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[Giagnocavo]Michael::Write()

 Tuesday, February 01, 2005
Why not to use Bellster

So, Pulver launched a great new marketing campaign called Bellster. People are hyping this up as “Peer to Peer telephony”. I'm tired of P2P being abused as buzzword. The entire freaking Internet is a peer to peer system. But that's not what I really care about. People are joining up to Bellster without thinking what it means. There are two primary problems with Bellster.

1. *Most likely* your phone company has it outlawed, since you are reselling your service. In some countries, this might even be illegal, and in violation of local laws, in addition to your own contract. There is no such thing as “unlimited” calling (except perhaps, inside a certain network). If you go over what your telco thinks is acceptable for “unlimited” calling (somewhere between 1000-5000 minutes probably), you'll get charged, or cut off, or something. Other telco's might notice your calling pattern has significantly changed. If you use your phone normally, and then all of a sudden it jumps to 4 times volume and calls a wide range of numbers at a wide selection of times... software can flag that down, and you can get your line cut (it's called bypass). This will depend on each telco/country. Then again, maybe you hate the telco and want to stick it to 'em. If you get away with it... good for you.

2. It's all fun and games 'till someone gets hurt. (And then it's fun for one less person.) Sooner or later, someone's going to make bad phone calls via Bellster. The problem is that these phone calls come from YOUR phone line. So, when the SS investigates the latest terrorist threat, and finds it came from your line... ouch. I'd expect nothing less than a personal visit. Depending on how that goes... good luck. In the USA, I can only imagine what would happen. Sure, eventually you will probably get cleared and be OK. Meanwhile, are you willing to risk being imprisioned, questioned, perhaps having your computers confiscated, etc. etc.?

In light of those two things, who on Earth would use Bellster? My local calls are more money than what I pay to call half the world with VoIP (yes, even at my commercial, retail rates, not wholesale carrier rates). So *I'm* not going to share my line to call Canada when I can already do that for very cheap (not to mention that if I did share my line, within a month or two it'd be cut). Plus, I'm at the whim of whoever is running the service. I doubt the service level is gonna be that great.

So... potential risk... zero benefit... why would I do this? THINK people, THINK!

Misc. Technology | Security
Tuesday, February 01, 2005 1:34:00 AM UTC  #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

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