The Other Dumb Thing the FCC is Doing: New Rural Call Completion Rules
"If every call was killing somebody that didn't go through, what would you do? Well, you wouldn't do what the FCC asked because the killing would go on," says telecom activist and architect Daniel Berninger.
When the Federal Communications Commission passed the Rural Call Completion (RCC) order in 2013, they hoped to prevent telephone companies from delaying or dropping expensive long-distance calls to rural areas by relying on customer-driven complaints to lead investigations.
However since rural phone customers rarely take complaints to the FCC, the agency orders all telephone companies to submit quarterly reports of completed calls to find dropped calls: and therein lies the problem. "There isn't enough information in the data for them to find problems," says Bernginger. "No one is evaluating exactly what [the FCC's] contribution is; their existence is justified by this theory that government would be useful here."
"Rural call completion is not really rural call completion, it's call completion in general," Berninger explains. Rural customers don't need the FCC incentivizing telephone companies to not hamper their customers' service. "Our sense of reliability of that device is essential in terms of us buying that service. It's in the incentive of all the carriers to make sure call completion is high as it can be."
Reason TV's Nick Gillespie sat down with Berninger to discuss the FCC, the problems with the new Rural Call Completion rules, as well as Berninger's nonprofit, Voice Communication Exchange Committee, which seeks a transition to all-IP networks.
About 10 minutes.
Camera by Joshua Swain and Robert Mariani. Edited by Mariani.
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Other, singular?
Just off the the top of my head-
Massive expansion of their unnecessary E-rate slush fund.
Pounding another nail into federalism's coffin and destroying Dillon's Rule with their order prohibiting states from deciding the authority and limits of municipal owned/operated broadband networks.
I think Congress should think long and hard about defunding most of the FCC.
Eliminate it. Done.
This will happen when you elect
Almanian for President - 2016
"I Probably Won't Make it Any Worse"
That's fine, too. I'm sure whatever legitimate functions it has, assuming there are any, could be handled without this out-of-control commission.
THIS WHOLE COMMISSION IS OUT OF ORDER!!!!
With that slogan, I'd elect you to head up reason's web operations.
God bless you, Commander, and God bless the United States of America....
*trips down stairs....doesn't spill drink*
I'm only going to support your candidacy if you promise to create some sort of reality show based on shutting down the FCC.
I'm thinking that step 1 is to announce that you will be eliminating half the jobs at the FCC. Tell the employees that you need their input to help identify who goes/stays. Then film the fuckers backstabbing each other. No matter how vile the current crop of reality stars are, they would pale compared to bureaucrats fighting for their jobs.
p.s. In the end, you don't give the rose to anyone, you just fire the lot of them.
You've earned a place in my administration with this brilliant idea. We'll get you on the payroll, THEN figure out a job (that's how it works in FedGov, right?)
In addition, I'd be interested in subscribing to any newsletters you may publish...
You also need a position devoted exclusively to punching Lindsey Graham in the face. (There are plenty of others who need it from time to time, but he needs continuous punching. And he has one of the most punchable faces around.)
Oooh! I call Bimbo Eruption Czar.
It has to be a Czarship because I'd never make it through a Senate confirmation hearing.
That first sentence is atrocious
That is why I skip the posts and go straight to the comments.
The second one isn't any better.
I didn't watch the video, but did they get into what exactly is in those reports? Please tell me that there is a huge monthly report that lists all the calls made from a rural number and the number they tried to call.
I'd also bet that that data set probably isn't the most secure one in the world. No reason why people should be upset when you start tracking down the Farmer John players and the gals they met on farmersonly.com based on their calls.
One of my parents' friends passed away 2 years ago. My mother told me last week that his widow just met someone on farmersonly...
And she makes $7248 a month, working just a few hours a week on her laptop?!!!
I'd be stunned if farmersonly.com made more than $7248 a month total.
If they actually do make money, I should sue them for that fucking song they are constantly playing.
I'd be stunned if farmersonly.com made more than $7248 a month total.
If they actually do make money, I should sue them for that fucking song they are constantly playing.
Next year's prediction: FCC orders all ISPs to file quarterly reports of dropped packets.
The FCC will issue a rule that says that money is speech.
Sorry, that money isn't speech.
That money is hate speech...
Ah, yes. Thanks for that correction.
Man, there's some smart pipples on this forum. I gotta stick around some more and see if any of it rubs off.
Nah, packets missed by the NSA packet analyzer. Dropped packets are coming in a few years.
Nah, packets missed by the NSA packet analyzer. Dropped packets are coming in a few years.
Sorry, known bug in NSA packet analyzers causes duplicate posts from time to time.
upto I saw the receipt saying $9363 , I did not believe ...that...my best friend woz actualey bringing home money part-time on there computar. . there brothers friend has done this for only about eleven months and as of now took care of the mortgage on their apartment and bought Lexus LS400 . go to this web~site ...www.TradeValt.com
Nick - allow me to explain why your take is both hasty and "dumb". I spend half the year in a rural area. We have a "local" monopoly phone company here. They get significant funds from the government rural phone programs (you know the ones that add a buck or two to your phone bill).
So what do I get in return? Well lets start with internet - I am forced to take their landline because, they argue, they would not survive if they didn't *ck everyone for an extra 25 bucks. Second, I get the pleasure of not getting phone calls from everyone who wishes to call me on that number as this local monopoly chargecs a 6c termination charge.
I am also a VOIP customer. I am unable to call into my rural home, neighbors or local businesses as the VOIP service (the second one I might add) refuses to pay the 6c tithe. Though they did tell me that was not incredibly bad, they have seen some areas in the plains charge over 40c to terminate a call.
So I pay into the fund to help these bastard local monopolies and yet they are allowed to get away with a practice that harms their customers - who have no where to go. And no, you are not always able to tell the call was dropped, many times it never rings.
Instead of bashing the FCC on this maybe you should start bashing the heads of these rural monopolies.
It's sort of like the net neutrality regulations they just passed. The problem is local monopolies, but the FCC doesn't seem to mind those, but they just want to make sure the monopolies aren't too monopolistic *wink wink*.
Stilgar|3.10.15 @ 4:33PM|#
"Nick - allow me to explain why your take is both hasty and "dumb""
Let me help you here: Adding more government regs to a circumstance already screwed by government regs is not going to make things better.
Rural service is very expensive per customer compared to suburban and especially urban service. This is not very complicated; lower population density means there are fewer people to spread the costs over. Your service probably costs more than you pay every month, with the difference made up by customers in more dense areas and the USF. Also, your provider likely has to negotiate rate increases with the local authorities as part of its franchise agreement.
Unless Nick Gillespie lives in your town/county, there isn't much he can do about your local monopoly. That's up to you when you go to the polls. It's a worthwhile topic of discussion, but it's not a national issue. The FCC has authority over the entire country and they are proposing something that will impose burdens on companies everywhere.
as William answered I cant believe that some people able to make $5276 in one month on the internet .
see this page.......... http://www.MoneyKin.Com
Is this even a thing? I'm about as rural as you can get and have had many friends in other rural friends around the country and I've never heard of a problem with "call completion." At least not on land lines.
Are they talking land-line or mobile?
Yeah, some places -- in the hills like where I live -- the terrain means that you get call drops on mobile. I understand that it's not really reasonable to expect, in the middle of the Appalachian foothills, for there to be such dense tower placement that signal reaches into every backwoods holler with a trailer.
my classmate's ex-wife makes $60 /hr on the internet . She has been unemployed for 9 months but last month her payment was $20806 just working on the internet for a few hours. hop over to this web-site..........
????? http://www.netjob70.com
my co-worker's half-sister makes $86 hourly on the internet . She has been without work for five months but last month her pay check was $15863 just working on the internet for a few hours. read this article..........
????? http://www.netjob70.com
The buckyballs (magic magnetic ball) is indeed an cool magnetic building intellectual toy. Compared to the other types of Intelligence toys, Bucky balls magnetic building toys can simulate your brain, both left and right side, so you can benefit more from it.
1990 Chrisian Slater?
*ponders*
SURE! That'd be OK!
Was that during the Jack Nicholson years?
did the nicholson years ever really end for slater?