Author Topic: magicJack pwns AT&T and T-Mobile, makes calls from cell phone in home for FREE  (Read 943 times)

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The Fake Shemp

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By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer – Fri Jan 8, 2:29 pm ET

LAS VEGAS – The company behind the magicJack, the cheap Internet phone gadget that's been heavily promoted on TV, has made a new version of the device that allows free calls from cell phones in the home, in a fashion that's sure to draw protest from cellular carriers.

The new magicJack uses, without permission, radio frequencies for which cellular carriers have paid billions of dollars for exclusive licenses.

YMax Corp., which is based in Palm Beach, Fla., said this week at the International Consumers Electronics Show that it plans to start selling the device in about four months for $40, the same price as the original magicJack. As before, it will provide free calls to the U.S. and Canada for one year.

The device is, in essence, a very small cellular tower for the home.

The size of a deck of cards, it plugs into a PC, which needs a broadband Internet connection. The device then detects when a compatible cell phone comes within 8 feet, and places a call to it. The user enters a short code on the phone. The phone is then linked to the magicJack, and as long as it's within range (YMax said it will cover a 3,000-square-foot home) magicJack routes the call itself, over the Internet, rather than going through the carrier's cellular tower. No minutes are subtracted from the user's account with the carrier. Any extra fees for international calls are subtracted from the user's account with magicJack, not the carrier.
According to YMax CEO Dan Borislow, the device will connect to any phone that uses the GSM standard, which in the U.S. includes phones from AT&T Inc. and T-Mobile USA. At a demonstration at CES, a visitor's phone with a T-Mobile account successfully placed and received calls through the magicJack. Most phones from Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp. won't connect to the device.

Borislow said the device is legal because wireless spectrum licenses don't extend into the home.

AT&T, T-Mobile and the Federal Communications Commission had no immediate comment on whether they believe the device is legal, but said they were looking into the issue. CTIA — The Wireless Association, a trade group, said it was declining comment for now. None of them had heard of YMax's plans.

Borislow said YMax has sold 5 million magicJacks for landline phones in the last two years, and that roughly 3 million are in active use. That would give YMax a bigger customer base than Internet phone pioneer Vonage Holdings Corp., which has been selling service for $25 per month for the better part of a decade. Privately held YMax had revenue of $110 million last year, it says.

U.S. carriers have been selling and experimenting with devices that act similarly to the wireless magicJack. They're called "femtocells." Like the magicJack, they use the carrier's licensed spectrum to connect to a phone, then route the calls over a home broadband connection. They improve coverage inside the home and offload capacity from the carrier's towers.

But femtocells are complex products, because they're designed to mesh with the carrier's external network. They cost the carriers more than $200, though some sell them cheaper, recouping the cost through added service fees. YMax's magicJack is a much smaller, simpler design.

... suck it CELL PHONES!
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Joe Molotov

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Cellphone pirates sticking it to the man! :rock
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The Fake Shemp

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I can't wait to see someone use a 3G-enabled device to make calls using the magicJack :lol
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Arbys Roast Beef Sandwich

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wait, won't you still get charged for incoming minutes or something? I don't get it.

US phone companies are fucking draconian for charging for incoming texts/calls anyway.
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The Fake Shemp

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It's talking about outgoing calls.

The days of the normal carrier system are coming to an end. With Google manufacturing and selling their own phone, and almost certainly preparing to use Google Voice as a VOIP, this is just marking the beginning of the end. The carriers are going to have to evolve or die.

Within ten years, you'll pay $20 for a Google phone that will be ad revenue supported.
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Arbys Roast Beef Sandwich

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yeah but isn't the device still calling your phone for it to work (i.e., it's just routing the call)? or am I missing something?

Either way, I'm all for competition in this space, and I guess phone companies will just have to adapt or die.
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Eric P

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Within ten years, you'll pay $20 for a Google phone that will be ad revenue supported.

i actually floated this to my current company

30 second ad instead of ringing gets you a 5 min conversation
1 min of ads gets you a 10 minute call

charged only for inbound, or if the call is coming from someone on the same network, the call is free (essentially paid for with the caller's having heard an advertisement before contacting you).

it's a good idea, but not right for our company, unforch.
Tonya

The Fake Shemp

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yeah but isn't the device still calling your phone for it to work (i.e., it's just routing the call)? or am I missing something?

No, it's using a femotcell to rout your call via the Internets. So you can you use your phone and number through VOIP really.
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The Fake Shemp

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Within ten years, you'll pay $20 for a Google phone that will be ad revenue supported.

i actually floated this to my current company

30 second ad instead of ringing gets you a 5 min conversation
1 min of ads gets you a 10 minute call

charged only for inbound, or if the call is coming from someone on the same network, the call is free (essentially paid for with the caller's having heard an advertisement before contacting you).

it's a good idea, but not right for our company, unforch.

I am pretty sure we'll get something similar from Google. Standby screens will be advertisements. Boot up/shut down screens will be advertisements. Ads instead of ringtones. Google ads on the Android dashboard. If that means I pay like $5 a month for service, I'm up for that.
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The Fake Shemp

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That industry is completely different. What Google is talking about is a totally VOIP phone that is ad-supported, which is something that they have even spoken about, so yeah I DO NOT THINK IT IS CRAZY.

Why do you think they're manufacturing their own phone? Why do you think they purchased Gizmo5?

They are working on their own VOIP phone.
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