Re: Some Things Never Change: 350 Lines Tapped in NYC Over Two Years

In the recent controversy over wiretaps of suspected terrorists, I

> found an article in the New York Times describing the outcry over > wiretaps. Seems that 350 phones were tapped by police over two > years -- back in May 1916 -- 90 years ago. The article said wiretaps > started in 1895 -- 110 years ago. > The article dealt with the issues of wiretaps, who paid for them, what > they were used for, etc. > Other articles of that time frame dealt with charges that phone rates > were too high or too low. Politicians claimed too high, the phone > company claimed too low to meet service demands. There were constant > valuation studies going on with rate reductions ordered. > In 1916, it appeared the rate was roughly 5c for each local call, plus > line rental. That's worth at least $1.00 today, probably more. Some > sections could get unlimited residential service. > There was an apartment house rate: "for telephone switchboards of the > Monitor type [Monitor was capitalized] which are used extensively in > small apartment houses a rate of $132 for a switchboard of two > stations and one trunk line for 2,400 local calls per year, yielding > about 5.5c a call. There was considerable pressure to drop this > particular rate to 5c a call to match other rates. I presume this > arrangement was where a tennant used a phone on a pay-as-you-go basis. > The New York Times was filled with articles on telephone rates and > complaints about them in 1916.
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2manyheadshotz
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