Over and out? AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon ditch RCS joint venture

Wed. April 14, 2021 | By Liam Tung – ZDNet |

AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon have killed off the Cross Carrier Messaging Initiative (CCMI), a joint venture created in 2019 to bring Rich Communications Services (RCS) messaging to Android devices.

News of the CCMI’s demise comes from telco-focused website Light Reading, to which Verizon confirmed that the US carriers that owned CCMI have ended the joint venture.

“The owners of the Cross Carrier Messaging Initiative decided to end the joint venture effort,” Verizon told the publication.

While that spells the end of the CCMI, it’s not the end for RCS messaging, which Google has thrown its weight behind to create a modern take on SMS with capabilities more like Apple’s iMessage, Facebook Messenger, and WhatsApp, such as group chats, read receipts, and video and audio messaging. Google has supported RCS by enabling it in Android’s default Messages app.

RCS is also an opportunity for carriers to earn SMS-like revenue with a messaging system that can better compete with services like Facebook-owned WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger.

Verizon said that the “owners remain committed to enhancing the messaging experience for customers including growing the availability of RCS.”

RCS was proposed in 2007 as a replacement for SMS, but it didn’t gain much traction until AT&T, Sprint (now part of T-Mobile), T-Mobile and Verizon announced the CCMI in 2019.

The CCMI was meant to create a business-to-consumer rich messaging system, allow consumers to buy services from apps, and enable RCS messaging across carriers in the US and abroad.

However, Apple never declared support for RCS and the protocol’s future remained an open question.

Despite Google’s backing, RCS hasn’t taken off in the US. As per Light Reading, RCS “remains a dud in the US”, despite gaining some adoption in Japan.

T-Mobile also told the publication it is still committed to “delivering RCS interoperability and are working with other providers to make it happen”.

“T-Mobile customers with Android devices can currently enjoy RCS messaging across our network as well as with many other customers worldwide by interoperating with Google,” the carrier said.

T-Mobile, arguably the biggest supporter of RCS, last month announced it was working with Google to make Android Messages the default rich messaging platform on devices on its network.

“T-Mobile plans to make Messages the default messaging experience on all Android devices, including support for the advanced messaging capabilities of Rich Communication Services (RCS),” the carrier said.

In the UK, BT announced in October that its EE mobile network would partner with Google to bring RCS Business Messaging (RBM) to companies in the UK.

BT claimed its RBM pre-order campaign for the Samsung Galaxy S20 drove a 5-fold improvement in engagement when compared to SMS and email.

According to BT, there are around 400 million devices globally with RCS enabled. That’s still a very tiny number compared to the 4.7 billion mobile subscribers that can use SMS today, according to figures from mobile industry body GSMA, which creates RCS specifications.

Facebook says that Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp handle 60 billion messages a day. GSMA sponsored a survey across Spain, India, China and the US that found that 64% of internet users send SMS daily while 75% use instant messaging apps like WhatsApp.

Read the full story HERE.

Uber Law Enforcement Operations Team Video

Sat. April 10, 2021 | By Wade Stormer, Uber LE Liaison Manager (via Linkedin) |

LEOs, LE Analysts, and Prosecutors check out the new release of Uber’s Law Enforcement Operations Team video (for North America). If you have never worked with Uber or our team, this will be a great primer about what we do and why!

Uber Law Enforcement & Public Safety Response Portal Video Overview

Visit the Uber LE Response Portal here

Israeli Phone-hacking Firm Cellebrite Halts Sales to Russia, Belarus in Wake of Haaretz Report

Thurs. March 18, 2021 | By Oded Yaron and Rafa Goichman – Israel News |

Cellebrite will stop selling hacking tools to Russia and Belarus after its technology was used against minorities, pro-democracy activists and opposition forces.

Cellebrite, the Israeli digital intelligence company, announced Thursday that it will no longer sell its technology to Russia and Belarus after it was used to hack opposition forces and minorities in the countries.

In an appeal against Israel’s Defense Export Control Agency, Defense Ministry, and Cellebrite, Eitay Mack, a lawyer and human rights activist, together with 80 human rights activists revealed documents that link Cellebrite’s technology with the persecution of political actors as well as minority groups in Russia.

Among them Lyubov Sobol, a lawyer for the Anti-Corruption Foundation headed by Alexei Navalny, was mentioned.

After the documents were revealed, Cellebrite called a halt on exports of its technology to Belarus and Russia. In the past, the company denied the sale of technology to the dictatorship, but investigative agencies reported that the Lukashenko administration has purchased and used Cellebrite’s hacking technology since 2016…

Read the full story here.

Inside the complicated business of disguising 5G equipment

Tues. March 2, 2021 | By Samantha Murphy Kelly – CNN Business |

For years, artificial cacti have lined the sandy roadsides of North Scottsdale, Arizona. They look real at first glance but tucked inside are antennas and radio equipment that provide 4G LTE wireless connectivity to the area. Large concealment structures like this, which in this case are about 24 feet tall, have become so good it’s sometimes hard to tell the real cacti from the fakes.

Across the United States, clunky 4G cell towers are often “disguised” with regionally-prominent foliage. Evergreens are attached to sites in the Northeast. In the South, they’re decorated to look like palm trees. And then there’s the cacti out West. In some cases, the equipment is tucked into existing church bell towers, town square signs and on the side of historic landmarks. On farmland, 4G-enabled water towers are set up as props to give the impression they’re part of the landscape.

But with the rollout of 5G, the next-generation of wireless speed, cities like Scottsdale will rely less on elaborate cover ups and more on a piece of architecture that’s been a mainstay in urban and suburban environments for well over a century: street lights.

It’s not as creative as hiding technology in a faux plant but the shift is currently playing out all over the world. “Design will be just as important moving forward with the 5G installations, but we will have a greater focus on streetlights than the cacti,” said Keith Niederer, telecom policy coordinator for Scottsdale.

That’s because 5G radio signals for small cell sites operate at a higher millimeter wave frequency than 4G, making them more easily blocked by objects, such as wooden fixtures or leaves, and certain materials. Consequently, installations must be set up every couple hundred feet — and that distance will shrink even more as data-needy technology like self-driving cars hit the roads. They also need to be close to street level for people to access the signals and the antennas, for the most part, must remain exposed.

All this is to say, you can’t quite put 5G in a pretty box. The technology needs to be out in the open — on main streets, residential roads and frankly, everywhere.

“In Scottsdale, aesthetics are pretty important. Every street has a different theme and streetlights vary,” added Niederer, noting the technical limitations. “We want them to blend in as much as possible and not stand out.”

With speeds nearly 30 times faster than 4G in the US, 5G promises to handle significantly more internet traffic and bandwidth with zero latency, allowing for immediate response times for data transfers. 4G made services like FaceTime or Uber a reality, but 5G intends to do even more, such as help self-driving cars process all the information they need to make life-or-death decisions in the blink of an eye or enable robotic surgeries. But in the short-term, 5G deployment presents an opportunity for the businesses that conceal the technology.

The wireless carriers in the Phoenix metro area, including Scottsdale, are working with Valmont Industries, one of the largest concealment companies in the world and the first maker of the camouflaged pine tree tower nearly 30 years ago in the Denver market, to ensure the colors, designs and use cases fit with neighborhoods. (Valmont just wrapped a similar project with the city of San Antonio, Texas, swapping its signature fluted poles with swooping arms for ones with a similar style but a stronger base and thicker steel to support the 5G equipment.)

“There’s no form factor we won’t consider using,” said Mark Schmidt, general manager of communication concealment at Valmont. “Our goal is to bridge the gap between the aesthetics in a community, what a jurisdiction would like to see and what the wireless carrier requires as a form factor. … But the most natural fit here will be traffic lights and street lights.”…

Read the full story here.

How Cell Phone Tracking Is Increasingly Being Used to Solve Crimes

Sat. Mar. 6, 2021 | By Marcia Wendorf – interestingengineering.com |

While cell phone tracking raises privacy concerns, it also provides vital information when investigating crimes.

Mobile phone tracking is a controversial subject. After the riot at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, authorities were able to use cell phone records to determine who was present.

Whether we are actively using them or not, our cell phones are constantly pinging nearby cell towers, emitting a signal then receiving one back. Based on the strength of the emitted signal and the time it takes to reach the cell tower, the location of the phone can be determined.

You may have noticed that the antennas on a cell tower are always arranged in the shape of a triangle. Each antenna array covers a 120° pie-shaped slice of the surrounding area, as shown in the diagram below. By convention, the three sectors are designated alpha, beta, and gamma – α, β, γ.  The following diagram…

Read the full story here.