Showing posts with label Caller ID. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caller ID. Show all posts

Friday, February 1, 2008

Phone giants' rising rates questioned

NEW YORK — AT&T and Verizon are raising prices for caller ID and other popular phone services by as much as 300%, even as they continue to push regulators to loosen up because of increased competition.

AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ) have argued they need pricing flexibility to compete with cable TV and others offering Internet-based phone services. Dozens of states have acquiesced, giving carriers freedom to jack up prices.

In California this month, AT&T raised prices for several stand-alone features: Anonymous call rejection now costs $5 from $1.90; caller ID rose to $9.99 from $6.17. Some local toll calls — calls that aren't considered long-distance but don't qualify as local — jumped by more than 200%.

In Ohio, AT&T raised the price of call forwarding and three-way calling from $4 each to $5.99. Automatic call back now costs $1.99 per use, up from 70 cents.

Verizon has made similar moves. Call forwarding now costs $3 a month in Ohio, a 300% increase from 75 cents. Call waiting is now $5 a month, up from $3.

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Cablevision Offers On-Screen Caller ID

NEW YORK — Couch potato alert: If you get telephone service through your cable TV provider, you don't have to get up while watching TV to see who's calling.
Several cable companies have been experimenting with a feature that will display an incoming caller's name and number in a little box in the corner of the TV screen.
Cablevision Systems Corp., which operates around the New York City area, has offered this feature in several areas and now says that as of Friday it will be available to all 3 million of its cable television customers.
Comcast Corp., the largest cable TV operator in the country, offers the service in one market _ which the company declined to identify _ and has plans to offer it elsewhere later.
Time Warner Cable Inc. offers it in several areas.
Cablevision says its on-screen caller ID _ including an option to turn off the notifications _ carries no additional charge. About half of Cablevision's television customers also subscribe to its digital phone service.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Caller ID spoofing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Caller ID spoofing is the practice of causing the telephone network to display a number on the recipient's caller ID display which is not that of the actual originating station; the term is commonly used to describe situations in which the motivation is considered nefarious by the speaker. Just as e-mail spoofing can make it appear that a message came from any e-mail address the sender chooses, caller ID spoofing can make a call appear to have come from any phone number the caller wishes. Because people are prone to assume a call is coming from the number (and hence, the associated person, or persons), this can call the service's value into question."

Caller ID spoofing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

Caller ID - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Caller ID (caller identification or CID, and more properly calling number identification - CNID) is a telephony service that transmits the caller's telephone number to the called party's telephone equipment during the ringing signal or when the call is being set up but before the call is answered. Where available, Caller ID can also provide a name associated with the calling telephone number. The information made available to the called party is visible on a small liquid crystal display imbedded on the telephone, or on a separate unit which is connected to the telephone.
Caller ID is often helpful for tracing down prank calls and telemarketers. The concept behind caller ID is the value of informed consent; however, it also poses problems for personal privacy.

Caller ID - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AT&T Frequently Asked Questions: Caller ID is not working.

"Caller ID is not working."

Click to see AT & T FAQ on why your callerID does not work.

AT&T Frequently Asked Questions: Caller ID is not working.:

Monday, July 2, 2007

Caller ID Delivery - Telephony Online

Caller ID Delivery
Telephony's Editor-at-Large Carol Wilson talks with Accudata CEO Greg Smith about research showing telecom operators may be shortchanging their customers when it comes to delivering Caller ID names and numbers.

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Thursday, June 14, 2007

House Approves Anti-Caller ID Spoofing Bill - Security Fix

"The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday approved legislation that would make it a crime for someone to fake their phone's outgoing Caller ID information for nefarious purposes."
House Approves Anti-Caller ID Spoofing Bill - Security Fix:

Monday, June 4, 2007

Market Research Finds Opportunity to Improve Caller I.D.

DALLAS – June 4, 2007 – When the phone rings, we’re pretty used to knowing who’s calling, thanks to Caller I.D/ Calling Name services. By digging into their own databases and sometimes a few outside databases, carriers claim to provide us with the name and number of whoever is calling. But there are many instances when we see “unknown” or “unavailable” flash across the Caller I.D. Box. Can that be remedied? Just what is the market potential for carriers to improve Caller I.D. services to their customers? That’s what Accudata Technologies wanted to find out when it commissioned a national survey designed to answer just that.

The research study produced some surprising results. By using additional databases, including the database owned by Accudata, there is a potential to improve Caller I.D. services provided by carriers from the current rate of less than 48 percent of the time to more than 87 percent.

“Our Board of Directors was interested in determining the market potential for improving the performance of Caller I.D. services that carriers provide,” M. Gregory Smith, Accudata CEO, said. “Based on the results of this research, there is a large opportunity for Accudata to continue the record growth that it has experienced over the past five years.”

The survey also highlighted how little customers know about their Caller I.D. service. Most Caller I.D. subscribers (57 percent of respondents) aren’t sure how much they actually pay for the service because it is bundled with their phone service. And despite the fact that subscribers are getting Caller I.D. only 48 percent of the time, just 2 percent rated their service as poor.

“These numbers are significant because they show us that not only are most people unsure of what they’re paying for, they also just don’t know that they should get better service,” Smith said. “They’re satisfied with their Caller I.D. service because it’s all they know. But what if their caller I.D. service provided a calling name 87 percent of the time? The research really opened our eyes to just how much Accudata and other databases can help carriers improve their services.”

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Consumers and Corporations Unite to Fight Telephone Companies Over Caller ID

Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service organization launches consumer advocacy blog

DALLAS - March 13, 2007 - If you were paying anywhere from $80 to $100 each year on a service, and you found out that the service provider wasn't supplying you with the service 100 percent of the time, you'd be upset, right? Maybe you should be sitting down. If you subscribe to a Caller ID service, you're probably getting cheated. And that's why Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service, a coalition of consumers and companies tired of paying Caller ID service fees without receiving the service, has started a grassroots effort to educate Caller ID users on the truth behind "Unavailable" and "Out of Area" calls.

The truth is that while we consumers are spending millions of dollars every year on Caller ID services, telephone companies aren't necessarily providing us with every name they are capable of getting. Caller ID works by matching the phone number of the person calling with a name that is stored in a database. When a number is stored outside a telephone company's database, that company has to purchase the information from another company that owns the database where the information is stored. Most every wireline telephone number is stored in one of these databases, but phone companies aren’t accessing every number.

Why not?

Typically, purchasing this information costs less than half a penny. But these big telephone companies don’t want to spend any money on their customers, which results in those "Unavailable" and "Out of Area" calls that show up on Caller ID displays. And because most consumers don't even know that their phone companies are capable of providing a higher level of service, they're letting the phone companies continue to profit off of them by providing sub-standard service. That's the purpose for the Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service blog - it's time for consumers to take a stand against these larger telephone companies.

The blog offers Caller ID consumers information on everything from how Caller ID works to contact information for the attorney general's office in each state. The blog includes broadcast and print news coverage from across the country. In addition, it provides users with a forum where they can come together and share their concerns, opinions and experiences. The blog was created both to educate consumers on what they should expect from their Caller ID service and to arm them with the information and strategies they will need to demand 100 percent service.

The blog can be accessed at http://calleridunavailable.blogspot.com/

About Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service
Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service is a coalition of consumers and companies that feel cheated for paying Caller ID service fees but not receiving calling names. Every year, Americans pay up to $120 each for Caller ID service but only get caller names on 30-70 percent of their calls. The technology to fix this problem is already in place. There’s no good reason that phone companies can’t provide it. We’re paying for Caller ID 100 percent of the time. Isn’t it time we got it?

Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

What Can You Do?

What can you do to get the Caller Id services you are paying for?

You can do three things;

  • #1 - Click Here to Add Your Name to Our Petition. (No Email Required)

  • #2 - Call your phone company provider and complain.
    Click Here to find your phone companies number.

  • #3 - Contact your state's Attorney General's Office and ask them what they are going to do to insure that you get the Caller ID Service you are paying for.

  • #4 - Contact your state's Public Utilities Commision - Click Here for FCC List.

  • Sunday, February 11, 2007

    Telephone Customer Help Lines

    Embarq (Sprint Residential Service)
    Customer Service #- 1-888-723-8010

    Verizon
    Repair #- 1-800-483-1000
    Customer Service #- 1-800-483-4000

    AT&T
    Repair #- 1-800-246-8464
    Customer Service #- 1-800-464-7920

    Qwest
    Product manager #- 1-800-423-8994

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Thursday, February 8, 2007

    Caller ID Display Terms

    These are the common terms that appear on the caller ID display when a name is not identified through a phone carrier.

    Unavailable – un-retrieved number, or truly unavailable
    Out of Area - un-retrieved number
    City, State - un-retrieved number, or truly unavailable
    Private Number - Permanently made private by the caller
    Private – made private by the caller
    Blocked – Name blocked by caller on a call-by-call basis.
    Wireless Call – mobile number
    Unknown Name – un-retrieved or truly unidentified number

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service

    How many times has your Caller ID shown something like “Caller ID Unavailable?” You’re not alone. Consumers for Fair Caller ID Service is a coalition of consumers and companies that feel cheated for paying Caller ID service fees but not receiving Caller ID service. Every year, Americans pay up to $120 each for Caller ID service but only get caller identification on 30-70% of their calls. The technology to fix this problem is simple and cheap. There’s no good reason that phone companies can’t provide it. We’re paying for Caller ID 100% of the time. Isn’t it time we got it?

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Wednesday, October 18, 2006

    Solving the Caller ID Problem - O'Reilly Emerging Telephony

    "In the wake of the proposed Truth in Caller ID Act, a lengthy discussion of the issues around reliable Caller ID data recently took place on the excellent Voice Over IP Security Alliance VOIPSEC mailing list. While many points were debated, two things are clear: VoIP-based systems connecting to the PSTN have increased the unreliability of Caller ID data, and law enforcement agencies have legitimate needs to be able to get access to call record information that is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. "

    Solving the Caller ID Problem - O'Reilly Emerging Telephony:

    A Proposal for Solving the Caller ID Problem

    "There is growing concern over the interaction of VoIP systems with the legacy PSTN, and the transmission of caller identity data--most notably, Caller ID on the PSTN. It is not always possible, or obvious how, to handle Caller ID data when moving to or from VoIP and the PSTN networks. There are even business models predicated on the ability of Caller ID to be transmitted to the PSTN with a value that is not 'expected'; call centers are an obvious example, where customer-support staff make outbound calls with a Caller ID that may be from one of many possible clients. More troubling is the possibility that Caller ID may be used to trick unsuspecting call recipients into certain actions or beliefs, and it is this concern that's currently creating a legislative threat I believe must be averted."

    O'Reilly Network -- A Proposal for Solving the Caller ID Problem

    Wednesday, September 27, 2006

    What Your Phone Company Doesn’t Want You to Know About Caller ID

    Sept 27, 2006
    What Your Phone Company Doesn’t Want You to Know About Caller ID
    By Greg Smith

    Every day, millions of Americans are paying for a specific service, and yet they are completely unaware that they are not getting the most for their dollar.
    Customers that subscribe to caller ID services pay anywhere from $6.75 per month up to $9.95 per month, but a number of calls listed as "unavailable," "unknown" or "out of area" continue to appear in the caller ID display. While some calls are genuinely blocked or listed as private, these unavailable and out-of-area calls are simply the result of a phone company not spending the money to gather this data.
    A small test of caller ID accuracy conducted by The Boston Globe in conjunction with Accudata Technologies Inc. found several instances where two prominent providers in the New England area didn’t supply a caller’s name because they did not want to pay the extra money to obtain the data from the Line Information Database (LIDB)/Calling Name (CNAM) Database where the data is stored – in some cases these databases are combined.
    CNAM/LIDBs house most of the working telephone landlines in North America and contain information ranging from service and operational information to customers’ names, their payment history indicator and their preferred language. This data is vital to the normal operation of the phone line. Telephone service providers need this information not only to display names on caller ID, but also to make credit decisions, ensure appropriate billing and other necessary services that callers take for granted. And with fewer than 20 CNAM databases in North America, including one owned and maintained by Accudata, carriers don’t have to search very far to get this information.
    In The Boston Globe test, conducted by reporter Bruce Mohl, five calls were monitored on two telephones in Massachusetts belonging to customers who subscribed to different, large telecom companies. Each of the five calls came from out of state; two from Texas and one each from Missouri, New York and Washington. Of the five calls, the first provider was able to identify and properly deliver the calling name for only two. The other service provider registered an even less favorable score, identifying only one of the calls. Research showed that the names were available to both telecom companies; they just chose not to retrieve the data.
    Caller ID works by matching the phone number of the person calling with a name obtained from a CNAM database. For the larger providers, caller ID information is typically easier to retrieve in their service areas since it is likely that the caller is one of the carrier’s own customers and therefore the information is located in the provider’s own database. However, if a caller is calling from outside the provider’s service area, or if he or she subscribes to a different provider, the firm then has to purchase information from the caller’s phone company. For example: Larry and Gail both subscribe to AT&T.
    If Larry calls Gail, AT&T has only to dip into its own database to provide Gail with Larry’s name and phone number. However, if Angie – who subscribes to Verizon – calls Gail, then AT&T must pay Verizon to gather Angie’s caller information.
    The cost of this information is typically less than a penny, but many telecom companies don’t give their customers what they paid for because they choose not to purchase data from other telecom companies. So why aren’t telecoms providing true caller ID services for their customers? Follow the money. Assume that the average telephone receives 200 calls a month, and 100 of those calls come from within the network. In this case, a phone company would need only to identify 100 phone calls from other databases. At a premium rate of one penny for each call, providers would spend $1 each month per customer. If the customer pays $7 per month for caller ID services, the provider receives a 600 percent profit. And while the pennies can add up to millions of dollars, how many other services have this kind of profit margin?
    Another big reason for failing to provide true caller ID services is that phone companies don’t want to give money, even the pennies per call it costs for calling name information, to their competition. But perhaps the greatest reason is the lack of knowledge by the customers. Most caller ID users don’t know why "unavailable" shows up on their caller ID displays, and since most calls typically come from within the calling area anyway, unknown numbers are pretty unusual. The biggest exception is cellular calls that still do not always have the name stored in an accessible database.
    This doesn’t change the fact that caller ID customers are still paying anywhere from $80 to more than $100 per year for a service that is not living up to expectations. Consumers do not typically put up with this type of service; they squeeze every last mile out of their gas tanks, every last gigabyte out of their iPods or every last bit of speed out of their modems. Consumers would complain if the call forwarding feature that they purchased only worked 80 percent of the time, or if it only functioned if it was forwarded to a number provided by the same carrier. People want the most for their money, but if they want the most out of their caller ID, they’re going to have to do something about it, whether by lodging a complaint with the FCC or to their local state public utility commission. Otherwise, phone companies will continue to provide this incomplete service to unsuspecting consumers. Consumer complacency is the phone company’s friend.

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Sunday, July 9, 2006

    Caution: Unidentified callers ahead

    Caution: Unidentified callers ahead
    Phone companies fail to provide some IDs because of the cost of obtaining the data
    By Bruce Mohl
    July 9, 2006

    Some callers can’t be identifi ed because their information is blocked or unavailable, but in other
    cases the callers aren’t named because the customer’s phone company simply doesn’t want to spend the money to obtain the data.
    A small Globe test of caller ID accuracy found several instances where Verizon Communications and Comcast Corp. didn’t provide a caller’s name because they didn’t want to pay the extra money.
    The price is minimal on a per-call basis -- often a penny or less a call -- but spread across a telecommunications giant’s many customers, it can quickly run into the tens of millions of dollars.
    A spokesman for Verizon said the company provides excellent caller ID service, culling names from its own vast database and also spending tens of millions of dollars each year to access additional names from other telecommunications companies.
    ``We do not buy data from some smaller companies because the cost to do so doesn’t justify the
    relatively little data that we don’t already have,” said Verizon spokesman Philip G. Santoro . ``We’re giving customers as much as anyone could give them without making it cost prohibitive for us.”
    Comcast spokeswoman Shawn Feddeman said the cable giant contracts with a national database
    company for its caller ID services. She said it was her understanding that the company buys name data from most telecommunications companies.
    Caller ID is a hugely popular service, allowing consumers to see the name and number of who is calling so they can decide whether to take the call or return it later.
    In Massachusetts, 65 percent of Verizon’s 1.7 million landline customers have caller ID. Four of every five customers with caller ID have it as part of a bundle of telecommunications services. The a la carte price is $7.95 a month, and is scheduled to rise to $8.20 a month on Saturday .
    Comcast charges $6.75 a month on an a la carte basis, but a spokeswoman said most customers
    receive it as part of a bundled package.
    Caller ID works by matching a number with a name. For a company like Verizon, caller ID information is easy and inexpensive to retrieve in its own service area because the caller is probably one of the firm’s own customers. But identifying the name of someone calling from outside the company’s service area requires the firm to purchase that information from the caller’s phone company.
    On its website, Verizon explains that the caller ID service will not always generate the name and number of the caller. When that happens, the website says, a message will be displayed explaining why.
    The messages vary depending on the customer’s display unit, but Verizon identifi ed ``out of area” or ``unavailable” as messages that would pop up for calls made from outside ``specially equipped areas” and calls made through an operator. The messages ``private” or ``anonymous” would appear for calls made by people who have blocked the display of their telephone information. Industry officials says it’s also diffi cult to identify the names of people making calls using operators, toll-free numbers, or from businesses with their own phone systems. Names are also not available for consumers with dial-around long-distance service or customers of telecommunications companies that don’t store name data, including many wireless carriers.
    M. Gregory Smith , chief executive of Accudata Technologies of Allen, Texas, a company that aggregates and sells data attached to phone numbers, said many telecommunications companies shortchange their caller ID customers by failing to purchase name data from smaller telecom companies. He said Verizon is one of the worst offenders.
    ``They don’t want to pay the going price,” Smith said.
    Santoro of Verizon indicated Accudata charges too much for the calling name data it has for a number of smaller telecom companies. ``We don’t think this guy’s data is worth the money,” Santoro said. He declined to discuss the two companies’ pricing.
    Smith said his prices are more reasonable than Verizon’s. He said Verizon charges 1.6 cents for each calling name Accudata purchases, but Accudata would be willing to charge Verizon half that . Smith said Accudata spends more than $1 million a year purchasing data from Verizon.
    To test whether caller ID customers are getting their money’s worth, the Globe arranged for five people to call numbers here in Massachusetts belonging to a Verizon and a Comcast customer with caller ID. All of the calls came from out of state, one each from New York, Missouri, and Washington, and two from Texas.
    The Verizon customer’s caller ID was able to identify only the caller from New York, who presumably was in Verizon’s database. For the other four calls, only the state the call was coming from was identified.
    The Comcast caller ID correctly identifi ed the callers from New York and Missouri and listed the other three as ``unknown name.”
    Verizon and Comcast said they couldn’t provide names for the two Texas numbers because they were in Accudata’s database, and neither company purchases data from Accudata. Verizon didn’t come up with the Missouri name because it doesn’t purchase name data from Southwestern Bell Co., which is now part of AT&T. Comcast’s caller ID provider did purchase the Southwestern Bell name and the Verizon name.
    The fifth caller from Washington wasn’t identifi ed by either company, presumably because he is living in a furnished apartment where phone service is supplied by the landlord.
    Santoro of Verizon said the Globe’s small sample was not statistically valid, and added that Verizon would have done much better in a larger test involving name data from larger telecom companies.
    Santoro said Verizon customers are very satisfi ed with the company’s caller ID service. ``We haven’t had one call about this from the millions of customers we serve,” Santoro said.
    But complaint calls may not be a good barometer of caller ID service quality, since it’s nearly impossible to know when a caller’s name is unavailable for a legitimate reason and when it’s unavailable because the company is trying to cut costs and increase its profits.

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Wednesday, June 7, 2006

    GovTrack: H.R. 5126 [109th]: Text of Legislation

    1) IN GENERAL- It shall be unlawful for any person within the United States, in connection with any telecommunications service or VOIP service, to cause any caller identification service to transmit misleading or inaccurate caller identification information, with the intent to defraud or cause harm.
    `(2) PROTECTION FOR BLOCKING CALLER IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION- Nothing in this subsection may be construed to prevent or restrict any person from blocking the capability of any caller identification service to transmit caller identification information.
    `(3) REGULATIONS- Not later than 6 months after the enactment of this subsection, the Commission shall prescribe regulations to implement this subsection.

    "H.R. 5126 [109th]: Truth in Caller ID Act of 2006"


    GovTrack: H.R. 5126 [109th]: Text of Legislation:

    Friday, April 7, 2006

    Attorney Generals Contact Info

    Alabama:
    Troy King (R)
    (334) 242-7300
    State House, 11 S. Union St. Montgomery, AL 36130
    http://www.ago.state.al.us

    Alaska:
    Talis J. Colberg (R)
    (907) 465-3600
    P.O. Box 110300, Diamond Courthouse, Juneau, AK 99811-0300
    http://www.law.state.ak.us/

    American Samoa:
    Malaetasi M. Togafau
    (684) 633-4163
    American Samoa Gov't, Exec. Ofc. Bldg, Utulei, Territory of American Samoa, Pago Pago, AS 96799
    http://www.samoanet.com/asg/asgdla97.html

    Arizona:
    Terry Goddard (D)
    (602) 542-4266
    1275 W. Washington St., Phoenix, AZ 85007
    http://www.azag.gov/

    Arkansas:
    Dustin McDaniel (D)
    (800) 482-8982
    200 Tower Bldg., 323 Center St., Little Rock, AR 72201-2610
    http://www.ag.state.ar.us

    California:
    Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown Jr. (D)
    (916) 445-9555
    1300 I St., Ste. 1740, Sacramento, CA 95814
    http://ag.ca.gov

    Colorado:
    John Suthers (R)
    (303) 866-4500
    1525 Sherman Street, Denver, CO 80203
    http://www.ago.state.co.us/index.cfm

    Connecticut:
    Richard Blumenthal (D)
    (860) 808-5318
    55 Elm St., Hartford, CT 06141-0120
    http://www.ct.gov/ag/

    District of Columbia:
    Linda Singer (Acting) (D)
    (202) 724-1305
    John A. Wilson Building, 1350 PA Ave, NW Suite 409, Washington, DC 20009
    http://occ.dc.gov

    Delaware:
    Joseph R. "Beau" Biden III (D)
    (302) 577-8338
    Carvel State Office Bldg., 820 N. French St., Wilmington, DE 19801
    http://www.state.de.us/attgen

    Florida:
    Bill McCollum (R)
    (850) 414-3300
    The Capitol, PL 01, Tallahassee, FL 32399-1050
    http://myfloridalegal.com/

    Georgia:
    Thurbert E. Baker (D)
    (404) 656-3300
    40 Capitol Square, SW, Atlanta, GA 30334-1300
    http://ganet.org/ago/

    Guam:
    Alicia G. Limtiaco
    (671) 475-3409
    Judicial Center Bldg., Ste. 2-200E, 120 W. O'Brien Dr., Hagatna, Guam 96910
    http://www.guamattorneygeneral.com/

    Hawaii:
    Mark J. Bennett (R)
    (808) 586-1500
    425 Queen St., Honolulu, HI 96813
    http://www.state.hi.us/ag/index.html

    Idaho:
    Lawrence Wasden (R)
    (208) 334-2400
    Statehouse, Boise, ID 83720-1000
    http://www2.state.id.us/ag/

    Illinois:
    Lisa Madigan (D)
    (312) 814-3000
    James R. Thompson Ctr., 100 W. Randolph St., Chicago, IL 60601
    http://illinoisattorneygeneral.gov/

    Indiana:
    Steve Carter (R)
    (317) 232-6201
    Indiana Government Center South - 5th Floor, 402 West Washington Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204
    http://www.in.gov/attorneygeneral/

    Iowa:
    Tom Miller (D)
    (515) 281-5164
    Hoover State Office Bldg., 1305 E. Walnut, Des Moines, IA 50319
    http://www.IowaAttorneyGeneral.org

    Kansas:
    Paul Morrison (D)
    (785) 296-2215
    120 S.W. 10th Ave., 2nd Fl., Topeka, KS 66612-1597
    http://www.ksag.org/index.shtml

    Kentucky:
    Greg Stumbo (D)
    (502) 696-5300
    State Capitol, Rm. 116, Frankfort, KY 40601
    http://ag.ky.gov

    Louisiana:
    Charles Foti (D)
    225-326-6000
    P.O. Box 94095, Baton Rouge, LA 70804-4095
    http://www.ag.state.la.us/

    Maine:
    G. Steven Rowe (D)
    (207) 626-8800
    State House Station 6, Augusta, ME 04333
    http://www.state.me.us/ag

    Maryland:
    Douglas F. Gansler (D)
    (410) 576-6300
    200 St. Paul Place, Baltimore, MD 21202-2202
    http://www.oag.state.md.us

    Massachusetts:
    Martha Coakley (D)
    (617) 727-2200
    1 Ashburton Place, Boston, MA 02108-1698
    http://www.ago.state.ma.us

    Michigan:
    Mike Cox (R)
    (517) 373-1110
    P.O.Box 30212, 525 W. Ottawa St., Lansing, MI 48909-0212
    http://www.ag.state.mi.us

    Minnesota:
    Lori Swanson (D)
    (651) 296-3353
    State Capitol, Ste. 102, St. Paul, MN 55155
    http://www.ag.state.mn.us

    Mississippi:
    Jim Hood (D)
    (601) 359-3680
    Department of Justice, P.O. Box 220, Jackson, MS 37205-0220
    http://www.ago.state.ms.us/

    Missouri:
    Jeremiah W. (Jay) Nixon (D)
    (573) 751-3321
    Supreme Ct. Bldg., 207 W. High St., Jefferson City, MO 65101
    http://www.ago.mo.gov/

    Montana:
    Mike McGrath (D)
    (406) 444-2026
    Justice Bldg., 215 N. Sanders, Helena, MT 59620-1401
    Jon Bruning (R)
    (402) 471-2682
    State Capitol, P.O.Box 98920, Lincoln, NE 68509-8920
    http://www.ago.state.ne.us/

    Nevada:
    Catherine Cortez Masto (D)
    (775) 684-1100
    Old Supreme Ct. Bldg., 100 N. Carson St., Carson City, NV 89701
    http://ag.state.nv.us/

    New Hampshire:
    Kelly Ayotte (R)
    (603) 271-3658
    State House Annex, 33 Capitol St., Concord, NH 03301-6397
    http://www.state.nh.us/nhdoj/

    New Jersey :
    Stuart Rabner (D)
    (609) 292-8740
    Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex, 25 Market St., CN 080, Trenton, NJ 08625
    http://www.state.nj.us/lps/

    New Mexico:
    Gary King (D)
    (505) 827-6000
    P.O. Drawer 1508, Sante Fe, NM 87504-1508
    http://www.ago.state.nm.us

    New York:
    Andrew Cuomo (D)
    (518) 474-7330
    Dept. of Law - The Capitol, 2nd fl., Albany, NY 12224
    http://www.oag.state.ny.us

    Northern Mariana Islands:
    Matt Gregory
    (670) 664-2341
    Caller Box 10007, Capitol Hill, Saipan, MP 95960
    http://www.cnmiago.gov.mp/

    North Carolina:
    Roy Cooper (D)
    (919) 716-6400
    Dept. of Justice, P.O.Box 629, Raleigh, NC 27602-0629
    http://www.ncdoj.com/default.jsp

    North Dakota:
    Wayne Stenehjem (R)
    (701) 328-2210
    State Capitol, 600 E. Boulevard Ave., Bismarck, ND 58505-0040
    http://www.ag.state.nd.us

    Ohio:
    Marc Dann (D)
    (614) 466-4320
    State Office Tower, 30 E. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43266-0410
    http://www.ag.state.oh.us

    Oklahoma:
    W. A. Drew Edmondson (D)
    (405) 521-3921
    State Capitol, Rm. 112, 2300 N. Lincoln Blvd., Oklahoma City, OK 73105
    http://www.oag.state.ok.us

    Oregon:
    Hardy Myers (D)
    (503) 378-4732
    Justice Bldg., 1162 Court St., NE, Salem, OR 97301
    http://www.doj.state.or.us

    Pennsylvania:
    Tom Corbett (R)
    (717) 787-3391
    1600 Strawberry Square, Harrisburg, PA 17120
    http://www.attorneygeneral.gov

    Puerto Rico:
    Roberto J. Sanchez-Ramos
    (787) 721-2900
    GPO Box 902192, San Juan, PR 00902-0192
    http://www.justicia.gobierno.pr

    Rhode Island:
    Patrick Lynch (D)
    (401) 274-4400
    150 S. Main St., Providence, RI 02903
    http://www.riag.state.ri.us

    South Carolina:
    Henry McMaster (R)
    (803) 734-3970
    Rembert C. Dennis Office Bldg., P.O.Box 11549, Columbia, SC 29211-1549
    http://www.scattorneygeneral.org

    South Dakota:
    Larry Long (R)
    (605) 773-3215
    1302 East Highway 14, Suite 1, Pierre, SD 57501-8501
    http://www.state.sd.us/attorney/

    Tennessee:
    Robert E. Cooper, Jr. (D)
    (615) 741-5860
    500 Charlotte Ave., Nashville, TN 37243
    http://www.attorneygeneral.state.tn.us

    Texas:
    Greg Abbott (R)
    (512) 463-2100
    Capitol Station, P.O.Box 12548, Austin, TX 78711-2548
    http://www.oag.state.tx.us

    Utah:
    Mark Shurtleff (R)
    (801) 538-9600
    State Capitol, Rm. 236, Salt Lake City, UT 84114-0810
    http://attorneygeneral.utah.gov/

    Vermont:
    William H. Sorrell (D)
    (802) 828-3173
    109 State St., Montpelier, VT 05609-1001
    http://www.state.vt.us/atg

    Virgin Islands:
    Elliott Davis
    (340) 774-5666
    Dept. of Justice, G.E.R.S. Complex 488-50C Kronprinsdens Gade, St. Thomas, VI 00802

    Virginia:
    Bob McDonnell (R)
    (804) 786-2071
    900 E. Main St., Richmond, VA 23219
    http://www.oag.state.va.us

    Washington:
    Rob McKenna (R)
    (360) 753-6200
    900 Fourth Street, Suite 2000, Olympia, WA 98504-0100
    http://www.atg.wa.gov/

    West Virginia:
    Darrell V. McGraw Jr. (D)
    (304) 558-2021
    State Capitol, 1900 Kanawha Blvd. , E., Charleston, WV 25305
    http://www.wvago.us/

    Wisconsin:
    J.B. Van Hollen (R)
    (608) 266-1221
    State Capitol, Ste. 114 E., P.O.Box 7857, Madison, WI 53707-7857
    http://www.doj.state.wi.us

    Wyoming:
    Pat Crank (D)
    (307) 777-7841
    State Capitol Bldg., Cheyenne, WY 82002
    http://attorneygeneral.state.wy.us/

    Caller ID Unavailable? click here to do something.....

    Thursday, March 2, 2006

    FCC Probes Caller-ID Fakers

    "If you've ever used one of the half-dozen websites that allow you to control the phone number that appears on someone's Caller ID display when you phone them, the U.S. government would like to know who you are. Last week the FCC opened an investigation into the caller-ID spoofing sites -- services that began popping up late 2004, and have since become a useful tool for private investigators, pranksters and more than a few fraud artists."

    FCC Probes Caller-ID Fakers