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- From: werner@cs.utexas.edu (Werner Uhrig)
- Newsgroups: austin.general
- Subject: this caller-ID arguments tend to be "a bit dense"
- Date: 18 Nov 1992 06:29:13 -0600
- Organization: CS Dept, University of Texas at Austin
- Lines: 177
- Message-ID: <lgkdopINNrm7@dimebox.cs.utexas.edu>
- References: <1992Nov12.171104.9358@oakhill.sps.mot.com> <83759@ut-emx.uucp> <83843@ut-emx.uucp>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: dimebox.cs.utexas.edu
-
- Wowbagger wrote:
- ||>Making Caller ID illegal is good news to me.
- ||>... invasion of privacy involved.
-
- not to me, it isn't. it's not all "cut and dried"...
-
-
- ||different from the peephole you have on your front door.
-
- that it is. but related, nonetheless (though too many people
- use analogies to lead people to inappropriate conclusions:
- by arguing for a logic in the analogeous situation, and then
- claiming - often not even spelled out in so-many-words that
- "the same applies back in the analogeous case")
-
- ||CallerID limits its "resolution" to just identifying the number and not the
- ||person *actually* on the phone but I dont see why it should give privacy
- ||advocates nightmares. I've seen some discussion on this topic in some other
- ||groups, but I never seem to understand why privacy advocates are so reluctant
- ||to forfeit their right to call people anonymously.
-
- well, no reason to assume that repeating the reasoning once more is
- going to make a dent ...
-
-
- >What about the rights of the people receiving the call? I feel I have the
- >right to know who is calling me, since they are disturbing me.
-
- well, you pick up the phone and ask them, and if you don't like the
- answer, you hang up ...
-
- ...and if it was an honest mistake, you really don't have "any such
- rights" (and what "rights" you have otherwise in this regard hasn't
- really been established yet, has it?!!)
-
- That said, I am a great fan of "not getting called in the first place"
- by the kind of people whose answer lead me to hang up on them...
-
- I simply want a "non-soliciting blocker" (and FREE OF CHARGE) and a
- PUCC ruling that forces all phone-solicitors to register their "spiels"
- and to pay for whatever the technology costs that would prevent them
- from ever bothering me by ringing my phone ...
-
- >Sure, you say I do not have to answer the phone, but I frequently get calls in
- >the middle of the night where they hang up as soon as I pick up the phone.
- >These types of calls would stop rather instantly if caller ID were avaible to me.
-
- that seems a fallacy (for if a person wants to bother you, he can
- always call from a phone that you can't trace back to a person)
-
- but, besides, what gives anyone a right to regulate the hours which
- *I* decide to sleep (or be busy with work, or children, or ...
- whatever is important to me) - and make it "ok to solicit without
- fear of annoying" ?!?
-
-
- >You should not have the right to keep make anonymous calls to my house!
-
- I'm in agreement with you in the following sense:
-
- I should have the ability to push a query button on my phone to see
- "some information the caller permits me to see" (not necessarily
- the number): "Bush-Quayle campaign calling" would be just fine,
- as long as I am also able to set my phone up to "ignore all political
- campaign calls"...
-
- I should be able to (silently) instruct my phone (the phone company?)
- to stop ringing for a certain class of calls; as a matter of fact,
- we should be able to program our phone's ringing in many ways and
- by many criterias... and not have to disclose that to the phone
- company either (for example, if I decide to want to block all
- Democratic campaign calls, but accept the Republicans, I should
- be able to do that, conveniently and cost-free... heck, I have a
- room full of retired computers, which have a standard interface
- and the capability and capacity to run programs to do these little
- chores for me ...
-
- these things should not lead to higher charges; instead phone bills
- should be getting lower (i.e. reflect the shrinking cost of computers)
- while capabilites increase... Society is getting ripped off by
- "regulated monopolies", there is no doubt about it! (well, better
- than having a government monopoly though, isn't it?!! if you have
- not lived in such a place and experienced what the govmt routinely
- tends to do with a "cash-cow" monopoly, and capability to "snoop"
- just ask people from any of dozens of countries...
-
-
- > The phone ringing disturbs me, but I do not want to turn of the ringer
- > because then I may miss an important call.
-
- absolutely agreed! We want to filter out "nuisance calls" while
- accepting "important calls" ANYTIME... Those folks who suggest
- "turn of the phone when you go to sleep" clearly don't seem to have
- any aging parents or kids out driving the car on weekend nights...
-
-
- >Simple solution:
- >DO NOT CALL ANYONE THAT YOU DO NOT WANT THEM TO HAVE YOUR PHONE NUMBER!
-
- sometimes "simple" is more like "simplistic".....
-
- actually, I can think of calls I made that I'd rather not
- identify the phone-number..... I'd be quite willing to identify
- myself by name, however ...
-
-
- > a 2-way street. If you dial *my* number then I should know who you are
-
- yes and no: I may be willing to identify myself, but not where
- I am calling from: thus, if you had the ability at your end
- to request that I identify myself so that I could communicate
- back "it's Werner" (some form of keyboard and display) then that
- would do also (and I would not have to let you know where I am at
- - which is none of your business!)
-
-
- >I am tempted to get call-return just so I can call back those who hang up on
- >me, but why should I have to pay extra to try to protect myself and still not
- >know who is disturbing me?
-
- exactly! however knowing the phone number would not help you
- (or rather me) with the problems we'd like to see go away:
- the out-of-state sweat-shop phone-banks (which are always busy,
- never answer, and move all the time - and people would just laugh
- at you with a "sue me" if you'd actually get anyone to answer: it
- would be easy - and not illegal, I don't think - for "them" to
- rig a device to the phoneline, which, when called, would pick up
- and disconnect immediately again; of course, you'd pay for the
- first minute ...)
-
- >I would like to see caller ID legal. If you want the option to turn it off,
- >then give me the option of having my phone AUTOMATICALLY REFUSE any call from
- >a "blocked" caller ID. If you do not want to tell me who you are, then I do
- >NOT want to talk to you. You should have nothing to hide from me.
-
- "nothing"? NOTHING!?!!! you must be joking. In this context,
- for example I might be returning a call or responding to some
- phone message on my answering machine (saying, for example,
- "please call, we found a document which seems addressed to you,
- but doesn't show an address - or a parcel for which you would
- need to accept paying postage for... or come pick it up... or
- one of many things...) Or I might, unknowingly, have misdialed
- (or been given a wrong number) and not getting an answer - or
- worse, getting only a ringing (or busy?) signal, without some
- additional information that would help me (onward through the
- fog), the situation would really be "less than ideal" (and
- desirable)...
-
-
- ||Per-call-blocking is absolutely essential,
- >
- >Why? Are you engaged in something illegal that you should *have* to disguise
- >who you are?
-
- "WHY" is none of YOUR business....
-
- get it? get it? !! (as was stated elsewhere: it's a two-way street)
-
-
- ||If you dont want to let callerID give out your identity, more power to you,
- ||just dont believe the recepient is obligated to pick it up!
-
- agreed. however, what I concerned about is that the "features"
- of the phone-system of the future change NOT with the "people"
- in mind, but mostly according to greed motive (and an attitude of
- f*ck-you-unless-you-pay-me-not-to)
-
-
- >But I do not want to talk to anyone who wishes to hide their identity from me!
- >I would like to block "anonymous" calls. It is my right as well!
-
- yes, yes. but, can you see where the ideal solution has to provide
- "more" than the "simple" solution you seem to advocate?!?
- --
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