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Re: [Enum] IETF, ENUM and NGN





>
> I have an account at the University of Vienna IP PBX
> which is connected via Telekom Austria in Vienna
> +43 1 59966 366027
> but the number is also a private network number assigned
> +43 59966 366027
> Both entries are in ENUM and pointing to
> sip:e001-366027 at enum.at43.at
> (BTW this is an example of privacy)

How is this an example of privacy???

Given the whole internet knows that these phone numers are personal identificiation material, providers are NOW responsible for protecting the expectations of EU persons, NOW. If their policies have rules concerning semi-public persons (like most of us, who use publicity to establish professional reputation ), the provider may be able to escape certain obligations - IF their own rules disclaim such obligations.


Who is the ENUM provider, TODAY? I need a legal name, so I can refer the data protection authorities to the abuser (if any abuse is occuring).

Lets view the data protection and privacy policies, for educational purposes, and see what protections they represent they provide.

We need to view similar policies of the delegation authority, as their unilateral acions can cause servers and authorities handling a given name to change. This implies that yhe policies setting the exectation for a given name can change - without notice to the party relying on the earlier disclosure.

(No: you cannot expect grandmother to pull up her dns tool , and parse the ENUM syntax, wherein the revised notice string is located, in Arabic script)



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