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FCC Won't Release Cell Carrier Reliability Data 185

imuffin writes "MSNBC is reporting that the FCC has been collecting data on the reliability of different cell phone carriers in the US. This data could be invaluable to consumers trying to choose a company to sign a lengthy contract with. Just the same, the FCC won't release the data to consumers, citing national security risks. The data collection on cell services began in 2004, but were simultaneously pulled from public view. FOIA requests to obtain the data have been denied, and commentators feel this is simply for the government's convenience." From the article: "'There is nothing mysterious behind it, it is corporate competition protection,' said [terrorism analyst Roger Cressey] ... 'The only reason for the government to not let these records get out is then one telco provider could run a full-page ad saying 'the government says we're more reliable.'' Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists."
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FCC Won't Release Cell Carrier Reliability Data

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  • by User 956 ( 568564 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:41PM (#17262588) Homepage
    Just the same, the FCC won't release the data to consumers, citing national security risks.

    Once again, confirming the fact that "national security risks" and "risks to corporate profit" are the same thing.
    • by windowpain ( 211052 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:49PM (#17262688) Journal
      Your "risk to corporate profit" argument doesn't fly unless you're arguing that the Bush administration has some kind of stake in the least reliable carriers.

      If the figures were published the effect would presumably be that the profits of the worst carriers might suffer and the profits of the best carriers might improve as customers migrate to the better carriers.

      Why would the Bush administration care who wins and who loses?
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Why would the Bush administration care who wins and who loses?

        Because one of the carriers that would be losing was one of the Republicans' biggest contributers, maybe?

        Bush or no Bush, your entire post was on how releasing the information would hurt some companies' bottom lines, while it contained no information whatsoever on how it would be useful to terrorists, and therefore does nothing to refute the assertion that "risk to national security" was codespeak for "risk to corporate profit".
      • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:00PM (#17262816) Homepage Journal
        It's about removing the government's ability to regulate business and promote the interest of citizens above the interest of corporations. They don't feel that corporations should have any accountability or responsibility whatsoever. It's about creating a climate and culture where the government doesn't oversee corporations and punish wrongdoing. Bush & Co. don't have any specific interest in telecoms; they just want corporate feudalism in general.
        • by ivan256 ( 17499 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:59PM (#17263396)
          Oh, give me a break. If that were the case, they would be pusing to prevent the FCC from having anything to do with the carriers at all. The report never would have existed.

          More likely, somebody is an idiot and actually believes that data is sensitive, somebody thinks calling the data sensitive will make them seem more important, thus advancing their career, or the report is so poorly done that they want to bury it before people realize their incompetence.

          This culture we have of pinning things we don't like on politicians we don't like even if there is no evidence or connection is absurd. It is *the* reason that the leaders of both our major political parties are complete morons who's sole talent is pinning blame on somebody else. We get it. You don't like Bush. But stand up and have some principles. Otherwise you are no better than he is.
          • "If that were the case, they would be pusing to prevent the FCC from having anything to do with the carriers at all."

            The People will not tolerate NO regulation.

            They will however fall for the appearance of regulation. Man, does the FCC appear to regulate!

          • >Oh, give me a break. If that were the case, they would be pusing to prevent the FCC from having anything to do with the carriers at all.

            There's been a steady trend to remove consumer protection. About the only blip in the opposite direction was number portability.
        • I read the article and something is pretty unclear to me. The article states, "Any time a carrier has an outage that affects 900,000 caller minutes - say a 30-minute outage impacting 30,000 customers - it must report it to the Network Outage Reporting System."

          My question is, how does the provider know in the case of mobile phones, how many were affected in a network outage?

          They could go by billing address, which, on average might be reasonable assuming that residential and business areas are uniformly

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by Retric ( 704075 )
            Cell networks keep track of "inactive" users. So they don't need to estimate how many users where effected in most cases they have a list of who was effected.
          • Well they have a pretty good idea how many minutes each mast handles at particular times of the day, so you can work it out that way.

            The only time they might get it significantly wrong is if a mast was down, and during that downtime period there was a major event near the mast that brought lots of people to the area, or made them all want to make phone calls at the same time.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by msobkow ( 48369 )

          I think there is more behind the scenes than people realize. There have been complaints about unreliable cell coverage and other telecommunications issues filed with the FCC for years. Maybe they're gathering evidence to determine if charges or additional legislation are required.

          If that's the case, it's pretty clear why they don't want to release the data: it's evidence.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Mr. Sketch ( 111112 )

        Why would the Bush administration care who wins and who loses?

        Maybe one of the lesser reliable carriers made large campaign donations?

        I don't see the big deal since if the report said that carrier Z had the best quality and tons of customers migrated to carrier Z, it would add additional strain to their system and they would end up with lesser reliablity. Of course, the people leaving carriers A through Y would leave those carriers with a lighter load and probably better service, so it would all balance out in the end.

        The point is that people should be able to get a

      • Bush? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by troll -1 ( 956834 )
        Your "risk to corporate profit" argument doesn't fly unless you're arguing that the Bush administration has some kind of stake in the least reliable carriers.

        The FCC is an independent agency that answers to Congress, not the president. See USC Tile 47 151 [cornell.edu] and 154 [cornell.edu]
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's my understanding that the FCC chair is appointed by the President.

          Completely independent, I'm sure. Just like Congress has been completely independent for the last half decade.
        • Mod parent +5 funny (Score:5, Informative)

          by rhombic ( 140326 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:54PM (#17263358)
          The FCC is an independent agency that answers to Congress, not the president.

          Wow, thanks for the laugh, that's the funniest thing I've read all day.

          FWIW, the commissioners are appointed by the President, and then confirmed by congresscritters. 3/2 split by political party.

          Source? The FCC website [fcc.gov] The congressional oversight is a joke.

        • An "independent" agency? Name one that is really independent. Our government agencies are so ruled by politics that NOAA can't even confirm that they believe global warming exists. They are pressured to massage their data to the contrary. The FDA won't approve drugs that don't meet the approval of the moral majority despite the fact that we are supposed to have separation of church and state. There is no altruism left in any agency. They all kowtow to the party in power.
      • Why would the Bush administration care who wins and who loses?

        It's not necessarily the Bush Administration, but on average more wireless companies give money to Republicans than Democrats. See this page on OpenSecrets [opensecrets.org]. AT&T (Cingular) and Verizon both gave more money to Republicans than Democrats.

      • by jelle ( 14827 )
        'Your "risk to corporate profit" argument doesn't fly unless you're arguing that the Bush administration has some kind of stake in the least reliable carriers.'

        The FCC not willing to release reliability data for risk to the national economy^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hsecurity is information in itself.

        The current administration has clearly shown the strong belief that healthy big companies are a requirement for a healthy economy. Whether or not you or me agree with that is besides the point, the government (political part
    • by profplump ( 309017 ) <zach-slashjunk@kotlarek.com> on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:21PM (#17263026)
      Given that the security and stability of a nation is in large part a function of a sufficiently strong economy, "national security risks" and "risks to profit" are the same to some degree, regardless of your politics.

      That's not to say this data should be kept secret, or that the "national security" banner isn't used to hide thing for political purposes, but it's silly to pretend that the economy plays no part in security.
      • Open competition to attract informed consumers leads to a strong economy but definitely creates "risks to profit".
        • Open competition can lead to a strong economy, or it could lead to a weak one. People seem to spend a lot of time complaining about how the open competition from overseas labor hurts our domestic economy, and how we should restrict it. I can't say I wholeheartedly agree with that viewpoint, but it's not completely unreasonable either.

          Beside that, the second line in my post notes that I'm not claiming this particular activity is a valid use of the national security tactics to protect the economy, just that t
    • by jelle ( 14827 )
      'Once again, confirming the fact that "national security risks" and "risks to corporate profit" are the same thing.'

      Which teaches us which carriers are reliable and which are not, because if carrier reliability would be linear with company size, there would be no problem with releasing the data. Obviously, they found that some/all big carriers suck big time and some small carriers rock, so releasing the data would cause big economical shifts in the customerbases of those companies...

  • by LordPhantom ( 763327 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:43PM (#17262604)
    Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists.

    Except, say, if they're trying to pick a quality cell phone provider?
    • by wiredlogic ( 135348 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:53PM (#17262724)
      Except, say, if they're trying to pick a quality cell phone provider?

      Osama: Hello? Hello? Mustafa, are you still there? WTF! I should've heeded that government report and gone with Sprint!
    • Obviously, terrorists will manipulate this information to drive down the stock of the lower-performing carriers (yes, Cingular, I'm looking at you). Then, once they drop low enough, they'll purchase the company at fire-sale prices and...#5 PROFIT!
    • by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:01PM (#17262822) Homepage
      Except, say, if they're trying to pick a quality cell phone provider?

      Of course!

      The idea is that without knowing which carriers are reliable, the terrorists will by chance pick an unreliable carrier. Then, when they're making the final call to initiate the attack, the call might be dropped, hopefully at a point that makes it sound like the attack is cancelled (like in those television commercials).

      Come on, that's about as effective as most of our anti-terrorism initiatives, isn't it?
  • by dingbatdr ( 702519 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:43PM (#17262616) Homepage
    Money Talks.
    • Actually, this is normal practice for the FCC. In fact, it's also the reason that there was never a broadcast television "Channel #1". For the sake of competition, they didn't want a single television channel claiming they were #1 - hence the 2-13 most of us remember.

  • by xlordtyrantx ( 958605 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:44PM (#17262620)
    ... to have some information like that. I know when I first got a cell phone plan, I had no clue as to who to go with. After joining up with Cingular, I find out that they don't cover my area really well, and that if I wanted coverage, I needed to go with Verison. I could have used that info early on, before getting stuck into a two year contract... Oh, and everything that we want to know these days seems to only help the terrorist. Anyone else notice that?
  • by way2trivial ( 601132 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:47PM (#17262660) Homepage Journal
    it could be financial, technilogical prowess, who knows..

    even if it 'were' terrorists, how else will they know which companies service to use for their remote triggers?

    lastly. when WHATEVER entity commissioned the collection of data, started with a request for funds to collect the data.. the request must have detailed SOME benefit to justify (stop laughing, even though it's government, it's true) anyone have an idea of what the original justification was?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:48PM (#17262666)
    Why the hell did they do the study in the first place?
  • by Dachannien ( 617929 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:48PM (#17262674)
    The reports at issue here concern the uptime of the cell phone providers' networks, not the rate of dropped calls or coverage problems.
  • Whom to Trust? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by andphi ( 899406 ) <phillipsam.gmail@com> on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:50PM (#17262702) Journal
    FTA: Consumers have no idea how reliable their cell phone service will be when they buy a phone and sign a long-term contract.

    My solution is not to trust any of them. I had a contract with Cingular. Largest Network, Fewest dropped calls, blah blah. I don't buy it. Why should I trust Verizon not that it's claiming to have the largest network? If I get a prepaid phone, It'll be Cingular because most of the rest of my family is on Cingular, but I'm under no illusions that it will work more than 85% of the time away from large towns or cities.
    • by raehl ( 609729 )
      Part of the problem is there's network, and then there's network. Just because you operate the most extensive network of any single cell phone company doesn't mean you have the biggest area where your customers can place non-roaming calls.

      For example, I have a phone with T-Mobile. T-Mobile has a pretty small network; however, you can roam on a lot of other networks, particularly Cellular One in my area, at no additional charge over your normal plan. So the effective network is bigger than their actual co
    • Largest network meaning most owned cell towers. But doesn't mean best coverage. They own their towers and the former AT&T towers. Phones however stay on their home network pretty much at all costs. So if your phone has 1 bar of service on cingular but there's an AT&T tower sitting in your back yard, you'll get crappy service because your phone isn't smart enough to understand that AT&T and Cingular are the same company now.
  • Not happy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LParks ( 927321 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @06:53PM (#17262728)
    So the Government uses my tax dollars to commision a report, and then denies me the information within that report?

    This is information that I am paying for and could weigh heavily in my decision of which service to subscribe to. It is ridiculous that the government does not support a consumer-driven economy.
    • by brxndxn ( 461473 )
      Anyone wanna do some research and post exactly how much Cingular, Sprint, Nextel... (damn.. I don't even know the carrier names after all the consolidation as of late) have donated to all the Congressional lawmakers?

      We could probably assume that whatever carrier has paid the most to lawmakers had the worst reliability in the study.. since the carrier with best coverage, if they paid the most, would want the study released. (unless of course it makes all cell phone companies look highly unreliable - highly l
  • See, if the terrorist had information about who had the most outtages and where, they could all buy into the most reliable plan for their area. And then their calls would be free to each other while they coordinate the descruction of our nation.

  • Grammar nazi alert (Score:5, Informative)

    by imuffin ( 196159 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:00PM (#17262810)
    You know, I normally mod down grammar nazis. But I can't help but complain here. My article summary has been so heavily edited that I barely recognize it. When I submitted this story, it didn't have these subject/verb disagreements:

    The data collection on cell services began in 2004, but were simultaneously pulled from public view.
    or
    FOIA requests to obtain the data has been denied,

    And I certainly wouldn't use the questionable idiom "Just the same."

    Come on, mods. If you're going to edit my submission beyond recognition and destroy its grammatical integrity while you're at it, at least don't attribute the submission to me.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:12PM (#17262952)
      Sorry but, you're grammer isn't up to hour standards. Let us insure you that, as semi-professional mod's I know how to edit. Furthermore, we excepted your submission irregardless, and thank you even if you are not happy too except it.
    • Direct quote?! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ThePyro ( 645161 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:30PM (#17263094)
      What I think is more important than grammar mistakes is that your article summary was posted in the form of a direct quotation, with no indication that your words had been edited. That's extremely poor journalism. Quotation marks should always been reserved for direct word-for-word quotations... any changes by editors must be clearly indicated as such by the use of brackets. Or, the editors should paraphrase the summary instead of writing it in the form of a direct quote.
    • by Kelson ( 129150 ) *
      Come on, mods. If you're going to edit my submission beyond recognition and destroy its grammatical integrity while you're at it, at least don't attribute the submission to me.

      Hmm, I wonder if we'll start seeing stories with this byline:

      Alan Smithee writes...

  • ...a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists.

    Rip out the land lines, shoot down the communication satellites, blow up the unreliable cell phone carriers, thank the reliable cell phone carrier for doing a job well done, and Google stock shoots straight up as they own all of the undamaged dark fiber. Did I miss anything?
  • by AtariDatacenter ( 31657 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:02PM (#17262836)
    Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists.



    And that is the threat! We must be prepared for threats we can't even imagine! The terrorists are cunning and we have to remove any information that could be used in any conceivable way by terrorists, even if we can't think of how they may use them!



    I can't believe how careless cities are by providing traffic flow numbers and population densities. That kind of reckless pre-911 behavior will get us all killed!

    • Yeah! Like, how about a bomb that has two cell phones as a trigger, one from Cingular and one from Verizon, and the terrorists dial each of them 1000 times, and when one of them receives two more calls than the other, BOOM! And when they bark they shoot bees out of their mouths... AIIIEE!
    • >>> Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists.

      How about if the report highlights single points of failure that are a bit dicey already and could be targeted to wipe out the network causing untold damage to businesses.

      It didn't exactly take much imagination to come up with that.

      All it needs is a large explosion somewhere (not necessarily with any loss of life) added to a communication blackout and you've got pandemonium. Yeah I've heard of la
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by DrSkwid ( 118965 )
        So how is knowing that carrier A drops 3% of calls and carrier B drops 5% of calls really going to make a fking difference to that scenario, brainiac ?

        "OMG teh Al Kayeeda blew up the mobile tower, I can't call Mom and tell her to pick me up from soccer practice, let's start pandemonium!!!!1"

        "pfft, don't panic, that tower drops 7% of calls anyway, n00bs"

        • by pbhj ( 607776 )
          So do you understand the concept of a premise or are you just flaming?

          You'll notice that as I haven't read the report I speculate on it's content and use the word "if" to show that my considerations are only valid (in my opinion) for cases in which the premise is true. The premise is that the detail which the FCC does not want to release pertains to a single point of failure.

          Clearly, from your comment you are privy to the details of the report. It would be more constructive therefore to release the details
          • by DrSkwid ( 118965 )
            if you can cause explosions like that, why would you need to know which parts of the mobile phone network were vulnerable, it doesn't matter which parts you blow up.

            These people took down the World Trade Centre, do you think the need a map of cell phone towers ?

            Drive a truck onto the Golden Gate Bridge and detonate it McVey style.

            Demonstrative, terrorising acts don't require vulnerable targets, any target will do.

            I live in a place where the terrorists blew up pubs, shopping centres, fish & chip shops, c
    • And that is the threat! We must be prepared for threats we can't even imagine!

      That's actually a good point. The airline security theatre is always updated to counter the latest terrorist technology, so it will consistently lag one step behind evil. Any real security would have to take future imagination into account. Thus solving the problem once and for all!

  • Yet another... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by FunWithKnives ( 775464 ) <<ten.tsirorret> <ta> <tcefrePxodaraP>> on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:07PM (#17262902) Journal
    Yet another incident wherein the public is not allowed to see/do/say/read/etc something because it would be a "national security risk". This is bullshit, obviously. They're using the Terrorism Scare (sort of a neo-Red Scare) to justify actions that would otherwise generate a lot of flack.

    "We've been collecting information on cellphone services, and have produced a ranking of reliability. But, unfortunately, if we let Joe Sixpack have access to this information, the terrorists will win! So of course you realize that we're just keeping your best interests at heart, right? You wouldn't want the terrorists to blow up little Johnny's elementary school, now would you?"
  • by rowama ( 907743 )
    FTA: Consumers have no idea how reliable their cell phone service will be when they buy a phone and sign a long-term contract.

    This blatant over generalization is contradicted by ...

    FTA: Complaints about cell phone service are near the top of every list of consumer gripes. The Illinois attorney general's office, for example, last year ranked cell phone complaints as the fourth-most-common complainComplaints about cell phone service are near the top of every list of consumer gripes. The Illinois attorney gene
    • As a result, everybody knows spotty service is an issue when they decide on *any* service provider... A much more significant factor is the family/friends connection.

      Not necessarily. What if I just moved into the area, and I don't have that many local friends? What if my friends are stupid, and I'd rather trust some sort of objective report? What if my friends are generally poor and don't have cell phones? What if my friends all work at the same place and their phones all come from a single provider,

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by rowama ( 907743 )
        >Who are you to say what kind of information we should or shouldn't find more valuable?

        A nobody expressing an opinion. Isn't that what we do here?

        I don't think the difference in service reliability would persuade me to change.

        >What if...? What if...? What if...? What if...?

        Obviously, the "objective" source of information would benefit you, since you might be forced to move to a place full of poor, stupid people with only one place to work. If I was forced into such a situation, figuring out how to
    • by dircha ( 893383 )
      How about the fact that we the people paid for this data to be collected, compiled, analyzed and stored?

      How ass backwards is it when you are making up excuses why a government of the people, by the people, is witholding the work of our hard earned tax dollars, conducted under the direction of our democratically elected representatives ... from we the people?

      Who the hell decided this was a good idea? Who do they work for if not us? And you're making up excuses for them?

      Throw the worthless bums out.
  • by CallFinalClass ( 801589 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:12PM (#17262956)
    OK folks - I'm associated to the industry and this isn't as juicy as people would make it out to be.

    RTFA, and you will see that only really large outages are noted. This does not cover MUCH more common issues like:

    * Poor RF optimization, leading to dropped calls and poor coverage

    * Span outages to cell sites, forcing all calls on that site to drop and new attempts to be blocked

    * Audio issues

    ...and so on.

    AFAIK, while the feds may compile the data, I know of no efforts by any govt agency to independently collect this sort of data, IIRC it's all self-reported.

    Now, if they lowered the thresholds (not gonna happen), then you would see more things of interest.

  • Honestly, who doesn't see it coming? I'm also guessing that the information will become available via a "lost" laptop, CD, DVD, pen drive, or possibly floppy (it *is* the government, we're talking about), that will leak the results. The most reliable companies' stocks skyrocket, people sell sell sell for the poor performers, and the government workers buy buy buy before the leak occurs.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:23PM (#17263046)
    What are they really hiding?

    The real issue that is being hidden here is the number of times paranoid homeland security dickheads takeout the cell networks in response to perceived local threats. This may be done with or without the carriers co-operation. However, the carriers know when it is happening.
  • by banerjek ( 1040522 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @07:24PM (#17263054) Homepage
    No one seems to care how easy we make things for the terrorists -- at least the FCC is trying to do something.

    When will people learn that terrorists may be using our roads, electrical grid, water supply, and grocery stores to benefit themselves? I hear some of them may even be using the telecommunications infrastructure to communicate with each other!

    Once we deprive the terrorists of access to these resources, we can live safe and free. Limiting access to these things will be difficult as a practical matter, our best option is probably to blow all these things up.

    We should probably burn down the schools and universities too -- there's no telling what a terrorist might do with knowledge they could gain there....

  • was written with just such an event in mind... EFF, go to work!
  • on 24 never has cell problems; I want that company!
  • Can you hear me now? ...

    Ok... How bout now?
  • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @08:14PM (#17263496) Homepage Journal
    If America doesn't convert the totally unaccountable "national security" excuse into a government system that's part of the oversight mechanism of checks and balances, then unaccountable government will destroy America. The national security excuse is therefore clear and present danger to real national security.

    I note that "national security" is the excuse that Bush gives to protect his warrantless NSA spying on Americans, which covers the same telcos these reliability data could expose as unreliable with immunity, though they can use the data themselves for anything they want, including business competition.

    Is there anyone left who believes Bush and his "national security" excuses are anything but fascism: government by and for, but not of, corporations? Anyone who believes anyone coming after Bush will be any more accountable, now that Bush has proven how easy it is for even a fool to abuse us this way, while we're actually under attack?

    Why do they hate America?
    • Is there anyone left who believes Bush and his "national security" excuses are anything but fascism: government by and for, but not of, corporations? Anyone who believes anyone coming after Bush will be any more accountable

      C'mon, be realistic - there are plenty of cultural references from the 90's and before where, seemingly at every turn, things are classified as 'matters of national defense' to frustrate our friendly neighborhood protagonist.

      It's an old excuse - not that it's any justification - but let's
      • Who said Bush invented it? I don't think I've ever given Bush credit for a single original idea in his entire life - perhaps his most essential characteristic.

        Bush (his "team", really - he's just a spokesmodel) has, however, created unprecedented (in the US) secrecy and classifications, even classifying info long public. Hand in hand with unprecedented (American) fascism.

        Just because his crimes aren't new doesn't mean we shouldn't care about them. To the contrary, the new ones are more alarming, precisely b
        • So like I said: Impeach Bush Now. TODAY. Or starting January 3, 2007, when he's actually lost his ablative coating of House Republican majority.

          I would venture that every president in modern history has done things in the office that would be plausibly impeachable offenses. I would also venture that impeaching every president out of partisan bitterness would also be a tragic mistake - better to get rid of the office all together. Until then, we have 4-year terms.
          • Again, who said we should impeach Bush out of "partisan bitterness"? How about breaking serious laws, like FISA? Or lying us into invading Iraq?

            What do you think we impeach a president for? Only when we find a dead body in his arms, and the president confesses?
            • How about breaking serious laws, like FISA? Or lying us into invading Iraq?

              My point is all the modern presidents have done this, at least to the level that one could raise charges and hold proceedings, even if not convicted, at least back to Lincoln. Lincoln was on particularly thin ice with some of his executive decisions. Only my lack of knowledge of prior presidents has me stop there.

              The number of laws we have practically guarantees it. Bush has probably broken several laws he doesn't even know about.
              • No, not all modern presidents have done even those two crimes I mentioned. Bush has.

                Nixon's CIA wiretapping was the abuse that Congress wrote the FISA to stop. Nixon didn't run nearly as much surveillance as has Bush, and it wasn't specifically illegal at the time Nixon did it. Even so, Nixon avoided impeachment for that crime, among others, only by resigning.

                Lyndon Johnson lied us deeper into Vietnam, with his Gulf of Tonkin fabrications and lies. That was a much less serious example, but he still probably
                • No, not all modern presidents have done even those two crimes I mentioned. Bush has.

                  Nice strawman, but my claim wasn't that they had done those two crimes, rather they've done things that one could plausibly bring up as potential high-crimes and misdemeanors.

                  If you want to lower the bar to impeachment, fine, but that's going to effectively eliminate the office - so it might as well just be done constitutionally.
                  • You've got it exactly backwards.

                    You claimed that Bush shouldn't be impeached, because other presidents have done the kinds of crimes that he did. I refuted (with facts) that they hadn't done what he has done - that "even the two crimes I mentioned" are unprecedented, which you had denied in general. That's not a strawman, though apparently you can't tell the difference from a simple rebuttal.

                    You're the one raising the bar to impeachment. You still haven't answered which crimes should cause impeachment. So I
                    • because other presidents have done the kinds of crimes that he did

                      You're talking about specifics, I'm talking about broad categories.

                      You're right, none of the other presidents have done the specific things Bush 43 has done. Agreed.

                      However, Clinton did perjure himself in federal court while in office. That shakes the foundation of our system.
                      Bush 41 - lied to Congress about his involvement in arms shipments/funding to Iraq
                      Regan was certainly impeachable for Iran-Contra, but even a Democratic Congress didn'
                    • Yes, lying us into Iraq (and consistently while we've been there) and repeatedly (and unnecessarily) violating the FISA should have Bush impeached. If those crimes weren't committed with the complicity of his Republican Congress (and collaborators among its caged Democratic minority), which still retains 49 Senate votes, he'd be impeached and convicted.

                      As would those other presidents, specifically Bush Sr, Reagan and Johnson. Maybe even Roosevelt, though I doubt it.

                      Clinton's "lying" was supposedly when he s
                    • When investigations show Bush violated FISA to generate intel on domestic political enemies, like challengers to Republican officials, or even just corporate espionage, will that be good enough for you to want impeachment?

                      cite? This sounds like complete speculation/conspiracy theory on your part but show me the evidence and I'll believe you. If you'd rather not recognize that laws have to adapt to technology and fail to interpret the peacetime clause of FISA, but no Library Tower or Brooklyn Bridge, then
                    • I did not say losing the Iraq War (or knowing it would be lost) was impeachment grounds. I said lying us into war. I think a Congressional investigation into the difference between Bush's intel and the reports he gave Congress, and the people, will show that. Those will produce Impeachment Articles. Then House managers can try to convince 18+ Republican senators to probably destroy their Party's chances to elect a Republican president in 2008, while Democrats control Congress.

                      So I don't think those Republic
  • by Fred_A ( 10934 ) <fred@NOspam.fredshome.org> on Friday December 15, 2006 @08:34PM (#17263724) Homepage
    Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists.
    That's why I keep seeing all those full page ads in Al Quaida weekly : "9 terrorists out of ten choose Wiretelzoom, the most reliable wireless carrier according to the government"
  • Cressey added that he couldn't imagine a scenario where the reports would be valuable to terrorists

    I know if I was going to use cellphones to detonate bombs, or communicate with others during a plot, I would definately like to know who the most reliable network belonged to.

    I don't believe that the FCC has weighed the benefits of consumers being able to have Government collected data to aid them in making their decision when selecting a provider against the ills of terrorists having the same tool.

    Th

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jamstar7 ( 694492 )

      I know if I was going to use cellphones to detonate bombs, or communicate with others during a plot, I would definately like to know who the most reliable network belonged to.

      So let's outlaw cell phones then. Can't trigger a bomb with a cell phone if there are none...

      The data has been collected, that in itself is a security threat when the information is kept the out of the hands of the average American. In such a situation, it is more likely for a specially trained terrorist informant to get ahold of the

      • each cell phone needs a randomly triggered "outage simulation" so that a terrorist can't tell the real outages from the fake ones!
  • Market balance (Score:3, Insightful)

    by pumpknhd ( 575415 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @09:29PM (#17264228)
    The idea that if the government releases the data, everyone will switch to the best provider is ridiculous. If everyone switches to the "best" provider, they'd become oversaturated, lots of service unavailable, and drop calls. They'd stop being the best. Then with the next report, everyone would switch to the new "best" provider. No, it doesn't work that way. Reporting will make all the companies more accountable and try harder to improve their service.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jamstar7 ( 694492 )

      The idea that if the government releases the data, everyone will switch to the best provider is ridiculous. If everyone switches to the "best" provider, they'd become oversaturated, lots of service unavailable, and drop calls. They'd stop being the best. Then with the next report, everyone would switch to the new "best" provider. No, it doesn't work that way. Reporting will make all the companies more accountable and try harder to improve their service.

      Actually, if 'everybody' switched, the cell company wo

  • I would find out who is privy to the report and then track down who they use, chances are it's one of the ones at the top of the list we don't see. Well at least in their area I would suspect. But they may know how bad it really is and not even own a cell phone!
  • That's the beauty of national security - anything can impact it. besides, FOIA requests cost money, take time, and may uncover embarrassing facts - so let's keep the US safe from those terrorist bastards and keep our secrets to ourselves. And anyone who thinks different must be a commie pinko spy or an undercover agent for the FBI...

  • They'll lose a laptop with the data on it soon enough.

    They always do. The signal always gets through.
  • by Eric_Utah ( 55690 ) on Friday December 15, 2006 @11:58PM (#17265314)
    I'm involved with contributing data to the reports in question. Let me point out that the accusation against the FCC isn't quite right. Submitter claims that the FCC has been collecting data on the "reliability" of different cell phone carriers in the US -- data that could be be invaluable to consumers. The data in question are actually "outage reports" that involve FCC reportable events. These types of events generally involve damage to systems and read like: "911 service down to 175,000 subscribers for 17 hours due to fiber burned in arson event at 777 Bozo St.", or "45,000 subscribers had no services in Deer Meadows when falling tree knocked over Hwy 32 repeater". They describe specific incidents and addresses with number of subscriber minutes affected.

    Outage event reports full of acts of God (and acts of vandals) do not provide any data on the actual "reliability" of cell phone carriers as judged by consumers. Consumer reliability is seen as: "How often do my calls drop - how many areas of town have no service - how often do my call attempts say 'try again' or 'network busy'". Knowing that 20,000 users lost long distance service in BFE when an idiot with a backhoe dug up a fiber does not help with those questions -- oversubscribed cell phone towers are not reported as outage events. In short, the FCC does not know who the most "reliable" carriers are -- only which ones sustain the most damage to their facilities.

    As for security matters: If anyone wanted to create havoc, they'd take one glance at the report and burn down the sites responsible for the largest outages listed. "National infrastructure" is described in painstaking detail. It wouldn't take a criminal mastermind - only a couple of drunk high school kids.
    • by Sinical ( 14215 )

      As for security matters: If anyone wanted to create havoc, they'd take one glance at the report and burn down the sites responsible for the largest outages listed. "National infrastructure" is described in painstaking detail. It wouldn't take a criminal mastermind - only a couple of drunk high school kids.


      Might you then have to consider (scary thought ahead!) ACTUALLY FUCKING PROTECTING THE NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE?!

      Oh noes, it costs us money to do that and we would far rather censor the reports than attempt
  • You would find that cellular carriers have really crappy service.

    Unfortunately you won't find any of that information confirmable unless you have about 4 million cell phones distributed around the country and can start gathering data on all 4 million phones and the successful connectivity rates between the phones and yourself.

    Unfortunately there aren't too many people who have that kind of cellular coverage and data.

    Unless you are OnStar.

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