Friday, April 18, 2008

Emergency calls

The nature of IP makes it difficult to locate network users geographically. Emergency calls, therefore, cannot easily be routed to a nearby call center, and are impossible on some VoIP systems. Sometimes, VoIP systems may route emergency calls to a non-emergency phone line at the intended department. In the US, at least one major police department has strongly objected to this practice as potentially endangering the public.[4]

Moreover, in the event that the caller is unable to give an address, emergency services may be unable to locate them in any other way. Following the lead of mobile phone operators, several VoIP carriers are already implementing a technical work-around.[citation needed] For instance, one large VoIP carrier requires the registration of the physical address where the VoIP line will be used. When you dial the emergency number for your country, they will route it to the appropriate local system. They also maintain their own emergency call center that will take non-routable emergency calls (made, for example, from a software-based service that is not tied to any particular physical location) and then will manually route your call after learning your physical location.[citation needed]

e911 is another method by which VoIP providers in the US are able to support emergency services. The e911 emergency-calling system automatically associates a physical address with the calling party's telephone number as required by the Wireless Communications and Public Safety Act of 1999 and is being successfully used by many VoIP providers to provide physical address information to emergency service operators.