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579 lines
29 KiB
Text
Volume Four, Issue Thirty-Seven, File 13 of 14
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN Phrack World News PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN Issue XXXVII / Part Three of Four PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN Compiled by Dispater & Spirit Walker PWN
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PWN PWN
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PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN
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THE RBOC'S GREED IS AIMED AT DESTROYING OUR BULLETIN BOARDS!
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Computer Users See Threat In Costs November 5, 1991
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By Martin Rosenberg (Kansas City Star)
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"Southwestern Bell Plan Portends Changes, They Fear"
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Some computer bulletin board operators in Missouri say they might have to shut
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down the increasingly popular computer networks if Southwestern Bell Telephone
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Company, succeeds in raising their rates.
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Southwestern Bell says its only trying to fairly price its services by charging
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the bulletin board operators business rates instead of residential rates. The
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company is seeking approval for the changes from Missouri regulators.
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Industry experts say the issue could be the opening volley in a broad campaign
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by telephone companies to change the way consumers and businesses pay for
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electronic communications.
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Residential customers might one day have to pay more to use their personal
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computers and modems than they pay for voice communications, experts say. And
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businesses might have to pay more to use fax machines.
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Southwestern Bell denied that it is attempting to change any rates other than
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those affecting a small number of data communications customers who should be
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switched to a flat business rate, more expensive than the residential rate.
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The bulletin boards, frequently operated out of homes, allow users to exchange
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messages, advice and software programs. Many are free to use, and operators
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often get no revenue from them. Hundreds have formed across the state in the
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last few years.
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Southwestern Bell's proposal is meant for only those who have set up a bulletin
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board through his or her personal computer. Not affected are computer users
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who merely access the bulletin board computer over telephone lines.
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The proposal comes at a time when telephone companies' plans for information
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services have moved to center stage.
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The U.S. Supreme Court (as already) cleared the way for seven regional
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telephone companies, including Southwestern Bell, to start providing
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information services. Those services could eventually compete with electronic
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bulletin boards, newspapers and data base operations such as CompuServe Inc.
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and Prodigy Services Co. (CompuServe is owned by H&R Block Inc. of Kansas
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City).
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Revenues for telephone-delivered information in the United States amounted to
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an estimated $750 million last year and are projected to grow to $2 billion in
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1992, according to industry sources.
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Southwestern Bell's proposal, if approved, would take effect by mid-November.
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Bulletin board operators are operating like businesses, said William Bailey,
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company district manager of rate administration for Missouri in St. Louis.
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"Some customers on residential lines would more appropriately be on business
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lines," Bailey said.
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Bailey said current business customers also would be affected. They would be
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allowed to switch to the flat business rate ($33.55 a month in metropolitan
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Kansas City) and avoid paying a higher "information terminal service" rate
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(currently $43.60 a month), he said.
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Southwestern Bell mounted a similar effort to get bulletin boards under
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business rates in Texas. It later decided to allow free bulletin board services
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using three or fewer lines to continue to enjoy residential rates.
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That was "an enormous mistake," Bailey said. Phone companies are unable to
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monitor whether a bulletin board is collecting money from users, he added.
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Many Kansas City bulletin board operators are upset with Southwestern Bell's
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proposal.
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"If they start charging business rates, some bulletin boards will shut down,"
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said Lanny Conn, who operates a free bulletin board called SOLO-Quest.
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Bill Hirt, who operates the Amiga Central bulletin board for Amiga computer
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users, said he would close down if he is charged the business rate. His
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bulletin board also is free to use.
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Currently, about 200 personal computer users -- some as far off as Australia
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and Sweden - call his bulletin board, he said.
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Conn and Hirt serve as spokesmen for the Greater Kansas City SysOps
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Association, made up of about 22 bulletin boards. (SysOps stands for system
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operators). Hirt estimates there are 100 bulletin boards in the city; most
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have been set up as hobbies.
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Attorney Robin Martinez, who is representing the association, said that
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Southwestern Bell's proposal would hurt information-age pioneers.
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"People running bulletin boards and people using them are on the cutting edge
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of the information age," he said.
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Southwestern Bell wants to thin the ranks of bulletin board providers so there
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will be fewer competitors to its own offerings, he said.
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"To a certain extent, they are trying to get a stranglehold on information
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services," Martinez said.
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Bailey denied there is a link between his company's proposals and its own plans
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for information services.
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"I'm not getting any direction from on high to do what I am doing," he said.
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"I'm really not aware what my company intends to do in terms of information
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services."
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But William Degnan, a telecommunications consultant in Austin, Texas, said,
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"The majority of these folks (bulletin boards) are underpricing these services
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that Southwestern Bell would like to provide at a grander scale."
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Degnan had advised the group of Texas bulletin board operators who had opposed
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Southwestern Bell's efforts to charge business rates there.
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"I think Southwestern Bell is concerned that (it) won't be able to sell what
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other people are giving away," Degnan said.
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Martha Hogerty, public council representing consumers in Missouri, said after
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reviewing Southwestern Bell's filing, "This looks like anybody with a modem
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would have to be on a business rate."
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Most regional Bell telephone companies are now developing strategies for
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offering information services.
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Phone companies may soon try to get customers to pay a measured rate for data
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communications, said Howard Anderson, president of the Yankee Group of Boston.
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Under such a system, the monthly cost of data communications would increase the
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longer you are connected during the month -- like a running taxi meter.
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A change to metered rates would be reasonable and enable telephone companies to
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increase revenues as usage and expenses mount, he said.
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The average residential customer uses the phone 21 minutes a day, while a
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customer with a personal computer and modem uses a phone line an average of 62
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minutes a day, Anderson said.
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Anderson predicted that telephone companies may decide to offer customers high-
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speed data communications for a rate higher than voice communications. Usage
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above a fixed number of hours would increase the size of the monthly phone
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bill, he said.
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To encourage use of the new line, phone companies may take steps to lower the
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quality of standard lines so that they will not cleanly carry electronic
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information, Anderson said.
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Bailey disagreed, saying Southwestern Bell has no plans to introduce measured
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service for voice or data communications.
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And, he said, "I know of no plans to degrade our service to migrate customers
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>from one service to another."
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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SW Bell Tariff Called Threat to Computer Bulletin Boards November 18, 1991
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By Robert Sanford (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
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A proposal by Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. to revise a tariff for telephone
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use has brought protests from owners of personal computers who use phone lines
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to operate bulletin board services for other computer owners.
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The bulletin board operators contend that their members - by and large -
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operate bulletin boards as a hobby and not a business. And they contend that
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the change suggested by Bell is part of an effort by the phone company to make
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them pay business phone line rates rather than residential rates.
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Bulletin boards are computers with modems that can be accessed by other
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computers with modems. The "bulletin boards" contain information that can be
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passed to other computers - information of any sort, from cooking recipes to
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games to automobile tips to computer programming.
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Hobby bulletin board users have common interests, said Jim Harre, coordinator
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of a bulletin board network called Network 100. "You could say that bulletin
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board users are somewhat similar to amateur radio operators. They are people
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using computers to communicate. They serve a function like a bulletin board at
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a supermarket. They pass on information.
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The operators see the Bell proposal as a threat to all bulletin boards.
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Increased costs would simply force some hobby boards out of existence."
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A list of several networks in the St. Louis area shows there are about 250
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bulletin boards in the area, said Bob Schmedake, a system operator, or "sysop",
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as they call themselves. It is estimated that there may be that many in the
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Kansas City area. So there are several hundred across the state. There are
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16,000 bulletin boards listed worldwide.
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Although the tariff proposal has brought the issue of residential vs. business
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rates to the forefront in discussions among Missouri sysops, the proposal does
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not suggest any sort of residential rate change. The proposal suggests that
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some users of a different sort of service called Information Terminal Service
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should be allowed to change to flat business rate.
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Generally, the ITS rate is $43.65, the flat business rate is $33.55 and the
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residential rate is $11.35.
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A definition in the phone company's existing tariffs says in part that a line
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used "more as a business than of a residence nature" should be billed at a
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business rate, said William Bailey, Southwestern Bell's district manager for
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rate administration in Missouri.
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A "business nature" could be said to be present if the line is advertised in
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any way, he said.
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But the nature of the growth of bulletin boards has been that computer owners
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added modems to personal computers in the home and began communicating with
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others by computer, using residential line, the sysops say. Most always have
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thought of bulletin boards as a hobby, they say. Though there may be some
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charges for access to bulletin boards, nobody makes any money at it, they said.
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Bailey said that the phone company does not know how many sysops there are
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using residential lines and the company has no formal plan to try to determine
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how lines are being used.
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Bailey attended a meeting in Kansas City that also was attended by John Van
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Eschen, assistant manager for telecommunications for the Missouri Public
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Service Commission, and about 150 sysops.
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The meeting was described later as being "testy" at times and the outcome was
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that the sysops and the phone company agreed to disagree. Users contended that
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bulletin boards are a public service offering information and that rate
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increases could force some to shut down.
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"The users want to be billed as residential", Van Eschen said. "An avenue
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toward getting that would be to file a formal complaint against Bell. That
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could lead to written testimony and a hearing."
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He said there is a complaint on file now charging that Bell wanted to change
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user's rate from residential to business and there was talk at the meeting
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about some sort of legal action.
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Van Eschen said the PSC is continuing to study the question and has made no
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recommendation. The effective date for application of a ruling would be
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December. 15.
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Some sysops, Harre among them, suggest that the phone company might be
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interested in reducing the number of bulletin boards because the company has
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plans to enter the information services business itself and may see bulletin
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boards as potential competitors. The Supreme Court recently upheld a ruling
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that allowed the Baby Bell companies to enter information services.
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Bailey said he was not aware of what the company plans to do in the information
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services business.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Phone Companies Eyeing Higher Rates for BBSes November 18, 1991
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By Steve Higgins (PC Week)(Page 173)
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The shoestring bulletin-board service could be a thing of the past if the major
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telephone companies have their way.
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Regional operating companies such as U.S. West Inc., Southwestern Bell Corp.
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and Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. are maneuvering to raise the cost
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of doing business for the more than 40,000 operators of dial-in bulletin boards
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in the United States, those operators say.
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The bulletin board services (BBSs), whose offerings run the gamut from
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technical support to discussions on exotic birds, could be crippled or killed
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off completely by higher installation costs and monthly line charges that, in
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some cases, would double the current rates.
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"If the telephone companies were to raise the operating costs, we would have to
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pass that on to users," said Kevin Beherens, operator of Aquilla BBS, a
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distributor of shareware in Aurora, Ill.
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While attempts to up the ante have thus far been rebuked by overwhelming
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opposition from BBS users, a proposal by Southwestern Bell that could make it
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easier for the company to crack down on BBS operators who are paying low,
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residential phone-line rates is up for review this month.
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"We have a tariff for business customers. Bulletin-board service operators
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should be paying that rate," said David Martin, a spokesman for Southwestern
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Bell in St. Louis. "We don't now have an organized program to move bulletin-
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board providers to that rate."
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The companies region covers five states in the Midwest and the southern United
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States, but the proposal would take effect only in Missouri. If approved by
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Missouri regulators, it could more than double the monthly rate for operators
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of bulletin-board systems.
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Business data-line rates average $18 to $45 per month nationally, while
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residential rates average $7 to $20 per month.
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In addition, a federal judge's ruling in October that frees the telephone
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companies to operate their own bulletin-board services could make price hikes
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even more tempting. Because of the federal ruling, analysts say, the phone
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companies' interest in raising costs for BBS operators extends beyond
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extracting more revenue.
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"The phone companies want to put up electronic Yellow Pages...[which] in itself
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[is] not a bad thing," said Jack Rickard, editor of Boardwatch, a monthly
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magazine for BBS users that is published in Lakewood, Colorado. "But the
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mentality seems to be to stop anything else."
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COMPETITORS ABOUND
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Should they unveil their own on-line services, the phone companies will find a
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prodigious installed base with which to compete. In addition to the garage BBS
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operations, nearly 40 of the top 100 PC software companies are exploiting the
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low expense and wide reach of bulletin boards to provide customer support,
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according to Soft*letter, an industry newsletter based in Watertown,
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Massachusetts.
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"We are just now starting to see business use bulletin-board services," said
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Jim Harrer, president and CEO of Mustang Software Inc., a vendor of
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communications software and a bulletin-board service operator located in
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Bakersfield, Calif. "It would cripple them if [tariffs] got in the way."
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If that becomes the case, observers say, some system operators might try to
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dodge the new tariff by disguising their operations as personal telephone
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lines. In fact, some operators are reportedly trying that tactic already.
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"I've heard of one guy who was who was trying to convince the phone company
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that he has five kids" who needed separate phone lines, Mustang Software's
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Harrer said.
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Increased costs could also affect the large bulletin-board operators, such as
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Prodigy Services Co. and CompuServe Inc., particularly if coupled with the
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emergence of bulletin boards maintained by telephone companies.
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"It is not going to push them out of business," said Boardwatch's Rickard, "but
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[Prodigy and CompuServe] are also affected."
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Southwestern Bell's Scorched Earth Policy For Bulletin Boards December 1991
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Taken from BOARDWATCH Magazine
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Throughout the debate on whether to allow the Regional Bell Operating Companies
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(RBOC) into the information business, opponents warned that the RBOC would use
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their monopoly position to unfairly eliminate competition. And throughout this
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debate, the RBOC piously denied they would ever do anything anti-competitive.
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Judge Greene warned in clear and ringing terms that their history indicated
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they would and denied them repeatedly the freedom to compete in information
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services over the course of the seven years since divestiture.
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Using millions in rate-payers funds, the RBOC lobbied and appealed through
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every venue in government and finally found an appeals court who directed Judge
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Greene to reconsider his stand.
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Forced to lift the ban on information content, Greene issued a stay on his
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ruling pending appeals by the opposition. In an October 7 decision by the
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appeals court, even the stay was overturned freeing the bells over night to
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operate their own online services.
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The ink had not completely dried on the document when they levied their opening
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shot. Southwestern Bell Telephone, with a history of BBS harassment going back
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to the mid-80s already under their belt, was the first out of the gate. In
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October, they filed a tariff revision asking that ALL electronic bulletin
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boards, whether operated for profit or as a hobby, be classified as Information
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Terminal Services and not only forced to pay higher business rates, but
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specifically prevented from using existing business measured service tariffs to
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reduce their telephone bills. The tariff was filed October 7, 1991 as a
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proposed revision to Missouri Local Exchange Tariff, P.S.C. Mo. No. 24 and
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P.S.C. Mo. No. 35, General Exchange Tariff, Section 17, Rules and Regulations
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Applying to all Customer's Contracts.
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Currently, the basic line charge for businesses in the Kansas City area is
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$33.55 monthly--about twice the residential rate. And the Information Terminal
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Rate is actually higher yet at $43.60 monthly. While the tariff modification
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is specifically aimed at BBS operators, the wording of the tariff would seem to
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include anyone who uses a modem or fax machine on a telephone line.
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Southwestern Bell has a history of animosity with regards to bulletin board
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operations. The company announced their own SOURCELINE gateway data service in
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Houston in 1988 and delivered letters to hundreds of Houston bulletin boards in
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October of that year demanding they pay business rates for their residential
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telephone lines. A group of local system operators operating under the banner
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of COSUARD took their case to the Texas Public Utilities Commission, charging
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predatory practices, anti-competitive actions, and discrimination against the
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hobby BBS community.
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Southwestern Bell, concurrent with the grandiose failure of their own
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SOURCELINE gateway service, settled with the group in January 1991. All BBS in
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the Houston area operating on three or fewer lines and not seeking subscriber
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support are classified as hobby BBS and continue to qualify for residential
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telephone service.
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Hobby bulletin boards are really the issue. Most commercial or subscription
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bulletin board systems already pay business telephone rates for their systems.
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However, most opt for a type of business classification referred to as "totally
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measured service." Virtually all RBOC offer a reduced basic rate in exchange
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for the right to meter local calls -- usually at two or three cents per minute.
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Since most bulletin boards make few outbound calls -- most of the activity is
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incoming--the totally measured service, even in a business classification, is
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only a few dollars more than residential telephone service. SWB in their
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filing, if approved, would effectively double the telephone charges for any BBS
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in the state of Missouri overnight.
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Kansas City system operators have banded together to form a non-profit
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organization titled the Greater Kansas City Sysops Association (GKCSA) to fight
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the proposed change. At a November 14th public hearing in Kansas City, nearly
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150 operators and callers showed up to protest the action and the MPSC agreed
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to delay implementation of the new rate until December 15th. SWB had
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originally sought to apply the rates effective November 15.
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According to GKCSA attorney Robin Martinez, the group will be filing a legal
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petition asking the MPSC to rule that all hobby BBS operating on residential
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premises be allowed the lower residential rate classification. The GKCSA
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contends in its petition that Southwestern Bell Telephone is acting in a
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predatory and anti-competitive manner in seeking to eliminate any perceived
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competition to their own planned information services in Missouri.
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GKCSA president Scott Lent predicts that if Southwestern Bell gets their way,
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it will be the end of the free hobby BBS in the state -- which is just what the
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telephone company wants. And he predicts that if SWB wins in Missouri, the
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other RBOC won't be far behind with tariffs of their own to eliminate the
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competition of underpriced information services represented by the free BBSs.
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William Bailey, company district manager of rate administration for Missouri,
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makes no apologies for the company's approach. At the Kansas City meeting he
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admitted that the charge will have no significant impact on company revenues,
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but denied that it was in any way connected to their entry into information
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services and avowed that he wasn't informed what the company's plans were in
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information services. He claimed their only goal was "fairness" in that modem
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users tied up the system longer than voice callers and should pay more. He
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could not comment on the coincidence of SWB filing for the tariff within a week
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of the appeals court decision.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Computer Phone-Fee Plan Angers Many December 8, 1991
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By Christine Bertelson (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
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"Costs May Triple For Electronic Bulletin Boards"
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For Barbara Clements, the electronic bulletin board she operates on her home
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computer in south St. Louis County is far more than a hobby. It is her only
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window on the world.
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Clements, 43, has severe cerebral palsy, which prevents her from walking or
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using her hands. Her garbled speech is difficult for many people to understand
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in public and impossible to comprehend on the telephone, she says.
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But by sitting at the keyboard and using a head wand, Clements is able to use
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her modem and computer to communicate with a growing network of other computer
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hobbyists.
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The computer network has given her a freedom and social life she is loath to
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lose.
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"Six years ago, before I got my modem, I was a total hermit," Clements said in
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an interview at her home.
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"My privately run bulletin board system is strictly social for my sanity. I am
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an equal human being on any bulletin board system because people cannot see my
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disability and they cannot hear my garbled speech. This makes it easier to
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make friends."
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Clements is one of hundreds of computer hobbyists statewide who would be
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affected by a proposal by Southwestern Bell Corp. to charge bulletin board
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operators business rates instead of residential rates for telephone hookups to
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their terminals.
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The proposal would affect not only disabled people such as Clements who see the
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network as a lifeline to the outside world.
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The bulletin boards have become increasingly popular with computer hobbyists in
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the general population as well - as a way to exchanging information about
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computers and various other interests.
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Those involved from teen-age "computer hackers" to adults trading recipes to
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singles looking for dates.
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Hundreds of electronic bulletin boards have been added to the network across
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Missouri the past few years. In the St. Louis area, more than 200 are in
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place. Only operators of the boards would be affected by the proposed rate
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boost; hundreds of others who phone into them would not be covered.
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The company announced the plan several weeks ago. The issue is expected to
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soon be before the Missouri Public Service Commission, which regulates utility
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rates in the state.
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The telephone company says it is only trying to price its services fairly,
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noting that computer chitchat often lasts longer than telephone calls. Tying
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up telephone lines increases Bell's operating costs, a spokesman said.
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Robin Martinez, a lawyer from Kansas City representing computer hobbyists
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there, said he plans to file a complaint this week, calling for a public
|
|
hearing on the issue.
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William Bailey, Southwestern Bell's district manager of rate administration for
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Missouri, said the company considers electronic bulletin boards operated by
|
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people such as Clements as businesses.
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"If a customer acts as a business, by advertising and other things, we could
|
|
charge a business rate," Bailey said. "We charge business rates to clubs and
|
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fraternities. One reason we price businesses higher is to keep residential
|
|
rates lower."
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Electronic bulletin boards, frequently operated from homes, function as a
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meeting place, their operators say.
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Many are free to use, and operators often get no income from them.
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|
Each has its on name, reflecting the personality of its "sysop" or system
|
|
operators. Clements dubbed hers, appropriately, "Barb's Outlook Window."
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|
One of Clements' electronic acquaintances is John Brawley Jr. of Eureka, known
|
|
by his computer handle "The Wanderer."
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The two met three months ago on her bulletin board and now regularly talk by
|
|
computer about subjects from the weather to Clement's cerebral palsy to
|
|
Brawley's ideas on the impact of quantum mechanics on religious concepts.
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|
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|
Brawley is concerned that Bell's proposal would effectively gag Clements. But,
|
|
he said, there is a broader issue involved also. Charging the higher rates
|
|
would restrict the free flow of information, he said.
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|
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Bailey said the principle at stake is not freedom of speech, but merely the
|
|
definition of what is a business and what is not.
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|
The U.S. Supreme Court recently cleared the way for regional telephone
|
|
companies, including Southwestern Bell, to provide information services that
|
|
could eventually compete with electronic bulletin boards, newspapers and data
|
|
base operators.
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|
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|
Revenue for telephone-delivered information in the nation was estimated at $750
|
|
million last year and projected at $2 billion next year, industry sources said.
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|
Martinez, the lawyer for the Kansas City bulletin users, estimated that
|
|
Southwestern Bell could take in $8 million more a year by charging the business
|
|
rates in question. Bailey would not confirm that figure.
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|
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|
Once computer hobbyists file a formal complaint with the state commission, Bell
|
|
would have 30 days to respond. If the issue is not resolved privately, the
|
|
commission may hold a public hearing, said agency spokesman Kevin Kelly.
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|
|
|
In the meantime, Clements said she has written to the company and is eager to
|
|
testify at a hearing.
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Agreement Nears For Phone Company And Missouri BBS Sysops February 14, 1992
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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|
Taken from Newsbytes
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|
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|
The report from Kansas City is that Southwestern Bell phone company is nearing
|
|
an agreement with local operators of computer bulletin board systems in dispute
|
|
over the company's charging BBSes business rates. The pact seems to center on
|
|
language in a new tariff plan.
|
|
|
|
Communications Daily newsletter this week quoted attorney Robin Martinez,
|
|
representing the sysops, as saying the proposed agreement calls for BBSes to be
|
|
exempt from business rates if they meet certain conditions.
|
|
|
|
One of the conditions is that the boards must be located in residences.
|
|
Exempted BBSes also must not charge for access, must not advertise and must
|
|
have fewer than five phone lines.
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|
|
|
Martinez says the last stumbling block in the agreement is coming up with a
|
|
workable definition for "BBS" for the tariff language.
|
|
_______________________________________________________________________________
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|
|
Final Notes
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
There are still some problems to be worked out in the Missouri/Southwestern
|
|
Bell situation, but meanwhile, there are other similar problems going on
|
|
with C&P (Bell Atlantic) Telephone in Virginia and US West Telephone in
|
|
Oregon.
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|
Our electronic rights and freedoms that we have enjoyed for oh so many years
|
|
are in jeopardy because of the greed of the Regional Bell Operating Companies.
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|
Support our Congress by supporting S 2112 and HR 3515!
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More details in Phrack 38.
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