About Phone Services

September 22, 2009

RingCentral to Present at the Voice Of Network (VON) Conference and Expo in South Beach, Florida

Filed under: Uncategorized — Phone user @ 12:30 pm

One more useful article. Read carefully!

SAN MATEO, Calif.-RingCentral, a cloud computing-based business phone services provider, today announced that its VP of Business Development, Jay Blazensky, will present a conference session titled “The Sales Challenge: Marketing Hosted Services in a Recession” at this year’s VON Conference and Expo in South Beach on September 21 at 11:30 AM at Miami Beach Convention Center.

The session will address the challenges and opportunities of marketing cloud based business phone systems at a time when many businesses have limited capital investments budgets. Blazensky will discuss how hosted communications services fit business needs in the current economy, eliminating upfront capex costs, while delivering substantial opex savings.

RingCentral is at the forefront of hosted, communications services, providing cloud computing-based phone systems for small businesses. The company recently introduced RingCentral Office, the industry’s first complete, cloud computing-based business phone system with one low, flat, fixed monthly fee, no contracts and zero setup costs. RingCentral Office combines a hosted multi-extension business phone system with advanced voice and fax functionality, unlimited calling and full-featured phones that arrive pre-configured and ready for use. Small businesses can begin using the RingCentral Office phone system within minutes.

About RingCentral

RingCentral provides cloud computing based phone systems for small business. With top industry honors, including PC Magazine’s Editor’s Choice Award and Small Business Computing’s Excellence in Technology, RingCentral offers full-access to core small business phone services and helps improve productivity for tens of thousands of customers worldwide. Headquartered in San Mateo, California, RingCentral is privately held with backing from Sequoia Capital, Khosla Ventures and DAG Ventures.

About VON Conference

The VON Conference & Expo will showcase the best of the global IP communications world for service providers and large enterprises. Roundtables, keynotes, panels and Q&A sessions go beyond the pitch to examine the financial, operational, marketing and technological strategies, best practices and solutions for introducing innovative applications and products that resonate with users. With its unique community, and its focus on service providers, VON is the single most trusted source of knowledge and business connections for the advanced IP communications and network convergence industries.

September 16, 2009

KCC students want out of ‘Dead Zone’

Filed under: Uncategorized — Phone user @ 11:05 am

And what do you think of this? Do you agree with the article below? Or you think different? Leave your comments.

ROSCOMMON — Kirtland Community College student Jonathan Webb said he has been in a couple of situations where he has been on campus and needed to call home for a ride.

However, because of limited cell phone access, Webb said he was unable to do so. He believes that an increased ability to send text messages and call family members from campus would be beneficial.

“I’ve never had really good service out here,” said Webb, 20, of Grayling. “I think it would be a good idea.”

That situation may be changing in the months ahead. According to Dennis Mansfield, Kirtland’s director of public relations, the college has leased property to Global Tower Access of Boca Raton, Fla., who has constructed a tower on the property. The college is currently putting some infrastructure in place at the tower, he said.

Mansfield also said the cell tower company has an agreement with CenturyTel to provide cell phone service on the KCC campus, and expects other carriers to follow suit in the future.

“It kind of works out well for everyone,” Mansfield said. “Students now have coverage out here. This will provide coverage for about an eight-mile radius. At least it’s a start. We expect other carriers to rent space.”

He said the term of the lease is for 120 months, and began in March of this year, with Global Tower Access having the option to extend the lease for four successive periods of 60 months (five years) each. The college will receive $1,000 per month with a three percent annual increase, Mansfield said.

Mansfield said the college should have service sometime in September, and also said the college hopes to have some sort of community event this fall in honor of the tower being constructed.

Like Webb, a couple other KCC students believe improved cell phone coverage at the campus would be a good idea, as long as the phones are used wisely.

“It’s definitely a good idea,’ said Josh Robbins, 20, of West Branch. “I think they can be distracting. Some students have used them in class. If it’s used for the right purpose, it’s a great idea.”

KCC student Francesca Infante, 18, of Lovells, currently has AT&T as her cell phone provider, and said she does not get good coverage on campus.

“It really doesn’t affect me that much, because I’m in class,” she said. However, Infante said if she were in an emergency situation, then the lack of coverage would be a problem.

Nine months ago, the KCC Board of Trustees authorized school administrators to look into the possibility of improving its cell phone services. According to a Nov. 25, 2008 KCC press release, the KCC Board of Trustees, at its Nov. 20 meeting, voted to allow Tim Scherer, Kirtland’s director of institutional services, to begin looking into potential lease agreements with cell phone providers.

September 8, 2009

Kokang clashes hit internet and phone services

Filed under: Uncategorized — Phone user @ 12:21 pm

Hey! Was just surfing the Internet and have found this! Waht do you think of the text written below? Waiting for your comments.

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) – Telephone and internet connections were cut off in Kokang during gun battles between the Kokang Army and government troops, said residents and observers. Kokang clashes hit internet and phone services.

“Most internet connections for people in Northern Shan State Special Region (1) are from China. The telephone lines are also from China but some telephones in Ching Shwe Haw are from Burmese service providers. On August 24, internet and telephone connections were cut off,” a military observer on the China border Aung Kyaw Zaw said.

The internet connection is yet to be restored but some of the telephone connections have been restored now, according to residents.

Ethnic Kokang are generally Han Chinese and traditionally closer to China. The educated Kokang usually study in China and have their own websites. Coincidentally these websites became inaccessible as soon as clashes broke out.

Web censoring is rampant in China though surfers do not need to rely on the slow speed Burmese internet service.

A junta announcement said 31 soldiers of the Burmese Army and 11 from among Kokang troops were killed in the gun battles between Kokang and junta troops, which broke out on August 27. According to the Kokang, about 200 people including many civilians were killed.

The junta’s mouthpiece the ‘New Light of Myanmar’ reported that over 30,000 Kokang civilians fled to neighbouring China. Now about half of them have returned to their homes.

September 2, 2009

Calling out fraud: Consumers discover they’re paying for hidden third-party charges

Filed under: Uncategorized — Phone user @ 11:36 am

Hey! Found a very interesting article about fraud again. What can I do if there is so many fraud arround? So, read it for being ready and enjoy!

Sep 02, 2009 (The Hutchinson News – McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) — Sarah Otto became suspicious last month when she noticed a $15 spike in her local phone bill.

So, the 26-year-old Hutchinson resident called AT&T to inquire why she was being charged an extra $15 for “Enhanced Services” — and to find out what exactly those services were.

AT&T directed Otto to call the 800 number listed under “Enhanced Services” on her telephone bill. As it turned out, Enhanced Services was short for Enhanced Services Billing Inc., or ESBI, a San Antonio-based company that bills consumers for third-party vendors.

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In Otto’s case, ESBI began billing her on behalf of the company Residential Email.

After a series of frustrating calls to automated voice-messaging systems for both companies, Otto said, she finally reached a Residential Email representative.
“The lady I spoke to was somewhat rude and said the company sells e-mail accounts,” Otto said. “She said I got on the Internet, clicked on an ad, verified my maiden name, my mother’s maiden name and inputted all of this info into their system.

“They said I confirmed my information in an e-mail and they called and confirmed it with me, too. When I told them I was not authorized to make changes on the account, because it’s in my husband’s name, the lady said, ‘Oh, that’s right. It was your husband.’ ” Otto says none of that happened, though. Neither she nor her husband, Adam, signed up for Residential Email or confirmed the service in e-mail or on the phone.

And although the company has now offered them a refund, Otto believes she was a victim of “cramming,” in which a company illegally adds unauthorized charges for various services to a consumer’s local telephone bill.

Otto has since filed a complaint against ESBI and Residential Email with the Kansas Attorney General’s Office, as well as the Federal Trade Commission.

She also contacted AT&T for help.

“AT&T told me to get a confirmation number on the refund or (the company) might not do it,” Otto said. “I had to ask six times to get a confirmation number from that lady.

“They knew full well this is going on, and the woman at AT&T said this happens a lot and (third-party companies) count on people not checking their bill.” Marisa Giller, an AT&T spokeswoman based in St. Louis, acknowledged Enhanced Services, or ESBI, is one of AT&T’s largest third-party billers, but she said reports of cramming were not common.

Third-party vendors adhere to strict guidelines from AT&T, Giller said, with less than 1 percent of AT&T customers’ bills bringing cramming complaints. She did not know how many cramming complaints had been lodged in the Hutchinson area or in Kansas.

The Kansas Attorney General’s Office received 117 complaints about phone bill cramming in fiscal year 2009, according to Ashley Anstaett, an attorney general’s office spokeswoman.

Otto, however, isn’t the only local citizen with a cramming complaint. Cindy Boswell of Hutchinson also reported noticing a $15 increase in her phone bill in late July.

Boswell was also billed by ESBI, except she was billed for voicemail services she never signed up for through Intelicom in Henderson, Nev. She is still awaiting a refund from the company.

Her neighbors have had the same problem, Boswell said.

“My neighbor was told her husband signed up for the services, but her husband is dead,” Boswell said.

Both Otto and Boswell have had AT&T block third parties from their accounts, something Giller acknowledged customers can opt to do.

But Otto thinks the listing of “Enhanced Services” on her phone bill was deceiving, as it was listed under plans and services, service changes, repair services, Internet services and long-distance services. She didn’t expect “Enhanced Services” to be the name of a company.

“It’s very misleading and very clever on this third party’s part,” she said. “We thought it was an extra service put on our phone like Caller ID, not a third party out of Texas.” Digging deeper Frustrated by the deception, Otto did a little research of her own and discovered Enhanced Services Billing Inc., a subsidiary of New Century Equity Holdings Corp., had already been investigated by the Federal Trade Commission several years ago for deceptive practices that violated the FTC Act.

In August 2001, New Century, owned by Platinum Equity LLC, settled with the FTC and agreed to repay $350,000 to consumers.

ESBI was also required to provide notices to consumers that their bills may contain unauthorized charges for enhanced services. They were required to inform consumers how to obtain a refund, too.

The FTC’s complaint charged ESBI with falsely representing that consumers were to pay charges on their telephone bills for Web sites and other items they had not ordered or authorized others to order for them; and ESBI unfairly attempted to collect — or arrange for local phone companies to collect — payment of charges from consumers for unauthorized services.

ESBI, according to the FTC, served as a “billing aggregator,” acting as an intermediary between vendors and local phone companies.

“Once the charges are collected by the phone companies, the billing aggregators, after taking their fee, pass the revenues back to their client vendors,” according to an FTC news release on the 2001 settlement.

“Although billing aggregators’ services allow consumers to use their phone services as a payment mechanism, they are also susceptible to abuse if the billing aggregators fail to adequately police the practices of vendors who may engage in fraudulent billing.” FTC director of public affairs, Claudia Bourne-Farrell, said ESBI is under an FTC order and that the company is monitored by the FTC to ensure compliance.

When contacted by phone Tuesday, a spokeswoman for ESBI in San Antonio described the company as a “billing clearinghouse” that bills for numerous third-company vendors. She said the company assumes the charges are legit and authorized by consumers and does not look into the charges.

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