Caron Carlson

Federal Security Takes Home D+ Report Card

U.S. lawmakers are contemplating new enforcement tools and financial incentives to spur better security practices after a report card on federal information security showed government CIOs managed a barely passing D+ average. The rating for 2004, released earlier this month, is a half-grade up from the previous years D. The notoriously low performance has called […]

Telecom Mergers Impact Price

Efforts to slow falling prices are behind the rash of recent telecommunications mergers, and the fallout will likely have business customers—large and small—digging deeper for services offered by a smaller pool of providers. Verizon Communications Inc.s $5.3 billion bid for MCI Inc. last week, if approved by regulators, would knock the second-largest competitive carrier out […]

Antiquated Tax Law Gets Second Look

For years, telecommunications companies have been pressuring Congress to do away with the federal excise tax on telephone services, a levy imposed in 1898 to help finance the Spanish-American War. But last week, the Joint Committee on Taxation proposed that rather than getting rid of the tax, Congress should expand it to cover a broader […]

Trio Eases VOIP Management for Businesses

Despite promises of streamlined efficiency and ease of convergence, network managers are discovering that running voice calls over the data network is rarely simple. To help the growing number of businesses turning to IP telephony, vendors are adding functions to make VOIP (voice over IP) management easier, and theyre adding services for enterprises that cant […]

ShoreTel Adds Whisper Page Feature to VOIP System

To give pioneering IP telephony users more bang for their buck, and to give those still hesitating a smoother way to migrate to the convergence frontier, ShoreTel Inc. next month will add new flexibility to its calling architecture. ShoreTel5 Release2 will come with a group paging feature and a “whisper page” option that lets receptionists […]

Telecom Deals Create Buzz

When Congress came up with its plan to let long distance telephone companies sell local phone service, local phone companies sell long-distance service, and the market move toward open competition, legislators likely never envisioned what is happening today. After prompting an initial spate of new entrants, the Telecommunications Act of 1996 gave way to consolidation. […]

Exit of FCCs Powell Leaves Deregulation Future Open

His legacy may be indelibly marked by the travails of Janet Jackson and Howard Stern, but the resignation of Federal Communications Commission Chairman Michael Powell clears the way for Congress to rewrite the rules at the foundation of telecommunications. Despite his notoriety in the debate over public decency, it is in the arcane world of […]

SBC in Merger Talks with AT&T?

Rumors have surfaced that SBC Communications Inc. has begun serious, preliminary negotiations to buy AT&T Corp., a move that would further consolidate the rapidly constricting telecommunications sector. The nations largest long-distance carrier, AT&T, of Bedminster, N.J., turned its sights in recent years to the lucrative business market, as pricing pressures in the long-distance consumer market […]

FBIs Carnivore Is Toothless

The FBI has steered clear of its much-criticized e-mail eavesdropping system in favor of off-the-shelf wares when it comes to court-ordered surveillance. The agency last week admitted it made little or no use of the system, first known as Carnivore and then as DCS 1000, during 2002 and 2003, opting instead to use commercial software […]

Solutions Sought for VOIP 911

The telecommunications and IT industries are marshaling resources to improve emergency 911 calling via voice over IP, and at least one project in the works takes advantage of Wi-Fi for location identification. The collaborative effort among some of the biggest names in telecom and IT comes in response to stepped-up interest by policy-makers in ensuring […]