How to block a caller?
Richards:
Great!
1) I already use the Sip 2 for GV, can I still use the route sp2?
2) Your format {(12222222222|13333333333):sp2($1)},{ph} means it will direct the caller to his own phone, won't it?
Thank you so much!
azrobert:
Quote from: Richards on October 19, 2013, 10:17:05 am
2) Your format {(12222222222|13333333333):sp2($1)},{ph} means it will direct the caller to his own phone, won't it?
Yes, but the caller will have his phone off-hook calling you. I think he will get a busy signal.
QBZappy:
Quote from: azrobert on October 19, 2013, 10:25:51 am
Yes, but the caller will have his phone off-hook calling you. I think he will get a busy signal.
Clever use of the ($1) to get a busy signal. The cost of delivering that "busy signal" is that a second voice channel is used up and any related $ cost (if any). In a low call volume scenario this solution is interesting.
Richards:
Quote from: QBZappy on October 19, 2013, 03:19:12 pm
Clever use of the ($1) to get a busy signal. The cost of delivering that "busy signal" is that a second voice channel is used up and any related $ cost (if any). In a low call volume scenario this solution is interesting.
Thanks. Would you please explain a bit? What does $1 really mean? 1 dollar? What do you mean "2nd voice channel is used up"?
I use the sip 2 for my google voice. Can I still use the SP2 trunk?
Thank you.
QBZappy:
$1=CALLER ID of incoming call. GV offers two voice channels. incoming call uses one voice channel, outgoing call to $1 (caller id) uses another. If by chance you receive a call while this is going on, then the call will fail (busy). At the moment there is no charge for using GV. If you used another service which charges for outgoing there would be a very small charge at the provider rate.
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