If your account has been suspended,

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tanjimajuha20
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If your account has been suspended,

Post by tanjimajuha20 »

Legal restrictions present a second situation in which you might not be able to move your number—number porting has been banned in a few rural areas in the USA through state legislation.

or if your account is in arrears, your current provider can block the number transfer. Telephone service providers are also allowed to prevent numbers from being ported out if they are associated with other services, such as Broadband. You can get around these administrative blocks by paying up your account and removing any attached services.

Apart from the above india telegram scenarios, your current VoIP provider can’t block your number from being transferred out.

5. How does the new VoIP company get the number?
The real work to port your number is carried out between the CLEC of your current provider and the CLEC of your new provider. In some cases your provider could be the network owner/CLEC. When you send in your Letter of Authorization, your new VoIP service provider prepares a Local Service Request (LSR), which it passes to its CLEC along with supporting documentation.

The CLEC forwards those documents to your current provider’s CLEC. If there are no errors in the documentation, the releasing CLEC sends a Firm Order Commitment (FOC date) back to the receiving CLEC. This document contains all of the information that the new CLEC needs in order to take over the number, including the release date.

6. When will I get a definitive transfer date?
Definitive transfer date
You won’t get the exact date of your number transfer until an error-free Local Service Report has been received and processed by the releasing CLEC. The transfer date is written on the Firm Order Confirmation sent back by the releasing CLEC.
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