SBC Hit with Antitrust Lawsuit 209
mrtaco01 writes "Four Internet service providers have filed an antitrust suit against SBC Communications, alleging that the Baby Bell unfairly inflated wholesale prices for high-speed Internet access."
How is this illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Attorneys for the California ISPs say San Antonio-based SBC must discontinue its pricing system in order to give smaller companies a chance to compete for DSL subscribers.
Looking at the way the article was written, I get the impression that some ISPs are suing SBC for providing a service which was hard to resell at a higher price.
In other industries, this is known as not having a good business plan. I'm unaware of how this is illegal and wanting clarity on this issue..
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2, Interesting)
And the idea that SBC is selling DSL lines at a loss is dubious at best. The R&D to develop DSL was paid for in the late eighties / early nineties via special permission from congress to raise
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2, Informative)
IIRC, back when I was still comparing DSL providers I heard that one can't get DSL in SBC territory from anyone without having an SBC landline account. Even though I'd just as soon ditch my home number entirely I can't without SBC blocking the line. There's no technical reason for this to be so. Speakeasy does after all pay SBC's rent after I've paid Speakeasy.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
They contain a miniature Central Office, including SBC owned DSLAM equipment. SBC doesn't want to have to open up rack space inside the RTs to third party CLECs like Covad. And since the pote
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
-Craig
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Omsoft service is a remarkable contrast to SBC and in my opinion worth every penny - even with the SBC price gouge. I got an error from their proxy server and sent an e-mail requesting removal from the proxy. Guess what? They did it and replied to me the same day. Link problems? I just give them a call and we troubleshoot it together - which brings up another point: They don't treat me like an idiot. Run your own server? Omsoft encourages it and sees it as a way for their customers to learn technology. It's like having a local "mom and pop" ISP again. I value Omsoft and would be pretty disturbed if SBC ran them out of business with price gouging tactics. I think I'll give my ISP a call tonight to congradulate and encourage them.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
I have had a 384sdsl line to provide outbound access for an office of about 6 users for almost 3 years now. The only downtime I had was during 9-11. Everytime I call, I get a human. Everytime I email, I get an answer. The latency is decent, the uptime is excellent, the price is about average. The throughput is good. They never screw up a bill. Came with 16 IPs. (remember, its just 384k)
We are moving to a new building, and getting dual T1s (12 pair for phon
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Bullshit. I had SpeakEasy DSL at my house for a time. Actually Speakeasy bought my account as Northpoint went out of business.
I switched to SBC because Speakeasy refused to give me ADSL and was telling me that I was too far from the CO to get anything but slow ass SDSL. They had just installed a new CO across the street from my house.
THen after I verified with three different employees
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Yes, that is exaclty what happened. They installed a new wire terminal box, and as I was walking by there was a guy working on it. I asked him what he was doing and he told me about the new CO. There was a room about 30 feet in the ground across the street and he told me that they just made it the local CO for the area.
He gave me the circuit number
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:3, Informative)
At least in this area, SBC does not allow "odd" protocols such as GRE [required for PPTP connections] and in certain locations they won't even let you connect to an smtp server that isn't theirs.
Furthermore, in my experience with PacBell [before the SBC buyout] and SpeakEasy at the same location and same service [1.5/384 adsl] I found that SpeakEasy provided a much better service. Much less downtime, none of which was u
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:3, Interesting)
So in order to break the monopoly, you have to force Bell to let others sell service over their lines. It's ugly and frustrating for companies like SBC, but it's what the govern
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Informative)
What you aren't reading is that SBC conned all these ISPs into jumping on the DSL bandwagon, and signing up thousands of DSL subscribers...
After they did all the leg work, SBC then lowered the price they offer the public. Hence making it too expensive for the ISPs to compete with SBC (since they still are paying the old rate, they actually pay MORE for 'wholesale' DSL access then SBC is selling to the public for)
Part of the problem with DSL is that the OWNER of the copper last mile has all the advantage. Even though you may be buying DSL Internet from any one of a half dozen ISPs, they ALL rely on SBC to get that last mile. Hence, they have a monopoly.
The courts allowed them have this monopoly, on the understanding that access was fairly given to competitors to 'resell' those facilities at a fair price.
Droping your retail price below your wholesale price doesn't seem very fair, and since it was the FCC that mandated this (ie, they made it a law), that is why it is ilegal.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Sometimes I wonder why this 'Anonymous Coward' guy is still allowed to post, he is obviously an idiot, and he posts so much!
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:3, Informative)
I work at an ISP that resells SBC DSL (Score:3, Informative)
What you aren't reading is that SBC conned all these ISPs into jumping on the DSL bandwagon, and signing up thousands of DSL subscribers...
After they did all the leg work, SBC then lowered the price they offer the public. Hence making it too expensive for the ISPs to compete with SBC (since they still are paying the old rate, they actually pay MORE for 'wholesale' DSL access then SBC is selling to the public for)
[/quote]
The bold part is the kicker. If SBC lowers the montly rate for ADSL serv
Re:I work at an ISP that resells SBC DSL (Score:2)
Actually, we a
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
In other industries, this is known as not having a good business plan. I'm unaware of how this is illegal and wanting clarity on this issue..
It's because ISPs and phone companies operate in a regulated market, and not a free market. Telcos are pretty much required (for the moment) to offer wholesale access to their lines to competitors at a rate that is fair because the telcos usually have a monopoly on the lines in a given geographical area. This was all spelled out in the Communications Reform Act of 1996 in the USA. It is up to the regulators and the courts to determine what is fair pricing, and these things are usually determined by lawsuits such as this.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:4, Insightful)
This all means that they're not a monopoly on the consumer market anymore, but they ARE a monopoly on the commodity bandwidth market. If you want to be a CLEC, you buy your lines from SBC, period.
Oh, I suppose you could go through the decades-long process of running your own copper, but the government has determined that it isn't realistic to expect a new company to be able to do that and remain in the market, so SBC is obligated to sell bandwidth as a commodity, a raw material if you will, to the CLECs.
Lasseiz-faire capitalists find any government definition of or intervention in markets appalling, but then they'd turn around and bitch if SBC were the only DSL provider in the area and charged $100 a month, too.
Sometimes the government helps you, turn off the talk radio and get a clue.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Indeed.
Unfortunately, once the monopoly is established, or, for that matter, any interventionist policy takes root (i.e. socialized medicine, government pensions *cough* Ponzi schemes *cough*), the market responds by adapting in such a way that any disruption of the government-backed entity would be away from a local minimum of other market responses to the artificial player.
Even though convincing arguments can be
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, in other industries, this is known as falling victim to a monopoly. That's why it's illegal.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:3, Interesting)
But since Microsoft effectively gets off scott free for doing this, SBC has probably decided they can probably get away with it too. Unfortunately, as noted elsewhere, SBC is in a regulated market, and Microsoft is not. This may be an interesting case to watch.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:5, Interesting)
As if this weren't bad enough, we have documented cases (but not enough money for a lawyer, yet...) of our customers being contacted to switch a week after they turn up with us. You see, we have to enter customer info into SBC's database to place the order.
And speaking of SBC's database, did you know that it returns different copper distances for SBC vs. the ISP? We have had customers whose loop was not qualified for service be contacted by SBC a couple weeks later and be able to get service.
All the telco's abuse their power, but SBC is one of the worst.
Problem is the antitrust suit from years ago (Score:2)
Floor space in their buildings, lines, etc...
So technically in this case, they may have a argument, legally.
Personally I think its a bunch of garbage, as was the initial breakup in the first place.
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How is this illegal? (Score:2)
Finally... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Finally... (Score:1)
Re:Finally... (Score:3, Informative)
Both are still too expensive, but considering that the prices for each are regulated, you have to get the regulators to recognize that fact, and get them to force the prices down.
For rural areas, there is really only one method of getting anything like broadband service, and that is Sat service. Unfortunately there is a higher up front instalation cost, and monthly costs are at least as high as ds
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
Raw Bell co. DSL bit-pipe service to independent ISPs is tariffed, but there is no particular approval cycle on the tariffs. The FCC accepts what they file, and that's that. The FCC is considering removing that requirement, so that the Bell company is as free to set prices and cut off competitive access to their wires as cable companies are. Cable is regulated under a different law, which is why it's different.
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
Sorry, dumb question here but, don't they charge a setup fee each time you do that, or is that just something they pull on us here in the US?
You, sir, are the victim of a monopoly.
You noticed?
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
Less Time For Other Suits (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Less Time For Other Suits (Score:1)
Re:Less Time For Other Suits (Score:1)
It's all moot anyway (Score:4, Funny)
Almost.
Telco's too (Score:2)
This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:5, Interesting)
It could mean that your installed DSL line could have several different choices of ISP's instead of just the ISP officially supported by the telephone company, which will lead to price competition and eventually monthly pricing more akin to dial-up pricing (e.g., US$20 to US$22 per month unlimited access).
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know about SBC's area, but for anyone else stuck in Qwest's area (I feel for you, really) you can already pick from multiple ISPs. Qwest has their ISP list [qwest.com] so you can see who's available. I have unlimited 640k/256k access for $19.95 a month from these guys [ultrasw.net].
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:2)
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:2)
They share the T1 between many connections at the DSLAM (usually a rack, but I have been told that they like to sometimes share two racks per T1).
So, the DSL line prices are going to either remain the same, or go down only when they share more DSL lines between T1 (thus effectively cutting your possible bandwith down -- depending on the other DSL users on your rac
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:2, Informative)
First of all, this is already the case. In my last apartment, I had dsl, and when I was shopping around, I must've browsed through twenty different ISP's. I originally tried to go with Speakeasy [speakeasy.net], which was just getting rolling, but as they didn't have a Chicago POP at the time, and I'm in Michigan... It caused a few problems having my gateway in Se
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:1)
This is already how it is.
The telco's resell DSL lines wholesale to ISPs who then provide the retail service for the customer. The problem is the cost structure is still high for providing the DSL ac
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:2)
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:2)
Re:This will lead to lower broadband pricing? (Score:3, Informative)
Examples of proper use: I have DSL; They want a Digital Subscriber Line; etc.
While you're at it can you cut out calling ATMs "ATM Machines" and PINs "PIN Numbers"?
Thank you,
Drive Through
Only SBC? (Score:2, Interesting)
Competition (Score:5, Informative)
Just two months ago, with the addition of the first 3rd party DSL provider, SBC dropped their price to $29.95/mo (which I was able to sign up for).
Granted, this wasn't due solely to the entrance of this 3rd party, but also high competition between Time Warner, the local cable modem supplier. The dramatic decrease in the pricing though just goes to show how good competition is for the consumer.
I'm happy with it. (Score:5, Interesting)
One day later, they said we could get it. Turns out, we were the first, i repeat, FIRST in that whole area for DSL. They installed a DSLAM and got rid of 2 load coils on the lines. All that for a piddly 30$ a month for a 1 year contract.
I'm usually against inflation praticies, but the cost has to come from somewhere if they're going to solve the last mile problem.
Yes, I live 8 miles away from the local city, and there's a CO near there serving OC-3 to local companies.
This is crap (Score:4, Interesting)
I live in Chicago, prime SBC territory where SBC (nee Ameritech) is fighting for higher wholesale prices for all resellers of their connectivity and dialtone, claiming they (SBC) can't compete. My home is served by an ISP out of Seattle, who finds it profitable enough to offer me great prices on a twice-resold DSL (SBC ==> Covad ==> Speakeasy.net) and a 1-year contract almost up. These other ISPs are crybabies, or trying to enter SBC markets too late to compete. Fire their MBAs and hire some that have a better penchant for marketing and planning.
SBC in Illinois... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:SBC in Illinois... (Score:1)
...which is probably due to people not being able to acquire capital to enter an already comoditized market. Unless someone can bring something new to the table that either (a) dramatically increases the value of the service to the customer or (b) dramatically reduces the cost of providing the service, there's not much of a compelling reason to enter into a market with razor-thin margins.
Re:SBC in Illinois... (Score:2)
Re:SBC in Illinois... (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you know what wholesale rates are? (Score:2, Interesting)
I find it amazing that the wholesale rate on a T1 line is $50 a month! Customers still pay what $300-500? It's probably cheeper for some companies to set up shop as a CLEC just to buy resold lines for their business.
Competition is a good thing, but some of the regulations are a joke.
Re:Do you know what wholesale rates are? (Score:4, Interesting)
First off, I want to clear up a few things about equipment costs that telcoms hide behind. They use this as their way to jack up the rates, because after salary and wage expenses, they really don't have much reason to charge a monthly fee to their customers, so they claim to be constantly upgrading their equipment. The telcoms are sneaky though, equipment works its way from the largest areas down to the rural areas so that they are re-using the same equipment where it is needed, and everyone gets an upgrade. Sounds good right!?
WRONG
The trick is how it goes from one CO to another. Each CO liquidates its old equipment to a holding company for pennies on the dollar. The holding company is usually a seperate entity whose main stakeholders are executives at the telco. The holding company then offers the equipment back to the next CO for its *original* price!!! Think of how much money is generated when just one upgrade works its way through the COs in an area. The telco has had to re-purchase the same equipment over and over again, so then they go to the local PUCO (public utilities commission) and ask if they can raise the price since the upgrade cost so much. When they get it approved it is a double win for them, they are getting more from their residual monthly fee, and they have made an ass-load of cash from their holding company entity.
For Public Utilities, it is all about how to work funny-money through the system, they don't have to worry about pleasing the customer since their is no competition. If you really think that your local telco is out to please/help you, then I have a bridge in Brooklyn I'll sell ya
NYTimes Coverage (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/25/technology/25DSL .html
[nytimes.com]
More articles:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/ch ronicle/archive/2003/07/25/BU143220.DTL&type=busin ess [sfgate.com]
From which quotes: "... SBC's monthly wholesale fees were between $32.50 and $39 per subscriber. At that price, he said, his clients were unable to compete against SBC when the additional cost of Internet service and modems is factored in."
http://www.bayarea.c [bayarea.com]
Value Added Services, not just re-selling (Score:3, Interesting)
For smaller ISPs to flourish they need to offer something the Big Boys (ie SBC & co) do not, perhaps better customer support, or some sort of Value Added Service. Competing on price alone will get you nowhere
ILECs (Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers) own the 'Last Mile' and other giants (Verio, Level3, etc) own the upstream pipes. Between paying for the upstream access and the co-location costs at the Central Office, I don't see how anyone even expected to compete with SBC and other ILECs in the DSL business.
SBC does not even make a profit on DSL, they just hope that over the long run they don't have to upgrade any more of their plant, and can continue to sell the same (slow) DSL service for $50 a month. Recurring revenue will let them break even in the long run.
Small ISPs should charge more, and offer more at the same time. Upstream firewall service, or anonymous file swapping, or extra good spam filtering or some sort of extra content available only to subscribers.
More is more. Smart consumers will pay more for expanded and better service.
Re:Value Added Services, not just re-selling (Score:1)
As a geek, I'd have to vote for Speakeasy [speakeasy.net] on this one. I wish I could've gone with their service when I had dsl at my last apartment, but they had to set me up with a gateway in Seattle. (I live in Michigan - minimum pings to anything about 150) They offer the largest spectrum of bandwidth options I've seen from an ISP, they're Linux-friend
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (Score:5, Interesting)
That having been said, from the viewpoint of a customer getting DSL from a 3rd party ISP back then, I wasn't too impressed with this, primarily because it caused the formation of ASI (which I think stands for "Advanced Systems Inc.") ASI was the ILEC holding company formed to handle the DSL circuits themselves, and its creation caused a severe increase in the delay of DSL installation, and these delays went on for at least a year.
The second issue I was aware of back then was exactly what these ISPs are complaining about. At some point SBC decided that the resale price for a DSL line to ISPs would be (surprise!) exactly the same as what they charged individual customers for basic DSL (with ISP) service at the same speed.
My ISP wasn't too happy about this, but they really died because they got "hosed" after they were bought out by a CLEC. Another ISP in the area, TexasNet, wasn't too happy about it either, but didn't get rid of DSL until SBC decided that it would remove one mode of billing, I think the one that let SBC pass the charges through to the ISP (the other being having the charges go onto the customer's phone bill).
These days I get my DSL through SBC, fast and reliable but expensive (6Mbit), thanks to being near a Remote Terminal. I depend on them for nothing but a pipe, and have made a point of ignoring their stupid SBC/Yahoo nonsense. In fact, the only ISP service I can't and don't do myself is NNTP.
This is nothing new (Score:1, Interesting)
What's more, even when the telephone companies aren't competing with direct DSL or dial-up competitors, they still manage to stifle competition by disallowing access to their telephone poles which could be useful to wireless ISPs, despite the recent US Supreme Court ruling on this matter.
This is nothing ne
Antitrust will be the main avenue to competition (Score:5, Insightful)
They would have grumbled when local telephone service competition was authorized in 1996, but they got, in return, permission to offer long distance service and "advanced" services such as Internet. So having gotten much in return, they're trying to weasel out of their half of the bargain. Powell's FCC has rolled back competition. They're making it next to impossible for CLECs to lease the high-frequency part of copper that's needed to offer consumer DSL service, and even cutting off some access to plain old full-price copper wire. So the CLECs like Covad won't be able to offer the ISPs a substitute for ILEC (SBC, VZ, etc.) DSL. Game! Powell also has a pending proposal that removes common carrier status from ILEC DSL, which is what this case is about -- SBC won't be required by federal regulation to offer raw DSL bit-pipe service to competitors of its Prodigy ISP service. Set! And even dial-up is coming under increased attack; many dial-up ISPs are becoming reclassified as toll calls, as the ILECs try to worm in a back-door "modem tax". It's happening -- I'm involved in some of these cases. Match!
So the independent ISPs are being squeezed hard. Under the old pre-1996 regulations, the ILECs were not subject to much antitrust review, because regulation controlled them. Now, they're being unshackled, but they still have their inherited monopolies on essential facilities -- that's a term of art in the antitrust business. They're blatantly using these monopolies (the copper loop) to leverage sales of what should be fully-competitive businesses (ISPs like Prodigy and VZ Online). That is certainly a red flag in antitrust.
Since the regulators (FCC) have stepped aside, relief will have to happen in the courts. A number of cases are pending now; this one looks to be particularly important. Its fate will help determine if the American public will have free access to the Internet, or whether we'll be stuck behind a corporate-administered Great Firewall of Bell, paying top dollar for limited choice.
And with an Internet in monopoly hands, the FCC's excuse for broadcast ownership deregulation (extreme concentration of ownership of the media) is proven a lie. But Powell hopes we don't notice.
Re:Antitrust will be the main avenue to competitio (Score:2)
Re:Antitrust will be the main avenue to competitio (Score:2)
Carterfone allowed "foreign attachments" but only using a "protective coupler", which was an extra-rent box from The Phone Company. So you still couldn't plug in your own phones directly and be legal (though of course many of us did so anyway). Around 1977, the FCC introduced Registration, which did away with the protective coupler requirement, provided that the equipment was either
a) Registered with the FCC, having passed tests (this is what everything does now); or
b) Grandfathered -- if it
Re:Antitrust will be the main avenue to competitio (Score:2)
SBC is exceptionally weak (Score:2, Insightful)
SBC DSL is also a ripoff--I wanted to get Speakeasy, but SBC won't share their lines. Hence, my cable modem will be delivered today o
Re:SBC is exceptionally weak (Score:2)
Re: SBC is exceptionally weak (Score:2, Informative)
Come on, you talk about your apartment complex not having a certain service (irrelevant, don't bitch to me)
SBC specifically negotiated an agreement whereby they block competing services, which are otherwise available in my area. This is both their fault and relevant.
Then don't buy it [SBC DSL].
I didn't. But you already knew that, from the rest of my post.
the lines belong to SBC. If they don't want to sell them to someone t
article text (Score:1, Interesting)
I hope God roasts their stomachs in HELL! (Score:3, Funny)
Getting ass raped with sand, broken glass and a telephone pole would have been a more pleasent experiance than doing business with SBC.
I hope that they are utterly destroyed, that everyone that works there commits suicide and that their rotting corpses are dragged through the streets behind SBC service trucks..
SBC raped me over and over and over and they deserve every bad thing on the planet raining down upon their heads, a thousand times over what they did to me and may they all spend eternity in HELL with SATAN ass raping them with a 300hp chainsaw...
Re:I hope God roasts their stomachs in HELL! (Score:2)
Cable (rr) is a little pricey but the speed is excellent and the service has been very dependable and I've had *NO* complaints other than I wish they would come down $10 a month. (or more)
SBC at it for a while.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Endless summer of DSL discounts [com.com] July 7, 2003
FCC loosens broadband rules [com.com] February 20, 2003
SBC unfair on high-speed Net, ISPs charge [com.com] July 26, 2001
ISPs fight for more than DSL scraps [com.com] June 26, 2001
ISPs allege Bell abuse in high-speed services [com.com] October 27, 1999
Seems like ISP's have been fighting SBC's anti-competitive practices for years. IMHO, the biggest mistake the FCC made was in allowing the Bells to compete as ISP's. They should be barred from being ISP's so that the motivation for them to compete with their own customers (independent ISPs) is removed.
blue
Re:SBC at it for a while.... (Score:2)
well. they should be. but whose side do you think the FCC is on anyway? the publics? LOL. did you see how they're pushing to allow mega-multi-media corporations to own 45% of local markets?
pretty soon the american public won't be voting for a president, the stockholders will just pick a ceo.
Re:SBC at it for a while.... (Score:2)
Of course, the puppet says he will veto [cnn.com].
Look, it's very simple (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want genuine competition among suppliers of a service, you can't have one of the suppliers running the infrastructure that the service is supplied over. Public infrastructure should be owned by and run for the benefit of the public, not for the profit of one particular user of it.
Welcome to the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority, Now A Wholly Owned Subsiduary of Ford Motor Co. Inc. $2 Surcharge Per Axle for Non Ford Vehicles.
Would we tolerate that? Well, the Bell network is little different, it's just less blatant.
Re:Look, it's very simple (Score:2)
As simple as these things may seem to us they are not so simple to someone who lives their life not caring about how any of these things gets handled, or even worse, caring about making money or helping corporations make money at any cost.
When you put a mob of people in charge of something like the FCC, FBI, CIA, etc. When things get all fucked up who do they blame? Noone. Or certainly not themselves. The public's solution? Create another departm
Happening to me now (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm moving into SBC territory next month, and the same situation exists here in Texas. Essentially, if I want to use another ISP, I have to pay that ISP a monthly fee and a separate line charge to SBC. But if I sign up with SBC, the combined line/ISP charge is the same as the line charge to go with someone else. So I can spend $30-$60 on the line charge and another $20-$40 to stay with my ISP, or just that $30-$60 to use their ISP. As much as I like my current provider, the financial incentive to switch is too great. But that still smacks of predatory pricing on the part of a monopoly.
SBC's not the only one that does this, of course. I work for another RBOC (though not in the telco or ISP areas) that does virtually the same thing. Evidently either my understanding of deregulation is flawed (the data services (DSL) unit must charge all ISPs the same, including their own) or the RBOC ISPs are really netting $0 after the line charges. Somehow I don't believe it's the latter.
I can't complain, although.... (Score:2)
Since then, the prices have dropped a bit and now I get 1.5 down and 256k up -- for $49.95/m
SBC Sucks.. and the ISPs register as a CLAC and.. (Score:2)
can have access to the poles and run thier own
copper cable? Or maybe sell WiFi wireless access?
Good luck, I hope they kick SBC's ass!
Cable Companies Are Worse (Score:3, Insightful)
SBC isn't as big of a problem as is RoadRunner. Giving all these things away free (i.e. installation) and undercutting us (and other ISPs in town). They've got thier own network that we can't buy into. They're also classified as a different type of "communications" company (with the cable t.v. aspect) and therefore don't have the same heap of taxes, regulations, and codes to follow.
Now, it's one thing to be able to offer your services for less than your competition, if you can do it, well, you've got the better business model. However, Time Warner can't seem to do it either, as they are writing off about 14 BILLION dollars in losses each year.
I'm not even going to get into the other uncouth things they do (as in sabotaging our wireless networks, etc).
bastards.
(phaeton sez)
SBC (Score:2)
Re:SBC (Score:2)
backhoe lawsuit (Score:2, Funny)
Talk about denial of service.
Lines need new ownership (Score:3, Insightful)
The phone company should be forced to "sell off"/"split off" a company that owns and maintains the poles and or last mile. This new company should continue to be government regulated, and maybe even get public funds. Forcing it to run as a non-profit run for the public good may not be a bad idea.
All companies that want, including the current incumbant, should have to purchase or lease access from this new company to provide copper based services.
This is what the mid 90's telecom act tried to create, but the "line owner" was virtual, and part of the largest service provider. The obvious conflict of interest caused problem. The solution? Eliminate the conflict, by making them two companies.
To take this a little further, I purchase my water from the town I live in. Why can't the copper last mile infrastructure be like that?
I know this is never going to happen, but that's my utopian vision.
-Pete
It's about time. (Score:2)
an SBC customer (Score:2)
I've been very happy with their service so far. Very rarely is there any outage.
However, they have jacked up the price from $30/mo to $50/mo. However, a local DSL provider who did offer me service a few years back was charging $100/mo. On the pretense that they offered "pre
Om Networks is Omsoft. Article had it wrong. (Score:2)
The "Om Networks" in the artticle should read "Om Technologies" (known as Omsoft [omsoft.com]) like the rest of the world has it [google.com]. Since I'm one of their customers, this case made my day :)
Re:Om Networks is Omsoft. Article had it wrong. (Score:2)
SBC in Nevada (Score:4, Informative)
Its not only monopolistic pricing, they are now, at least in Nevada (and I think I heard that Indiana or Illinois had a similar measure passed) absolved from even offering the lines to 3rd parties. We're trying to start a grassroots counter-attack in the Reno area, but its going to be a long fight for certain.
No longer Baby-Bells (Score:2)
The so-called baby-bells are babies no more. FCC De-regulation has lead to reconstitution of regional "Ma Bell" style control of telecom.
I nominate that the baby-bells now be referred to as
FRANKEN-Bells.
They are pieces cobbled together from other entities. The name, (and it's ominous undertones) is much more fitting.
Re:off topic but... Comcast Sucks! (Score:2)
capped at @128k now. I'm waiting for DLS to become
available and then I am going to dump them.
Re:off topic but... Comcast Sucks! (Score:2)
Re:SBC SBC SBC (Score:2)