The Telecom Digest
Monday, 15 Aug 2022

Copyright © 2022 E. William Horne. All Rights Reserved.
Volume 41Table of contentsIssue 167
Hold the Phone: OIG Issues a Telemedicine Special Fraud Alert
CWA Bargaining update: Maximus workers strike
Your phone company is (probably) selling your locations data. Here's how to turn it off
Message-ID: <20220813214011.GA79414@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2022 21:40:11 +0000 From: Telecom Digest Moderator <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org> Subject: Hold the Phone: OIG Issues a Telemedicine Special Fraud Alert Monday, July 25, 2022 In 2020, as part of its broader National Health Care Fraud Takedown, the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) charged 345 individuals, including over 100 licensed medical professionals, for their role in “schemes” and “scams” that “leveraged” aggressive marketing and so-called telehealth services to commit fraud.1 Now the OIG is urging providers not to get caught up in such schemes in the first place. A recently issued Special Fraud Alert2, identifies seven “suspect characteristics” that do not necessarily mean an arrangement is illegal, but may suggest heightened risk. https://tinyurl.com/ynyn9nkb ********************* Moderator's Note ********************* I came across this while looking for something else: it's a bit dated, but still worth looking at. Bill Horne
Message-ID: <20220813204256.GA79012@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2022 20:42:56 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malasQRMsimilation@gmail.com> Subject: CWA Bargaining update: Maximus workers strike On Monday, call center workers at federal contractor Maximus, who answer Medicare and Affordable Care Act marketplace lines, went on strike at four different call centers in Bogalusa, La.; London, Ky,; Chester, Va.; and Hattiesburg, Miss. The Maximus call center workers, who are organizing to form a union with CWA, went on strike to protest poor working conditions, including unfair attendance and restrictive bathroom break policies. In conjunction with the strike, workers across the country hosted a virtual town hall to discuss the impacts of Maximus=E2=80=99 policies and practices on its workforce and steps the company must take to ensure justice and fairness for its employees. Labor leaders, elected officials, and community allies, including CWA Secretary-Treasurer Sara Steffens, AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler, Rev. William Barber, Rep. Don McEachin (D-Va.), and Rep. Troy Carter (D-La.), participated in the town hall in support of the workers. Watch the recording of the virtual town hall here (link on webpage - Mod). https://cwa-union.org/news/organizing-update-169 -- (Please remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
Message-ID: <tdc74j$g1b$1@panix2.panix.com> Date: 15 Aug 2022 01:22:27 -0000 From: "Scott Dorsey" <kludge@remove-this.panix.com> Subject: Re: Your phone company is (probably) selling your locations data. Here's how to turn it off Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com> wrote: >On Tue, Jul 19, 2022 at 09:11:41AM -0400, Fred Goldstein wrote: > >> Not necessarily. While the phone company does know where you are, at >> least down to the which-cell level. the phone itself has GPS (required >> for E911 location purposes, though you sometimes wonder if the people >> behind such rules had other interests in mind), and apps can be given >> permission to access it. Then the app itself can communicate with its >> servers. The carrier has nothing to do with it. You can, however, go >> into the app permissions settings in Android and see which apps have >> Location permission, and when (all the time, or only when using it, for >> instance). > >Sorry, I don't buy it. The Olympians heights of the phone company PR >flacks probably resound with oh-so-comforting denials, but I think >they're lying through their teeth. I'm not saying that the phone company isn't collecting your position data. But read what Fred is saying.... by default any app running on your phone has access to your position data. It's not JUST the phone company. It's any company whose apps you are using. A whole raft of companies have access to your data and they ALL are likely to be collecting it. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
End of The Telecom Digest for Monday, 15 Aug 2022
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