The Telecom Digest
Thursday, 18 Aug 2022

Copyright © 2022 E. William Horne. All Rights Reserved.
Volume 41Table of ContentsIssue 170
AT&T approaches mid-point in white box switch rollout
'It's not being used and it's an eye sore': NJ town sues T-Mobile over abandoned cell tower
Workplace Productivity: Are You Being Tracked?
Message-ID: <20220817154304.GA106796@telecomdigest.us> Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 15:43:04 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malassiQRMmilation@gmail.com> Subject: AT&T approaches mid-point in white box switch rollout AT&T EVP and CTO of network services Andre Fuetsch told Mobile World Live (MWL) the operator plans to have 50 per cent of its core backbone traffic running on white box switches and open hardware by the end of 2022, advancing its goals around software-defined networking (SDN) and virtualisation. Fuetsch noted the white box deployments are one element of AT&T's overall commitment to SDN, virtualisation, integration, and openness. https://www.mobileworldlive.com/featured-content/top-three/att-approaches-mid-point-in-white-box-switch-rollout/ -- (Please remove QRM from my email address to email me directly)
Message-ID: <20220817153255.GA106634@telecomdigest.us> Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 15:32:55 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malassiQRMmilation@gmail.com> Subject: ‘It's not being used and it's an eye sore’: NJ town sues T-Mobile over abandoned cell tower North Haledon is suing T-Mobile in an effort to get them to take down a cell tower that is no longer being used. The town has been trying to get the tower removed since 2020. “It's not being used and it's an eye sore,” says Mayor Randy George. “Why should we have two cell towers next to each other, and the original contract from 20 years ago specifically states they have to take it down. We're just asking them to live up to the contract.” https://bronx.news12.com/its-not-being-used-and-its-an-eye-sore-nj-town-sues-t-mobile-over-abandoned-cell-tower -- (Please remove QRM from my email address to email me directly)
Message-ID: <0D0EA96C-1039-4E5D-A740-4452498BAE58@roscom.com> Date: 15 Aug 2022 22:58:23 -0400 From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> Subject: Workplace Productivity: Are You Being Tracked? The Rise of the Worker Productivity Score Across industries and incomes, more employees are being tracked, recorded and ranked. What is gained, companies say, is efficiency and accountability. What is lost? By Jodi Kantor and Arya Sundaram A few years ago, Carol Kraemer, a longtime finance executive, took a new job. Her title, senior vice president, was impressive. The compensation was excellent: $200 an hour. But her first paychecks seemed low. ... https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/08/14/business/worker-productivity-tracking.html ************************* Moderator's Note ************************* Anyone whom has been employed to tune a Spamassassin filter or block access to certain websites or re-re-re-install windblows after the 3rd or 4th time an employee has clicked "Yes" once-too-often will under- stand when I point out that the great majority of office employees are proof that the average corporate computer user is both brain-dead and oblivious to the dangers which computers pose to their privacy and to their income. Multivariant analysis of keypress frequency, word counts, repetitive patterns, email addresses sent-to or received-from, and time-away- from-keyboard factors can be used to accurately predict and measure the start, length, and periodicity of a female employee's lunar cycle. Or, the lack of same. Now, that kind of information is both dangerous and useful. It's dangerous because it can confirm preconceived notions about female employee's productivity, social tendencies, or work-ethic. It is also useful to a cutthroat capitalist, because it can be used to detect pregnancies which an employee might not choose to reveal to her boss, and therefore might make the boss feel justified in finding ways to fire her before her new child disrupts the office workflow, leads to demands for on-site child care, or raises the company's health-insurance rates. Some companies set up all corporate PC's to use a "secure" proxy server which gives employees the impression that they are safe from prying eyes and corporate monitoring, while in fact their employers have access to every URL they type, every opinion they register, every purchase they make, and every political ad they respond to, no matter if the data was gathered during their lunch hour, or after their workday had ended, or while working from home and forgetting to turn off the corporate VPN. Most companies don't bother: they just buy the data from pageface or metube or Pamazonian. The result is the same: pregnant females can be quietly offered a "promotion" which is actually a transfer to the mommy-track not-our-class-dear ghetto where they will languish until they quit. We did it to ourselves. We obliviously became early adapters of AOL Instant Messenger, we employed brain-dead self-serving lies to justify a "weather app" that reports our click lists to vicious opportunists whom sell it to anyone with money to spend, and we chose not to ask why the fresh-new-girl who was actually competent at making spreadsheets useful had suddenly been transferred to a small department that will end her career and her chance of having any of the dremas she'll give up as her options are removed one-by-one. We did it to ourselves. Bill Horne
End of telecom Digest Thu, 18 Aug 2022
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