Emergency Call Routing. Emergency calls will be handled differently than traditional phone service. When Your Users make an emergency call, Cisco and/or a third-party service provider will attempt to automatically route Your User’s call to the emergency call center corresponding to the Registered Location on Your or Your User’s account. If Your User’s call cannot be routed to the designated emergency call center, for example because Your User’s account does not contain a Registered Location, the call will be routed to a specialized call center, for which You may incur a fee. Your User may be required to provide a name, address, and telephone number to the specialized call center. Cisco will attempt to automatically provide the emergency call center dispatcher or emergency service operator with the name, Registered Location and telephone number associated with Your or Your User’s account. It is possible that the dispatcher receiving the call may not be able to capture or retain this information. Therefore, when making an emergency call, callers should always immediately inform the dispatcher of their location (or the location of the emergency, if different). If callers are unable to speak, the dispatcher may not be able to locate You if Your location information is not up to date. Callers should remain on any emergency call until told to disconnect by the dispatcher, as the dispatcher may not have the caller’s number or contact information. If a caller is inadvertently disconnected, the caller should call back immediately. For technical reasons, including network congestion, it is possible that an emergency call will produce a busy signal or will take longer to connect when compared with traditional emergency calls.
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Offer Description, Cisco Webex Offer Description, Product Description
Emergency Call Routing. Emergency calls through Your VoIP service will be handled differently than traditional phone service. When Your Users make an emergency call, Cisco and/or a third-third party service provider will attempt to automatically route Your User’s call to the emergency call center corresponding to the Registered Location on Your or Your User’s account. If Your User’s call cannot be routed to the designated emergency call center, for example because Your User’s account does not contain a Registered Location, the call will be routed to a specialized call center, for which You may incur a fee. Your User may be required to provide a name, address, and telephone number to the specialized call center. Cisco will attempt to automatically provide the emergency call center dispatcher or emergency service operator with the name, Registered Location and telephone number associated with Your or Your User’s account. It is possible that the dispatcher receiving the call may not be able to capture or retain this information. Therefore, when making an emergency call, callers should always immediately inform the dispatcher of their location (or the location of the emergency, if different). If callers are unable to speak, the dispatcher may not be able to locate You if Your location information is not up to date. Callers should remain on any emergency call until told to disconnect by the dispatcher, as the dispatcher may not have the caller’s number or contact information. If a caller is inadvertently disconnected, the caller should call back immediately. For technical reasons, including network congestion, it is possible that an emergency call will produce a busy signal or will take longer to connect when compared with traditional emergency calls.
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Cisco Flex Plan Subscription Agreement, Cisco Flex Plan Subscription Agreement, Cisco Collaboration Flex Plan
Emergency Call Routing. Emergency calls through Your VoIP service will be handled differently than traditional phone service. When Your Users make an emergency call, Cisco and/or a third-party service provider will attempt to automatically route Your User’s call to the emergency call center corresponding to the Registered Location on Your or Your User’s account. If Your User’s call cannot be routed to the designated emergency call center, for example because Your User’s account does not contain a Registered Location, the call will be routed to a specialized call center, for which You you may incur a fee. Your User may be required to provide a name, address, and telephone number to the specialized call center. Cisco will attempt to automatically provide the emergency call center dispatcher or emergency service operator with the name, Registered Location and telephone number associated with Your or Your User’s account. It is possible that the dispatcher receiving the call may not be able to capture or retain this information. Therefore, when making an emergency call, callers should always immediately inform the dispatcher of their location (or the location of the emergency, if different). If callers are unable to speak, the dispatcher may not be able to locate You if Your location information is not up to date. Callers should remain on any emergency call until told to disconnect by the dispatcher, as the dispatcher may not have the caller’s number or contact information. If a caller is inadvertently disconnected, the caller should call back immediately. For technical reasons, including network congestion, it is possible that an emergency call will produce a busy signal or will take longer to connect when compared with traditional emergency calls.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Cisco Collaboration Flex Plan