12/29/2023 0 Comments Sip google voiceIf that is the case, then Google Voice has a back-end voip server that operates at all times. That would mean that GV is running a Voip server and that all publicly switched (traditional) phone calls that are routed to a Google Voice number, end up brodcasting the call information in to the global voip system (the internet) as the voip system seeks a TCPIP end connection first, before re-entering the traditional PSTN system if the recipient is not another voip number. I would guess that Google Voice is just another voip/SIP service. Then I found a voip.ms Android app that produced the voip.ms call logs, proving that it was voip.ms that snatched the incoming calls and sent them to my other two phones as those calls were in the voip.ms call logs with matching time stamps. Just to be sure it was real, I uninstalled the GV app from both receiving phones. This shouldn’t be possible as voip.ms actually hijacked the incoming call to my GV number, although with my making it happen. But both of those two phones rang, showing my other family member’s number as the caller. With all Google Voice forwarding turned off, that call should have gone to nowhere. Then I turned off call forwarding on all phones in the Google Voice software interface, and used another family member’s smart phone (that wasn’t linked to anything), to call my Google Voice number. Then I added the other two phone numbers (the real numbers of the other two Android phones), in to the voip.ms configuration interface as additional caller ID values without linking them to anything. When I created a new “DID” (dial-in number) in the voip.ms interface, I selected the caller ID value (my real phone number from Google Voice) as the dial-in number to link to the new DID phone number. But at this rate, it looks like voip.ms does everything that Google Voice can do, and more when it comes to voice communications.And they can do it without porting my number to them. My initial plan was to use SIP services for only dialing out, to spoof my own number on to any of my own phones so people know it’s me when I call them from another phone that has a number they don’t recognize. I am getting Google-Voice-like dialing-in features from voip-ms that I can’t figure out exactly how they work. There is one feature that I never thought would be available from a SIP service, but that actually works some how without porting my phone number. ![]() For the past two days I’ve been working with SIP services on my two Android phones and on my Librem 5.
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