1552 lines
85 KiB
Plaintext
1552 lines
85 KiB
Plaintext
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Subject: Text of Ohio decree on Caller ID
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Organization: Oak Road Systems, Cleveland Ohio USA
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Date: Tue, 7 Apr 1992 01:59:22 GMT
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Followup-To: misc.consumers
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These are extensive excerpts from the "Opinion and Order" entered
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26 March 1992 by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio in the combined
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case on Caller ID (90-467-TP-ATA) and Automatic Callback (90-471-TP-ATA).
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I think the Opinion and Order is worth quoting at length for several
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reasons:
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- It mentions many of the issues and gives the principal arguments
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on both sides.
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- It gives some interesting technical information about how the
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services work.
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- It says something quite different from what some news media
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reported.
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- Phone companies, citizens' groups, and utilities commissions in
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other states will use it in making policy decisions.
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The original was 42 pages, about 120K bytes (my estimate), so this
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represents about 70% of the text. I've tried to edit impartially, but I
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feel it's only honest to disclose my bias to you: I think Caller ID is
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a good thing for telemarketers and a bad thing for their victims
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including me, that it will not have the benefits the phone companies are
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claiming for it, and that people who want to deal with harassing or
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obscene calls would find Call Trace more effective than Caller ID.
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Conscious of this bias (which the record amply supports, by the way),
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I've tried to be evenhanded in editing the arguments for and against
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Caller ID, removing only empty phrases and repetitive statements.
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You'll see brackets used in four ways. First, they mark rephrasings for
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brevity. Secondly, I insert some comments in the text; the first word
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in the brackets is "Comment" to mark this. Thirdly, I've twice replaced
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a long paragraph of less interesting testimony with a bracketed summary,
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so marked. Finally, I have marked a few "[sic]"s where I'm pretty sure
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something's wrong; sometimes I suggest a possible correct reading in
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brackets. Where I omit words, I have used the ellipsis "..." I've done
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two sorts of editing without special markings in the text: I've
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corrected obvious typos (those that remain being mine), and I've omitted
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almost all the citations on the assumption that the cited documents
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won't be available to most of you.
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The Opinion and Order generally uses the full name of something once,
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with a short form in parens, then uses the short form thereafter. But
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to make them easier to find, I've collected the principal acronyms and
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abbreviations here at the front. In the text, I use the acronyms even
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in places where the Opinion and Order uses the long forms.
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ACB = phone company's Annoyance Call Bureau
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ANI = Automatic Number Identification
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CCS = Common Channel Signaling, "essential to" CLASS services; "CCS
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is a network system that is separate from the voice portion of
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the call."
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CLASS="Advanced Custom Calling Services, which include Caller ID
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and Automatic Callback" as well as Call Trace and Repeat Dialing
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Cleveland = the City of Cleveland
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CPE = Customer Premise Equipment
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CPN = calling party's [telephone] number
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ECPA= the U.S. Electronic Communications Privacy Act
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IAM = "SS7 Initial Address Message which contains, in addition to
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other information, the telephone numbers of the called and
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calling parties."
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IXC = Interexchange Carrier
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Law Enforcement = "The Ohio Association of Chiefs of Police, the
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Ohio State Highway patrol, the United States Treasury
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Department, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms and, [sic]
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the Fraternal Order of Police, Inc." [Comment: Whew! The
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only reason I can imagine why these are lumped together is
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that they had a lobbyist or counsel in common; but I didn't
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think the Feds shared counsel with private parties.]
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LEC = Local Exchange Company
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NCMHS=North Central Mental Health Services
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OAC = Ohio Administrative Code
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OCC = Office of the Consumers' Counsel, an Ohio State agency that
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represents consumers' interests before the PUCO
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ORC = Ohio Revised Code, i.e. Ohio state law
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ODVN= Ohio Domestic Violence Network
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PUCO= Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
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RTU = right-to-use [fee]
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SS7 = Signaling System 7, "essential to" CLASS services; "SS7
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governs the exchange of information and component interactions
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of the CCS network."
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Staff = the staff of the PUCO
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Some of you may not want to read all of this text. (Some of you may not
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want to read any of it. But in that case, you're probably not reading
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these words :-) Following are the section heads in the Opinion and
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Order, which may help you browse for just the sections that interest you.
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I. History
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II. Discussion
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A. Description of Services
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B. Issues
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C. Privacy Concerns
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1. Arguments by Ohio Bell and OCC
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2. The Electronic Communications Privacy Act
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3. State Statutory Provisions"
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4. Conclusion on Privacy Concerns
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D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
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1. Ohio Bell's Position
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2. Law Enforcement Concerns
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3. Domestic Violence Concerns"
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4. Governmental Agencies' Concerns
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5. Deaf Community Concerns
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6. Conclusion on Accommodation Plan
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E. Blocking
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1. Types of Blocking
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2. Technical Aspects
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3. Block-the-blocker
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4. Automatic Callback
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5. Parties' positions on blocking
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6. Conclusion on blocking
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F. Non-published-number service
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G. Customer notice
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H. Competitive/Non-competitive Issue
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I. Costs
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1. Staff Concerns
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2. Economic Tests
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3. Right-to-Use Fees
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4. Conclusion on Costs
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J. Alternative Services
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K. Reporting Requirements
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L. Marketing Studies
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M. Telemarketing
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N. Interexchange Carrier Issues
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III. Summary of Conclusions
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Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
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"OPINION AND ORDER
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"The Commission, considering the applications filed March 20, 1990,
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the local public hearings, the evidentiary hearing, and briefs of
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counsel, and having determined that this matter should proceed directly
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to opinion and order without the issuance of an attorney examiner's
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report, issues its Opinion and Order.
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[Comment: I omit the names of counsel, which appeared here.]
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"I. History
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"On March 20, 1990, the Ohio Bell Telephone Company filed
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applications requesting that the Commission approve an amendment to its
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tariff and grant it authority to provide Caller ID and Automatic
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Callback. ...
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"By motion filed April 30, 1990 ... Ohio Bell requested that Rule
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4901:1-5-09(H), OAC, be modified or that Ohio Bell be granted an
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exemption from this rule so that non-published telephone numbers could
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be disclosed through Caller ID service. ...
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"In its entry of April 11, 1991, the Commission also decided that
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Caller ID and Automatic Callback may be unjust and unreasonable.
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Therefore, [public hearings in July and August 1991; evidentiary hearing
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11-30 Sept 1991; rebuttal hearing 7 Oct 1991]
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"On March 10, 1992, Ohio Bell filed a letter modifying its no-
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blocking position by offering to make free per-call blocking available
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to all subscribers and free per-line blocking available to law-
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enforcement and crisis-intervention agencies. ... Ohio Bell further
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averred that, should the Commission accept [that] offer, the
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Accommodation Plan proposed in the initial applications would be
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replaced by per-line blocking. [Comment: See II-D below, "Ohio Bell's
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proposed accommodation plan".]
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"On March 16, 1992, [lots of parties filed a motion to strike Ohio
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Bell's letter, saying among other things it should have come before the
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hearings, and that it misrepresented the evidence to date. In a
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footnote, the Commission said they didn't use the letter in reaching a
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decision but "Ohio Bell can hardly be faulted for presenting a
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compromise position for ... consideration."]
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"II. Discussion -- A. Description of Services
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"Caller ID is an optional service which allows a subscriber to
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identify the telephone number of the calling party by means of a
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customer-provided display terminal. Automatic Callback is also an
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optional service which enables a subscriber to return the last call
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received, whether or not it was answered. Ohio Bell initially requested
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permission to offer both services without blocking.
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"At the hearing, ... Ohio Bell offered the prefiled testimony
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of Ms Rosemary Takacs [Ohio Bell project engineer, who] is responsible
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for ... the deployment of [CCS and SS7], which are essential to [CLASS],
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which include Caller ID and Automatic Callback. ...
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"Ms. Takacs explained the technical features of how a call is pro-
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cessed over [CCS/SS7]. When the calling party lifts the receiver and
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dials a number, the calling party's central office switch selects a
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circuit from the voice trunk and marks it busy. The originating switch
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also creates an IAM [that includes the called and calling numbers]. The
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IAM is routed through the system to the terminating central office.
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When the terminating office receives the IAM, it identifies the incoming
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circuit, marks it busy, and rings the called line if it is idle. The
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terminating switch then sends a message to the originating switch to
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indicate that the call has been set up. At the point when the
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originating switch receives the message, the voice path is established.
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Messages are routed through the system not only when the call is
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answered, but while the call is in progress, and when the call is
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terminated. The entire call set-up process, on average, requires only
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0.2 seconds. The originating office and the terminating office must be
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SS7 equipped. Moreover, the terminating office must be equipped with
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the particular CLASS feature, e.g., Caller ID.
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"If a call is made to a customer who subscribes to Caller ID, ...
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[what happens depends on] whether the parties are served by the same ...
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central office. If [so], the Caller ID software in the central office
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switch pulls the CPN from switch memory. If [different] central
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offices, the software obtains the CPN from the IAM. The ... CPN is then
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displayed on the called party's display device after [transmission]
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through the local loop. The number is displayed during the silence
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between the first and second rings. For calls [not] from an SS7 central
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office, the calling party's number [CPN] is not forwarded; instead an
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"0" [sic; "O"?] for "out of area" appears on the customer's display. ...
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"If a customer subscribes to Automatic Callback, ... the central
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office switch obtains the CPN from the IAM and places it in a switch
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memory slot associated with the subscriber's line. Each time a call is
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received, ... the memory slot is updated with the most recent number.
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If the call originates from [a non-SS7] office, the memory is updated
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with an out-of-area indicator. When the subscriber dials the Automatic
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Callback code, a query message is sent to request line status and
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terminating information about the number in the memory slot. The office
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which serves the number in the memory slot, in turn, responds with the
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requested information. If the party's line is busy, periodic messages
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will be sent to determine if the party's line is busy or idle. When the
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party's line becomes idle, the Automatic Callback subscriber will be
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notified, by a special ring, that the call can be set up. After the
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subscriber answers the phone, a call will be set up to the called-back
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customer.
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"... Ohio Bell seeks to provide Caller ID and Automatic Callback in
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Ohio for local, intraLATA, and state and interstate interLATA toll
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calls. ... CPN will be passed for intraLATA 1+ calls where originating
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and terminating offices are equipped with SS7 and the appropriate CLASS
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features. For intraLATA 10XXX calls, ... CPN would not be passed
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[b]ecause all Ohio Bell central offices are connected to IXC points of
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presence by trunks equipped with multi-frequency signaling, which does
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not pass the CPN, ... even if the originating and terminating offices
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were equipped with SS7 and CLASS features or [sic] whether the call is
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between an Ohio Bell office and a non-Ohio Bell office. For similar
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reasons, ... [A]ll 1+ state and interstate interLATA calls are
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connected to carriers by equal-access multi-frequency signaling, and
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therefore CPN cannot be transmitted. Ms Takacs could not project when
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Caller ID would become available for ... interLATA calling [but not]
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until the LEC networks are connected to the 'intermediate networks' of
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the IXCs. ... [T]he industry would have to determine how to [transmit]
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CPN numbers on a uniform basis. At present, according to Ms Takacs, no
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IXC has agreed to pass CPN. ..."
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"II. Discussion -- B. Issues
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"The commission finds that neither Caller ID nor Automatic Callback
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is prohibited by law; however, upon reviewing the applications, the
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Commission finds that the applications are unjust and unreasonable.
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Nevertheless, with the implementation of appropriate safeguards for
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caller privacy, as recommended in this Opinion and Order, Caller ID may
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be rendered just and reasonable ... in accordance with ... section
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4909.18, ORC.
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"Several issues are raised by Caller ID and Automatic Callback and
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have been briefed by the parties. Some of the more prominent are
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whether the services are permissible under the federal and state consti-
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tutions and wiretap laws, whether Caller ID would constitute a breach of
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Ohio Bell's obligation to its non-published customers, whether Ohio
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Bell's Accommodation Plan is sufficient to meet legitimate privacy
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concerns, whether any of the various types of blocking should be imple-
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mented, whether the cost studies adequately support the proposed pricing
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schemes, whether Caller ID and Automatic Callback are competitive or
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monopoly services, and whether Ohio Bell's proposed notification to its
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customers is adequate. [Comment: These issues are discussed one by one
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in the lettered sections that follow.]
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"II. Discussion -- C. Privacy Concerns
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"1. Arguments by Ohio Bell and OCC
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"... In arguing that there is no violation of privacy, Ohio Bell,
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citing U.S. Supreme Court precedent, contends that state action is
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lacking in these proceedings [and cites] cases holding that mere
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regulation is insufficient to constitute state action. ... Ohio Bell
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stated that, even if the Commission were to find that state action
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exists, Caller ID and Automatic Callback do not infringe upon federally
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protected rights of privacy. Ohio Bell [says] there is no Ohio case law
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granting individuals a constitutional right to make anonymous telephone
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calls [and] that Caller ID does not violate Title III of the U.S. Omnibus
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Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, the U.S. Electronic Communi-
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cations Privacy Act, nor sections 2933.51-2933.65, ORC.
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"OCC ... [responds] that Caller ID violates the Fourth Amendment of
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the U.S. Constitution and Article 1 Section 14 of the Ohio Constitution.
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... [and] that there is state action involved in this Commission's
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review of Caller ID [since] the Commission, by conducting administrative
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and local hearings, ... invokes constitutional standards. In addition,
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OCC argues that Caller ID violates the ECPA and that the ECPA has
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preempted state law as of October 2, 1986.
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"II. Discussion -- C. Privacy Concerns
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"2. The Electronic Communications Privacy Act
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"The ECPA established a new chapter in Title II pertaining to pen
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registers and trap-and-trace devices. A 'pen register' is defined by
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statute as 'a device which records or decodes electronic or other
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impulses which identify the numbers dialed or otherwise transmitted on
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the telephone line ...' A 'trap-and-trace device' captures the incoming
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electronic or other impulses which identify the originating number of an
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instrument. Generally, the statute prohibits the use of pen registers
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and trap-and-trace devices without a court order, unless used 1) by a
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provider of electronic or wire communication service to protect its
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operations or users of that service; 2) to record the fact that a wire
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or electronic communication was initiated or completed in order to
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protect providers and users from fraudulent, unlawful, or abusive use of
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service; or 3) where the consent of the user of that service has been
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obtained. 18 U.S.C. 3121
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"Pursuant to the above statute, there is no violation of the statute
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as long as one of the parties to a telephone conversation provides
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consent. A customer, by purchasing Caller ID, clearly consents to the
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service. Thus the Commission concludes that a subscriber of telephone
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service, by purchasing CAller ID, consents to the use of a trap-and-
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trace device pursuant to the third exception [above. Delaware and North
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Carolina utilities commissions said the same in 1991.] Consequently,
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there is no explicit ECPA prohibition against the use of Caller ID, or
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like services, by telephone subscribers."
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"II. Discussion -- C. Privacy Concerns
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"3. State Statutory Provisions"
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[Summary: Ohio's wiretap statute, 2933.51-2933.65 ORC, defines
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"intercept" as the aural acquisition of contents of a wire or oral
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communication. Since Caller ID shows a display and users don't receive
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information through their ears, it's not prohibited by Ohio law.
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Furthermore, the law says that "'interception device' does not include
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any telephone facility used by a subscriber or a service provided by a
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communications common carrier in the ordinary course of that carrier's
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business." Finally, 2933.53(B)(4) says the wiretap law does not apply to
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a person who "is a party to the communication or if one of the parties
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has given the person prior consent." So Caller ID doesn't violate Ohio
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state law.]
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"II. Discussion -- C. Privacy Concerns
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"4. Conclusion on Privacy Concerns
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"Caller ID and Automatic Callback do not violate any state or
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federal statutory provisions. ... Furthermore, because of the safeguards
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to protect anonymity that must be employed pursuant to this Opinion and
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Order, there is no need to discuss constitutional issues concerning
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privacy and state action.
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"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
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"1. Ohio Bell's Position
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"... Joseph Rini, Assistant [V.P. Marketing] at Ohio Bell, ...
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acknowledged [that] there are occasions when subscribers would want to
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make anonymous telephone calls. ... Ohio Bell developed what it calls
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the Accommodation Plan, which merely provides different methods for
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placing a call without passing the CPN. ... Ms Gail Holmes, District
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Manager of Community Relations [for Ohio Bell] ... said that during
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[3/20/90 to about 5/17/90] Ohio Bell contacted various agencies ... to
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determine what issues and concerns would be raised by Caller ID.
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"Ms Holmes testified that a customer could use an Ohio Bell calling
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card or a cellular telephone, or place a call through the operator to
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prevent the disclosure of the originating telephone number. She [said]
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the advantage is that a '0' for 'out of area' is displayed on the Caller
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ID unit. Other methods ... were calling from a public telephone, using
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a line which is not published or listed that is intended for outgoing
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calls only, subscribing to Three-Way Calling to route calls through a
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third-party number, and subscribing to Multi-Ring Service to identify
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calls responding to the number displayed ...
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" ... Ohio Bell's proposed Accommodation Plan would not be readily
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advertised. However, if a customer were to call in with a concern, ...
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the contents of the plan would be explained.
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"... Robert A Fortescue [on tech staff at] Bellcore noted that New
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Jersey Bell developed an accommodation plan [or] law enforcement and
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women's shelters. ... [E]xample ... a rape crisis center where the
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counselors were given access to telephones that could make outgoing
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calls only. He noted that there has been no reported decrease in the
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number of calls to hotlines and tip lines since the implementation of
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Caller ID [and] stated that Caller ID [helps] law enforcement. ...
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[Comment: Contrast with the second paragraph following.]
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"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
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"2. Law Enforcement Concerns
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"Frank G Forchione, the First Assistant Prosecutor [for the city of]
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Canton Law Director, testified ... that he has prosecuted many
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misdemeanors involving harassing and obscene telephone callers. [He
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said] it would be very difficult to garner a conviction under Ohio law
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utilizing the information obtained from the Caller ID display device
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alone because of the evidentiary problems involved in establishing the
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chain of custody. [Comment: In II-J below, "Alternative Services", the
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Commission says "Call Trace appears to be a superior method of
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prosecuting obscene and annoying telephone callers as openly admitted by
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Ohio Bell (OBT Brief at 39)." See also II-G, "Customer Notice".]
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"Westerville [suburb of Columbus] Police Chief Ronald Shaw ...
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testified that, in his opinion, Caller ID will make undercover police
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work more dangerous, more costly, and more inconvenient to accomplish.
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... [H]e also believes that calls to 'tipster' lines will diminish.
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The witness sees vigilantism as another problem associated with the
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provision of CPN. Finally, [he] is concerned that Caller ID will
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degrade the safety of Ohio Bell's non-published number service on which
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many peace officers have come to rely.
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"Because Ohio Bell has failed, in [his] opinion, to address
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adequately law enforcement's concerns, Chief Shaw recommended that Ohio
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Bell be required to provide universal per-line blocking for law
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enforcement and some sort of blocking for the remainder of the
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population. Furthermore, ... Chief Shaw also recommended that the
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Commission establish a law-enforcement committee whereby Ohio Bell would
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be obligated to work with law enforcement to address the ongoing
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concerns that law enforcement has with telecommunications technology.
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"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
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"3. Domestic Violence Concerns"
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[Summary: David H Larsen, an M.S.W. licensed social worker, is
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Program Director of The Family Violence Program, a unit of the Cuyahoga
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County government, which includes Cleveland and many suburbs. He said
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in his opinion Caller ID would increase danger for abused spouses who
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have left the abusive partner and "should not be offered". But he said
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he had not discussed his concerns with his counterparts in states with
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Caller ID.]
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"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
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"4. Governmental Agencies' Concerns
|
|
|
|
"... Susan E Axelrod, Director of the City of Cleveland Department
|
|
of Aging, discussed the impact of Caller ID on the elderly within
|
|
Cleveland. ... Ms Axelrod believed that Caller ID would prevent older
|
|
adults from contacting social-service agencies [to ask] whether they
|
|
qualify for certain programs. She also believed that Caller ID would
|
|
hamper the reporting of elder abuse and ... open up elders to telemar-
|
|
keting scams. ... [I]n her opinion, Ohio Bell's proposal to develop a
|
|
symbol for use in the telephone directory [by] agencies that do not
|
|
subscribe to Caller ID would not alleviate the concern [because] in her
|
|
experiences elderly adults are very suspicious of their privacy and that
|
|
this symbol would not be enough to overcome those suspicions. ... [P]er-
|
|
call blocking would not alleviate the witness' concerns because it is
|
|
difficult for some elderly citizens to remember the extra digits or to
|
|
dial the appropriate numbers for blocking.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
|
|
"5. Deaf Community Concerns
|
|
|
|
"... Charles Williams, Program Chairperson of the Northeast Ohio
|
|
Senior Citizens of [sic] the Deaf, Inc., ... argued that Ohio Bell's
|
|
Accommodation Plan is not effective for the deaf community because all
|
|
of its provisions require the sense of hearing in one form or another.
|
|
On cross-examination, Mr Williams admitted that when a Telecommunications
|
|
Relay Service is established, whereby a call goes through an operator
|
|
center from a telecommunications device for the deaf, the number which
|
|
would show up on a Caller ID display device is the number of the
|
|
operator center. [Comment: No word on when such a center might be
|
|
established, or by whom.]
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- D. Ohio Bell's Proposed Accommodation Plan ...
|
|
"6. Conclusion on Accommodation Plan
|
|
|
|
"Upon consideration of the Accommodation Plan prepared by Ohio Bell,
|
|
... the Commission finds that [it] is inadequate to meet the needs of
|
|
Ohio Bell's subscribers. Far from being a convenient alternative to
|
|
protect the safety and privacy of law-enforcement personnel, their
|
|
families, battered women, the deaf, and other members of the public who
|
|
have legitimate needs for privacy, the Accommodation Plan is nothing
|
|
more than a list of currently available services. All the services ...
|
|
impose a measure of inconvenience or additional expense upon subscri-
|
|
bers. Even though Ohio Bell claims to have met with representatives
|
|
from domestic violence shelters, law enforcement, crisis-intervention
|
|
programs, and mental-health and social-service agencies, few of these
|
|
groups lend support to the Accommodation Plan. Consequently, Caller ID
|
|
must be accompanied by some form of blocking.
|
|
|
|
"[In a footnote, the Commission "strongly urge Ohio Bell to take
|
|
steps to form" a committee "to provide law enforcement an opportunity to
|
|
discuss" "communications technology issues and their impact on law
|
|
enforcement" with "Ohio Bell and the Commission, ... and to [involve]
|
|
the Ohio Telephone Association and the Commission's staff."]
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"1. Types of Blocking
|
|
|
|
"Blocking is another CLASS feature which is available in 1AESS,
|
|
5ESS, and DMS100 switches and which operates separately from Caller ID
|
|
and Automatic Callback. Blocking gives subscribers the ability to
|
|
change temporarily the public/private status of their telephone lines,
|
|
thus controlling transmission of the CPN to the called party. The
|
|
blocking software supports four types: ...
|
|
|
|
- "Universal per call: ... allows any subscriber in a CLASS-
|
|
equipped central office to use blocking at any time merely by
|
|
using the activation code. This ... will prohibit the forwarding
|
|
of the CPN for the next call only and will not work for subsequent
|
|
calls unless the activation code is again utilized.
|
|
|
|
- "Subscription per call: ... requires any customer [wanting] per-
|
|
call blocking to contact the telephone company business office
|
|
before blocking would be available. Once subscribed to, the
|
|
service would operate the same as described above.
|
|
|
|
- "Subscription per line: ... provides blocking for all calls
|
|
placed. A customer could subscribe to this service by contacting
|
|
the company's business office. Once the blocking feature is
|
|
placed on the customer's line, all calls placed from that
|
|
telephone line are private, unless a code is activated to forward
|
|
the CPN ... for that one particular call.
|
|
|
|
- "Universal per line: ... With this option, universal per-line
|
|
blocking would automatically be available when the CLASS services
|
|
are activated. Once activated, all calls on a particular line
|
|
would be blocked unless the subscriber dials *67 [rotary 1167] to
|
|
forward the CPN. ... The line would revert to private after each
|
|
call.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"2. Technical Aspects
|
|
|
|
"... Ohio Bell witness Rosemary Takacs [Comment: see II-A, "Descrip-
|
|
tion of Services", above] ... explained that in order to change the
|
|
subscriber line from public to private or vice versa, it would be neces-
|
|
sary to dial an activation code. The [current default] activation code
|
|
is *67 from a touch-tone [sic, lower case] telephone or 1167 from a
|
|
rotary telephone. ... [T]he subscriber would receive a confirmation
|
|
code, after which the call would be placed without disclosing the CPN.
|
|
When a telephone call is placed and blocking is instituted, a 'P' (for
|
|
private) will be displayed on the Caller ID device.
|
|
|
|
" ... in her opinion, universal line blocking would be more
|
|
difficult to institute than subscription blocking. ... The witness did
|
|
admit, however, that some telephone switches may permit encoding of sn
|
|
entire central office by one computer command. ... Takacs stated that
|
|
she did not know which type of blocking, universal or subscription,
|
|
would be more costly for the company. ... [But she felt] that it would
|
|
take longer to institute the requested services if some form of blocking
|
|
is also mandated. Specifically, she felt that it could take up to six
|
|
months after a Commission order for Ohio Bell to ... offer CLASS
|
|
services with blocking. Part of the delay would be attributed to the
|
|
testing of blocking ... and the installation of hardware to initiate a
|
|
voice prompt if someone dialed the wrong activation code. ..."
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"3. Block-the-blocker
|
|
|
|
"[Also known as] unidentified call rejection, [t]his feature would
|
|
forward a call that had the CPN blocked to a recording which would
|
|
generally state that the person did not accept blocked telephone calls
|
|
and that the person should hang up and redial without blocking in order
|
|
to get through.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"4. Automatic Callback
|
|
|
|
"Blocking affects Automatic Callback in a different manner than it
|
|
does Caller ID. ... [T]here are two ... levels of Automatic Callback.
|
|
Level One ... merely entails returning the last incoming call regardless
|
|
of whether it was answered or not. This is the feature which Ohio Bell
|
|
seeks permission to implement. ... Level Two [if implemented] will
|
|
voice back the last incoming CPN before the call is returned. Ohio Bell
|
|
does not seek authority in this application to provide this feature.
|
|
Blocking only affects Level Two Automatic Callback. Should the person
|
|
initiating a call implement blocking prior to placing the call, the
|
|
Automatic Callback customer's central office will recognize that the
|
|
number was blocked and prohibit the software from voicing back the CPN.
|
|
Blocking does not, however, prohibit either type of Automatic Callback
|
|
from functioning.
|
|
|
|
"Another issue ... is the possibility of the CPN being revealed to
|
|
the Automatic Callback subscriber in a monthly billing statement.
|
|
Technically, this occurs because when a subscriber returns a call by
|
|
using Automatic Callback, the number will show up on a billing statement
|
|
if the Automatic Callback customer subscribes to local measured service
|
|
with billing-number detail. ... Even though this may be a billing
|
|
issue, the Commission believes, as discussed below, that disclosure of
|
|
the number must be prevented if the service is offered.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"5. Parties' positions on blocking
|
|
|
|
"Ohio Bell initially proposed to offer Caller ID and Automatic
|
|
Callback without any form of blocking. This position has been attacked
|
|
by the intervenors; however, among the parties, there are differing
|
|
positions. ... OCC argued in favor of per-line blocking on a default
|
|
basis with selective call unblocking for all non-published-number
|
|
customers, [and] per-call blocking [for other customers]. OCC believes
|
|
that per-line blocking with selective call unblocking should be made
|
|
available to all customers upon request. In all cases, OCC believes
|
|
that blocking should be made available free of charge.
|
|
|
|
" ... Ohio Bell witness Rini [Comment: See II-D above, "Ohio
|
|
Bell's proposed accommodation plan".] testified that blocking would
|
|
diminish the value and societal benefits of the service [leading to]
|
|
reduced demand for the service. ... Ohio Bell argued that in the GTE
|
|
Kentucky trial, in which subscription per-call blocking was ordered, 54%
|
|
of the subscribers had utilized per-call blocking. Ohio Bell also
|
|
claims that persons placing prank and obscene telephone calls will
|
|
continue to do so by initiating the blocking option if that feature is
|
|
ordered. [Comment: In II-J below, "Alternative Services", the
|
|
Commission says "Call Trace appears to be a superior method of
|
|
prosecuting obscene and annoying telephone callers as openly admitted by
|
|
Ohio Bell (OBT Brief at 39)." See also II-G, "Customer Notice".]
|
|
Finally, Ohio Bell claims that it is the societal norm to identify
|
|
oneself when placing a telephone call; therefore, Caller ID does nothing
|
|
more than is the current norm.
|
|
|
|
"Kurt Wesolek, Senior Analyst in the Planning Section of the
|
|
Commission's Telecommunications Division, ... was questioned on the
|
|
effects blocking would have on Automatic Number Identification (ANI),
|
|
Open Network Architecture (ONA), Integrated Switch Digital Network
|
|
(ISDN), and Simplified Message Desk Interface (SMDI) technology. Mr
|
|
Wesolek stated that these services would not be affected by blocking
|
|
because, functionally, [they] operate on a different technology than
|
|
does Caller ID.
|
|
|
|
"OCC presented Dr Mark Cooper, President of Citizens Research, ...
|
|
[who] averred that the introduction of per-call blocking should not
|
|
hamper the timeliness of the offering [of Caller ID] because the basic
|
|
technology to offer the blocking service was already built into the
|
|
switches. ... According to Dr Cooper, blocking does not have a
|
|
detrimental effect on the family of CLASS services except for Caller ID.
|
|
Therefore, other CLASS services such as Automatic Callback, Repeat
|
|
Dialing, and Call Trace could still be utilized by the end user.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Cooper disagreed with Ohio Bell's argument that evidence from
|
|
New Jersey [shows] Caller ID has caused a reduction of harassing and
|
|
annoying calls in that state. [Comment: See the sixth paragraph of the
|
|
next section for the Commission's conclusion on this.]
|
|
|
|
"On cross-examination, Dr Cooper admitted that, if enough subscribers
|
|
utilize per-line blocking, there can be a diminution in the value of
|
|
Caller ID. ... His suggestion, that non-published-number subscribers be
|
|
given per-line blocking by default, would raise the level of blocking to
|
|
approximately 25% of Ohio Bell subscribers [and] at the 25% level, the
|
|
value of the service may be harmed.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- E. Blocking
|
|
"6. Conclusion on blocking
|
|
|
|
"Having considered the arguments [on] blocking, ... and having
|
|
previously determined that additional safeguards are necessary to insure
|
|
that Caller ID and Automatic Callback are just and reasonable, we find
|
|
that, should Ohio Bell wish to offer CLASS services such as Caller ID,
|
|
where the CPN could be transferred, the company must: 1) make available
|
|
free universal per-call blocking to all subscribers; 2) for those
|
|
customers who subscribe to non-published-number service, at any time,
|
|
per-line blocking must be provided on a default basis without any
|
|
additional charges, unless the customer affirmatively chooses to have
|
|
free per-call blocking after being fully informed of the availability of
|
|
per-line and per-call blocking; and 3) subscription per-line blocking
|
|
must be made available for published customers at a charge equivalent to
|
|
non-published-number service rates (currently $1.10). Furthermore,
|
|
per-call unblocking capability must be made available to all per-line
|
|
blocking customers. [Comment: The following is a footnote in the
|
|
Order, referenced at this point in the text.] As noted in section K
|
|
[below], the Commission will monitor this service through Ohio Bell's
|
|
quarterly reports and reserve [sic] the right to modify these provisions
|
|
based on the actual experience with Caller ID. ... [A] similar
|
|
procedure was adopted in North Carolina. ...
|
|
|
|
"Published-number customers, should they choose to subscribe to
|
|
per-line blocking, would receive a new service on top of their basic
|
|
monthly telephone service. Therefore, we believe it is appropriate for
|
|
Ohio Bell to charge these customers a small recurring monthly charge.
|
|
Ohio Bell even submits in its initial brief that should blocking be
|
|
instituted, there should be a modest charge for the service. However,
|
|
the company did not submit any cost studies which would support a charge
|
|
for blocking. Therefore, we believe that a monthly recurring charge
|
|
equivalent to the monthly charge for non-published-number service is
|
|
appropriate. [Comment: A footnote at this point notes that Idaho
|
|
allows a "modest recurring charge for per-line blocking."]
|
|
|
|
"Although not addressed in these proceedings, we are aware of the
|
|
non-recurring charge in Ohio Bell's tariff for changing to published or
|
|
non-published service. As set forth in more detail below, we believe
|
|
that non-published-number subscribers expect privacy when they purchase
|
|
the service. Therefore, it would not be appropriate to charge these
|
|
subscribers a non-recurring charge _for_maintaining_the_status_quo._
|
|
[Comment: underlining in original] However, should a published
|
|
subscriber choose to purchase per-line blocking, it would be appropriate
|
|
for Ohio Bell to charge the subscriber a one-time non-recurring charge.
|
|
|
|
"The Commission is also aware that certain CLASS services, such as
|
|
Call Reject and Automatic Callback, with measured service and call
|
|
detail are unaffected by blocking. Both services have the potential for
|
|
disclosing the CPN. Consequently, if Ohio Bell wishes to offer these
|
|
services, it must take measures to preserve the privacy of callers.
|
|
|
|
"... [W]e believe we have reached a decision which makes Caller ID
|
|
available to those who wish to use it to screen obscene and harassing
|
|
calls [Comment: see next paragraph.], while at the same time protecting
|
|
the rights of all customers to selective anonymity through free per-call
|
|
blocking and the special interests of 521,731 Ohio Bell customers who
|
|
value their privacy enough to pay a premium for a non-published
|
|
telephone number.
|
|
|
|
"We are not swayed by Ohio Bell's arguments regarding the Kentucky
|
|
blocking statistics nor by the arguments regarding prank and obscene
|
|
telephone callers. We believe that the Kentucky results show that 54%
|
|
of the subscribers in that state utilized blocking at one time or
|
|
another, not that blocking was instituted on 54% of the telephone calls.
|
|
... [W]hile Ohio Bell continually points to the experience of New
|
|
Jersey as support for unblocked Caller ID, the Commission would note
|
|
that in New Jersey five other custom-calling features (including Call
|
|
Trace) were instituted at the same time as Caller ID and Automatic
|
|
Callback. Therefore, while the New Jersey experience may support the
|
|
argument that prank and obscene telephone calls decreased after the
|
|
institution of these services, it is impossible to determine which, if
|
|
any, custom-calling services contributed the most to the decline. In
|
|
fact, if anything, the New Jersey experience argues for the simultaneous
|
|
coffering [sic -- unless this is a technical term unknown to me, I
|
|
assume it's a typo for "offering"] of Call Trace, Call Reject, and
|
|
Caller ID as we recognize in Section J below.
|
|
|
|
"There is one further matter. ... OCC has requested that a service
|
|
called block-the-blocker be instituted [at the same time as] Caller ID
|
|
and Automatic Callback. There is no evidence in the record to suggest
|
|
that this service will be available in the near future, ... if ever. ...
|
|
We do not find it necessary to direct Ohio Bell to offer this type of
|
|
service at this time,, although we would encourage the company to
|
|
investigate the provision of this service as an additional feature that
|
|
its customers may be interested in obtaining.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- F. Non-published-number service
|
|
|
|
"Next we must turn to Ohio Bell's request for an exception or exemp-
|
|
tion from the minimum telephone service standard which, with exceptions,
|
|
generally prohibits the disclosure of non-published telephone numbers.
|
|
Specifically, Rule 4901:1-5-09(H), OAC, permits disclosure to the
|
|
following: (1) authorized local exchange company personnel; (2) the
|
|
subscriber's primary interexchange carrier, for billing purposes only
|
|
(where permitted by tariff); and (3) appropriate authorities for
|
|
inclusion in the 9-1-1 emergency services network. ...
|
|
|
|
"According to Ohio Bell witness Rini, non-published-number service
|
|
was never defined [to] guarantee anonymity while placing a telephone
|
|
call. In fact, according to the witness, non-published telephone
|
|
numbers, along with all CPN, are routinely ... passed on ... through
|
|
Automatic Number Identification (ANI) with Feature Group D service. ...
|
|
Ohio Bell submits that approval of Caller ID and Automatic Callback will
|
|
have no effect on the company's non-published-number service. The
|
|
company will continue to treat its non-published-number customers
|
|
exactly the same as in a pre-Caller ID environment.
|
|
|
|
"... there are 521,731 non-published-number subscribers in Ohio
|
|
Bell territories. These subscribers represent approximately 20% of Ohio
|
|
Bell's entire customer base. [Comment: contrast with the last
|
|
paragraph of section 5 above.] ... OCC and Law Enforcement ... state
|
|
that non-published-number customers are united in their belief that
|
|
Ohio Bell should not be given authority to disclose their telephone
|
|
numbers through Caller ID or Automatic Callback. ...
|
|
|
|
"For the reasons that follow, the Commission believes that it is not
|
|
appropriate to grant Ohio Bell's request for a waiver or exemption of
|
|
Rule 4901:1-5-09(H), OAC. Traditionally, non-published-number
|
|
subscribers have come to expect that, by purchasing this service from
|
|
Ohio Bell, their telephone numbers will only be disclosed in the three
|
|
limited circumstances found in [the Rule]. We find that this is not an
|
|
unreasonable assumption. In fact, contrary to Ohio Bell's argument, the
|
|
'contract' between the customer and Ohio Bell, by definition,
|
|
incorporates [the Rule]. Customers have taken service pursuant to that
|
|
contract and thus have come to expect privacy in return for their paying
|
|
a premium charge for non-published service. Undoubtedly, approval of
|
|
Caller ID and Automatic Callback without a form of line blocking
|
|
[Comment: not just any blocking, line blocking] would lead to a
|
|
diminution in the value of the non-published-number service, for which
|
|
subscribers currently pay a premium. Therefore, because we deem it to
|
|
be in the public's interest that customers can rely on a long-standing
|
|
service for which they pay a premium and have come to expect some
|
|
measure of anonymity as part of their 'contract' for non-published
|
|
service, we have found that non-published-number subscribers should
|
|
always be provided per-line blocking unless the subscribers make an
|
|
informed and affirmative decision to choose universal per-call blocking
|
|
as an alternative. ...
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- G. Customer notice"
|
|
|
|
[Comment: I omit the testimony and present only the conclusion.]
|
|
|
|
"The Commission believes that, for Caller ID and Automatic Callback
|
|
to be just and reasonable, all customers need to learn of the changes
|
|
that these services will bring to the telecommunications network.
|
|
Therefore, at least for the review period discussed in more detail
|
|
below, Ohio Bell should [Comment: this means "must"] submit both its
|
|
notices and drafts of its advertisements about the service for prompt
|
|
Staff review ... at least 20 days prior to issuance.
|
|
|
|
In Ohio Bell's advertising of the services, the Commission wishes to
|
|
insure that the customer has _maximum_customer_choice_ as to the type of
|
|
service he or she wishes. [Comment: underlining in the original] Thus,
|
|
if Caller ID is offered, the company should equally promote Call Trace
|
|
and Call Reject as alternative means to deter harassing and obscene
|
|
calls. ... [T]o insure that all affected customers are adequately
|
|
informed about Caller ID and Automatic Callback, the first notice should
|
|
be sent to all Ohio Bell customers by direct mail or bill insert at
|
|
least 60 days prior to the availability of the services. The second
|
|
notice should be issued 30 days in advance to those customers in areas
|
|
where SS7 has been implemented. Twenty days before issuance of any
|
|
advertisements or notices, Ohio Bell must submit to the Staff its
|
|
notices."
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- H. Competitive/Non-competitive Issue
|
|
|
|
"The burden of proof is on the applicant to show that a service is
|
|
competitive under the standards set forth in Case No. 84-944-TP-COI
|
|
(944) ..., April 9, 1985. Ohio Bell has argued in this proceeding that
|
|
alternatives do exist to Caller ID and Automatic Callback [so that] the
|
|
Commission should grant Ohio Bell the competitive treatment it seeks.
|
|
|
|
"Ohio Bell witness Rini testified that both Caller ID and Automatic
|
|
Callback are competitive services [because] other services and devices
|
|
... perform call screening and call management functions. As examples,
|
|
he mentioned answering machines, answering bureaus, voice messaging
|
|
services, Feature Group D Service, and a device which screens out all
|
|
but certain pre-selected telephone numbers. As for services that
|
|
compete with Automatic Callback, Mr Rini listed telephone answering
|
|
machines, telephones with redial functions, and automated dialers which
|
|
allow a caller to retrieve stored telephone numbers by entering the
|
|
first letters of a name. He also noted that new technologies like ISDN
|
|
and ONA, which have an independent number forwarding component, may
|
|
likewise compete with Caller and Automatic Callback.
|
|
|
|
"Mr Gordon Scherer, President of Scherers Communications, Inc, ...
|
|
believed that Ohio Bell's offerings should not be categorized as
|
|
competitive offerings because 'functional equivalents' do not currently
|
|
exist. ... [T]he witness pointed out that Mr Rini conceded in his
|
|
prefiled testimony that the prerequisite for the development of CLASS
|
|
services is the delivery of the calling number [which] is wholly
|
|
controlled by Ohio Bell. ...
|
|
|
|
"... Mr Wesolek, on behalf of Staff, recommended that Caller ID not
|
|
be considered a competitive service [since] Staff does not agree with
|
|
Ohio Bell that adequate substitutes to Caller ID currently exist. ...
|
|
Since Ohio Bell failed to provide appropriate substitutes or cross-
|
|
elasticity studies with potential substitutes, Staff concludes that
|
|
competitive treatment for Caller ID should be denied.
|
|
|
|
"However, because 'smart' CPE is capable of providing a techno-
|
|
logically equivalent and competitive alternative to Automatic Callback,
|
|
Staff did agree with Ohio Bell that this feature should be granted
|
|
competitive treatment under 944 if Caller ID is authorized by the
|
|
Commission on a generally unrestricted basis [which means] with no more
|
|
than per-call blocking.
|
|
|
|
"Conclusion on Competitive Issue"
|
|
|
|
"Having thoroughly examined the arguments on this issue, we find
|
|
that both Caller ID and Automatic Callback should be treated as non-
|
|
competitive services. Regarding Caller ID, Ohio Bell has failed to show
|
|
this Commission that functional equivalents exist to the proposed
|
|
service. Many of the services which Ohio Bell argues are substitutes
|
|
for Caller ID are additional services offered by Ohio Bell. When Ohio
|
|
Bell controls not only many of the alleged competitive services, as well
|
|
as access to the telephone network, it is not possible to find that
|
|
these alleged alternatives would provide competition for Caller ID. The
|
|
only remaining viable alternative, therefore, is the answering machine.
|
|
However, an answering machine operates much differently than does Caller
|
|
ID. For instance, the calling party decides whether to provide any
|
|
identifying information when an answering machine responds.
|
|
|
|
"Similarly, we do not agree with Ohio Bell's competitive-position
|
|
argument regarding Automatic Callback. In its [argument], Ohio Bell
|
|
uses the future tense when discussing alternatives which will exist to
|
|
Automatic Callback. While the absence of current competitive
|
|
alternatives may not be enough to forestall competitive treatment of the
|
|
proposed service, Ohio Bell admits that '[T]he only prerequisite to the
|
|
development of this technology is the delivery of the calling number...'
|
|
[Comment: ellipsis in original] However, what Ohio Bell fails to point
|
|
out is that the delivery of the CPN is a product of the Advanced Custom
|
|
Calling Software which is controlled by Ohio Bell. Furthermore,
|
|
Ameritech, the parent of Ohio Bell, did not see any direct competition
|
|
for Automatic Callback in March 1987 and Ohio Bell has not, in our
|
|
opinion, submitted any evidence to the contrary. [Comment: In other
|
|
words, the phone company argues that alternatives don't exist, then
|
|
changes its tune when its original story doesn't help its case.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- I. Costs
|
|
"1. Staff Concerns
|
|
|
|
" ... Staff [first thought] Ohio Bell's cost studies [were adequate.
|
|
But] Staff later became concerned after reviewing the prefiled testimony
|
|
of Ohio Bell's witnesses which contains items not originally submitted
|
|
to Staff. [Staff is concerned about] joint product costs (right-to-use
|
|
fees), advertising expenses, and the Accommodation Plan. ... Staff is
|
|
especially concerned that, in a family of services such as Class, a
|
|
monopoly service such as Caller ID may lead to cross-subsidization of
|
|
other more competitive services. ...
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- I. Costs
|
|
"2. Economic Tests
|
|
|
|
"To support the proposed pricing scheme of Caller ID and Automatic
|
|
Callback, Ohio Bell called as a witness Dr Kent A Currie [who] is
|
|
employed by Ohio Bell as a manager of cost methods. ... [Comment: the
|
|
proposed pricing scheme does not appear anywhere in the Opinion and
|
|
Order.] To determine if the services are cost compensatory at the
|
|
proposed prices, Dr Currie applied two cost tests: the long-run marginal
|
|
cost test and the total incremental cost (TIC) test. Some ... factors
|
|
... in the cost analysis were depreciation, federal income taxes, gross
|
|
receipts tax, one-time expenses, inflation factors, opportunity costs of
|
|
capital, maintenance expenses, mass-media advertising, and the
|
|
Accommodation Plan. ...
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- I. Costs
|
|
"3. Right-to-Use Fees
|
|
|
|
"Dr Currie ... defined the RTU as a payment for the use of specific
|
|
functions ... implemented in computer software. [Generally,] the RTU
|
|
fee is paid to the equipment vendor only once by Ohio Bell for each
|
|
unit. ... In this instance, the RTU fees primarily involve payments for
|
|
the end office switches that provide CLASS services. ... Ohio Bell buys
|
|
its switches from three vendors: Northern Telecom, AT&T, and Siemens.
|
|
Each offers a different price structure and price level for CLASS RTU
|
|
fees. The Caller ID study included the RTU fee for Northern Telecom DMS
|
|
switches[, which is] based upon either the number of Caller ID lines
|
|
being furnished or the number of switches equipped with the service.
|
|
Only the Northern Telecom switch was included in the study because the
|
|
costs for CLASS services are product specific, except for Automatic
|
|
Callback which, according to Dr Currie, is packaged with Repeat Dialing.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Currie explained that cost studies involving RTU fees are
|
|
complicated by the fact that switch vendors sometimes structure their
|
|
fees so that a package of services is offered for less than the sum of
|
|
the individual package components. In this case, the product mix
|
|
includes Caller ID, Automatic Callback, and Repeat Dialing. [Comment:
|
|
Compare with the last sentence of the preceding paragraph.] Consequent-
|
|
ly, Dr Currie believes that it would be inappropriate to include the
|
|
product- specific cost for Caller ID as part of the total incremental
|
|
cost for the service.
|
|
|
|
"Applying the long-run marginal cost test and the total incremental
|
|
cost test, Dr Currie concluded that the family of CLASS services will be
|
|
cost compensatory in 10 years at the proposed tariff minimum rates.
|
|
[Comment: No figures were given anywhere in the Opinion and Order for
|
|
costs or prices of the services.]
|
|
|
|
"Staff believes that RTU fees, which make up a substantial amount of
|
|
the fixed costs of providing the CLASS services, have not been appropri-
|
|
ately allocated among the different features by Ohio Bell. ... [T]he
|
|
method chosen by Ohio Bell for allocating these fees places a dispropor-
|
|
tionate burden for recovering the fees on the least competitive service,
|
|
i.e., Caller ID. [Comment: This means that Staff thinks Ohio Bell's
|
|
cost studies exaggerate the cost of Caller ID and minimize the cost of
|
|
(unnamed) competitive services. Thus Ohio Bell would offer competitive
|
|
services at a price that was subsidized by Caller ID, gaining a
|
|
competitive advantage on those services.]
|
|
|
|
"According to Mr Wesolek, Staff has also reviewed Ohio Bell's
|
|
proposed cost studies which allegedly justify the competitive price
|
|
treatment Ohio Bell seeks for the proposed services. ... [After] Staff
|
|
originally reviewed the [cost studies], Ohio Bell has added advertising
|
|
expenses and expenses pertaining to the Accommodation Plan. Therefore,
|
|
Staff could not determine at the hearing whether Ohio Bell's proposed
|
|
prices were truly cost compensatory, especially at the minimum prices.
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- I. Costs
|
|
"4. Conclusion on Costs
|
|
|
|
"On the issue of costs, we find ourselves faced with a very
|
|
difficult situation. Ohio Bell has submitted cost studies. ... Staff
|
|
... has shied away from its previous position that Caller ID and
|
|
Automatic Callback, at the price list level, are just and reasonable.
|
|
... Staff was the only party, other than Ohio Bell, which raised the
|
|
cost of the services as an issue and presented testimony. ...
|
|
|
|
"Staff suggested ... that we gather more information from Ohio Bell
|
|
and reopen this hearing. ... Ohio Bell posited that Staff's position is
|
|
not warranted because Staff was satisfied with the company's cost
|
|
studies and revenue projections. However, Staff became concerned about
|
|
the services being cost compensatory when Ohio Bell introduced
|
|
additional cost data on the costs for mass-media advertising and the
|
|
Accommodation Plan for Caller ID. [Comment: The next two sentences are
|
|
the complete text of a footnote referenced at this point in the Opinion
|
|
and Order.] We would note that such new information was provided to
|
|
Staff at the hearing, leaving them little time for review and analysis.
|
|
Last-minute submittals of cost information worked, in this case, to
|
|
delay the Staff's analysis and can only result in further delays in
|
|
getting CLASS services out to the public as promptly as possible.
|
|
|
|
"Having thoroughly reviewed all parties' concerns, we find that Ohio
|
|
Bell should re-evaluate its costing and pricing methodologies for both
|
|
Caller ID and Automatic Callback, taking into account all of the recom-
|
|
mendations submitted thus far in this Order, i.e., blocking, customer
|
|
notice, etc. If Ohio Bell wishes to proceed with the service, it should
|
|
submit updated tariff sheets, including proposed prices, to this
|
|
Commission concurrently with its applications for Call Trace and Call
|
|
Reject. These prices to be proposed by Ohio Bell for Caller ID and
|
|
Automatic Callback must, at a minimum, reflect a level of pricing which
|
|
covers the company's long-run marginal cost test and the total incre-
|
|
mental cost test. Staff was not unsatisfied with the original cost
|
|
studies submitted by Ohio Bell, nor was Staff greatly concerned with the
|
|
pricing of the services at the price list level. It was not until after
|
|
Ohio Bell introduced additional data relating to expenses for adver-
|
|
tising and the Accommodation Plan that Staff questioned the company's
|
|
cost studies. We will not pass on Staff's concerns about advertising
|
|
costs at this time. Nevertheless, as a result of the Commission's
|
|
order, the cost implications of blocking must be taken into account and
|
|
the cost studies periodically submitted must be reviewed by Staff in
|
|
light of these changes. The prices that Ohio Bell proposes to charge
|
|
for Caller ID and Automatic Callback should reflect that the joint and
|
|
fixed costs are recovered within 5 years of the services being offered,
|
|
not the 10-year period suggested by Dr Currie. Because the other
|
|
intervenors did not object to Ohio Bell's cost data, this matter is to
|
|
be handled solely between the company and the Staff subject, of course,
|
|
to Commission review.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- J. Alternative Services
|
|
|
|
"... OCC's proposal that ... Call Trace and Call Reject be offered
|
|
as alternatives to Caller ID ... [is] currently the subject of a pending
|
|
complaint case by OCC against Ohio Bell.
|
|
|
|
"Call Trace permits the called party to dial an access code which
|
|
signals the terminating central office's switched memory to retrieve and
|
|
transmit the last incoming CPN to a law-enforcement agency or the
|
|
company's Annoyance Call Bureau. Call Reject (or selective call
|
|
rejection as known by Bellcore) allows the customer to refuse future
|
|
calls from certain telephone numbers. [A] customer may input known
|
|
telephone numbers onto a restricted list or, after a call is received, a
|
|
number can be added to the restricted list by dialing an access code.
|
|
Ohio Bell posits that the same anonymity issue surrounding Caller ID and
|
|
Automatic Callback is involved in Call Reject. Specifically, in certain
|
|
Ohio Bell central office switches (5ESS and DMS100), the numbers
|
|
contained on a screening list will be voiced back to the customer when
|
|
the customer checks the contents of the list.
|
|
|
|
"Neither Call Trace nor Call Reject provides the same benefits as
|
|
Caller ID, according to Ohio Bell witness Rini. He believed that the
|
|
distinguishing feature is that Caller ID benefits the customer before an
|
|
annoying call is received (call management) and after a call is answered
|
|
(information that can lead to the reduction of annoying calls) [while]
|
|
Call Trace and Call Reject ... benefit the customer only after the call
|
|
is answered. Call Trace is not being offered at this time because of
|
|
technical aspects surrounding the transport of the captured CPN to the
|
|
appropriate authorized agency. Ohio Bell's current ... schedule [lists]
|
|
Call Trace in the second quarter of 1992. Call Reject ... is not
|
|
currently being offered because there is the same issue present with
|
|
passing the CPN to the Call Reject customer as is present with Automatic
|
|
Callback. Until the privacy/anonymity issue is resolved, Ohio Bell does
|
|
not wish to file for approval of this service.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Richard A Carroll, an Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
|
|
... at the University of Chicago Medical Center, testifying on behalf of
|
|
Ohio Bell, did not believe that Call Trace would be as valuable a tool
|
|
in preventing obscene calls because it lacks the immediacy of Caller ID.
|
|
... He also did not believe that Call Trace would be as helpful to the
|
|
victim since the victim could not confront the caller with identifying
|
|
information. Concerning harassing calls made as a result of domestic or
|
|
interpersonal disputes, Dr Carroll again believes that Caller ID would
|
|
be more effective than Call Trace. As examples, Dr Carroll noted that
|
|
Caller ID would allow a potential victim to screen calls or use the sys-
|
|
tem to document violations of injunctions against harassment. [Comment:
|
|
Contrast with the testimony of prosecutor Forchione under II-D-2 above,
|
|
"Law Enforcement Concerns".]
|
|
|
|
"Ms Patricia Steinbarger, Assistant Manager in the Residential
|
|
Service Center at Ohio Bell, testified that Caller ID would aid in
|
|
reducing the number of annoying or harassing calls in three ways: ...
|
|
deter harassing callers by making their identity more readily known; ...
|
|
[having] the telephone number of the calling party, the called party
|
|
would not have to experience several instances of harassment in order to
|
|
resolve the problem; ... immediate access to the calling number would
|
|
expedite ACB investigations. [Comment: This happens automatically with
|
|
Call Trace; see the second paragraph in this section.] She also noted
|
|
that Caller ID could afford customers, in some instances, the ability to
|
|
resolve the problem themselves by informing the caller that they will
|
|
provide the number to authorities. ...
|
|
|
|
"Ohio Bell employee Barbara Fruscella stated that Call Trace does
|
|
not necessarily lead to a reduction in the volume of annoyance calls.
|
|
Ms Fruscella relied on data from Bell South ... [which, she said, show]
|
|
that, while the volume of annoyance-type calls did not decrease, the
|
|
costs to the ACB did increase. For example, Ms Fruscella claimed that
|
|
Ohio Bell's current operations allow its customers to contact the ACB
|
|
only during regular business hours; however, ... Call Trace would
|
|
require that subscribers ... be able to contact the ACB at any time.
|
|
... This witness also posits that ... Bell South data [showed] customer
|
|
dissatisfaction with paying for Call Trace and not receiving any
|
|
immediate tangible outcome. The witness did admit, however, that Bell
|
|
Atlantic reported that customer satisfaction was somewhat better when
|
|
Call Trace was offered at the same time [as] Caller ID. ...
|
|
|
|
"Conclusion on Alternative Services
|
|
|
|
"Initially, we agree that Call Trace and Call Reject perform comple-
|
|
mentary functions not identical functions with Caller ID. We do,
|
|
however, envision positive benefits that both Call Trace and Call
|
|
Reject, given the appropriate safeguards, can give Ohio consumers. Call
|
|
Trace appears to be a superior method of prosecuting obscene and
|
|
annoying telephone callers as openly admitted by Ohio Bell (OBT brief
|
|
at 39). However, because of a technical problem with forwarding the
|
|
captured CPN, Ohio Bell [is not] seeking permission to offer Call Trace
|
|
at this time. Call Reject allows subscribers ... to stop unwarranted
|
|
[sic; unwanted?] return telephone calls from a person. In these ways,
|
|
both Call Reject and Call Reject appear to be positive features.
|
|
|
|
"On the other hand, Call Trace lacks the immediacy which may
|
|
discourage obscene telephone callers from making repeat telephone calls
|
|
in the short term. Similarly, unless one knows the CPN (which is
|
|
impossible without Caller ID), it is impossible for a Call Reject
|
|
customer to add the telephone number of an obscene or annoying caller to
|
|
a restricted list, unless the subscriber answers and listens to the
|
|
obscene or annoying call. [Comment: How would a subscriber _know_ that
|
|
a first-time call was obscene or annoying without answering and
|
|
listening to it? And Call Reject lets the called party reject all
|
|
future calls from the number without knowing what the number is.] In
|
|
comparison, a Caller ID subscriber can confront an obscene or annoying
|
|
caller with his [sic] CPN, thereby potentially discouraging future
|
|
calls, and refuse to answer a call from a return obscene caller but
|
|
still add that number to his/her restricted list through the provision
|
|
of Call Reject. Thus, it appears that all three CLASS features are
|
|
complementary.
|
|
|
|
"There is, at the present time, a privacy concern regarding ... Call
|
|
Reject which we believe the company should resolve prior to offering
|
|
this service: ... a Call Reject customer [might obtain] the CPN ...
|
|
whenever the customer reviews the screening list and that customer is
|
|
served by a 5ESS or DMS100 central office. Thus, as discussed elsewhere
|
|
in this Order, we are greatly concerned with the potential discovery
|
|
[sic; disclosure?] of CPN in situations when Call Reject is utilized.
|
|
|
|
"Fundamentally, the Commission believes that maximum customer choice
|
|
should be the hallmark of any CLASS services. Just as we have provided
|
|
a 'menu' of options for customers seeking anonymity through blocking, so
|
|
too should customers have available to them a variety of CLASS services
|
|
in order to deter harassing or obscene calls. We would not want
|
|
customers to subscribe to Caller ID simply because it is the only
|
|
service available. Nor would we want it to be advertised as 'the'
|
|
answer to obscene and harassing calls. In a similar vein, the company
|
|
should not, as OCC evidently argues, promote Call Trace and Call Reject
|
|
to the exclusion of Caller ID. For these reasons, if Caller ID is to be
|
|
offered by Ohio Bell, its offering shall be contingent upon its offering
|
|
Call Trace and Call Reject contemporaneously. Therefore, while it is
|
|
clear that Call Trace and Call Reject will provide additional benefits
|
|
to Ohio subscribers, we feel that it is incumbent upon Ohio Bell to file
|
|
complete applications, including cost studies, for these aforementioned
|
|
features prior to us granting approval of Caller ID. We also recognize
|
|
that, as presently configured, blocking will not always prohibit the
|
|
CLASS subscriber from having access to the CPN. ... Moreover, before
|
|
we will approve any CLASS feature, Ohio Bell should verify in each CLASS
|
|
application that is submitted ... that CPN will be protected in all
|
|
instances in which the calling party chooses to implement blocking.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- K. Reporting Requirements
|
|
|
|
"The Commission believes that it would be prudent to maintain a
|
|
review of these services in order to evaluate more clearly their
|
|
effectiveness and benefits [as in NC]. Accordingly, if Ohio Bell wishes
|
|
to offer Caller ID it must provide quarterly reports for [a year]
|
|
consisting of ...: a) the extent of usage of per-call blocking and
|
|
per-line blocking; b) an itemization of all revenues and expenses
|
|
associated with the service; c) the number of subscribers to the
|
|
service, both residential and business; d) the total number of
|
|
residential and business subscribers to each CLASS service; e) the total
|
|
number of residential and business subscribers with non-published
|
|
numbers; f) the number of subscribers who terminate the service and
|
|
their reasons for doing so, if known; g) information regarding the
|
|
deterrent effect that the service has on harassing and obscene calls;
|
|
and h) the number and type of telemarketers that subscribe to the
|
|
service.
|
|
|
|
"All quarterly report information, with the exception of [item b],
|
|
must be submitted to the Compliance Division of the Commission's
|
|
Consumer Services Department. Revenue and Expense information should be
|
|
submitted to the Telecommunications Division Staff. The Commission
|
|
reserves the right to modify any portion of this Order after the
|
|
completion of the [year] based on the information provided in the
|
|
quarterly reports and other available information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"II. Discussion -- L. Marketing Studies
|
|
|
|
"To ascertain whether consumers would be interested in subscribing
|
|
to Caller ID and Automatic Callback, Ohio Bell conducted both quantita-
|
|
tive and qualitative research [whose results are] in a March 6, 1990,
|
|
Ohio Bell Caller ID Privacy Study (OCC Ex. 8). Generally, this study
|
|
finds that 1) a majority of Ohio Bell subscribers are not substantially
|
|
concerned with privacy as it relates to the telephone; 2) both published
|
|
and non-published customers are interested in Caller ID; 3) customers
|
|
recognize that blocking diminishes the value of the service; 4)
|
|
legitimate calls to police, fire, and medical emergency authorities
|
|
would not be affected; however, calls to hotlines where anonymity plays
|
|
a crucial role may be affected; and 5) almost half of all non-published-
|
|
number customers have purchased Caller ID to avoid prank or obscene
|
|
calls in New Jersey.
|
|
|
|
"OCC presented three witnesses to challenge the conclusions drawn by
|
|
Ohio Bell from the [above] research. The first ... was Dr Douglas
|
|
Ferguson, an Assistant Professor, School of Mass Communication, Bowling
|
|
Green State University. Dr Ferguson [testified that] focus-group
|
|
research is a discussion group that concentrates on a particular topic
|
|
or topics, is facilitated by a trained moderator, and typically [has]
|
|
8 to 12 participants. [It] depends heavily on a good focus moderator,
|
|
[who] is a passive and neutral facilitator of conversation and must keep
|
|
the participants on track.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Ferguson testified that focus-group research is not representa-
|
|
tive of public opinion but instead is rich in detail. A strength of
|
|
this approach is that it allows a response in the participant's own
|
|
words [without restricting to] categories as do telephone or mail
|
|
surveys. According to Dr Ferguson, Ohio Bell's focus-group research
|
|
was, logistically, planned correctly, but the results were tainted by
|
|
moderator bias. ... [T]he moderator for the Caller-ID focus groups
|
|
acted as a cheerleader for the service and, in some cases, actually
|
|
opposed negative comments made about the service. In addition, ...
|
|
Caller ID was defined from the perspective of the called party, not
|
|
[the] calling party. Thus, it would be difficult for ... participants
|
|
to envision negative aspects of Caller ID.
|
|
|
|
"In conclusion, Dr Ferguson posited that the moderator did a poor
|
|
job conducting the ... sessions and, because of this failure, any
|
|
positive conclusions used by Ohio Bell in its privacy study in support
|
|
of Caller ID are suspect. ... [T]he focus-group method could have proved
|
|
effective, if properly conducted, to point out to Ohio Bell potential
|
|
problems with Caller ID which needed addressed [sic] prior to filing the
|
|
application with the Commission. However, in his opinion, the focus
|
|
groups were not properly characterized to utilize this information.
|
|
|
|
"[Next] was Dr Sara Spears [of the same school, whose] primary
|
|
teaching responsibility is ... quantitative research methods to
|
|
undergraduate, masters, and doctoral level students, as well as advising
|
|
and supervising students who are conducting their own quantitative
|
|
research projects.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Spears evaluated and explained the mail survey [and] the afore-
|
|
mentioned Caller ID privacy study. According to [her], Ohio Bell
|
|
correctly utilized a systematic sample with a random start, non-
|
|
published-number customers were appropriately weighted, and Ohio Bell
|
|
correctly accounted for its corporate name by mailing half of the
|
|
questionnaires under a fictitious sponsor's name. [T]he major weak-
|
|
nesses ... are the unacceptably low response rate of 29.1%, the use of
|
|
questions which were clearly biased in favor of Caller ID, and that a
|
|
reinterpretation of the same data could lead one to very different
|
|
conclusions than those drawn by Ohio Bell. The witness ... would be
|
|
concerned if the results of this study were used to support a public-
|
|
policy decision.
|
|
|
|
"[Last was] Dr Mark Cooper, President, Citizens Research, Silver
|
|
Spring MD, [who] has testified extensively on ... CLASS-type services
|
|
before nine state public service commissions [and each house of
|
|
Congress]. Dr Cooper ... discussed ... state commission decisions
|
|
regarding Caller ID.
|
|
|
|
"Dr Cooper also challenged the New Jersey conclusions Ohio Bell
|
|
relied upon when it designed the offering in Ohio. First, Dr Cooper
|
|
disagreed with the argument that Caller ID has [reduced] obscene and
|
|
harassing calls. ... [T]he New Jersey evidence can not distinguish which
|
|
of the CLASS services accounted for the decline in annoyance-type calls.
|
|
... Any measurable decline in the number of reports to the telephone
|
|
company may reflect a change in the way the company handles complaints
|
|
or a displacement of such complaints to other agencies. Furthermore,
|
|
the witness believes that self-reporting statistics by any entity with a
|
|
stake in the outcome should make the Caller ID data suspect.
|
|
|
|
"Conclusions on Marketing Studies"
|
|
|
|
"While some subscribers may [want] Caller ID service, their number
|
|
does not appear to be as great as that represented by Ohio Bell. Upon
|
|
reviewing the evidence submitted in these proceedings, we agree with
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OCC's general premise that the Ohio Bell evidence does seem to skew
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somewhat the research that the company relied on when it filed the
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applications. This decision should not be construed as suggesting that
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Ohio Bell or any other telephone public utility can not rely on this
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type of quantitative or qualitative research when considering the
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provision of new telecommunication services. However, we encourage all
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telephone public utilities utilizing this type of research to reflect
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fully and accurately the results of their research and to at least
|
|
consider adjusting their tariff filings in accordance with those
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|
responses before filing an application with the Commission.
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"II. Discussion -- M. Telemarketing
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"Some of the parties have argued that Caller ID, through its ability
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to aggregate telephone numbers, will lead to a proliferation of tele-
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|
marketers and a concomitant increase in 'junk' calls to telephone
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|
subscribers. For example, Cleveland believes that telemarketers could
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determine, through telephone numbers, the geographic location ... of
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|
originating calls and that the destination of the call would reveal
|
|
interest in particular products. ... Cleveland [also] believes that
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|
other data would be obtainable, such as addresses, credit history, and
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|
other database information. The information resulting from telephone
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|
numbers ... would be of value and sold to telemarketers. Cleveland is
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particularly concerned that telemarketers may take advantage of its
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older citizens, who are more vulnerable to high- pressure solicitation
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activities and scams.
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"Scherers [Comment: See II-H above, "Competitive/Non-competitive
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Issue "] ... argued that there is no evidence ... that Caller ID will
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lead to an increase in telemarketing and 'junk calls'. Gordon Scherer
|
|
testified that ANI is primarily used for demographic research, not for
|
|
purposes of calling back the captured number. He also testified that
|
|
businesses that obtain telephone numbers of potential customers through
|
|
advertisements and promotions would treat that information as proprie-
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|
tary. As for the selling of lists, Mr Scherer indicated that currently
|
|
there are list-management companies that compile and sell lists relating
|
|
to a wide variety of topics. Consequently, he believes that Caller ID
|
|
would add little to the information that is already available. Further-
|
|
more, because Caller ID is local in its scope, he posited that Caller ID
|
|
may be economically unfeasible as a means to develop a marketable list.
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|
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|
"Ohio Bell, likewise, does not believe that Caller ID will lead to
|
|
telemarketing problems. ... [T]elemarketers would be more interested in
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|
data containing demographic information, rather than mere telephone
|
|
numbers, and [they] already have ... readily available business
|
|
information. Relying on the new Jersey Caller-ID experience, Ohio Bell
|
|
stated that there is no evidence that the predicted telemarketing abuses
|
|
and increase in unwanted sales calls have occurred. According to Ohio
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|
Bell, only 7% of the Caller ID customers in New Jersey are non-residence
|
|
customers, most of which are small businesses and municipalities.
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|
|
|
"Conclusion on Telemarketing
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|
"Obviously, Caller ID has its benefits in the realm of telemarketing.
|
|
... Caller ID could provide to many smaller, localized retail establish-
|
|
ments capabilities that have, up to now, been available only to those
|
|
large businesses that could economically justify the expense of Feature
|
|
Group D service, which contains a number identification component. On
|
|
the other hand, in light of the potential for abuses by telemarketers,
|
|
the Commission deems it necessary to institute additional measures to
|
|
protect subscribers from unwanted intrusions by telephone. As pointed
|
|
out by Gordon Scherer upon questioning by Chairman Glazer, telemarketers
|
|
should be prohibited from using blocking to conceal their identity.
|
|
Following up on this worthwhile suggestion, the Commission believes that
|
|
Ohio Bell, if it decides to offer Caller ID service, should in its
|
|
tariff prohibit the blocking of calls by telemarketers. Upon receiving
|
|
complaints that a telemarketer is blocking calls, Ohio Bell should
|
|
investigate and terminate service where appropriate. Ohio Bell should
|
|
also work with the Attorney General's office to identify potential
|
|
computer dialers should SB 93 pass the General Assembly.
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|
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|
"II. Discussion -- N. Interexchange Carrier Issues"
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|
|
|
[Comment: The seven paragraphs of this section dealt exclusively
|
|
with Allnet's pending case on equal access and intraLATA competition
|
|
(Allnet v Ohio Bell, 86-771-TP-CSS). I have severely cut this section
|
|
because it seems to me to be a side issue. I present only parts of
|
|
paragraphs 5 and 6, and all of paragraph 7.] "...
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|
|
|
"Allnet proposed that by permitting intraLATA competition, Ohio Bell
|
|
subscribers will have another alternative available to them besides Ohio
|
|
Bell's proposed Accommodation Plan to prevent the forwarding of CPN. ...
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|
|
|
"Next, Allnet argued that Automatic Callback will strengthen Ohio
|
|
Bell's position as the monopoly intraLATA provider because intraLATA
|
|
toll calls made over Ohio Bell's toll network will be returned over the
|
|
same facilities, thereby depriving customers of even utilizing 10XXX to
|
|
access another toll carrier. We agree that this is an issue which will
|
|
have to be decided if Ohio Bell further pursues offering this service.
|
|
However, we do not need to address this issue at this time because there
|
|
is not enough connectivity between Ohio Bell central offices outside the
|
|
Cleveland and Columbus local calling areas to justify the implementation
|
|
of LATA-wide Automatic Callback. ...
|
|
|
|
"Conclusion on Interexchange Carrier Issues
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|
|
|
"In conclusion, we note again that the issue of intraLATA competi-
|
|
tion is more appropriately the subject of Allnet's pending complaint
|
|
case. To decide the intraLATA competition issue in this case would, in
|
|
effect, inappropriately shift the burden of proof on the intraLATA
|
|
competition issue to Ohio Bell. This we hesitate to do. Therefore ...
|
|
we find that Allnet's arguments are inappropriate for consideration in
|
|
these proceedings.
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|
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|
"III. Summary of Conclusions
|
|
|
|
"In summary, the Commission finds that neither Caller ID nor Auto-
|
|
matic Callback are prohibited by law. However, upon review of Ohio
|
|
Bell's applications pursuant to Section 4909.18, ORC, the Commission
|
|
finds that the applications, as proposed, are unjust and unreasonable.
|
|
The services, however, may be rendered just and reasonable by the imple-
|
|
mentation of certain safeguards which will permit callers to preserve
|
|
their anonymity where circumstances warrant. It is the opinion of the
|
|
Commission that the Accommodation Plan is inadequate for this purpose
|
|
for reasons of expense and inconvenience. Because of the inadequacy of
|
|
the Accommodation Plan, some form of blocking must accompany Caller ID
|
|
and Automatic Callback. Specifically, if Ohio Bell wishes to offer
|
|
Caller ID and Automatic Callback, it must provide the following blocking
|
|
options: 1) make available free universal per-call blocking to all
|
|
subscribers; 2) for those customers who subscribe to non-published-number
|
|
service, both current and future, per-line blocking must be provided
|
|
automatically without any additional charges, or the customer may
|
|
affirmatively choose to have free per-call blocking after being fully
|
|
informed of the availability of per-line and per-call blocking; and 3)
|
|
subscription per-line blocking must be made available for published
|
|
customers at a charge equivalent to non-published-number service rates.
|
|
All blocking options must be accompanied by free per-call unblocking
|
|
capability.
|
|
|
|
"The Commission is also aware that certain CLASS services, such as
|
|
Call Reject and Automatic Callback, with measured service and call
|
|
detail are unaffected by blocking. Both services have the potential for
|
|
disclosing the CPN. Consequently, if Ohio Bell wishes to offer these
|
|
services, it must take measures to preserve the privacy of callers.
|
|
|
|
"Because Rule 4901:1-5-09(H), OAC, generally prohibits the disclosure
|
|
of non-published telephone numbers, Ohio Bell has requested a waiver or
|
|
modification of the rule in order to allow the disclosure of non-
|
|
published numbers through Caller ID. The Commission finds that Ohio
|
|
Bell's request should be denied. [Non-pub] subscribers pay a premium
|
|
for an increased level of privacy. To maintain the level of privacy to
|
|
which non-published customers have grown accustomed, the Commission
|
|
requires that per-line blocking, unless waived, be provided to
|
|
non-published subscribers. ...
|
|
|
|
"The implementation of these services should be preceded by actual
|
|
notice to the appropriate customers in the form of bill inserts or
|
|
direct mailing 30 and 60 days in advance of the service pursuant to the
|
|
directives of this Order. Twenty days before each issuance, Ohio Bell
|
|
must submit to the Staff its proposed notice and advertisements
|
|
concerning Caller ID.
|
|
|
|
"The evidence does not show that Caller ID and Automatic Callback
|
|
have functional equivalents. Therefore, Ohio Bell has failed to meet
|
|
its burden of proof as to the competitive status of these services. The
|
|
cost studies submitted by Ohio Bell did not account for blocking. Even
|
|
assuming the propriety of the cost information, it is impossible to
|
|
conduct a proper cost evaluation without accounting for the revenue
|
|
impact of blocking. Consequently, Ohio Bell should file updated tariff
|
|
sheets, including proposed prices. Pricing should be at a level to
|
|
insure that the services are cost compensatory and that the joint and
|
|
fixed costs are recovered within a five-year period.
|
|
|
|
"Owing to the complementary functions of Caller ID, Automatic
|
|
Callback, Call Trace, and Call Reject and desiring to provide telephone
|
|
service customers a variety of services to suit their particular needs,
|
|
the Commission believes that an offering of Caller ID must be contingent
|
|
upon an offering of Call Trace and Call Reject.
|
|
|
|
"To allow the Commission to obtain additional information about
|
|
these services, Ohio Bell, if it chooses to offer these services, will
|
|
be required to provide quarterly informational reports for a one-year
|
|
period. As a result of the identified problems with some of the
|
|
research methods used in Ohio Bell's marketing research studies, the
|
|
Commission is not convinced by Ohio Bell's marketing research findings.
|
|
Nor was Ohio Bell convincing in arguing that Caller ID would not give
|
|
rise to telemarketing abuses. It is expected that the quarterly reports
|
|
will provide additional and more reliable information concerning public
|
|
interest and telemarketing abuses.
|
|
|
|
"The Commission finds that the arguments raised by Allnet closely
|
|
approximate the issues which are the subject of its pending complaint
|
|
case. Consequently, findings on those issues shall be reserved for that
|
|
proceeding.
|
|
|
|
"Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law:
|
|
|
|
"1. On March 20, 1990, The Ohio Bell Telephone Company (Ohio Bell)
|
|
filed petitions seeking permission to amend its tariff in order to
|
|
provide Caller ID and Automatic Callback.
|
|
|
|
"2. By entry issued April 11, 1991, the Commission found that these
|
|
petitions may be unjust and unreasonable and, therefore, scheduled local
|
|
public hearings and an evidentiary hearing.
|
|
|
|
"3. By entries dated April 11, May 30, and August 27, 1991, the
|
|
Commission granted the following entities permission to intervene in
|
|
these proceedings: The Ohio Association of Chiefs of Police, the Ohio
|
|
State Highway Patrol, the United States Treasury Department, Bureau of
|
|
Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and the Fraternal Order of Police, Inc.;
|
|
the American Civil Liberties Union on Ohio Foundation; Allnet Communica-
|
|
tions Services, Inc.; the Office of the Consumers' Counsel; the Ohio
|
|
Domestic Violence Network; the North Central Mental Health Services; the
|
|
City of Cleveland; and Scherers Communications, Inc.
|
|
|
|
"4. In addition, United Telephone Company's motion to intervene was
|
|
denied of August 23, 1991; however, United was not foreclosed from
|
|
filing an amicus-curiae post-hearing brief.
|
|
|
|
"5. Ohio Bell's April 30, 1990, request for a modification or
|
|
exemption from Rule 4901:1-5-09(H), OAC, was consolidated into these
|
|
proceedings by a Commission entry dated April 11, 1991.
|
|
|
|
"6. Local public hearings were held in these matters in Cleveland,
|
|
Columbus, Dayton, and Toledo on July 29, August 7, August 8, and August
|
|
13, 1991, respectively.
|
|
|
|
"7. Evidentiary hearings began in these matters on September 11 and
|
|
concluded on September 30, 1991. A rebuttal hearing was held on October
|
|
7, 1991.
|
|
|
|
"8. Ohio Bell, the Commission's staff, Law Enforcement, NCMHS, OCC,
|
|
Cleveland, ODVN, Allnet, and Scherers filed briefs and reply briefs. By
|
|
letter filed March 10, 1992, Ohio Bell modified its position on
|
|
blocking.
|
|
|
|
"9. Having thoroughly considered the evidence of record, the
|
|
Commission has determined that the applications, as filed, are unjust
|
|
and unreasonable.
|
|
|
|
"10. Ohio Bell's proposed applications may be just and reasonable if
|
|
the applicant modifies its tariff offerings to incorporate the
|
|
safeguards set forth in this Opinion and Order.
|
|
|
|
"It is, therefore,
|
|
|
|
"ORDERED, That Ohio Bell's applications for tariff amendments in
|
|
Case Nos. 90-467-TP-ATA and 90-471-TP-ATA are unjust and unreasonable as
|
|
presently filed. It is, further,
|
|
|
|
"ORDERED, That by making the modifications delineated in this
|
|
Opinion and Order the applications may be just and reasonable. It is,
|
|
further,
|
|
|
|
"ORDERED, That should Ohio Bell still wish to offer Caller ID and
|
|
Automatic Callback it should modify its applications in accordance with
|
|
the conclusions of this Opinion and Order. It is, further,
|
|
|
|
"ORDERED, That Ohio Bell's request for an exemption or modification
|
|
of the minimum telephone service standards is denied. It is, further,
|
|
|
|
"ORDERED, That copies of this Opinion and Order be served upon Ohio
|
|
Bell; [the intervenors listed above]; their respective counsel; and all
|
|
other interested persons of record.
|
|
|
|
"THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO -- Craig A Glazer,
|
|
Chairman; J Michael Biddison; Ashley C Brown; Jolynn Barry Butler;
|
|
Richard M Fanelly.
|
|
|
|
"Entered in the Journal MAR 26 1992 A True Copy; Gary E Vigorito, Secretary"
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Cleveland, Ohio, USA brown@ncoast.org
|
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