| ==Phrack Inc.== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Thirty-Eight, File 10 of 15 | |
| Standing Up To Fight The Bells | |
| by Knight Lightning | |
| kl@stormking.com | |
| Did you hear about 1-800-54-Privacy? Did you decide to call? I did and the | |
| following is the information I received a few weeks later. It outlines some of | |
| the serious ramifications of what is going to happen if we do not actively | |
| support Congressional bills S 2112 and HR 3515. | |
| The information comes from the American Newspaper Publisher's Association | |
| (ANPA). Keep in mind, they have a vested financial interest in information | |
| services as do many others, and in many ways, the newspaper industry can be and | |
| has been just as bad as the Regional Bell Operating Companies. However, in | |
| this particular situation, the ANPA has the right idea and does a pretty good | |
| job in explaining why we need to act now and act fast. | |
| You know who I am, and what I've been through. My experiences have given me a | |
| unique perspective and insight into the methods and goals of the Regional Bell | |
| Operating Companies. They are inherently deceptive and if given even the | |
| slightest chance, they will screw the consumer and engage in anti-competitive | |
| market practices. Additionally, their tactics threaten our personal privacy as | |
| well. | |
| The RBOCs must be stopped before it's too late. | |
| :Knight Lightning | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| 1-800-54-Privacy | |
| 444 N. Michigan Avenue | |
| Suite 900 | |
| Chicago, Illinois 60611 | |
| February 14, 1992 | |
| Dear Consumer: | |
| If you're like many people, you may have been hesitant about leaving your name | |
| and address on our 1-800-54-PRIVACY phone line. | |
| Why? | |
| Quite simply, no one wants to give out information about themselves without | |
| knowing exactly how that information is going to be used. | |
| But the truth is, you reveal information about yourself EACH AND EVERY TIME YOU | |
| PICK UP THE PHONE. By tracking who you call, how often you call and how long | |
| each conversation lasts, the seven regional Bell telephone companies have the | |
| capability to learn and know more about you than even the IRS. | |
| In fact, with modern computer technology, there is practically no limit to what | |
| the Bells can learn about your personal life every time you pick up the phone. | |
| And there is virtually no limit -- only one's imagination -- to the ways they | |
| can take advantage of all the information they glean. | |
| Of course its one thing to have the capability to do this snooping. It's | |
| another thing to have the incentive to actually do it. | |
| Until October 7, 1991, the incentive just didn't exist for the Bells. Prior to | |
| this date, the vast electronic networks of the Bell monopolies were just | |
| neutral carriers of phone messages, data, and other companies' fax, audiotex, | |
| and videotex services. | |
| For example, when you last called a 1-900 or 1-800 line to get the latest stock | |
| quotes, sports scores, or headlines, your local phone company served simply as | |
| the pipeline for moving the billions of electrons in your call. The company | |
| that provided you with the information over the phone line was not -- and by | |
| law, could not be -- the phone company. | |
| And that's the way things had been since 1984, when U.S. District Court Judge | |
| Harold Greene issued his now-famous decree breaking up the AT&T monopoly and | |
| spinning off control of local phone service to seven regional Bell companies. | |
| In the decree, the Court expressly prohibited the individual Bells from | |
| entering three businesses -- cable TV, telephone manufacturing, and electronic | |
| information services. | |
| Why? | |
| After presiding over the lengthy AT&T anti-trust case and being exposed to | |
| hundreds upon hundreds of monopolistic abuses by AT&T, Judge Greene's Court was | |
| firmly convinced that, if allowed to enter any of these three current areas, | |
| the Bells would undoubtedly engage in the same monopolistic behavior that | |
| characterized their former parent. | |
| In other words, while cutting off the hydra-like AT&T head, Judge Greene was | |
| fearful that, given too much leeway, AT&T's seven so-called "Baby Bell" | |
| off-spring might become equal or worse monsters themselves. | |
| >From day one, however, the Bells undertook a long-term, multi-million dollar | |
| lobbying campaign to fight Judge Greene's ruling and try to convince the | |
| Justice Department, the higher courts, and even the U.S. Congress that they | |
| should be permitted to enter the content end of the information service | |
| business. | |
| And, so, on October 7, 1991, after years of heavy lobbying, a higher court came | |
| through for the Bells and practically ordered Judge Greene to overturn his 1984 | |
| decree and open up the information services industry to the Bells. | |
| In the 71-page ruling, a very reluctant Judge Greene devoted two-thirds of his | |
| decision to explaining why allowing the Bells to sell information services was | |
| bad for consumers and bad for America. | |
| For example, he went to great length to discount the Bells' claim that, once | |
| given the green light, they would be better able to serve the public than the | |
| thousands of already existing electronic information services. To quote from | |
| his decision. | |
| "In the first place, the contention that it will take the Regional | |
| Companies (the Bells) to provide better information services to the | |
| American public can only be described as preposterous." | |
| Judge Green also wrote: | |
| "Moreover, the Court considers the claim that the Regional Companies' | |
| entry into information services would usher in an era of sophisticated | |
| information services available to all as so much hype." | |
| His decision also contains a warning regarding the prices consumers will be | |
| forced to pay for Bell-provided services: | |
| "The Regional Companies would be able to raise price by increasing their | |
| competitors' costs, and they could raise such costs by virtue of the | |
| dependence of their rivals' information services on local network access." | |
| Finally, here's what Judge Greene had to say about his court's decision and the | |
| public good: | |
| "Were the Court free to exercise its own judgment, it would conclude | |
| without hesitation that removal of the information services restriction | |
| is incompatible with the decree and the public interest." | |
| If Judge Greene's warnings as well as his profound reluctance to issue this | |
| ruling scare you, they should. | |
| That's because the newly freed Bells now have the incentive, which they never | |
| had before, to engage in the anti-competitive, anti-consumer practices that | |
| Judge Greene feared. | |
| Besides using your calling records to sell you information services they think | |
| you're predisposed to buy, the Bell's may well try to auction off your phone | |
| records to the highest bidder. | |
| As a result, anyone who ever uses a phone could well be a potential victim of | |
| the Bell's abuse. | |
| Consider the simple act of making a telephone call to an auto repair shop to | |
| schedule body work or a tune-up. By knowing that you made that call, your | |
| phone company might conclude that you're in the market for a new car and sell | |
| your name to local car dealers. | |
| Another example. Think about calling a real estate broker for information on | |
| mortgage rates. Knowing you must be in the market for a house, the Bells could | |
| sell your name to other brokers. Or they could try to sell you their own | |
| electronic mortgage rate service. | |
| Now let's say you and your spouse are having some problems and one of you calls | |
| a marriage counselor. Tipped off by information purchased from the phone | |
| company, a divorce lawyer shows up on your doorstep the next morning. | |
| Finally, think about calling your favorite weather service hotline -- a | |
| competitor to the weather service operated by your local phone company. By | |
| keeping track of people who use its competitor's service, the phone company | |
| might just try to get you to buy its weather service instead. | |
| Far-fetched? Not at all. | |
| Nefarious? You bet. | |
| That doesn't mean that, starting tomorrow, your phone company is going to start | |
| tracking who you call, how long your calls last, and who calls you. However, | |
| they could do it if they wanted to. And, based on past experience, some of | |
| them probably will do so at one point or another. | |
| That's because the protest of gaining an unfair edge over the competition -- | |
| companies that have no choice but to depend upon the Bells' wires -- is just | |
| too tantalizing a temptation for the Bells to ignore. | |
| As you might expect, the Bells claim that these fears are totally unfounded and | |
| that strict regulations are in place to prevent them from abusing your | |
| telephone privacy. | |
| However, there simply aren't enough regulators in the world to control the | |
| monopolistic tendencies and practices of the Bells. Every single one of the | |
| seven Bells has already abused its position as a regulated monopoly. There is | |
| no reason to believe they won't in the future. | |
| For example, the Georgia Public Service Commission recently found that | |
| BellSouth had abused its monopoly position in promoting its MemoryCall voice | |
| mail system. Apparently, operators would try to sell MemoryCall when customers | |
| called to arrange for hook-up to competitors' voice-mail services. Likewise, | |
| while on service calls, BellSouth repair personnel would try to sell MemoryCall | |
| to people using competitors' systems. BellSouth even used competitors' orders | |
| for network features as sales leads to steal customers. | |
| In February 1991, US West admitted it had violated the law by providing | |
| prohibited information services, by designing and selling telecommunications | |
| equipment and by discriminating against a competitor. The Justice Department | |
| imposed a $10 million fine -- 10 times larger than the largest fine imposed in | |
| any previous anti-trust division contempt case. | |
| In February 1990, the Federal Communications Commission found that one of | |
| Nynex's subsidiaries systematically overcharged another Nynex company $118 | |
| million for goods and services and passed that extra cost on to ratepayers. | |
| The abuses go on and on. | |
| In this brave new world, however, it's just not consumers who will suffer. | |
| Besides invading your privacy, the Bells could abuse their position as | |
| monopolies to destroy the wide range of useful information services already | |
| available. | |
| Right now, there are some 12,000 information services providing valuable news, | |
| information, and entertainment to millions of consumers. Every one of these | |
| services depends on lines owned and controlled by Bell monopolies. | |
| This makes fair competition with the Bells impossible. | |
| It would be like saying that Domino's Pizzas could only be delivered by Pizza | |
| Hut. | |
| It would be like asking a rival to deliver a love note to your sweetheart. | |
| It would be a disaster. | |
| If the Bells aren't stopped, they will make it difficult -- if not impossible | |
| -- for competitors to use Bell wires to enter your home. | |
| They could deny competitors the latest technological advances and delay the | |
| introduction of new features. They could even undercut competitor's prices by | |
| inflating local phone bills to finance the cost of their own new information | |
| services. | |
| In the end, the Bells could drive other information services out of business, | |
| thereby dictating every bit of information you receive and depriving the | |
| American public out of the diversity of information sources it deserves and | |
| that our form of government demands. | |
| Can something be done to stop the Bells? | |
| Yes, absolutely. | |
| You can take several immediate steps to register your views on this issue. | |
| Those steps are described in the attached "Action Guidelines" sheet. Please | |
| act right away. | |
| In the meantime, on behalf of our growing coalition of consumer groups, | |
| information services providers, and newspapers, thank you for your interest in | |
| this important issue. | |
| Sincerely, | |
| Cathleen Black | |
| President and Chief Executive Officer | |
| American Newspaper Publishers Association | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| ACTION GUIDELINES | |
| Something is very wrong when a monopoly is put into the position where it can | |
| abuse your privacy, drive competitors from the market, and even force you, the | |
| captive telephone ratepayer, to subsidize the costs of new information services | |
| ventures. | |
| Can something be done to stop this potential abuse? | |
| Absolutely. | |
| WHAT YOU CAN DO. The first step is to call or write your local telephone | |
| company to assert your right to privacy. | |
| The second step is to write your U.S. Representative and U.S. Senators and urge | |
| them to support House bill 3515 and Senate bill 2112. | |
| Since the purpose of both HR 3515 and S 2112 is to prevent the Bells from | |
| abusing their monopoly position, not to prevent legitimate competition, the | |
| Bells would be free to sell information services in any area of the country | |
| where they do not have a monopoly -- in other words, 6/7 of the country. | |
| However, the bills would delay entry of the Bell companies into the information | |
| services industry in their own regions until they no longer held a monopoly | |
| over local phone service. As soon as consumers were offered a real choice in | |
| local phone service -- whether it be cellular phones, satellite communications, | |
| or other new technology -- the Bells would be free to offer any information | |
| services they wanted. | |
| Both bills are fair to everyone. They protect consumer privacy and ensure that | |
| the thriving information services industry will remain competitive. | |
| Quick action is need to pass these bills. A hand-written letter stating your | |
| views is the most effective way of reaching elected officials. It is proof | |
| positive that you are deeply concerned about the issue. | |
| POINTS TO MAKE IN YOUR LETTER | |
| You may wish to use some or all of the following points: | |
| A phone call should be a personal and private thing -- not a sales | |
| marketing tool for the phone company. | |
| The Bells should not be allowed to take unfair advantage of information | |
| they can obtain about you by virtue of owning and controlling the wires | |
| that come into homes. | |
| The Bells must not be allowed to abuse their position as monopolies to | |
| drive existing information services out of business. | |
| The Bells should not be permitted to engage in activities that would | |
| deprive Americans of the information diversity they deserve and that our | |
| form of government demands. | |
| The Bells should not be permitted to finance information services ventures | |
| by inflating the phone bills of captive telephone ratepayers. | |
| AFTER YOU'VE WRITTEN YOUR LETTER | |
| After you've written your letter or made your phone call, please send us a | |
| letter and tell us. By sending us your name and address, you'll receive | |
| occasional updates on the massive effort underway to prevent the Bells from | |
| invading your privacy and turning into the monopolistic monsters that Judge | |
| Greene warned about. | |
| There's one more thing you can do. Please ask your friends, relatives, | |
| neighbors, and co-workers to urge their U.S. Representatives and Senators to | |
| support HR 3515 and S 2112. We need everyone's help if we're going to stop the | |
| Bells. | |
| 1-800-54-PRIVACY | |
| 444 N. Michigan Avenue | |
| Suite #900 | |
| Chicago, Illinois 60611 | |
| * * * * * * ** * * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * | |
| Support HR 3515 and S 2112 | |
| by Toby Nixon | |
| tnixon@hayes.com | |
| February 7, 1992 | |
| DISCLAIMER: The following is my personal position on this matter, and not | |
| necessarily that of my employer. | |
| I am appalled at the RBOC's disinformation regarding HR 3515/S 2112, which | |
| propose to limit RBOC entry into information services until fair competition is | |
| possible. Every time one of the RBOC ads has played on the TV or radio, | |
| appeared in the newspaper, and now in the information they mailed to me, I | |
| can't help but stand up out of my chair and scream because of the contemptible | |
| lies. | |
| Clearly, all of the services they claim are being held back are, or could be, | |
| available TODAY. We are IN the Information Age; where have they been? It's | |
| HERE, not "just over the horizon." We don't need the RBOCs to provide these | |
| services; all the RBOCs need to do is continue to provide the transmission | |
| services, which they do today. Unfortunately, the majority of the citizens of | |
| the USA don't know that these services are already available WITHOUT RBOC HELP | |
| -- and the RBOCs are taking advantage of this lack of knowledge to try to gain | |
| popular support for their positions. | |
| What would happen if the RBOCs were to enter these markets? It is clear to me, | |
| based on their past performance in similar situations (such as voicemail) that | |
| they would leverage their monopoly on local telephone service to force | |
| competitors out of the market. They will use their guaranteed return on | |
| investment income from their monopoly on POTS to subsidize their information | |
| services (even providing co-location with central office switches is a | |
| subsidy), thereby indeed providing the "affordability" they talk about -- until | |
| the competition is driven out of the marketplace. Then the RBOCs will be free | |
| to raise the rates as high as they wish! With their monopoly on access, they | |
| could easily sabotage access to competitive services and make the RBOC services | |
| look better (just being co-located will provide better circuit quality and | |
| response times). While all of the competition would have to pay exorbitant | |
| rates for ONA services (to obtain ANI information, billing to phone accounts, | |
| etc.), the phone company has this free. Free competition? Hardly! | |
| Many of you know that I am a Libertarian, and strongly oppose government | |
| regulation of business. The logical position for a Libertarian might appear to | |
| be to support the RBOC's fight against further regulation. But the fact is | |
| that they've enjoyed this GOVERNMENT-IMPOSED monopoly for decades; in too many | |
| ways, the RBOCs function as though they were an arm of the government. They | |
| have effectively no competition for local access. Every competitive service | |
| MUST use the RBOCs' facilities to reach their customers. This places the RBOCs | |
| in the position of being able to effectively control their competition -- | |
| meaning there would be no effective competition at all. | |
| Despite their protestations that the proposed legislation would limit "consumer | |
| choice" and "competition", the reality is that provision of such services by | |
| RBOCs, so long as they remain the sole provider of local telephone service in | |
| most of the country, would be anti-choice and anti-competitive, plain and | |
| simple. It would be ABSOLUTELY UNFAIR for the government to turn them loose to | |
| use their monopoly-guaranteed income to try to put independent information | |
| services (even BBSes) out of business, when it is the government that has | |
| permitted (required!) them to get the monopoly in the first place. | |
| It absolutely disgusts me that in their printed materials the RBOCs go so far | |
| as to forment class warfare. They talk about "the spectre of 'information | |
| rich' versus 'information poor'". They say that minorities, the aged, and the | |
| disabled support their position, to raise liberal guilt and stir up class envy | |
| (but without disclosing what have certainly been massive contributions to these | |
| groups in return for their support). They further stir up class envy by making | |
| the point that Prodigy and CompuServe customers are "... highly educated | |
| professionals with above average incomes, owning homes valued above national | |
| norms ... the world's most affluent, professional, and acquisitive people," as | |
| though this were somehow evil! They attack, without stating any evidence, the | |
| alleged "reality" that the only reason this legislation is proposed is to prop | |
| up newspaper advertising revenues (the whole attitude of "evil profits" is so | |
| hypocritical coming from those for whom profits are guaranteed, and whom never | |
| mention the fact that they're not entering information services out of altruism | |
| but only because they seek to expand their own profits!). They invoke | |
| jingoistic fervor by talking about services "already being enjoyed by citizens | |
| of other countries" (but at what incredible cost?). | |
| The materials are packed with this politically-charged rhetoric, but completely | |
| lacking in facts or reasonable explanation of the basis for the positions of | |
| either side. Their letter isn't written for a politically and technologically | |
| aware audience, but for those who are attuned to the anti-capitalistic culture | |
| of envy and redistribution. It isn't written for those trying to make an | |
| informed decision on the issues, but is intended simply to rally the ignorant | |
| into flooding Congressional offices with demands for services that most of the | |
| writers wouldn't know the first thing to do with, and which the writers don't | |
| realize are available without the RBOCs. | |
| They talk about some supposed "right" of individuals to participate in "the | |
| Information Age", regardless of, among other things, INCOME. Does all of this | |
| appeal to the plight of the poor and disadvantaged mean that these services | |
| will be available regardless of ability to pay? Hardly! WE, the taxpayers, | |
| WE, the RBOC customers, without any choice of who provides our local phone | |
| service, will pay -- through the nose -- either in the form of cross- | |
| subsidization of "lifeline" (!) information services by those of us paying | |
| "full" residential rates or business rates, or by tax-funded government | |
| subsidies or credits going directly to the RBOCs. Does anybody really think | |
| that the RBOCs will cover the cost of providing these services to the | |
| "information poor" out of their profits? What a ridiculous idea! | |
| The fact that the RBOC position is supported by groups like the NAACP and the | |
| National Council on Aging -- representing the most politically-favored, most | |
| tax-subsidized groups in America -- make it clear that they fully intend for | |
| the cost of such services to be born by the middle class and small business- | |
| people of America. Once again, the productive segments of society get screwed. | |
| Once again, private businesses which have fought to build themselves WITHOUT | |
| any government-granted monopoly will be forced out, to be replaced with | |
| politically-favored and politically-controllable socialized services. Once | |
| again, America edges closer to the fascist system which has been so soundly | |
| rejected elsewhere. When will we ever learn? | |
| We SHOULD all write to our Congressmen and Senators. We should demand that | |
| they pass HR 3515 and S 2112, and keep them in force unless and until the RBOCs | |
| give up their local telephone monopolies and allow truly free competition -- | |
| which means long after the monopolies are broken up, until the lingering | |
| advantages of the monopoly are dissipated. Of course, the RBOCs could spin off | |
| entirely independent companies to provide information services -- with no | |
| common management and no favored treatment in data transmission over the other | |
| independent information services -- and I would cheer. But so long as they | |
| have a chokehold on the primary _delivery vehicle_ for information services in | |
| America, their protestations for "free competition" ring incredibly hollow. | |
| Toby Nixon | Voice +1-404-840-9200 Telex 151243420 | |
| 2595 Waterford Park Drive | Fax +1-404-447-0178 CIS 70271,404 | |
| Lawrenceville, Georgia 30244 | BBS +1-404-446-6336 AT&T !tnixon | |
| USA | Internet tnixon@hayes.com | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| RHC Tactics Blamed For Failure Of Information Services Bill April 1, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Taken from Communications Daily (Page 4) | |
| Rep. Cooper (D-Tenn.) said that his legislation to put conditions on RHC | |
| provision of information services (HR-3515) didn't have much chance of success | |
| >from time bill was introduced. At panel discussion in Washington sponsored by | |
| National Press Forum, he said outlook for bill was "pretty grim," and that only | |
| hope for success would be if powerful committee chairman came to rescue. That's | |
| unlikely, he said. | |
| Cooper said he has about 48 co-sponsors for bill and Senate version (S-2112) | |
| has none. In strong attack on RHCs, he said RHCs were responsible for lack of | |
| support and said members of Congress were intimidated by ad campaign against | |
| sponsors and co-sponsors of HR-3515 -- what he termed "a $150,000 penalty" for | |
| sponsoring legislation. Cooper also criticized RHCs for sponsoring | |
| organizations without letting the public know of their interest, naming | |
| specifically Small Business for Advertising Choice, with headquarters in | |
| Washington. He said he didn't mind legitimate "grass-roots" campaigns, but | |
| objected to "Astroturf campaigns." | |
| Disputes with RHCs broke into the open dramatically during Cooper's intense | |
| exchange with Southwestern Bell Vice-President Horace Wilkins, head of RHC's | |
| Washington office. Cooper said that if RHCs were truly interested in providing | |
| information services, they would push for sponsorship of amendment to cable | |
| reregulation legislation to allow telco entry. But Bells were "AWOL" on issue, | |
| Cooper said, even though there are members of House Telecom Subcommittee who | |
| would introduce such amendment if RHCs asked. Wilkins said one House chairman, | |
| whom he declined to name, had told RHCs not to participate by pushing telco | |
| entry amendment. Cooper responded: "Who told you?" He told Wilkins: "You | |
| have the opportunity of a lifetime." | |
| Wilkins challenged Cooper: "Why don't you take the lead" and introduce | |
| amendment? Cooper replied he would do so if SWB would promise its support. | |
| Wilkins responded: "If it's the right thing, we'll be with you." Cooper | |
| replied that RHCs reportedly had been told not to push for such amendment, and | |
| neither he nor Wilkins would say which powerful House figure was against telco | |
| entry. Without RHC backing, any introduction of telco entry amendment "would | |
| have zero support," Cooper said. He said RHCs have backed away from active | |
| support of legislation to lift the MFJ manufacturing bar because they're afraid | |
| his measure might be attached to it. Wilkins disagreed, saying RHCs were | |
| backing the bill. | |
| Mark MacCarthy, Cap/ABC vice-president, said the strongest argument against RHC | |
| entry into information services is that there's no evidence that "new and | |
| better information" would be provided to public. RHCs could provide more | |
| efficient network architectures and distribution, he said, but "not better | |
| programming." There's a historical example of "dark side of diversity" in | |
| which radio programmers once supported live symphony orchestras and provided | |
| quality content, MacCarthy said, but now, in an era in which there are many | |
| competitors, most stations obtain most of their programming free, on tape from | |
| record companies. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |