other -- there will be a delayed dial tone for many. In some
- smaller central offices, perhaps only nine or ten subscribers can go
- off hook with dial tone at the same time. Subscribers following will
- hear dial tone as soon as someone in the first bunch has finished
- dialing.
-
- 'Busy Hour' is defined as that time of the day when historically the
- largest number of subscribers want service all at the same time; then
- is the time that you'll see ten to fifteen percent of the total
- subscriber base on the line all at once. Usually if this happens, it
- will be mid-morning or mid-afternoon on a weekday; a time when
- businesses make heavy use of their phones. During other 'non-busy'
- times, perhaps five percent of the subscribers will be using the phone.
- There are many times when only one or two percent of the subscribers are
- using the phone, and sometimes less than one percent of the total sub-
- scriber base will be using the phone.
-
- We all know that to provide a scenario where total or 'virtual' non-
- blocking is available would be prohibitively expensive; and anyway, an
- analysis of the telecom traffic patterns in the past simply does not
- warrant that kind of service.
-
- I've been asked what did 'they' do in the days of manual service --
- all calls handled by the 'number please?' operator -- when an emergency
- occured? Surely California had earthquakes and presidents got assasinated
- and other grievous things occurred causing the citizens to all go 'off-
- hook' at once seeking information, comfort, guidance or whatever ...
-
- Generally, Bell went to 'emergency service only', meaning instead of
- responding 'operator' or 'number please?' the operators would answer with
- the phrase 'emergency service only right now; if this is not an emergency
- please hang up and place your call later ...'; the operators would go
- up and down the line of lighted jacks on their switchboards repeating
- that message over and over; saying it, pulling their cord out and
- moving to the next one. They'd only pause if the subscriber spoke up
- immediatly such as to ask for the Fire Department or something like
- that. If the subscriber then continued to stay off hook (as evidenced
- by the illuminated lamp associated with his jack) or tapped rapidly
- on his hook (meaning the lamp would flash in the same way), then the
- operator or some other operator would go on the line to deal with it.
-
- If the emergency/disaster was national or worldwide in scope (the
- Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 comes to mind as does the
- death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1945) then the entire Bell System
- would be on emergency service only for a matter of an hour or two, maybe
- eight or ten hours until the stirred up citizens quieted down and went
- back to whatever they had been doing before the incident which caused
- the uproar. An operator with Illinois Bell during those years told me
- that she was on duty the Sunday of the Pearl Harbor incident, and that
- '... about noon that day, our boards lit up like a Christmas Tree; we
- wondered about it and within about ten minutes our supervisors were
- telling everyone what happened and we were on emergency service only from
- then until about ten o'clock that Sunday night ...'
-
- If the incident was local in nature or confined to the jurisdiction of
- one central office exchange, then those operators dealt with it in the
- same way, but word was quickly passed to the rest of the area that
- non-emergency calls were to be withheld from the affected exchange
- until the operators had gotten their boards under control again,
- however long that might take. A woman who was the chief operator and
- phone room manager at Pearl Harbor on the day that FDR said would
- 'live in infamy forever' whose story has appeared here in TELECOM
- Digest recalled later that '... the operators in Oakland were very
- protective of us that day and for several days following; they'd wait
- for us to call them when we could handle more traffic given all the
- downed wires and wrecked buildings and all ...' At the time, Oakland,
- California was the AT&T international center handling calls to the far
- east, the Pacific Islands, etc.
-
- On a summer day in 1935 when an explosion caused a major fire in the
- Chicago Union Stockyards causing a huge amount of thick, very black,
- very acrid smoke over a large area of the southside of Chicago, the
- operators at the YARds exchange (now 312-927) worked for several hours
- explaining to a frantic neighborhood around the stockyards what was
- going on, and relaying information to the residents from authorities
- at the scene, etc.
-
- One such instance that I remember specifically was an explosion at
- the Whiting Refinery in 1953. I was only a little kid, but I remember
- hearing kind of a loud 'thump' with the house shaking a little for
- just a second or two. I guess we were about a mile west of the labor-
- atory which had the explosion, but a big fire could be seen even
- that far away. It was fierce enough that it quickly spread into some
- storage tanks and a large device they called a 'cat cracker' -- whatever
- that means -- and hot enough that it twisted some railroad tracks out
- of shape there and completely melted the main street in Whiting where
- it runs through the center of the refinery (on both sides of the street)
- at that point. People living within a block or two of the location had
- their houses completely caved in. Between the Amoco Refinery Fire Depart-
- ment and the Whiting Fire Department it took them four days to put out
- the fire. I was just a kid; it was all very exciting to see and I wanted
- to make sure all my friends knew about it but when I tried to call someone
- I knew, maybe ten minutes or so after the blast, I remember the Whiting
- phone operator taking what seemed like forever to respond and then all
- she said was they were only handling emergency calls due to the explosion
- and the large number of people trying to find out the details. I turned
- on the radio (local area station) where they were already talking about
- it and remember the announcer saying something to the effect that 'if you
- know how to operate a telephone switchboard then your help is urgently
- needed at the Whiting telephone exchange to cope with a flood of calls
- due to the explosion', and asking people to refrain from using the phone
- if at all possible until further notice.
-
- Just some thoughts this Sunday evening I thought you might enjoy reading.
-
-
- PAT
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of TELECOM Digest V14 #116
- ******************************
-
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