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VoIP E9-1-1

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VoIP E911 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: VoIP E9-1-1


1
Non-Service Initialized Phones and 9-1-1
Michigan 2009 Fall Forum on Next Generation 9-1-1
and Other Emerging Technologies November 3, 2009
2
Agenda
  • Introduction
  • What is an NSI phone?
  • The Challenge of NSI phones

3
TCS Fast Facts
  • Established in 1987
  • Annapolis HQ, Seattle, Tampa, London
  • Data Centers in WA, AZ, MD
  • NOCs in Seattle and Annapolis
  • NASDAQ TSYS
  • Strategic Offers
  • Wireless Location Messaging Solutions
  • Satellite Services and Deployable Systems
  • Homeland Security
  • Professional Services
  • Industry Relations
  • Founding Member SMS Forum, PAM Forum, IN Forum
  • Member 3GPP, CTIA, ETSI, GSM, NENA, APCO, OMA,
    TIA, ESIF, NRIC VII, IETF

4
TCS E9-1-1 Solutions
  • Meets wireless E9-1-1 Phase I and Phase II FCC
    requirements
  • Provides standards-based VoIP i2 E9-1-1 service
    (Owns the original i2 patent)
  • Displays caller location to police, fire and
    emergency personnel (life-saving information)
  • Supports 24/7 monitoring and operations
  • Operates 2 fully redundant data centers
  • Serves over 100 million subscribers
  • Processes over 125,000 calls/day
  • Has completed over 100,000,000 E9-1-1 calls to
    date
  • Operates the only TL9000 certified NOC in the 911
    industry

5
TCS Facilities/NOC/Data Center
Seattle Network Operations Center
Backup NOC Data Center Phoenix, AZ
Seattle Data Center
6
What is an NSI Phone?
  • Every cell phone is unique and must be positively
    identified via an electronic handshake with the
    wireless switch before service is activated.
  • An NSI phone is one that has not completed the
    handshake, or has failed the handshake.
  • Discarded (failed)
  • Newly purchased (failed)
  • Power up (not complete)
  • Service lost/restored (not complete)

7
Why are NSI Phones Capable of 9-1-1?
  • Congressional pressure (Eshoo, D-Ca)
  • FCC Mandate
  • Similar to warm dial tone for landline
  • For 9-1-1 calls, carriers skip the handshake
  • The road to hell..

8
How do NSI Phones Work?
  • Call routing based on cell sector (same as normal
    wireless call)
  • PSAP receives ESRK, but no CBN
  • The CBN is typically 911 7 digits of Electronic
    Serial Number
  • Location info is provided (assuming capability of
    phone and PSAP)
  • Accuracy not adequate to pinpoint user (same as
    normal Phase 2)

9
NSI Phones Are Perfect Harrassment Tools
  • No phone numberno CBN, in exact location, not
    traceable
  • Many children find amusement by playing with
    their NSI phones
  • Older users are malicious
  • No good deed goes unpunished

10
Consequences
  • Dispatcher in Chicago, victimized by one too many
    prank calls, chastised child for playing with the
    phone. The call was legitimate, however, with
    tragic results and lawsuits.
  • Numerous anecdotal reports of false reports of
    serious crimes causing responders to kick in the
    doors of innocent, sleeping, unsuspecting victims
  • Intentional misdirection of police away from a
    crime in progress.

11
Statistics
  • Tennessee
  • 2 of NSI calls are legit
  • Oct-Dec 06 54 different callers dialed 9-1-1
    from an NSI phone more than 10 times (max140)
  • Of these 54 people, 8 were children

12
More Statistics
  • Florida
  • 12-county survey for one month
  • 4 of all NSI calls were legit
  • Michigan
  • 2-month survey
  • .05 of 1000 NSI calls were legit (5 calls)
  • Washington
  • Snohomish County-6 week survey
  • 2 of 553 NSI calls were legit

13
What is Being Done About NSI Phones?
  • FCC has amended the NSI mandate to allow carriers
    to block harassment calls
  • Carriers are reluctant to block calls due to
    liability concerns and cost considerations
  • Who has authority to identify a harasser?
  • No existing technology to block specific NSI
    calls.

14
What is Being Done About NSI Phones?
  • Petition to FCC
  • NENA, APCO, NASNA, several states
  • Petition called for FCC Notice of Inquiry
  • FCC Notice of Inquiry (Nov 3, 2003)
  • 70 Respondants with various recommendations
  • Block all NSI Phones terminate NSI requirement
  • Block specific NSI Phones using various
    technologies
  • NENA submitted reply response

15
NENA Response to FCC Notice of Inquiry
  • Opposed termination of NSI requirement and
    supported blocking of individual calls
  • Called for Advisory Working Group for negotiated
    rule making
  • Identified issues to be resolved
  • What technology to be used to block calls?
  • How to define a harassment call what triggers
    blocking?
  • Liability
  • How long should blocking persist on any one
    phone?
  • Funding/Cost Recovery

16
Options
  • Terminate all 9-1-1 service for NSI phones (if
    the phones dont work for regular calls, why
    should there be an expectation for 9-1-1?)
  • Or,
  • Block Harassment Calls from specific phones

17
Technology for Blocking Individual NSI Calls
  • Block at the PSAP
  • Recommended by carriers
  • Assuages liability concerns
  • Places burden for blocking on the entity that
    wants the calls blocked
  • Does hardware/software exist to block NSI calls?
  • Can calls be routed to recording?

18
Technology for Blocking Individual NSI Calls
  • Block at the MSC/MPC
  • Development work required
  • How to communicate block order?
  • Automated timer on blocks
  • Calls can be routed to recording
  • Possible call processing delays for all 911 calls

19
Potential issues if all NSI wireless handsets are
blocked
  •  The carrier processing the call may not be able
    to distinguish a handset that has no active
    account with any carrier from a handset
    subscribed to a carrier with whom the carrier
    processing the call does not have an automatic
    roaming agreement.
  • A carrier may block a 911 call due to billing
    errors or disputes or a simple case of a check
    lost in the mail.
  • Immediately and for several seconds after power
    on, MSC to MSC handoff, recovery from loss of
    service in a tunnel etc, system "reboots", and
    other normal network events a handset will appear
    to be non-initialized and be blocked from making
    911 calls.

20
Potential Issues if we block individual wireless
handsets
  • Each suspect handset will have to be blocked on
    every carrier with a compatible air interface or
    the handset will simply roam to another
    compatible network.
  • Bad actors will simply get another NSI handset at
    a yard sale or thrift store. There is a virtually
    unlimited supply of such handsets.
  • Bad actors may donate the blocked handset to a
    thrift store which could prevent a decent citizen
    from making a 911 call to request help for
    someone else who really needs it.
  • Call processing can be delayed or complicated as
    the telephones electronic serial number on every
    911 call will have to be compared to a list of
    blocked serial numbers.
  • Because it is extremely difficult, perhaps
    impossible, to uniquely identify NSI handsets
    even using the ESN of the handset, the wrong
    handset may be blocked when attempting to block a
    harassing caller or other inappropriate 911
    calls.

21
Thank you
  • Dick Dickinson
  • Sr. Director, Public Safety
  • TeleCommunication Systems, Inc
  • 206-792-2224
  • ddickinson_at_telecomsys.com
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