From: “Cynthia H. Brown” <cynthb@sonetis.com>
To: dthorn@gte.net
Message Hash: ba53c8702817253c1887435246f7f39ed8ae62773736663e22e00063a36d2e48
Message ID: <199702160610.BAA13975@homer.iosphere.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-02-16 06:10:23 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 15 Feb 1997 22:10:23 -0800 (PST)
From: "Cynthia H. Brown" <cynthb@sonetis.com>
Date: Sat, 15 Feb 1997 22:10:23 -0800 (PST)
To: dthorn@gte.net
Subject: Re: More on digital postage
Message-ID: <199702160610.BAA13975@homer.iosphere.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Sat, 15 Feb 1997 Dale Thorn wrote:
> jim bell wrote:
>
> > But having an address, and a walkway, and a doorbell is generally considered
> > if not explicit permission, but at least toleration of the idea that
> > somebody can walk up and knock on the door, etc. Having a telephone with a
> > number that anyone can dial is going to result in some level of intrusion.
> > Having a fax machine is a similar issue, unless technology provides a way to
> > block unwanted faxes.
>
> There are some neato methods to deal with the door and the phone,
> but I haven't investigated faxes since I don't run one at home.
Boring but it works: There are plenty of fax-to-PC programs out
there. Anyone can save *lots* of trees by viewing faxes on the
screen before printing the useful page(s). Yes, I know, this means
human intervention, but so does crumpling up the ***BUY NOW***
garbage, tossing it at the recycle bin, missing, cursing, etc.
Here in Canada, the CRTC (Canadian Radio & Telecomms Commission) put
out rules limiting the time of day, etc. for phone spam (voice or
fax). Does anyone out there have the specifics of the CRTC regs?
Cynthia
===============================================================
Cynthia H. Brown, P.Eng.
E-mail: cynthb@iosphere.net | PGP Key: See Home Page
Home Page: http://www.iosphere.net/~cynthb/
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