oh, by the way, forgot to add that since these were roaming records, then they occurred (supposedly) on some other carrier's network - who did some degree of processing, then were sent to the international roaming clearinghouse, and then on to cingular.
so it might not be a cingular code defect or fraud issue specifically. oh yeah, the carrier still has to pay the roamer clearinghouse (something - perhaps not always the full amount) if it's fraud or not. that's why they get touchy about such things.
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oh, by the way, forgot to add that since these were roaming records, then they occurred (supposedly) on some other carrier's network - who did some degree of processing, then were sent to the international roaming clearinghouse, and then on to cingular.
so it might not be a cingular code defect or fraud issue specifically. oh yeah, the carrier still has to pay the roamer clearinghouse (something - perhaps not always the full amount) if it's fraud or not. that's why they get touchy about such things.