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The Courts Network United States Technology

Colorado Drops Its T-Mobile-Sprint Lawsuit After Dish Agrees To House Headquarters In the State (theverge.com) 13

In the latest swirl of T-Mobile-Sprint merger drama, Colorado is exiting a lawsuit challenging the deal after Dish Network agreed to house its new wireless headquarters in the state. The Verge reports: The Colorado Attorney General's Office announced its decision on Monday after Dish promised that the state would be one of the first in the nation to receive 5G services and become the home of its new wireless headquarters, creating thousands of jobs. The DOJ approved the T-Mobile-Sprint merger back in July after it was able to piece together a new wireless competitor by allocating some of Sprint's spectrum to Dish. The Federal Communications Commission formally voted to approve the merger late last week. Dish is positioned to become the third largest wireless competitor after negotiations with the Justice Department to approve the merger.

Dish won't be building out a new headquarters, however. The company already houses its call center employees at the "Riverfront" facility in Littleton, Colorado and any new wireless HQ employees will work in that building (which looks eerily like a Cabela's location) as well. Colorado was formerly part of a multistate lawsuit spearheaded by the New York State Attorney General's office aimed at blocking the merger. Colorado is now the second state to drop out of the suit along with Mississippi. A trial date is set for December 9th. In a press release, Dish said that it "expects to employ 2,000 full-time employees" at the Colorado headquarters over the next three years.
"The agreements we are announcing today address those concerns by guaranteeing jobs in Colorado, a statewide buildout of a fast 5G network that will especially benefit rural communities, and low-cost mobile plans," Chief Deputy Attorney General Natalie Hanlon Leh said in a statement to The Colorado Sun. "Our announcement today ensures Coloradans will benefit from Dish's success as a nationwide wireless competitor."
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Colorado Drops Its T-Mobile-Sprint Lawsuit After Dish Agrees To House Headquarters In the State

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  • QPQ

    This is old stuff. Who will be left holding the bag? Rhetorical question...

  • goes full big gov to ensure new investment.
  • Of course (Score:4, Funny)

    by llamalad ( 12917 ) on Monday October 21, 2019 @09:29PM (#59333394)

    "I either want less corruption, or more chance to participate in it."
    â"Ashleigh Brilliant.

  • but on a bigger scale. They spread their factories out throughout the country so that there's always a ton of jobs on the line if anyone talks about cutting back on the endless wars.

    I like how the ruling class has us completely under control with the constant threat of job losses. Marx predicted this, but all anybody can remember about him is that a couple of two bit thug dictators used his books for rhetoric.
    • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Monday October 21, 2019 @10:38PM (#59333548)

      >"I like how the ruling class has us completely under control with the constant threat of job losses. Marx predicted this."

      Riiiiight. Because the same corrupt governments that can cave to business interests should go ahead and just own/control all business. That will fix everything. Not....

      Nothing does business worse than government, where the money is "free" and bureaucracy is overwhelming. Where the customers are captive, efficiency doesn't matter, and competition vanishes. Where innovation is not rewarded and idealistic group-think treats the consumers as annoyances.

      No system is perfect, but one where the government exerts massive control over business is much worse than what we have now. Government needs to be smaller, more local, more responsive, more responsible, and focused on preventing and busting monopolies. Not bigger, more expensive, more wasteful, less local, and more corrupt.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • All the Sprint employees who are going to get their walking papers because their positions have become redundant. But hey, sacrifices must be made in the name of job creation, or something like that.

  • I look forward to "a statewide buildout of a fast 5G network that will especially benefit rural communities" when the next article I ran across indicates they can't even get 5G to work within the confines of a stadium (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2019/10/verizons-5g-network-cant-cover-an-entire-basketball-arena-either/).
  • I lived in California until 2017. Me & my wife had two cell numbers, first TMobile, then Google Fi. We paid ~$100/month with tmob, then ~$70 with Fi. We moved across the pond. Now we have three cell numbers (one for our daughter). I pay $7/month for 10 gig of data and $3 for everything else. My wife pays around $8, daughter $5. The country also has 4 cell providers.

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