Home Your IT Home IT Every dog has its day - and some have phone numbers
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Japan's largest telco, NTT Com is offering citizens telephone numbers for their dogs, and other pets. The idea is not as daft as it might seem.

NTT Com is offering the numbers so owners can put these on their pet's tag rather than making their own real telephone number public to anyone who happens to pick up the pooch, moggie or whatever other pet has gone walkabout.

They are IP phone numbers, which in Japan begin with 050, and NTT Com is charging a fraction of the price of a real phone number. Calls made to the pet's number can be automatically forwarded to the customer's private phone number or routed to a voicemail server and the owner notified via email. Phone numbers can also be blocked.

The pet's phone number is one of several IP phone services offered by NTT Com and marketed under the trade name 050 Anshin (Safe) Number.

Seems like an idea that Australian VoIP service providers could take up. There must be many cases where people want to advertise a number on which they can be contacted without making their regular number public.

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Stuart Corner

 

Tracking the telecoms industry since 1989, Stuart has been awarded Journalist Of The Year by the Australian Telecommunications Users Group (twice) and by the Service Providers Action Network. In 2010 he received the 'Kester' lifetime achievement award in the Consensus IT Writers Awards and was made a Lifetime Member of the Telecommunications Society of Australia. He was born in the UK, came to Australia in 1980 and has been here ever since.

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