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The carrier said it was also pleased by the results.

The carrier said it was also pleased by the results.

"While this test is highly successful, we continue to evaluate the technology, understand the challenges and opportunities that are presented and are determined to deploy the technology to consumers," the carrier said in a statement. "We are excited to continue our partnership with our customers, who have proven that these new protocols are not the same as their traditional protocols. And we thank the millions of customers who have used these technologies to call their loved ones."

Today's announcement said AT&T is rolling out a new "SHOP" tool for checking Caller ID numbers for its Voice Service customers. The new tool allows customers to check the number of calls their calling provider calls if they have an active account with the carrier and if they have a current account.

While the company has not announced a rollout of a new phone service for the carrier, it says the new tool will help reduce calls to 5% per month for customers receiving a monthly call subscription.

"We continue to build on our long-standing partnership with our customers, who have made over $1 billion in annual calls in our voice service business to continue their calls on time with the most-used Voice Service in the United States," AT&T said in a statement.

The carriers said they plan to roll out the new tool in the next few weeks, and that more is expected.

This is the first time the carriers have used the new technology to check Caller ID numbers, and AT&T is the first to offer the technology to AT&T customers.A group of women and men from the United States, including the women themselves, arrived on Monday to protest the Trump administration's policy to cut off US aid to Syria.

The Women's March on Washington was organized by the Center for Global Justice, an anti-globalization think tank, and a coalition of women, civil rights and human rights organizations in support of President Donald Trump's plan to cut off US funding for the Assad regime.

A woman in her 50s took part in the march at the National Museum of American History. She told reporters that she was protesting her country's "wicked treatment of women and girls" by a "corrupt" military regime.

"This is an attack on our freedom — our humanity, our humanity as a people," she said.

President Barack Obama administration officials have said they are not concerned about the violence committed by Bashar al-Assad's government against women and girls, and it

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