By Richard Thurston, 7 December 2007 08:18
NEWS
VoIP telephony providers will have to enable customers to make calls to the emergency services, following a ruling by Ofcom.
All VoIP providers who connect to the UK's public switched telephone network (PSTN) will have to modify or upgrade their systems to allow 999 and 112 calls to be made, the telecoms regulator has ruled.
Ofcom chief executive, Ed Richards, said: "As new voice services develop and become more mainstream, regulation must evolve too. In the future, consumers will be confident that if they can make calls to ordinary national numbers using their VoIP service, then they will be able to call 999 or 112 in an emergency."
But the requirement will not come into force until 8 September, 2008 - around six months later than planned. Ofcom proposed the requirement in July this year, saying it would be enforced from early 2008.
Ofcom is concerned that lives could be put in danger if users try to dial the emergency services and subsequently fail to make a connection. Many VoIP providers do not currently have the necessary connections in their networks to enable a 999 call to be completed.
Ofcom's research claims just 64 per cent of households that use VoIP can dial 999 over their connection. The research also suggests that 78 per cent of VoIP users who cannot call 999 mistakenly thought they could or did not know that they couldn't.
The new requirement will not affect VoIP services which do not connect to the PSTN or setups which only accept incoming calls.
Richard Thurston writes ZDNet.co.uk

Comments
There are 2 comments. Join the discussion
1. Roger Huffadine
Traditional phone systems are powered by a reliable 'central battery' in the telephone exchange making them ideal for emergency communication - they are also analog.
VoIP is locally powered from your mains supply is complicated electronically and digital.
I really don't see the point in Ofcom requiring VoIP service providers to connect to 999 emergency services if they don't also mandate that VoIP phones are line powered.
2. Richard
My BT phone failed during a power-cut:
During our recent power-cut (already the second this Winter - how many more??), I was surprised to discover that my landline phone wouldn't work.
Obviously, the base units of most cordless phones need mains power - how many customers realise that?
I hadn't realise that the phone part of my phone/fax machine was also dependent upon mains power.
Fortunately, I still also had a "steam-powered" handset.