Date: Mon, 2 May 2005 01:46:50 +0200 From: Niels Bakker <niels=nanog@bakker.net> To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: FCC To Require 911 for VoIP
* sean@donelan.com (Sean Donelan) [Mon 02 May 2005, 01:45 CEST]:
Why do you think the ISP knows anything more precise that the information they already give in the IN-ADDR.ARPA name? Let's encode the ZIP Code in the router DNS name ... (well, someone had to suggest using DNS as the universal database solution eventually).
Well that's fun... whenever you see a phone number you can get its physical location. Doesn't sound like such a good idea to me, privacy-wise.
Looking it up in the phonebook (be it digital or otherwise) is much the same, although you won't have any control over being listed or not. I even recall that the Dutch Phonebook on a CD-ROM had unlisted numbers on it, so you could get the address associated with it... The same goes for DSL IP's with some DSL telco's... They allow for automated billing by sites through the phone bill (opt-out ofcourse) or even provide the sought geolocation info (Klipping). The latter is mostly used by devious marketing agencies ofcourse, and some of the ISP's have explicitly taken care of the opt-out for all their subscribers... In short, technologies exist, how they're used is mostly up to us. How to prevent abuse is definitely up to us (techies or whatever ;D)... Rome wasn't built in a day... (though some argue it was destroyed in one ;D)
-- Niels.
Regards, JP Velders