Sorry, best I can do is 3731111. (There is a 9 in there also though).
I’m opening the bidding now! Who’ll give me $300,000 grand!
C’mon people! Daddy needs a new c-wrench!
Sorry, best I can do is 3731111. (There is a 9 in there also though).
I’m opening the bidding now! Who’ll give me $300,000 grand!
C’mon people! Daddy needs a new c-wrench!
Looks like they pulled it.
Invalid Item shows up now.
hmmm. Wonder why they pulled it? Phone numbers are indeed a “sellable” commodity. Maybe they discovered that the seller didn’t actually own it. Too bad.
A plumbing company in Rhode Island has that phone number. It’s a great idea. I know if mypipes were exploding, I might call the one plumber whose phone number I have memorized.
FWIW, I had a feeling that was the case ever since I first saw this thread.
BTW: 212 wasn’t the only one listed.
How, exactly, would this work? Say I’ve just sold you my phone number. How do we go about forcing Verizon, for example, to transfer the number to you?
No, I’m afraid that Verizon is right, even if they are The Evil Empire. Ultimately, no one can compel them to assign a given phone number to a given person.
Phone number portability should make this a reality. Network solutions tried the same crap with domain names a few years ago, claiming they registrants did not own their own domains, and lost in court.
http://news.com.com/2100-1039_3-5149700.html
If they can move my phone number to another carrier, they can move it to another person on another carrier.
Fuck Verizon.
It used to belong to Brown University, and now belongs to the GEM Plumbing and Heating Co., which apparently liked the number so much that it has it in two area codes (401 and 617).
Call me dense, but I still don’t get it. Phone number portability means that you can compel a phone company to let you keep the number you already have, even when you switch carriers. But I didn’t think it extended to letting you force the phone company to give a certain number to someone else, or to give you a specific phone number that you didn’t already have.
I see you earning another sig here science boy.
Damn that’s funny.
Back when that song came out the record company got its hands on the 312 (Chicago) one. When you called it you got a plug for the song. I understand they did this in other markets, too.