California PUC Calls For A Public Hearing On VoIP 114
Vick points to this story at Voxilla.com, which says that "A California Public Utilities Commissioner has called for public hearings on the agency's recent demand that Voice over IP service providers apply and be certified as full-fledged telephone companies." The anti-regulation arguments, though, mostly seem to hinge on timing and protocol -- I wish more objectors would argue that there are already too many phone regulations, instead of seeming to promise a boatload more captured users (dollars) if we just let VoIP develop for a few years before unchaining the regulators.
The Beauty of VOIP (Score:2)
Would the regulation be where the VOIP service provider finally does the TDM conversion for the PSTN fall off or would it be on the bandwith and such?
Personally my favorite VOIP product has to be Avaya's IP Softphone. Can telecommute over a VPN, and the sofpt
Re:The Beauty of VOIP (Score:1)
Ultimately, VOIP phone service plugs into the real phone system somewhere. It's easy for a regulator to track them down.
Look for Cisco behind this (Score:2)
VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:5, Insightful)
First, it means they aren't a natural monopoly. Anyone can start a similar business without investing millions of dollars in each community. The regulatory approach to a non-monopoly should be completely different.
Second, it means that taxes based on physical connections aren't appropriate. Vonage shouldn't charge for the Universal Connectivity Fund. Granted, there may be good reason to create a Universal Broadband Fund, but that would be based on charges levied by the ISPs, not by secondary service providers.
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:3, Interesting)
The idea of the USF is to set one regulated price for phone services everywhere in the state, with the overage profits from those connections that are easy to serve in the cities being funneled into paying for customers that the ILEC phone company is required to serve at a loss in the rural areas.
If Vonage and friends are allowed to continue unregulated, the eventual end is that nobod
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2)
Because phone service is a necessity, unlike food. (their logic, not mine; feel free to laugh)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2)
Whether you know it or not, you are benefitting from the regulations that limit how much can be charged for the right of ways for the various paths your phone calls / IP packets take to get to their destination. If you're willing to benefit from regulation, you might as well let other people benefit.
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:1)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2)
And this is bad because?
Maybe the idea that one price fits all should be discarded in favor of something that more closely fits reality.
Or maybe not.
I haven't seen much arguement/evidence either way.
-- this is not a
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:4, Insightful)
Think about it. Your argument could easily be applied to wireless - if you let everyone use 802.11b, they should have to pay USF because they might concievably drive established carriers out of business, thus driving down the amount available to fund phone service for schools, libraries, rural and disadvantaged residents, etc.
I'd rather use these new technologies to provide cost-effective service to everybody, rather than taxing it (and there by limiting its competitiveness) just because an established monopoly is a source of cheap revenue.
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:2)
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, try again. Federal law says states can't set prices or erect barriers to companies entering or exiting the mobile telephone marketplace. Cellular service is regulated a bit by the FCC, but unlike the copper-loop-providers, the state PUC's can't touch 'em. States have the usual power to regulate the terms and conditions of service contracts, but
Re:VoIP doesn't manage physical wires (Score:1)
The thing is that these services are growing q
how easy to track? (Score:2)
But private networks, like grand parents calling kids on the other side of the country. that will be harder to track.
Re:how easy to track? (Score:2)
Re:how easy to track? (Score:2, Insightful)
It's all handled in software too. Calling Roger Wilco or PalTalk "phone services" stretches the definition to the snapping point. For strict peer to peer I could write software myself so regulating the software is pointless to even try. I know tons of teenagers who could do it as well. It isn't rocket science. It isn't even computer science.
And then what do you call an email with an
Regulationg computer to computer voice transmission over IP ma
more taxes on taxes... (Score:1)
Even with the new taxes I still feel much cleaner - kinda like when I dumped cable for my dish...
We're done paying for the Spanish American War! (Score:2)
These taxes were originally supposed to be temporary. It's high time that we got rid of them! [state.tx.us]
They have no place in the world of TCP/IP.
Re:We're done paying for the Spanish American War! (Score:2)
Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:4, Informative)
POTS is a regulated competitve system at this point. You've got the ILEC former monopolies who now are required to bend over backwards to let CLECs into their interfaces. However, everybody in the POTS business is required to submit their payments into the USF, provide free priority 911 connectivity, and other basic things. What the POTS-over-VoIP services are trying to sell themselves as is a replacement to phone service that costs less, but they're making a lot of their cost savings by cutting corners on the services that the companies they're trying to compete with are required to provide.
That's unfair competition, and something the regulators need to step in on.
Your post would be quite informative (Score:2)
Re:Your post would be quite informative (Score:2, Informative)
PSTN: Public Switched Telephone Network
ILEC: Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier
CLEC: Competitive Local Exchange Carrier
USF: Universal Service Fund
Re:Your post would be quite informative (Score:1)
POTS -- Plain Old Telephone Service
ILEC -- Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier, e.g. SBC, Verizon, or Bell South
CLEC -- Competitive Local Exchange Carrier -- an upstart telco that sells phone service in competition with the local ILEC. In most cases the CLEC doesn't actually provide phone service. It just resells service provided by the ILEC, who is required by regulators to sell the service to the CLEC at a discount, usually far below the cost of providing the service. Whether such an arr
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:1, Interesting)
Your identification of who these companies are is wrong, and your justification of the legal issues is wrong also. You claim
"But allowing Vonage to poach the the phone customers in the bandwidth-fortunate territories will be the death of the USF.."
and you claim
"If Vonage and friends are allowed to continue unregulated, the eventual end is that nobody in the easy-to-serve areas will be paying into the U
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:1)
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:3, Insightful)
That di
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
If you feel justified in tax
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
Really? There are tons of businesses that do just this. Go look into office leasing companies. They will sell you a room with a door, a lock, a desk, a chair, and (included in the price) a phone with your very own number that you get to advertise in the phone book as the number of your office. Or you can look at extended stay hotels which do basically the same thing (except for publishing the phone number). Or yo
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
We require phone companies to provide standardized levels of service because we consider phone service a utlity, a service we just can't live without these days.
If Vonage is going to set itself as a competitor to a monopoly, then something's not quite right with that picture. Monopolies by definition don't have c
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
But that's not the situation we'r
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
Taxes do not need justifications linked to what they're assessed against. It's sometimes politically popular to link a tax to "because it's wrong" or "because that's what causes the problem we need to pay for" but there's no need to do so. Taxes exist simply because the government needs to raise money somehow, and the government arbitrailily picks the things it wants to tax through a process called "legislature" based on what's politically acc
Re:Can't undercut by bypassing regulations (Score:2)
In all those cases, the phone line stays within the orginization, and that's the key. They're not offering phone services to the public, they're offering phone services to those renting place to stay/work there.
And don't think that market is unregulated either. Yeah, they can charge a higher price for use, but they h
Breaking the monopoly... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Breaking the monopoly... (Score:2)
Re:Breaking the monopoly... (Score:2)
Re:Breaking the monopoly... (Score:2)
Just use end to end VoIP (Score:5, Insightful)
Once there is enough high speed IP deployed, we can bypass the traditional voice phone network entirely, and run voice over encrypted end to end IP connections. Imagine "dialing" in the form of domain names. The only reason the regulators are getting into this is because VoIP services are interfacing with the existing voice network. More work needs to be done to phase that voice network out of existance (which will be a long slow thing).
Re:Just use end to end VoIP (Score:1)
That is exactly what SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) [columbia.edu] does. Instead of a phone number, a SIP URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) is dialed (e.g. sip:me@sipcall.com). IP phones that support SIP, like the Cisco 7960, Pingtel xPressa and others, allow dialing SIP URI's via the numeric keypad. Mobile networks based on 3G/UMTS (release 5) use SIP for signalling, blurring the line between the PSTN and IP communications.
Re:Just use end to end VoIP (Score:1)
One thing that would be important with this is to ensure that the traffic is not only encrypted, but also that the nature of it (that a given session is voice traffic) is hidden. So other kinds of traffic need to be using the same thing. With TLS/SSL, the port number used is still in the clear, so the type of traffic can be inferred. While it would still be possible to do something else of that encrypted path, what is really needed is that the standard allow the end point only to know anything about what
Purpose of regulation irrelevant to VoIP (Score:3, Insightful)
With VoIP, there is no monopoly. There can be dozens of different VoIP providers just as there's dozens (ok thousands) of pr0n sites or dozens of online bookstores.
When we have a new technology, why don't we rethink the way we regulate things instead of just applying the old regulations to the new technology regardless of whether or not it makes sense to do so?
Re:Purpose of regulation irrelevant to VoIP (Score:2, Insightful)
The breakup of AT&T back in the 1980's was done all wrong. They broke things between local phone service and long distance service. The whole thing came about because of competition in long distance. Now we have competition in local calling, plus internet and VoIP. The one thing that remains a monopoly is the physical infrastructure. Had the breakup been done so that one well-regulated company owns and manages the physical infrastructure, and all the rest get to complete (with regulation gradually
Re:Purpose of regulation irrelevant to VoIP (Score:1)
You're presuming competence and transparency anytime you regulate like this- you tell me how well they're doing!
The free market way to regulate this is to accept that the physical network is a natural monopoly, and then to put up operation of it up for bid every 3-4 years (in regional chunks of course). That way the market ensures tran
Consittutional Rights?? (Score:1)
In all the law and criminal justice classes I have been taking these past 2 years, I always got the impression that the Constitution and, more specifically, the Bill of Rights defined:
the limits that the Government can infringe on the Pre-existing rights of Human Beings
Corporations are entities created by governments, and therefore have only the rights granted to them by those governments.
Now point me to a lin
Ok wrong forum! (Score:1)
Re:Consittutional Rights?? (Score:3)
Re:Consittutional Rights?? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Consittutional Rights?? (Score:1)
Re:Trolling for justification? (Score:3, Funny)
It's not like they aren't going to do what the hell they want anyways.
Re:Trolling for justification? (Score:2)
Mandatory California Recall Tie-In (Score:2)
Re:Mandatory California Recall + Budget Tie-In (Score:2)
This is double dipping (Score:4, Insightful)
If you do have to pay then you should be able to subtract the amount from the tax/fee you pay though your ISP.
Now the moment one of these DSL providers starts connecting lines to peoples houses or other locations then they are a Telco and should act like one.
I think this is more like a regulatory barrier to entry into voice communications or protectionism for the existing Telco.
Re:This is double dipping (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This is double dipping (Score:1)
Re:This is double dipping (Score:3, Interesting)
So if I use a dialup line to make a voip call or call a voip gateway with my dialup line should I be paying the same 30cents for 911 fee twice?
Some weak examples from the non digital world. You don't pay sales tax on a car when you buy it and then pay ex-size tax again when you register it. You pay once. And if you buy a car that never leave
Welcome to Government. (Score:2)
Powerful people expect everyone else to provide for them, and they always get more than they give. The only difference is that the government tells you what they're going to steal up front.
Re:Welcome to Government. (Score:2)
One of the most brilliant exposition on this idea is by the late economist Mancur Olson. I highly recommend the read. Amazon link [amazon.com]
The short summary: the separation of politics and economics is highly artificial (especially in America). The historic record shows that there is a continuum between political governance and economics which relates to the economics of political resource theft. On the far end is "Rape and Pillage" where the political tax is 100
Wrong question (Score:3, Insightful)
It isn't going to be possible to regulate it without extensive packet monitoring.
Re:Wrong question (Score:1, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Wrong question (Score:2)
Phone companies should be looking for a way to turn themselves entirely into an ISP business is what I'm saying, because their existing business model is going to go bye bye.
VoIP as a real service (Score:3, Interesting)
So, if the telco I worked for was trying to replace conventional telephone service with VoIP then why wouldn't it be considered a telephone service?
Re:VoIP as a real service (Score:2)
What makes telco's accountable to regulation is their monopoly ownership of the last mile delivery medium. It don't matter a crap whether they used analog loop, TCP/IP, or fuggin' morse code to deliver service-- the salient point is that they own the copper, and that's what the regulation is based on. No one is suggesting that using VoIP exempts one from regul
Re:Save the telcos----not (Score:2)
No big surprise (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't get it--can someone explain VOIP to me? (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe I'm being thick here. It seems to me that what we need for VOIP is a peer-to-peer protocol, and network cards/stacks that have a guarantee of service, where in this case, the service is time-based. Now if I'm not mistaken, the Linux 2.4 kernel has 'quality of service' flags for network traffic (including IPv4), and IPv6 has it built into the actual model! Now if this is the case, there should be no need for VOIP "providers," other than ISPs that don't explicitly deny a particular traffic type. Now this is all theoretical for real-time conversations, but in practice it's much easier--people use things like teamspeak all the time!
Can someone please tell me why we are looking to a centralised (and billable, taxable) VOIP strategy, instead of a direct peered (or even client/server) model? I honestly don't get it!
Re:I don't get it--can someone explain VOIP to me? (Score:4, Insightful)
So that you get a real phone number that anyone can call.
Re:I don't get it--can someone explain VOIP to me? (Score:2)
Well, because at present they are interfacing with the regular phone network, which requires a translation from the 10-digit phone system addressing to IP addressing and back. Additionally, if you want to be able to plug in your VoIP phone anywhere, there needs to be a central location that keeps track of which IP address yo
Me and my VoIP Qual-it-ty (Score:2)
In any case, VoIP hasn't been the smoothest road to go down. I've had relibility issues at my desktop, and the phones and back-end are often down/rebooted for "maintenance".
I'm all for no regulation, but one thing is for sure: the quality of service should be guarenteed to be as good or better than standard analog service. Right now, I feel I'm on the bleeding edge.
Don't get me wrong: VoIP is
shoot yourselves in the foot (Score:3, Interesting)
The same deregulation allows VOIP like Skype [skype.com] simply to take off without any questions being asked (so far).
If the US were to regulate VOIP and tax it or otherwise inhibit its implementation it will just shoot itself in the foot and hobble into the "human communication over IP" era. Europe, Japan and most of the rest of the world will find no fault in VOIP.
It remains to be seen if this is entirely true, former national carriers could try to make a last ditch effort but most of them are in such deep financial trouble that they really are dangerously close to bankrupcy.
911 service should not be a telephone tax (Score:1)
The government will try and add taxes wherever it can to supplement the regular tax base.
Anytime you see a special fee, surcharge or outright tax you should wonder why it's there.
Using broadband for telephone service is one area where the government has no business.
M
Why VoIP Will Not Be Regulated (Score:2)
The purpose of regulating telephone companies was spelled out explicitly in the 1934 Communications Act, the year the FCC was created:
"For the purpose of regulating interstate and foreign commerce in communication
by wire and radio so as to make available, so far as possible, to all the people
of the United States a rapid, efficient, nationwide, and worldwide wire and
radio communication service w
CA and Bay Area residents make your voice heard (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
they will never learn (Score:2)
Having their cake... (Score:1)
1) Is the service running over the ILECs/CLECs local network? If yes, the VoIP provider (Vonage, 8x8, etc.) should pay the appropriate fees (USF, access charges, etc.) to the responsible local POTS provider. In other words, PC-to-phone or phone-to-PC is a telecommunications service in the conventional sense of the word.
2) If the service is exclusively PC-to-PC (even if it connects to a VoIP-enabled ph
Re:More links (Score:1)
Above NeroTechCenter Link has moving pr0n windows (Score:1)