Marconi Rivello
2004-Sep-04 12:18 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
I had this idea, and after looking for something like this already in progress, I found another guy who tried to start it... But I was unable to contact him, and his project seems to be dead. But, I believe it is possible, and I wanted to know the opinion of the experienced... So, let's go: I got an asterisk server setup to receive free calls from US to Brazil. The problem is that at my work, the Internet connection is really good, so I can talk to US, and receive calls from US (through StanaPhone, and IPKall) without any problems. But, at my home, there's no broadband. So, I bought an FXO card, put it at my PC at work, and whenever it gets a call to me, it dials my home number. So I can talk to US for a local call cost, with sound quality better than the real phone call from US (I already did, and it's really better through voip). I was thinking: we could build an Asterisk network, maybe go even further and make it P2P like skype (but I believe it's not necessary at the beginning), and every user would share it's phone line, and be able to place calls to PSTN through the other users' phone lines. So, I let Japanese people call my neighbours for free, and an Italian guy may let me use his phone, so he can use the Indian guy's phone... In US, local calls are free. So it wouldn't be a problem to make such a network to get rid of long distance calls. But in other countries (like here in Brazil) local calls are charged. So there could be some king of billing (without commercial purposes, just to pay for the costs), or something... Asterisk is really powerful, and I believe that at least for a small initial test, it wouldn't require anything else. So, any thoughts on this? Critics, suggestions, ideas... Marconi.
Kevin Walsh
2004-Sep-04 14:11 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
Marconi Rivello [marconirivello@gmail.com] wrote:> I was thinking: we could build an Asterisk network, maybe go even > further and make it P2P like skype (but I believe it's not necessary > at the beginning), and every user would share it's phone line, and be > able to place calls to PSTN through the other users' phone lines. So, > I let Japanese people call my neighbours for free, and an Italian guy > may let me use his phone, so he can use the Indian guy's phone... > > In US, local calls are free. So it wouldn't be a problem to make such > a network to get rid of long distance calls. But in other countries > (like here in Brazil) local calls are charged. So there could be some > king of billing (without commercial purposes, just to pay for the costs), > or something... >What you're suggesting is possible, but has its drawbacks: 1. A home user who has one phone line, and opens it up to the world for local calls, may find that the line is in use by a bunch of Brazilian people when he goes to use it, or tries to make an emergency call. 2. Your phone line may be used to make crank calls, or to place fake pizza orders etc. 3. A wide range of other issues that seem to have slipped my mind. This sort of thing is best organised centrally, rather than by a bunch of people opening up their phone system to the world. A central body would have control over who gets to use the service, and can cancel a subscription, and take more effective action, if abuse is proven. A central body would also be better prepared to trace who made that crank call. Although it's a nice idea, it's not really practical, in my opinion. That sort of setup is best left to companies who want to allow "local" dialout from any office, rather than as a publicly-accessible effort. Of course, if you want to open up your phone line then don't let me stop you. :-) You could persuade a bunch of people you know to do the same, but I'd advise against opening up such a network to the unwashed general public. -- _/ _/ _/_/_/_/ _/ _/ _/_/_/ _/ _/ _/_/_/ _/_/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ K e v i n W a l s h _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ kevin@cursor.biz _/ _/ _/_/_/_/ _/ _/_/_/ _/ _/
m80246@comcast.net
2004-Sep-04 17:30 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
hi marconi my name is Mo and i like that adea of everybody conecting their asterisk to the local phones but can you explain me more how to do that. regards Mo -------------- Original message --------------> I had this idea, and after looking for something like this already in > progress, I found another guy who tried to start it... But I was > unable to contact him, and his project seems to be dead. But, I > believe it is possible, and I wanted to know the opinion of the > experienced... So, let's go: > > I got an asterisk server setup to receive free calls from US to > Brazil. The problem is that at my work, the Internet connection is > really good, so I can talk to US, and receive calls from US (through > StanaPhone, and IPKall) without any problems. But, at my home, there's > no broadband. So, I bought an FXO card, put it at my PC at work, and > whenever it gets a call to me, it dials my home number. So I can talk > to US for a local call cost, with sound quality better than the real > phone call from US (I already did, and it's really better through > voip). > > I was thinking: we could build an Asterisk network, maybe go even > further and make it P2P like skype (but I believe it's not necessary > at the beginning), and every user would share it's phone line, and be > able to place calls to PSTN through the other users' phone lines. So, > I let Japanese people call my neighbours for free, and an Italian guy > may let me use his phone, so he can use the Indian guy's phone... > > In US, local calls are free. So it wouldn't be a problem to make such > a network to get rid of long distance calls. But in other countries > (like here in Brazil) local calls are charged. So there could be some > king of billing (without commercial purposes, just to pay for the > costs), or something... > > Asterisk is really powerful, and I believe that at least for a small > initial test, it wouldn't require anything else. > > So, any thoughts on this? Critics, suggestions, ideas... > > Marconi. > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20040904/915de56e/attachment.htm
Marconi Rivello
2004-Sep-04 18:02 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
Marc: I took a look at those websites, but they look like a big phonebook. Are you sure that they provide ways of placing calls from SIP to PSTN for free? Marconi. On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 22:22:02 +0200, Marc Storck <mstorck@luxadmin.org> wrote:> This already exists, it's called ENUM/E.164 and exists at different > locations: > > e164.lu > e164.info > e164.org > e164.arpa > > Regards, > > Marc
Shilliday, Jim
2004-Sep-04 18:06 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
Marc Sure -- you register a free number that reaches your asterisk box, and configure your box to let incoming callers dial out locally to the PSTN. Jim -----Original Message----- From: Marconi Rivello [mailto:marconirivello@gmail.com] Sent: Saturday, September 04, 2004 9:03 PM To: Marc Storck Cc: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia,or just a matter of organization? Marc: I took a look at those websites, but they look like a big phonebook. Are you sure that they provide ways of placing calls from SIP to PSTN for free? Marconi. On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 22:22:02 +0200, Marc Storck <mstorck@luxadmin.org> wrote:> This already exists, it's called ENUM/E.164 and exists at different > locations: > > e164.lu > e164.info > e164.org > e164.arpa > > Regards, > > Marc_______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Jon Radel
2004-Sep-04 21:26 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Free WWT (WorldWideTelco): Utopia, or just a matter of organization?
Marconi Rivello wrote:> In US, local calls are free. So it wouldn't be a problem to make such > a network to get rid of long distance calls. But in other countries > (like here in Brazil) local calls are charged. So there could be some > king of billing (without commercial purposes, just to pay for the > costs), or something...Well... actually... There are ever fewer people left in the U.S. who have free local outbound calls. Lots of people have enough calls or minutes included in the base monthly charge to cover their normal calling every month, so it sort of looks like the calls are "free." However, if their phone is suddenly in use 18 hours / day by people all over the world their bill might jump painfully. For example, if I exceed my monthly allowance on my residential POTS lines with Verizon, I pay 9.6 cents per local call. However, if your phone company in the U.S. ever noticed that you were billing or sharing your line, they'd probably make you get a more expensive business line, and that's if they were feeling really, really nice. (A Local Exchange Carrier (LEC) not to be named here once shut down one of our DS-3s without notice because we thought we were wholesaling the capacity, in part because we were carrying VOIP across it. Their lawyers turned green, and sent people with fancy titles to apologize, after they realized what the business office had done, but it, and lesser episodes, show that the LECs in the U.S. are, as a general rule, quite freaked out about all this VOIP and "free" phone call stuff. You are messing with their revenue, you know.) All of which pales besides how you'll feel the first time the police drop by to discuss a phone call placed from your phone that played a key role in some nasty crime. The chances are you'd have some very long and very painful discussions with police officers who wouldn't know an RTP packet if it punched them in the nose about how a) it wasn't you, b) it wasn't somebody who came over to your house to use your phone, c) you might be able to figure out what country the call was from if they let you go home and look at your logs, and d) they should believe you and not the technicians from the phone company. So, I'd second other recommendations here that do this if you must for a few friends you trust, but think really, really hard before you open something like this to the public. --Jon Radel