On Thu, Jun 24, 2021 at 10:55 AM Jared Smith <jaredsm...@jaredsmith.net> wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 24, 2021 at 4:04 AM John T. Bittner <j...@xaccel.net> wrote: > >> As a voip provider we are in the process of getting our own token and >> cert. >> >> We got our OCN and did all the other FCC requirements. >> >> We are at the point of working with iconectiv to get our token. >> >> Based on the info we have after we get the token we go to neustar to get >> our cert. >> > > That all seems correct. > > >> >> >> Iconectiv are asking a lot of questions on how we are going to get certs >> out of there api’s ? This is confusing me, I was under impression that we >> get the cert from neustar. >> > > iConectiv is the Policy Administrator -- they don't give you the actual > cert, but they do certify that you've got your OCN and are authorized to > get a cert, etc. Neustar is one of the Certificate Authorities that is > authorized to give out Stir/Shaken certs. > > >> I have spent hours reading many things about stir shaken and a lot of it >> is contradicting. I also can’t find anything on the asterisk setup were we >> would even configure api information to connect to iconectiv. >> > > You don't do this from within Asterisk -- you'd have to do this outside of > Asterisk, and the configure Asterisk for the cert that you get from Neustar. > > >> Our SBC’s are asterisk based so we would like to implement this directly >> on these servers. >> >> >> >> Do I need middleman software to get this to work. >> > > Yes -- Asterisk doesn't handle this directly, at least at this point. > Please be aware that you'll likely need to interact with the APIs from both > the PA and the CA (iConectiv and Neustar, in your case). > > >> >> Last question… We do a lot of call forwarding and passthrough caller id. >> >> Is there any method to allow this with Stir Shaken ? >> > > You can -- but it's complicated, depending on your relationship with the > customers and numbers you're forwarding. The major point of Stir/Shaken is > that the recipient of a call can know that the caller ID on the call > actually belongs to someone authorized to use that number. If you as a > middleman know that the number presented belongs to your customer, then you > can give them an "A" level attestation. If you know the customer but not > that they're authorized to use that particular number, you can give the > calls a "B" level attestation. If you don't know the customer or the > number, you give them a "C" level attestation. > Now let's say that I own DID 8885551212 and my upstream provider send a call to me for that DID from "someuser" at 7775551212 with a valid A level attestation. I need to forward (not route) that call back to an upstream provider (maybe not the same one), say to a cell phone. I want the caller ID to be that of the original caller. What do I do? > > -- > Jared Smith > -- > _____________________________________________________________________ > -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- > > asterisk-dev mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-dev
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