Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Alex Balashov

On 08/18/2015 05:00 PM, Derek Andrew wrote:


Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is a cell phone or a land line
because of local number portability?


Not at all impossible. It could be not be further from impossible. The 
LRN allows you to determine where the call goes.


--
Alex Balashov | Principal | Evariste Systems LLC
303 Perimeter Center North, Suite 300
Atlanta, GA 30346
United States

Tel: +1-800-250-5920 (toll-free) / +1-678-954-0671 (direct)
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.csrpswitch.com/
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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Eric Wieling


We use the http://www.data24-7.com/carrier24-7.php We use the product to 
look up carrier names, the returned data includes wireless or landline 
information.  I'm not affiliated with them.


On 8/18/2015 16:30, Carlos Alvarez wrote:
I have a customer in market research who is legally required to 
manually dial calls to cell phones.  Right now they are considering 
abandoning all of their auto/predictive dialer software and going to 
manual dial for everything, because the list-scrubbing services have 
been shown to be inaccurate.  There are extreme penalties for 
auto-dialing a cell phone, and best effort is NOT a defense to this, 
at all.  For example, Gallup just settle a claim for $12M.


So they need a totally accurate way to prevent a cell phone call from 
originating from their dialer.  The only thing I can think of is some 
sort of LRN dip + LRN-to-carrier-type response.  One of their people 
talked to Neustar, but didn't get great answers because he doesn't 
really understand telephony.  Before I get in touch with Neustar, I 
thought I'd see if people here have some ideas.


If you provide a commercial product for this, please feel free to tell 
me so on or off list, the customer is willing to pay for the service 
and we're open to all options.  I don't have a budget number yet but 
manual dialing is going to cost them quite a bit for some types of 
studies.




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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Derek Andrew
Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is a cell phone or a land line
because of local number portability?


On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:34 PM, Matthew Crocker matt...@corp.crocker.com
wrote:



 Depending on your switch you should be able to build a profile for the
 customer and reject calls going to cell phone LRN providers.

 Personally, I wouldn’t take on the liability of guaranteeing their
 auto-dialer only calls landlines.   You would end up being sued if you make
 a mistake.  IMHO, let them manually dial or find a list scrubbing company
 that actually works.

 —

 Matthew Crocker
 President - Crocker Communications, Inc.
 Managing Partner - Crocker Telecommunications, LLC
 E: matt...@corp.crocker.com
 E: matt...@crocker.com


 On Aug 18, 2015, at 4:30 PM, Carlos Alvarez caalva...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have a customer in market research who is legally required to manually
 dial calls to cell phones.  Right now they are considering abandoning all
 of their auto/predictive dialer software and going to manual dial for
 everything, because the list-scrubbing services have been shown to be
 inaccurate.  There are extreme penalties for auto-dialing a cell phone, and
 best effort is NOT a defense to this, at all.  For example, Gallup just
 settle a claim for $12M.

 So they need a totally accurate way to prevent a cell phone call from
 originating from their dialer.  The only thing I can think of is some sort
 of LRN dip + LRN-to-carrier-type response.  One of their people talked to
 Neustar, but didn't get great answers because he doesn't really understand
 telephony.  Before I get in touch with Neustar, I thought I'd see if people
 here have some ideas.

 If you provide a commercial product for this, please feel free to tell me
 so on or off list, the customer is willing to pay for the service and we're
 open to all options.  I don't have a budget number yet but manual dialing
 is going to cost them quite a bit for some types of studies.

 ___
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 VoiceOps@voiceops.org
 https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops





-- 
Copyright 2015 Derek Andrew (excluding quotations)

University of Saskatchewan

Typed but not read.
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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Erik Flournoy
Derek,

Is actually right. Legislation that blocks a company from auto dialing a
number based on it being a cell phone or landline is extremely difficult to
prosecute. Straight talk has a home service that essentially uses a
wireless carrier backbone. I can pickup the base plug it in at my neighbors
house or better yet put it in my car on a power inverter and wah lah my
home phone is what it truly is a cell phone with a 110-220v power supply.
Number Portability would make wireline and wireless number location nearly
impossible. Manual dialing would be the only way to prevent an auto dialer
issue.

Erik Flournoy
808-426-4527
301-218-7325

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE
This e-mail message, including any attachments from EESPRO.com - contain
information which is CONFIDENTIAL AND/OR LEGALLY PRIVILEGED. The
information is intended only for the use of the individual named above and
may not be disseminated to any other party without written permission. If
you are not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible
for delivering the message to the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that any dissemination, disclosure, distribution, copying or
taking of any action in reliance on the contents of this e-mailed
information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this transmission
in error, please immediately notify i...@eespro.com, and permanently delete
this e-mail and the attachments hereto, if any, and destroy any printout
thereof.

On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Derek Andrew derek.and...@usask.ca
wrote:

 Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is a cell phone or a land line
 because of local number portability?


 On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:34 PM, Matthew Crocker matt...@corp.crocker.com
  wrote:



 Depending on your switch you should be able to build a profile for the
 customer and reject calls going to cell phone LRN providers.

 Personally, I wouldn’t take on the liability of guaranteeing their
 auto-dialer only calls landlines.   You would end up being sued if you make
 a mistake.  IMHO, let them manually dial or find a list scrubbing company
 that actually works.

 —

 Matthew Crocker
 President - Crocker Communications, Inc.
 Managing Partner - Crocker Telecommunications, LLC
 E: matt...@corp.crocker.com
 E: matt...@crocker.com


 On Aug 18, 2015, at 4:30 PM, Carlos Alvarez caalva...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have a customer in market research who is legally required to manually
 dial calls to cell phones.  Right now they are considering abandoning all
 of their auto/predictive dialer software and going to manual dial for
 everything, because the list-scrubbing services have been shown to be
 inaccurate.  There are extreme penalties for auto-dialing a cell phone, and
 best effort is NOT a defense to this, at all.  For example, Gallup just
 settle a claim for $12M.

 So they need a totally accurate way to prevent a cell phone call from
 originating from their dialer.  The only thing I can think of is some sort
 of LRN dip + LRN-to-carrier-type response.  One of their people talked to
 Neustar, but didn't get great answers because he doesn't really understand
 telephony.  Before I get in touch with Neustar, I thought I'd see if people
 here have some ideas.

 If you provide a commercial product for this, please feel free to tell me
 so on or off list, the customer is willing to pay for the service and we're
 open to all options.  I don't have a budget number yet but manual dialing
 is going to cost them quite a bit for some types of studies.

 ___
 VoiceOps mailing list
 VoiceOps@voiceops.org
 https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops





 --
 Copyright 2015 Derek Andrew (excluding quotations)

 University of Saskatchewan

 Typed but not read.



 ___
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 https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops


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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Andy Brezinsky
We've used DNC.com in the past which gets data from 
http://www.tcpacompliance.us/.  That's run by Neustar directly and:


Specifically, qualified users can now subscribe and receive the most 
up-to-date files (the Intermodal Ported Telephone Number Identification 
Service) consisting of nationwide ported telephone numbers that have 
been moved from wire line to wireless and vice versa, enabling users to 
avoid using auto-dialers or pre-recorded messages to call wireless numbers.


They will also offer an indemnification clause if you use their service 
and the number was on the list to protect you.  Prices were pretty 
reasonable and they both bulk interfaces and real time.



On 08/18/2015 03:30 PM, Carlos Alvarez wrote:
I have a customer in market research who is legally required to 
manually dial calls to cell phones.  Right now they are considering 
abandoning all of their auto/predictive dialer software and going to 
manual dial for everything, because the list-scrubbing services have 
been shown to be inaccurate.  There are extreme penalties for 
auto-dialing a cell phone, and best effort is NOT a defense to this, 
at all.  For example, Gallup just settle a claim for $12M.


So they need a totally accurate way to prevent a cell phone call from 
originating from their dialer.  The only thing I can think of is some 
sort of LRN dip + LRN-to-carrier-type response.  One of their people 
talked to Neustar, but didn't get great answers because he doesn't 
really understand telephony.  Before I get in touch with Neustar, I 
thought I'd see if people here have some ideas.


If you provide a commercial product for this, please feel free to tell 
me so on or off list, the customer is willing to pay for the service 
and we're open to all options.  I don't have a budget number yet but 
manual dialing is going to cost them quite a bit for some types of 
studies.




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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Carlos Alvarez
I'm going to answer a number of messages at once, because there were quite
a few replies (thanks to all of you).

NPA-NXX filtering is already being done, and is useless.  So they also
employ list scrubbing based on what appears to be old/cached LNP info or
dips, and that is also insufficient both legally and practically.  The data
sources being used in the industry now do not appear to comply with the law.

For anyone who is saying that you can't determine a cell phone due to LNP,
you are wrong.  Please look up these terms and you will see it's very
possible:  LERG, LRN, OCN  As far as cell phones that are turned into
home service, that's fine, we don't care about false positives.  We just
need to make sure that a cell number is never dialed by mistake.  And the
law allows a 15 day grace period from porting.

On the guarantee that isn't something we'd provide, what I mean was
simply a data source that is always accurate.  Such as LRN-LERG testing for
every call.  The customer will accept ultimate responsibility.

Some people recommended third-party services both on and off the list.  The
one concern there is again, accuracy.  If the list scrubbers can't get it
right...then any third party is suspect.  Are they using cached data?  Or
acquiring data from dubious sources?  I don't know.



On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:31 PM Glen Gerhard ggerh...@sansay.com wrote:

 Carlos,

 you can get a list of all NPA-NXXs that are used by cell carrier and use
 that as a starting point.  Then add to that the list of LRNs used by call
 carriers which may or may not be included in the first list.

 Then you need to dip your traffic and compare the DNIS/LRN to the combined
 list.  If the number is ported the LRN will match the list.  If the number
 is not ported and is cellular it will be in the list of NPA-NXX.  If not
 cellular it won't match the list.

 Either way if there is a match to the list then you can reject the call
 for that customer.  (I believe you are a Sansay customer so you can set up
 a route table with the combined list and then use it as the primary route
 table for those customers and then link to normal tables.  I can have our
 support team put together the list of current NPA-NXX but you'll need a
 LERG6 subscription to keep it current).

 Good luck,

 ~Glen

 PS this message is not copyrighted nor confidential ;-)





 On 8/18/2015 2:14 PM, Erik Flournoy wrote:

 Derek,

 Is actually right. Legislation that blocks a company from auto dialing a
 number based on it being a cell phone or landline is extremely difficult to
 prosecute. Straight talk has a home service that essentially uses a
 wireless carrier backbone. I can pickup the base plug it in at my neighbors
 house or better yet put it in my car on a power inverter and wah lah my
 home phone is what it truly is a cell phone with a 110-220v power supply.
 Number Portability would make wireline and wireless number location nearly
 impossible. Manual dialing would be the only way to prevent an auto dialer
 issue.

 Erik Flournoy
 808-426-4527
 301-218-7325

 CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE
 This e-mail message, including any attachments from EESPRO.com - contain
 information which is CONFIDENTIAL AND/OR LEGALLY PRIVILEGED. The
 information is intended only for the use of the individual named above and
 may not be disseminated to any other party without written permission. If
 you are not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible
 for delivering the message to the intended recipient, you are hereby
 notified that any dissemination, disclosure, distribution, copying or
 taking of any action in reliance on the contents of this e-mailed
 information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this transmission
 in error, please immediately notify i...@eespro.com i...@eespro.com,
 and permanently delete this e-mail and the attachments hereto, if any, and
 destroy any printout thereof.

 On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Derek Andrew derek.and...@usask.ca
 wrote:

 Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is a cell phone or a land line
 because of local number portability?


 On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:34 PM, Matthew Crocker 
 matt...@corp.crocker.com wrote:



 Depending on your switch you should be able to build a profile for the
 customer and reject calls going to cell phone LRN providers.

 Personally, I wouldn’t take on the liability of guaranteeing their
 auto-dialer only calls landlines.   You would end up being sued if you make
 a mistake.  IMHO, let them manually dial or find a list scrubbing company
 that actually works.

 —

 Matthew Crocker
 President - Crocker Communications, Inc.
 Managing Partner - Crocker Telecommunications, LLC
 E: matt...@corp.crocker.com
 E: matt...@crocker.com


 On Aug 18, 2015, at 4:30 PM, Carlos Alvarez caalva...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have a customer in market research who is legally required to manually
 dial calls to cell phones.  Right now they are considering abandoning all
 of their auto/predictive 

Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Glen Gerhard

  
  
The official NPAC database is always up to date and
  is available from Neustar (for now) commercially on a per dip or
  per monthly charge.  You can pull down the updates every 15
  minutes to ensure the data is up to date for you network or you
  can just send them a dip for every call (Invite with 302 return).
  
  The NPAC members can get a nightly pull for the DB which means it
  is up to 24 hours of date, but normally that is accurate enough
  for wholesale providers.  Due to the large liability issues, for
  your application you should go with the 15 minute updates or
  direct Neustar dips.
  
  ~Glen
  

On 8/18/2015 3:04 PM, Carlos Alvarez
  wrote:


  I'm going to answer a number of messages at once,
because there were quite a few replies (thanks to all of you).


NPA-NXX filtering is already being done, and is useless. 
  So they also employ list scrubbing based on what appears to be
  old/cached LNP info or dips, and that is also insufficient
  both legally and practically.  The data sources being used in
  the industry now do not appear to comply with the law.


For anyone who is saying that you can't determine a cell
  phone due to LNP, you are wrong.  Please look up these terms
  and you will see it's very possible:  LERG, LRN, OCN  As far
  as cell phones that are turned into "home" service, that's
  fine, we don't care about false positives.  We just need to
  make sure that a cell number is never dialed by mistake.  And
  the law allows a 15 day grace period from porting.


On the "guarantee" that isn't something we'd provide, what
  I mean was simply a data source that is always accurate.  Such
  as LRN-LERG testing for every call.  The customer will accept
  ultimate responsibility.


Some people recommended third-party services both on and
  off the list.  The one concern there is again, accuracy.  If
  the list scrubbers can't get it right...then any third party
  is suspect.  Are they using cached data?  Or acquiring data
  from dubious sources?  I don't know.




  
  
  
On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:31 PM Glen Gerhard ggerh...@sansay.com
  wrote:


   Carlos,
  
  you can get a list of all NPA-NXXs that are used by cell
  carrier and use that as a starting point.  Then add to
  that the list of LRNs used by call carriers which may or
  may not be included in the first list.
  
  Then you need to dip your traffic and compare the DNIS/LRN
  to the combined list.  If the number is ported the LRN
  will match the list.  If the number is not ported and is
  cellular it will be in the list of NPA-NXX.  If not
  cellular it won't match the list.
  
  Either way if there is a match to the list then you can
  reject the call for that customer.  (I believe you are a
  Sansay customer so you can set up a route table with the
  combined list and then use it as the primary route table
  for those customers and then link to normal tables.  I can
  have our support team put together the list of current
  NPA-NXX but you'll need a LERG6 subscription to keep it
  current).
  
  Good luck,
  
  ~Glen
  
  PS this message is not copyrighted nor confidential ;-)
  
  
  
  

  
On 8/18/2015 2:14 PM, Erik Flournoy wrote:


  Derek, 


Is actually right. Legislation that blocks a
  company from auto dialing a number based on it being a
  cell phone or landline is extremely difficult to
  prosecute. Straight talk has a home service that
  essentially uses a wireless carrier backbone. I can
  pickup the base plug it in at my neighbors house or
  better yet put it in my car on a power inverter and
  wah lah my home phone is what it truly is a cell phone
  with a 110-220v power supply.  Number Portability
  would make wireline and wireless number location
  nearly impossible. Manual dialing would be the only
  way to prevent an auto dialer issue. 
  
  

  

  

Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Hiers, David
Have you looked at it from a call routing perspective instead of a service 
definition perspective?

Does the FCC definition of devices/services covered by this ruling match the 
set of ‘things that must have a resolvable Home Location Record to receive a 
call’?  If so, then a per-call SS7 HLR query could do the trick.

David


From: VoiceOps [mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org] On Behalf Of Carlos 
Alvarez
Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2015 15:05
To: Glen Gerhard; voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

I'm going to answer a number of messages at once, because there were quite a 
few replies (thanks to all of you).

NPA-NXX filtering is already being done, and is useless.  So they also employ 
list scrubbing based on what appears to be old/cached LNP info or dips, and 
that is also insufficient both legally and practically.  The data sources being 
used in the industry now do not appear to comply with the law.

For anyone who is saying that you can't determine a cell phone due to LNP, you 
are wrong.  Please look up these terms and you will see it's very possible:  
LERG, LRN, OCN  As far as cell phones that are turned into home service, 
that's fine, we don't care about false positives.  We just need to make sure 
that a cell number is never dialed by mistake.  And the law allows a 15 day 
grace period from porting.

On the guarantee that isn't something we'd provide, what I mean was simply a 
data source that is always accurate.  Such as LRN-LERG testing for every call.  
The customer will accept ultimate responsibility.

Some people recommended third-party services both on and off the list.  The one 
concern there is again, accuracy.  If the list scrubbers can't get it 
right...then any third party is suspect.  Are they using cached data?  Or 
acquiring data from dubious sources?  I don't know.



On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:31 PM Glen Gerhard 
ggerh...@sansay.commailto:ggerh...@sansay.com wrote:
Carlos,

you can get a list of all NPA-NXXs that are used by cell carrier and use that 
as a starting point.  Then add to that the list of LRNs used by call carriers 
which may or may not be included in the first list.

Then you need to dip your traffic and compare the DNIS/LRN to the combined 
list.  If the number is ported the LRN will match the list.  If the number is 
not ported and is cellular it will be in the list of NPA-NXX.  If not cellular 
it won't match the list.

Either way if there is a match to the list then you can reject the call for 
that customer.  (I believe you are a Sansay customer so you can set up a route 
table with the combined list and then use it as the primary route table for 
those customers and then link to normal tables.  I can have our support team 
put together the list of current NPA-NXX but you'll need a LERG6 subscription 
to keep it current).

Good luck,

~Glen

PS this message is not copyrighted nor confidential ;-)




On 8/18/2015 2:14 PM, Erik Flournoy wrote:
Derek,

Is actually right. Legislation that blocks a company from auto dialing a number 
based on it being a cell phone or landline is extremely difficult to prosecute. 
Straight talk has a home service that essentially uses a wireless carrier 
backbone. I can pickup the base plug it in at my neighbors house or better yet 
put it in my car on a power inverter and wah lah my home phone is what it truly 
is a cell phone with a 110-220v power supply.  Number Portability would make 
wireline and wireless number location nearly impossible. Manual dialing would 
be the only way to prevent an auto dialer issue.

Erik Flournoy
808-426-4527
301-218-7325

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE
This e-mail message, including any attachments from EESPRO.com - contain 
information which is CONFIDENTIAL AND/OR LEGALLY PRIVILEGED. The information is 
intended only for the use of the individual named above and may not be 
disseminated to any other party without written permission. If you are not the 
intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible for delivering the 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any 
dissemination, disclosure, distribution, copying or taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this e-mailed information is strictly prohibited. 
If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify 
imailto:i...@eespro.comn...@eespro.commailto:n...@eespro.com, and 
permanently delete this e-mail and the attachments hereto, if any, and destroy 
any printout thereof.

On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Derek Andrew 
derek.and...@usask.camailto:derek.and...@usask.ca wrote:
Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is a cell phone or a land line 
because of local number portability?

On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:34 PM, Matthew Crocker 
matt...@corp.crocker.commailto:matt...@corp.crocker.com wrote:


Depending on your switch you should be able to build a profile for the customer 
and reject calls going to cell phone LRN 

Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Alex Balashov
Getting an LRN is easy. The real question is, is there a reliable data 
source to map LRN - {wireless,RBOC,etc}?


I think this data is in the LERG, but the LERG is overkill...

--
Alex Balashov | Principal | Evariste Systems LLC
303 Perimeter Center North, Suite 300
Atlanta, GA 30346
United States

Tel: +1-800-250-5920 (toll-free) / +1-678-954-0671 (direct)
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.csrpswitch.com/
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Re: [VoiceOps] Preventing calls to cell phones with guaranteed accuracy

2015-08-18 Thread Glen Gerhard

  
  
Carlos,
  
  you can get a list of all NPA-NXXs that are used by cell carrier
  and use that as a starting point.  Then add to that the list of
  LRNs used by call carriers which may or may not be included in the
  first list.
  
  Then you need to dip your traffic and compare the DNIS/LRN to the
  combined list.  If the number is ported the LRN will match the
  list.  If the number is not ported and is cellular it will be in
  the list of NPA-NXX.  If not cellular it won't match the list.
  
  Either way if there is a match to the list then you can reject the
  call for that customer.  (I believe you are a Sansay customer so
  you can set up a route table with the combined list and then use
  it as the primary route table for those customers and then link to
  normal tables.  I can have our support team put together the list
  of current NPA-NXX but you'll need a LERG6 subscription to keep it
  current).
  
  Good luck,
  
  ~Glen
  
  PS this message is not copyrighted nor confidential ;-)
  
  
  
  

On 8/18/2015 2:14 PM, Erik Flournoy
  wrote:


  Derek, 


Is actually right. Legislation that blocks a company from
  auto dialing a number based on it being a cell phone or
  landline is extremely difficult to prosecute. Straight talk
  has a home service that essentially uses a wireless carrier
  backbone. I can pickup the base plug it in at my neighbors
  house or better yet put it in my car on a power inverter and
  wah lah my home phone is what it truly is a cell phone with a
  110-220v power supply.  Number Portability would make wireline
  and wireless number location nearly impossible. Manual dialing
  would be the only way to prevent an auto dialer issue. 
  
  

  

  
Erik Flournoy
  808-426-4527
301-218-7325


CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE
This e-mail message, including any attachments
from EESPRO.com - contain information which is
CONFIDENTIAL AND/OR LEGALLY PRIVILEGED. The
information is intended only for the use of the
individual named above and may not be
disseminated to any other party without written
permission. If you are not the intended
recipient, or the employee or agent responsible
for delivering the message to the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that any
dissemination, disclosure, distribution, copying
or taking of any action in reliance on the
contents of this e-mailed information is
strictly prohibited. If you have received this
transmission in error, please immediately
notify in...@eespro.com,
and permanently delete this e-mail and the
attachments hereto, if any, and destroy any
printout thereof.  

  

  

  


On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Derek
  Andrew derek.and...@usask.ca
  wrote:
  
Isn't it impossible to decide if a number is
  a cell phone or a land line because of local number
  portability?
  
  
On Tue, Aug 18,
2015 at 2:34 PM, Matthew Crocker matt...@corp.crocker.com
wrote:
  
  





Depending on your switch you should be able
  to build a profile for the customer and reject
  calls going to cell phone LRN providers.  


Personally, I wouldn’t take on the liability of
guaranteeing their auto-dialer only calls
landlines.   You would end up being sued if you
make a mistake.  IMHO, let them manually dial or
find a list scrubbing company that actually
works.

  
—
  
  
  Matthew
Crocker