Billing Standards: Exchange Message Record (EMR)
Billing Standards: Exchange Message Record (EMR)
There are many billing standards that have been developed for telecommunications networks.
Because the services offered by different types of network operators (e.g. cable television
compared to local telephone companies) are beginning to overlap, billing standards are also
converging.
Billing standards define the measurements, record format and the methods of transfer for
billing related information within a network. New services are being offered by network
result, billing standards are continually being revised and they are converging. Because
companies can use different billing standards or different revisions of billing standards,
clearinghouses often provide translation services between different billing standard formats.
telecommunications systems. The EMR format is often used for billing records. The records
may be exchanged by magnetic tape or by other medium such as electronic transfer or CD ROM.
that is used primarily by local telephone companies to process billing records and exchange
records between systems. The AMA format was created by BellCore and is now managed by
Telcordia.
Carrier Inter-exchange Billing Exchange Record (CIBER)
Carrier Inter-Exchange Billing Exchange Record (CIBER) is a billing standard designed to
promote inter-carrier roaming between cellular and other wireless telephone systems. The
for Global System for Mobile communications (GSM) cellular and Personal Communications
Systems (PCS). There are currently multiple versions of TAP: TAP II, TAP II+, NAIG TAP II,
and TAP 3. Each successive version of TAP provides for enhanced features. Due to the global
nature of 3G wireless and GSM, the TAP billing standard provides solutions for multi-lingual
and multiple exchange rate issues. TAP3 was released in 2000 as a significant revision of TAP2.
TAP3 has changed from the fixed record size used in TAP2 to variable record size and TAP3
offers billing information for many new types of services such as billing for short messaging and
other information services. The GSM association (www.GSMmobile.com) manages the TAP
standard.
defines an Internet Protocol Detail Record (IPDR) as the standard measurement record.
The IPDR structure is very flexible and new billing attributes (fields) are being added because
Internet services are now offered in almost all communications systems. The NMD-U standard is
records between different systems, primarily between wireless systems in the Americas. IS-
124 messaging is independent of underlying technology and can be sent over X.25 or SS7
signaling links. The development of standards is primarily led by CiberNet, a division of the