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492 lines
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492 lines
24 KiB
Text
==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume Three, Issue 29, File #10 of 12
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN P h r a c k W o r l d N e w s PWN
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PWN ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ PWN
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PWN Issue XXIX/Part 1 PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN November 17, 1989 PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN Created, Written, and Edited PWN
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PWN by Knight Lightning PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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Welcome to Issue XXIX of Phrack World News!
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Although Phrack Inc. is officially four years old, Phrack World News is not.
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PWN originally in its first issue (which was in Phrack Inc. II... its a long
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story) was known as "Phreak World News," but quickly changed and starting with
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Phrack Inc. Issue III became Phrack World News as you see it today.
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This issue of Phrack World News contains stories and articles detailing events
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and other information concerning AT&T, Clifford Stoll, Kent O'Brien, Kevin
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David Mitnick, Datacrime, DEC, FAX, FCC, Galactic Hackers Party, IBM, Lawrence
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Livermore National Laboratory, Leonard Mitchell DiCicco, MCI, NASA, Robert
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Morris, Shockwave Rider, SummerCon '89, The "NEW" TAP Magazine, 2600 Magazine,
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Viruses, Worms Against Nuclear Killers, and much more so keep reading and
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enjoy.
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:Knight Lightning
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"The Real Future Is Behind You... And It's Only The Beginning!"
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Judge Proposes Community Service For Hacker's Accomplice October 13, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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by Kathy McDonald (New York Times)
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LOS ANGELES -- A federal judge says she is inclined to sentence a man who
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pleaded guilty to helping computer hacker Kevin Mitnick steal a computer
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security program to community service and asked him to submit a proposal on
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such a sentence.
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U.S. District Judge Mariana R. Pfaelzer said Leonard Mitchell DiCicco, of
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unincorporated suburban Calabasas, had been helpful in the case, in which he
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reported Mitnick to officers at Digital Equipment Corporation in Massachusetts.
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Mitnick has admitted he stole a DEC computer security program and
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electronically brought it to California.
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Pfaelzer gave DiCicco, age 23, until November 1 to come up with a detailed
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proposal for his community service.
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"I favor the handicapped, older people, something which is out in the
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community," Pfaelzer said.
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DiCicco pleaded guilty in July to one count of aiding and abetting the
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interstate transportation of stolen property. He admitted that in 1987 he let
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Mitnick, age 25, of suburban Panorama City, use his office computer at
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Voluntary Plan Administrators in Calabasas to break into the DEC system.
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Mitnick pleaded guilty and was sentenced in July to one year in prison and six
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months in a community treatment program aimed at breaking his "addiction" to
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computer hacking.
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Under a plea agreement with the government, DiCicco pleaded guilty in exchange
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for a promise that he would not be prosecuted for any of the other instances of
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computer hacking he and Mitnick carried out.
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He said after Thursday's (October 12) court appearance that he would like to
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put his computer talents to use to help others.
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Assistant U.S. Attorney James Asperger did not object to giving DiCicco
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community service rather than a prison term, saying: "I think Mr. DiCicco's
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cooperation in this case was essential to the prosecution of both Mr. Mitnick
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and himself. He is certainly lower in culpability than Mr. Mitnick."
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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If you are looking for other articles related to Leonard Mitchell DiCicco and
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the famous Kevin David Mitnick please refer to;
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"Pacific Bell Means Business" (10/06/88) PWN XXI....Part 1
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"Dangerous Hacker Is Captured" (No Date ) PWN XXII...Part 1
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"Ex-Computer Whiz Kid Held On New Fraud Counts" (12/16/88) PWN XXII...Part 1
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"Dangerous Keyboard Artist" (12/20/88) PWN XXII...Part 1
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"Armed With A Keyboard And Considered Dangerous" (12/28/88) PWN XXIII..Part 1
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"Dark Side Hacker Seen As Electronic Terrorist" (01/08/89) PWN XXIII..Part 1
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"Mitnick Plea Bargains" (03/16/89) PWN XXV....Part 1
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"Mitnick Plea Bargain Rejected As Too Lenient" (04/25/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1
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"Computer Hacker Working On Another Plea Bargain" (05/06/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1
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"Mitnick Update" (05/10/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1
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"Kenneth Siani Speaks Out About Kevin Mitnick" (05/23/89) PWN XXVII..Part 1
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"Judge Suggests Computer Hacker Undergo Counseling"(07/17/89) PWN XXVIII.Part 1
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"Authorities Backed Away From Original Allegations"(07/23/89) PWN XXVIII.Part 1
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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How Hacker Jammed 911 Police Lines October 4, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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by Benny Evangelista
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He is a brilliant, but lonely teenage computer hacker with too much time on his
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hands.
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And the police said the 16-year-old San Gabriel boy used that time to put a
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sophisticated high-tech spin on age-old teenage telephone pranks by tying up
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police emergency lines from Hayward, California to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and
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harassing other people, all from what he thought was the safety of his home
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Commodore 64 computer.
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The calls that jammed Hayward police and Alameda County sheriff's lines were
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potentially dangerous, but officials said that no emergency was neglected
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because of them.
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This is the way he got his kicks, but he had most of us just absolutely
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crazed," said Connie Bullock, security director for one of the long-distance
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companies that suffered thousands of dollars of losses.
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The boy, who police would not identify because of his age, is <was> scheduled
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to be arraigned October 16th in Los Angeles County Juvenile Court for making
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telephone bomb threats, fraudulently obtaining long-distance telephone service,
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interfering with a police officer and making harassing phone calls.
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"Our goal is to get him on probation so we can doctor him for the next couple
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of years," said Sgt. Bernie Kammer, of the Los Angeles County sheriff's
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computer crime detail.
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"Hopefully, he may be one of the guys who sends the next space capsule up,"
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Kammer said.
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The hacker, who has used handles like "Kent O'Brien," surfaced sometime last
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October, said Bullock, director of network security for ComSystems
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Incorporated, a Van Nuys-based long distance company.
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Bullock learned that someone had tapped into the electronic phone mail system
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of a Cedar Rapids-based long-distance company using ComSystems lines.
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A security officer for the Iowa company began receiving harassing and
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threatening calls, some at home in the middle of the night, she said.
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The hacker became good at cracking home answering-machine codes in the Southern
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California area and possibly elsewhere, and changed several outgoing messages,
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she said.
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He also broke into the phone mail system at Sears administrative office in
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Hayward, California and called workers there, she said. He even commandeered
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one phone mail box and had other people leave messages.
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He would also make anonymous calls or just let the phone ring in the middle of
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the night and hang up. He phoned in bomb threats to his old high school and a
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fast-food restaurant, Kammer said.
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In all cases, he used a computer synthesizer to disguise his voice, Kammer
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said. And he routed the calls in ways to make tracing impossible.
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Then he started calling Cedar Rapids police emergency 911 lines, bombarding
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dispatchers in the middle of the night with a series of computer-assisted calls
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that would tie up the lines for hours. He would make small talk and ask about
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the weather, said Cedar Rapids Detective Stan McCurg.
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The boy could call up five or six other people, hold their lines captive and
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route the calls to police, McCurg said.
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"The scary thing is he had the capability to screw you over and you couldn't do
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anything about it," McCurg said.
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Police say the boy pulled the same trick on the Alameda County Sheriff's
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office, San Francisco police and the Los Angeles County sheriff's office in
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Crescrenta Valley.
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The calls did not cause any safety problems, but there was always that
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potential, Kammer said.
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The big break came after the boy started calling Hayward police dispatchers in
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late February. At first, the dispatchers played along, trying to find out who
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and where the boy was while the boy gave false clues to throw them off.
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"It was like, 'Catch me if you can,'" said Hayward Detective Dennis Kutsuris.
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On March 2, dispatchers kept him talking from 8:10 a.m. to 1:20 p.m., long
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enough to trace the call to his San Gabriel home. That night, police served a
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search warrant and found the boy in bed talking on the phone using his
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synthesizer.
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The hacker was a lonely boy who dropped out of high school because it didn't
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challenge him, but had passed his general education equivalency exam and was
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taking courses from a community college, according to Kammer and Bullock.
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Police seized the computer equipment, but formal charges were not filed until
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last month because of the complex followup investigation, Kammer said.
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Bullock said her company lost about $71,000 worth of calls, plus four angered
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customers. Kammer said although police believe the loss could be "hundreds of
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thousands" of dollars, they can only prove the loss of $2000 in court.
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In the meantime, Hayward police received another call September 6th from a
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computer-synthesized voice that they feel came from the boy. Kammer said a
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relative had given the boy another computer, but they have no proof that he was
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back to his old tricks.
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Still, that incident, along with Cedar Rapids police reports will be used for a
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probation report, Kammer said.
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Bullock said the case was intriguing at first, but became frustrating as her
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file grew to 2 feet thick.
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"He had me by the guts," she said. "I was obsessed with finding him. He's a
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typical 16-year old, but a little more menacing. He is pretty smart, but he
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had absolutely nothing to do, but sit in his room with his computer equipment
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and all he had to do was talk on the phone."
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Just The FAX, Please November 6, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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by Noam Cohen (New York Times)
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Teachers in rural Minnesota are ready to hear the most up-to-date version of
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the oldest excuse in the book: "Honest, teach, the fax ate my homework."
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Yes, the facsimile machine has gone to school in Sibley County, an agricultural
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area 60 miles southwest of Minneapolis-St. Paul.
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It is the last component to be installed in a four-year-old interactive
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television system, or ITV, that brings advanced classroom instruction to small,
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isolated areas through closed-circuit cable television.
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In an education system where students adjust the contrast knobs to get a better
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look at their calculus teacher, it is hardly surprising that these students are
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the first in the country to use the fax to receive or hand in homework.
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David Czech, the telecommunications director for the school district who is
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responsible for its cable system education program, said that now, televised
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teachers can even give surprise quizzes.
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"The fax makes the classroom truly self-contained," said Kelly Smith, an
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assistant principal at Gibbon-Fairfax-Winthrop High School, in Sibley County,
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who taught mathematics for the ITV program before fax machines were introduced.
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He said that when he taught he "had to rely on transportation in the district
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and assignments always stacked up."
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The fax machines, part of a special line made by Ricoh Corporation, transmit on
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the same wiring that carries the television image to students. By using cable
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instead of telephones, the district saves money on telephone costs and receives
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quicker, cleaner copies.
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The machines have a built-in copier, allowing one student to retrieve the
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assignment and hand copies to classmates (usually no more than eight).
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Students then use the machine to hand back work.
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The Sibley County school district purchased and installed the fax machines with
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the remaining $22,000 of a $150,000 state grant for ITV, according to Czech.
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The machines, which school officials and a Ricoh spokeswoman say are the first
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to be used in high school education, have generated interest elsewhere. Czech
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says he has received calls from education officials in Hawaii, Wisconsin, Ohio
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and other parts of Minnesota.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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MCI Sues AT&T -- Charges Deceptive Advertising October 12, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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"We Welcome The Opportunity To Discuss Who Is Misleading Whom..."
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AT&T is using false and malicious advertising to protect its long-distance
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business, MCI Communications Corporation charges in a lawsuit filed Tuesday,
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October 10.
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MCI, whose 10 percent market share makes it a distant number two to AT&T's 75
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percent, says its giant rival is resorting to false claims in the hope of
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stemming the loss of 100,000 customers to MCI each week.
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AT&T, however, says it will defend itself with a countersuit. According to
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AT&T spokesman Herb Linnen: "We welcome the opportunity to discuss who is
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misleading whom... we have been quite concerned for some time now about MCI's
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misleading print and broadcast advertising. We have taken our complaints
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directly to MCI without success."
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He added, "AT&T stands behind its advertising."
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This latest litigation is simply the latest chapter in MCI's long and very
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bitter battle with AT&T, which began in the 1970's when MCI successfully broke
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AT&T's long-distance monopoly by offering "Execunet," the first long-distance
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service bypassing AT&T offered to the public. The two companies have battled
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each other at the Federal Communications Commission, which authorizes the rates
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for each, ever since. This is the first time since AT&T's divestiture that the
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arguments have been taken into a courtroom.
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In an interview, MCI Chairman William McGowan said that "AT&T ads are sleazy,"
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and he noted that the nine month old campaign grew increasingly negative,
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forcing MCI into the courts.
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AT&T responded saying that MCI is resorting to the courts since "...they just
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can't hack it in the marketplace..."
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McGowan responded that he believes a lawsuit is the only way to fight a company
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which is spending two million dollars a day on advertising. He said, "Our
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budget is big -- $51 million -- but how do you compete with someone who is nine
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or ten times your size in advertising?"
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MCI is still studying the impact of the latest round of AT&T ads, but McGowan
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said he is sure MCI should have gained "a lot more" than 100,000 customers per
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week if not for the advertising. The advertising has not affected professional
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telecommunications managers, but does have an impact on individual and small
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business customers, he said.
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The MCI suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, DC, alleges that
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AT&T's advertising campaign "maliciously attacked MCI's honesty and the value
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of MCI's products and service by falsely and deceptively representing that it
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is superior to its competitors in general, and MCI in particular, in terms of
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trustworthiness, quality and price.
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MCI's suit cites AT&T ads that assert MCI's rates are cheaper than AT&T's only
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when calls are made over 900 miles away and after 7 p.m. MCI's suit also takes
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umbrage at AT&T's advertisement which states that MCI customers "might have
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better luck calling Mars than trying to reach MCI representatives for an
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explanation of their bills."
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The ads, the suit charges, also claim non-AT&T companies provide slow telephone
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connections; that other companies do not operate worldwide like AT&T; and that
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competing 800, facsimile and WATS services are inferior.
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The suit says AT&T "has wrongfully profited and MCI has been damaged by being
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wrongfully thwarted from maximizing its sales potential."
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The suit asks the court to order AT&T to discontinue advertising its services
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for a period of one year and that advertisements after that time be approved by
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the court and carry a notice to that effect in the advertisement itself.
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Additionally, it asks for profits "wrongfully amassed" by AT&T on the sale of
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its products and services during the past year, plus interest and legal fees.
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McGowan was particularly irked by a claim that MCI's fax service has 57 percent
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more problems than AT&T faxes. He said that number was arrived at by figuring
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the difference between AT&T service -- with 4.9 percent errors -- and MCI, with
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7.7 percent errors. Rather than reporting the 2.8 percent difference, the ad
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claims a 57 percent higher rate -- the percentage increase between 4.9 percent
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and 7.7 percent.
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"Talk about misleading," McGowan said.
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"Yes, talk about misleading," said Herb Linnen. "They've survived this long in
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part based on the deceptions they've used on a public not well educated on the
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technical aspects of telephony... we'll clear this up once and for all in court
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with a countersuit."
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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Unleashing Ma Bell October 24, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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by Peter Passell (New York Times)
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Could AT&T's rivals in long-distance phone
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service survive no-holds-barred competition?
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Since the breakup of the telephone monopoly in 1984, the Federal Communications
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Commission has kept AT&T on a short leash to prevent the giant company from
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chewing up the "small fry."
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But now two of those small fry have grown into profitable multibillion-dollar
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corporations, and AT&T is asking the regulators for the freedom to fight for
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market share. If the FCC agrees -- a crucial decision could come as early as
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Thursday -- high-volume telephone users are likely to reap a bonanza from lower
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prices.
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When the Bell System was dismembered, analysts generally agreed that rivals
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would need a lot of help from Washington to gain a secure foothold in the
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long-distance market dominated by the ultimate name-brand company.
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The analysts were right: After AT&T's competitors lost their discounts on
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regulated charges for hookups to local telephone exchanges, all of them took a
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financial bath and some went broke.
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But in the ensuing consolidation, a few companies emerged with both the
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technical capacity to match AT&T's service and the marketing savvy to sell
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themselves to once-skeptical consumers.
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MCI Communications now has 12 percent of the long-distance market and in the
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last year has grown four times as fast as AT&T.
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US Sprint Communications, with its much-ballyhooed all-fiber-optic system, has
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an 8 percent share and is the principal carrier for 117 of America's 800
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largest companies.
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Joel Gross, a communications analyst at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, believes
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a fourth network, assembled from a half-dozen smaller companies, will soon
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emerge.
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One reason AT&T's rivals have managed to do so well in the last few years is
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continuing regulatory discrimination.
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Last summer, the FCC switched AT&T from traditional fair-rate-of-return
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regulation to a more flexible "price-cap" system that gives the company
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discretion to adjust individual rates within a narrow price band.
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But neither the old price regulations nor the new ones apply to MCI, US Sprint
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and other smaller long-distance companies. And they have taken advantage of
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AT&T's inability to cut prices, offering volume discounts where AT&T is most
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vulnerable to customer defections.
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AT&T has fought back, convincing the FCC to allow it fast-track approval for
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rate concessions needed to hang onto its biggest customers.
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And it is now asking the commission for broad discretion to cut rates by more
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than the 5 percent permitted under the price-cap rule. If the FCC agrees, it
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is a sure bet that AT&T will price aggressively, accepting sharp reductions in
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its fat profit margins to check its loss of market share.
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It is obvious why MCI and US Sprint are unhappy at the prospect of an AT&T
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unleashed. But it is not so easy to see how the public would lose from the
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ensuing donnybrook.
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One worry is that AT&T would slash prices by enough to drive rivals out of
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business, and then be free to price-gouge.
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But as Peter Pitsch, a former FCC staff member who now consults for AT&T points
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out, such "predatory" pricing is only a plausible option if the predator can
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hope to make up the inevitable short-term losses with long-term monopoly gains.
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And two considerations make such a calculation unlikely.
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Once the cables have been laid and the switches installed, it costs very little
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to operate a long-distance phone system. Thus even if AT&T were able to drive
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MCI and US Sprint into bankruptcy, their creditors would find it advantageous
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to continue to sell long-distance services.
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And if AT&T somehow did manage to shut down its rivals, the FCC would hardly be
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likely to reward it with permission to charge monopoly prices.
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Another concern is that price-cutting would make long-distance service
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unprofitable for all, discouraging further investment.
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That, however, might not be such a bad thing. Losses are capitalism's way of
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telling businesses to slow down: There is enormous overcapacity in
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long-distance communications and more investment anytime soon is unlikely to be
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productive.
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Does all this mean the commission will hang tough and permit AT&T to flex its
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competitive muscles? A year ago, when the FCC was dominated by Reagan-appointed
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free marketers, the answer would have been easy.
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Today, with a Bush-appointed majority led by a chairman, Alfred Sikes, of less
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certain ideological bent, it is hard to say.
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MCI and US Sprint have managed to squeeze a lot of regulatory mileage out of
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their underdog status, and certainly will not give up the privileges that go
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along without a fight.
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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AT&T Strikes Back: Countersues MCI October 27, 1989
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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AT&T struck back on Thursday, October 27 at advertising claims made by MCI
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Communications Corporation and received two rulings from the Federal
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Communications Commission affecting regulation of its long distance services.
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AT&T said in a countersuit against MCI filed in Washington, DC that MCI was
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misleading consumers through false and deceptive advertising in its business
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and residential long distance service. AT&T's filing denied similar
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allegations made by MCI in a suit filed October 10.
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Victor Pelson, AT&T group executive, said MCI unfairly compared its discount
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service with AT&T's regular long distance service rather than its discount
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service. Pelson also denied claims that the quality of MCI voice service was
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superior to AT&T's, or that its facsimile service featured fewer garbled
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|
transmissions than AT&T's.
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"We intend to clarify any misconceptions in the market," said Merrill Tutton,
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AT&T Vice President for consumer marketing.
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MCI spokeswoman Kathleen Keegan Thursday responded that, "our ad claims are
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|
accurate... We will soon be filing a motion for a preliminary injunction to
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cause AT&T to cease its advertising campaign."
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Also on Thursday, the Federal Communications Commission upheld a decision
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|
giving AT&T greater freedom to compete for big corporate customers but rejected
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|
another pricing plan by AT&T.
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The FCC voted unanimously to uphold a pricing plan known as Tariff 12, which
|
|
lets AT&T offer corporate customers a package of communications services. AT&T
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|
contends it is at a disadvantage because MCI does not have to submit detailed
|
|
filings to the FCC before they can serve customers. MCI had challenged Tariff
|
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12, asking the FCC to overrule it and prohibit AT&T from offering full service
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communications packages to its customers.
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In the second item, the FCC declared unlawful a pricing plan known as Tariff
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15, that AT&T had applied solely to a single customer, the Holiday Corporation,
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owner of the largest hotel chain in the United States. The FCC said AT&T could
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no longer justify the special rates to a single customer to meet competition
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when MCI was making the same service available to customers generally.
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>--------=====END=====--------<
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