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  NY Tel Premium join:2004-04-09 Smithtown, NY
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| reply to Lenagainster Re: [ATT CV] Suspended because of no E-911
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You may need to provide your address to the 911 dispatcher.
Your 911 call may be answered by a regional 911 center (used for wireless 911 calls) or other emergency response centers.
In order to use AT&T CallVantage at a different location other than your registered primary service address, you must provide AT&T with the new address. AT&T will confirm and validate that Alternative E-911 Service is available from the newly requested address. If Alternative E-911 is not available at the requested new location, you will not be able to use AT&T CallVantage at that address.
If you live in an area that does not have E-911 for traditional wireline phone service, you will continue to receive Basic 911 Service.
*If you have a traditional phone that does not plug into power. For example, cordless home phones require power to work. In some cases, large neighborhood power outages could cause phone line outage.
**The chart is provided for your convenience. AT&T does not make specific representations or warranties based on the statements in the chart, as AT&T cannot foresee every possible such combination of events. How will I know what kind of 911 Service I have with AT&T CallVantage?
The type of 911 Service you receive with AT&T CallVantage is based on the combination of your phone number, your service address, and AT&T's network. See "911 Service Type Information" on Account Management & Settings page for your 911 service type. Below you will find further explanations and details for the items in the above comparison chart.
There are some important differences with the way 911 service works compared to traditional phone service. These include: Service Outages or Interruptions Prevent Alternative 911 and Alternative E-911 Calls Placed From Your AT&T CallVantage Phone
* Just as your regular cordless phone will not work today without power, your Telephone Adapter (TA) does not operate without power. As a result, you will be unable to make any type of 911 call from your AT&T CallVantage phone during an electrical power outage. * Similarly, you will not be able to make any 911 calls from your AT&T CallVantage phone if your broadband service provider has a service outage, or if any other service disruptions keep you from being able to make an outbound call. * If for any reason your AT&T CallVantage is temporarily interrupted, you may not be able to make any 911 calls.
FOR THESE REASONS, AT&T STRONGLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU ALWAYS HAVE AN ALTERNATIVE MEANS OF ACCESSING TRADITIONAL WIRELINE 911 SERVICES FROM YOUR HOME. We Need to Know the Physical Location of your AT&T CallVantage Phone for 911 to Function
* When you dial Alternative 911 using AT&T CallVantage, your call may be routed to a different dispatcher than that used for traditional wireline 911 calls. Calls dialed to Alternative 911 will be routed to a Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) center or other PSAP or local or regional center designated for wireless services associated with the service address you provided when you signed up, or other backup emergency answering services. In some geographic areas, Alternative 911 calls may not be answered outside standard business hours. * In order for Alternative 911 and Alternative E-911 to work properly, the registered 911 service address we have on file for you MUST correspond to the physical location of your AT&T CallVantage phone. This will enable us to accurately identify your emergency Public Safety Answering Point and correctly route your call. * If you relocate your AT&T CallVantage phone on a temporary basis, such as taking your Telephone Adapter (TA) with you when you go to a vacation home, you MUST provide AT&T with the new address and we must be able to confirm 911 service availability for that address. When AT&T detects that you may have moved yourTA, we will ask you to confirm your address. Click here for more information on this procedure. * You can update your physical Service Address online or by calling Customer Service at 1 (866) 596-8464, 8:00 AM ET - 9:00 PM ET Monday - Friday.
If you have Alternative 911
When You Call 911 the First Information You Should Provide is your Location
* If you do need to dial 911 from your AT&T CallVantage phone, the first information you should provide the emergency operator is your location, name, and telephone number, as the Emergency Services PSAP personnel may NOT have this information available automatically. This occurs because your call may go to a general access line at the PSAP which is different from how traditional wireline 911 calls are handled by the PSAP. * From time to time, due to network congestion, you may have a greater possibility of receiving a busy signal or experiencing unexpected and/or longer answering wait times when you dial 911 with AT&T CallVantage Service than with traditional wireline 911 calls.
If you have Alternative E-911
* When you dial 911 with Alternative E-911 service, your call may be routed to the dispatcher used for traditional wireline E-911 calls and the dispatcher may automatically have access to your location, name, and telephone number.
Additional Important Differences When Dialing 911 from Your AT&T CallVantage Phone
* If you purchase your TA from a retailer, you may be able to make outbound calls immediately after installing your TA. However, provisioning of your Alternative 911 or Alternative E-911 service may take additional time to complete in which case any 911 calls dialed between installation of your TA and completion of 911 provisioning may not complete or may be forwarded to a non-public, backup emergency answering service. * If you have Call Forwarding, Locate Me, Do Not Disturb, or other features programmed and in use at the time you dial a 911 call, if your call is interrupted the emergency dispatcher may not be able to call you back at the phone from which you dialed the call.
Important Note
* Please refer to the 911 Service section in the AT&T CallVantage Subscriber Agreement for important information on possible service limitations of the 911 Service, including the differences between the AT&T CallVantage 911 Service and traditional wireline 911 dialing. | |   RockyBB Premium join:2005-01-31 Longmont, CO
| reply to Lenagainster said by Lenagainster :It is still hard for me to comprehend the amount of corporate greed that went in to the decision to screw all these CV customers because of the fear of a lawsuit from an unanswered 911 call when the TOS specifically releases ATT from any liability. It is a stupid decision that will backfire in the PR arena. I'm so surprised. Your comments are usually well thought out. Though perhaps I've been fooled all along.
It has nothing to do with corporate greed. It has much more to do with corporate responsibility -- to ensure that customers get what they expect to get, and to ensure that stockholders (including pension plans, as well as widows and orphans) don't find their assets declining in value due to irresponsible decisions by marketers trying to ring up a couple thousand $25/month deals ..... there's so much more at stake in AT&T Corp that the little VOIP unit should not put all of that in jeopardy. | |  nycityny Premium join:2005-08-09 New York, NY
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| reply to djousma Another thing odd/funny about this - so many folks are worried about signing up with the "smaller" VOIP companies for fear they won't be around very long. Meantime, the "big" guy, AT&T, is the one VOIP company to actually throw in the towel and go out of business. Perhaps folks should not over think their decision in picking a VOIP company. They should just go with the one that has the services that best fits their needs and hope for the best. | |   NY Tel Premium join:2004-04-09 Smithtown, NY
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| said by nycityny :Another thing odd/funny about this - so many folks are worried about signing up with the "smaller" VOIP companies for fear they won't be around very long. Meantime, the "big" guy, AT&T, is the one VOIP company to actually throw in the towel and go out of business. Perhaps folks should not over think their decision in picking a VOIP company. They should just go with the one that has the services that best fits their needs and hope for the best. AT&T is not going out of the VoIP business. The CallVantage Product is going to be re-released and changed under the aegis of the Project Lightspeed Product line. This "customer shedding" has been known to insiders for the past 18 months. I would think the "new" AT&T under Eddie Whiteacre has no plans to discontinue the service but merely morph it into something else. | |  nycityny Premium join:2005-08-09 New York, NY
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| said by NY Tel :AT&T is not going out of the VoIP business. The CallVantage Product is going to be re-released and changed under the aegis of the Project Lightspeed Product line. This "customer shedding" has been known to insiders for the past 18 months. I would think the "new" AT&T under Eddie Whiteacre has no plans to discontinue the service but merely morph it into something else. Semantics. From the standpoint of the consumer, they chose a VOIP company that appeared to be stronger and more stable than most. In the end, their service will be discontinued. | |
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