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6 votes
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Secret military telephone buttons
7 votes -
Google releases “disable 2g” feature for new Android smartphones
19 votes -
Company that routes SMS for all major US carriers was hacked for five years
27 votes -
US phone companies must now block carriers that didn’t meet FCC robocall deadline
18 votes -
Lithuania says throw away Chinese phones due to censorship concerns
15 votes -
Documenting the last pay phones in America
12 votes -
What are your ISP support experiences?
I just wanted to see what everyone else’s experience has been working with your ISP. I recently had a horrible experience and wanted to see if anyone else can relate and maybe just vent a little....
I just wanted to see what everyone else’s experience has been working with your ISP. I recently had a horrible experience and wanted to see if anyone else can relate and maybe just vent a little.
My recent experience: I moved to a new town, and I had been experiencing issues with my internet dropping out, as we all probably have had at some point, and I contacted Cox communications through their chat app. After multiple attempts to fix it, they finally sent a tech out to find that the coax connectors at the pole were rusted out. He replaced them but it wasn’t fixed completely. The tech dismissed it and said to just use it for now and I wouldn’t notice. So I did, and it wasn’t great at first, but it actually slowly got better and was good for a while until the last couple of weeks. This past week every single night it would drop out. I watched the connection drop while I was trying to watch mythic quest (great show btw) and every night for the past week the internet was unusable in the evenings. I then contacted Cox again multiple times, got a credit refunded back to my account and they wanted to do the whole reset modem thing again, so I did just to get to the next steps. Again they said use it and see if it improves, so I did, and it didn’t. I contacted them again, and again the modem reset, so I got fed up and filed a complaint with the FCC while I was chatting with this guy and he had the nerve to try and sell me home automation at the end of our chat!
The next day goes by, a woman from their escalation lines contacts me about my FCC complaint and they send a new tech out. Turns out Cox never buried my original line in conduit, so the line was probably damaged underground as it was sending a weak return signal. The tech ran a new drop from a different tap and used the thickest coax I’ve ever seen. So far it’s been good after the new drop, but it took multiple chats and calls with two different field technicians and an FCC complaint to get it fixed. The worst part about it is Cox Communications is the only broadband ISP in my area other than Starlink and I seriously considered Starlink. So if you read this far, thanks! Please share your experiences if you’d like, or if you want to vent that’s okay.
15 votes -
Tomorrow is the 75th anniversary of the first mobile phone call
6 votes -
The US FCC wants your thoughts on improving the shorter National Suicide Prevention Lifeline number
4 votes -
5G: The outsourced elephant in the room
12 votes -
Comcast nightmare: Six months without Internet despite $5,000 payment
12 votes -
LG to close mobile phone business worldwide
12 votes -
Brazil’s consumer protection regulator fines Apple $2M for not including charger in iPhone 12 box
11 votes -
Can we stop pretending SMS is secure now?
17 votes -
Finnish telecoms giant Nokia is to axe between 5,000 and 10,000 jobs worldwide in the next two years as it cuts costs
7 votes -
Stanford study into “Zoom Fatigue” explains why video chats are so tiring
22 votes -
I'm getting spammed by robocalls, what can I do about it?
Hello people of Tildes, long time no see! As per title, since some point last week I've begun receiving calls from extra-EU countries I've never had any contact with (Haiti, Algeria, Morocco,...
Hello people of Tildes, long time no see! As per title, since some point last week I've begun receiving calls from extra-EU countries I've never had any contact with (Haiti, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia just to name a few).
No doubt it is part of a call back scam; of course I have never picked up nor redialed, still, this seriously blows as I've now been woken up twice at 3am during the week.
Now, I've never had such a problem before, nor have I recently posted my number online anytime recently. Has anyone here had a similar issue? What can I do about it (I'm from the EU if that might help)? Is there any way for me to find out where my number was leaked from?
I have just now installed NoPhoneSpam from f-droid, but have no idea how good of a fix that will be.
Let me know if y'all have any ideas, thanks :)
13 votes -
On the trail of the robocall king
8 votes -
Some educated guesses about the companies, products, and services that are facing down a terrible 2021
9 votes -
Three digit suicide prevention hotline gets green light from House of Commons
21 votes -
Finland's parliament approved a bill designed to protect its networks against cyber threats and espionage – may be used to exclude China's Huawei and ZTE
4 votes -
Verizon 5G DSS isn't the 5G you want
9 votes -
Sweden is banning equipment from Chinese telecommunication firms Huawei and ZTE from its new 5G network
7 votes -
Nokia wins NASA contract to put a 4G network on the moon
8 votes -
It's been twenty-four years since internet companies were declared off-the-hook for the behavior of their users. That may change, and soon
20 votes -
Nokia wins Belgian 5G contracts amid US pressure to exclude the Chinese firm Huawei from supplying key telecoms equipment
6 votes -
AT&T shelving DSL may leave hundreds of thousands hanging by a phone line
6 votes -
Nokia has clinched a deal with Britain's biggest mobile operator BT to supply 5G radio equipment – coming months after UK said it would ban Huawei from 5G networks
7 votes -
At this point, 5G is a bad joke
16 votes -
The Nokia 3310 is twenty years old today
9 votes -
One year later, has the Huawei ban been effective?
5 votes -
The clean network: A US Department of State proposal to provide 5G free of China's interference
3 votes -
US phone carriers may soon be able to block all calls from robocallers' carriers
16 votes -
Mexican drug cartels are installing parasite antennas on existing cell towers, layering their criminal communications network on top of the official one and making life dangerous for technicians
11 votes -
The phone bill security hole in HIPAA
5 votes -
United Kingdom to ban Huawei equipment in 2021 and remove it from 5G networks by 2027
6 votes -
The most recent iteration of a widespread government imposter scam has bilked thousands of Americans out of hundreds of millions of dollars
4 votes -
Hundreds arrested after European law enforcement agencies monitored over 100 million encrypted messages sent through Encrochat, a network used by criminals
20 votes -
Widespread T-Mobile outages cause issues for wireless customers across the US
4 votes -
When phones were fun: Samsung's "Matrix Phone" (2003)
8 votes -
US court grants permission to recover Marconi telegraph from Titanic wreckage—but NOAA is fiercely opposed to the controversial salvage mission
6 votes -
Reverse engineering a £339 5G bioshield
7 votes -
Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou loses key court battle as British Columbia judge rules extradition bid should proceed
7 votes -
Ameelio, a startup backed by the Mozilla's 'Fix the Internet', aims to provide free video calls and messaging to prisoners in the US where video calls can cost as much as $25 for 15min
11 votes -
Peter Dutton opens door to new Australian surveillance of journalists via foreign orders
6 votes -
Anatomy of an internet shutdown
7 votes -
Why is TV 29.97 frames per second?
10 votes -
A history of vintage electronics: The Guglielmo Marconi Collection and the history of wireless communications
3 votes -
Facebook invests $5.7 billion in India's Jio Platforms, becoming the largest minority shareholder in the telecommunications company
7 votes