VoIP brings back old-fashioned pay phones to rural Vermont (2025)

(spectrum.ieee.org)

80 points | by bookofjoe 3 hours ago ago

16 comments

  • AussieWog93 26 minutes ago

    One of the few good things that Telstra did in Australia was open up their whole old payphone network for free, nationwide.

    Apparently they're a genuine lifeline for people fleeing from abusive relationships; they need to leave their mobile behind to avoid being tracked.

    • HDBaseT 11 minutes ago

      I remember reading some stats on the Telstra phone boxes, they help a lot of people in need. A ton of calls go to emergency services, government services, etc.

      I would be keen to know the total cost to run and maintain everything. There is a ton of boxes still around.

    • ctaloi 11 minutes ago

      Getting the correct keys to pay phones in the US seems to be a challenge.

    • bigstrat2003 20 minutes ago

      I wish we had that in the US. Not due to abuse victims per se (though that does sound super useful for them), but just because it would be nice to not have to carry a cell phone to get ahold of people.

  • singpolyma3 an hour ago

    I wonder how this will work with the FCC's proposed regulation to require ID, address, and "alternate phone number" for anyone who make make a phone call.

    • macintux an hour ago

      That sounds alarming, but from reading more about it, it doesn't seem like it would be relevant to this, although in the long run it's certainly possible that calling from a payphone would never actually reach someone directly, being shunted to the "you probably don't care about this" purgatory voicemail.

      https://www.mintz.com/insights-center/viewpoints/2776/2025-1...

      But that would seem true today as well.

  • bahmboo 36 minutes ago

    How many phone numbers do you have memorized? These days I only know a few but I used to know dozens.

    • hdgvhicv 3 minutes ago

      I know half a dozen. All from the 80s and 90s, and only two which actually exist today.

      Other than that I know mine and my wife’s.

      Oddly enough I knew a company which had a phone number which was two digits transposed from my home number - 818614. My number until about 1993 was 818641. Didn’t realise the company was still going until a couple of weeks ago when a lorry pulled up outside my window with the name and phone number on.

      The other number I remember is my school number for some reason, I can’t think of ever have rung it. It’s still the same number today, 30 years later.

  • userbinator an hour ago

    This is an example of the few places where something like this is feasible.

    free-to-use pay phones

    What an oxymoron. I suggest the term "public phone".

    • runako an hour ago

      Look at the device in TFA. That's a pay phone, which is also a way of describing a specific range of hardware types.

    • PyWoody 22 minutes ago

      Phones-formally-known-as-pay

  • arbuge an hour ago

    > free-to-use pay phones

    Some redundant words there perhaps.

    • dylan604 an hour ago

      You could use a pay phone to call the operator. You can use it to make collect calls. Hell, if you were industrious enough, you could trick the phone into giving you a dial tone for free. The VoIP ones will probably be harder to trick though

    • thaumasiotes an hour ago

      Why? Payphones have never been distinguished by the fact that you had to pay to use them. You also had to pay for the phone in your home.

      Payphones were distinguished by the fact that they were located in convenient public places, and if you needed to contact someone, you could use them. That's still true here.

  • ChrisArchitect an hour ago

    (2025) OP

    Prior to that: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44188204

    See also:

    Futel (Portland, Wash. State etc) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42220598

    Philtel (Philadelphia) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33851030

  • jmux an hour ago

    dudes rock