Kevin Martin's Latest Gift To Telcos: Dismissing Skype Petition
from the we-don't-need-no-discussion-at-all.. dept
A little over a year ago, Skype filed a petition with the FCC asking to extend the Carterfone decision to mobile networks. The Carterfone ruling was what allowed people the opportunity to connect non-AT&T telephones to the phone network, and kicked off an awful lot of innovation in the telephone arena (getting everyone past the black rotary phones). The Skype petition was a bit misguided, because the situation in the mobile world was quite different than the AT&T telephone monopoly of the 1960s. In fact, there is a lot more competition and openness in the mobile world -- and that competition has pushed many of the players to continue to open up at a greater rate, knowing they need to in order to compete.So, it probably doesn't come as much surprise to find out that telco buddy Kevin Martin is dismissing the Skype petition outright. He announced this at the CTIA conference, where it was greeted by applause -- suggesting that it was mostly employees from mobile operators in the room. Martin pointed out that there was a lot of competition in the mobile space and also noted Verizon Wireless' move towards openness. Of course, it may be a bit early to declare Verizon Wireless truly open, and it seems a bit odd to dismiss the Skype petition out of hand without any public discussion. While it's probably true that the Skype petition was asking for unnecessary regulations, you would think that at least a discussion could have been held around questions of openness on mobile networks before the petition was totally dismissed.
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Filed Under: carterfone, fcc, open networks, wireless
Companies: fcc, skype
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Compared to 1968 AT&T? Uh... yes, there's a lot more competition.
The mobile world is very closed, this is everything from what hardware you are allowed to bring onto a carriers network to what software you're allowed to load onto your phone.
Yes, that's partly, though not totally true. On GSM networks you can bring anything onto that network with a SIM card, and most phones will let you load whatever software you want right now (VZW is still something of an exception to this rule). The competition between the different carriers has made it so that all of them are opening up more and more.
So, yes, it's quite a different world and while it's not truly open yet, it's moving in that direction.
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That's kind of like declaring China of today to be a free and open democracy by comparing it to China of 1968. In other words, while it may not be as closed as it once was, to declare it free and open today is still an exaggeration.
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Um. I didn't declare it "free and open." I simply said that it was a different scenario than the one that caused the Carterfone decision to be put in place (1968 AT&T). And then I noted that because of competition in the market the *TREND* is towards more openness.
So, I never said that the market was free and open, because it's not. But it's moving in that direction, which was NOT the case in 1968. Hence the criteria that required Carterfone isn't necessarily present for a wireless Carterfone.
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If you want to be pedantic, I didn't say you did either.
because it's not.
No, it certainly isn't.
But it's moving in that direction, which was NOT the case in 1968.
Again, like democratic freedom in China, that movement though is too little and not guaranteed to even continue. It certainly isn't enough to convince me that no further pressure is needed.
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Um. You did. And I quote: "I greatly disagree with your assertion that there is "a lot more competition and openness in the mobile world"."
To which I responded in pointing out that there clearly is a lot more competition and openness than there was. I don't think you can debate that point.
To which you responded with the China comparison, which wasn't the point. I made a relative statement: that there is much more competition and openness. You are making an absolute statement.
I'm not sure why this is even worth repeating.
Again, like democratic freedom in China, that movement though is too little and not guaranteed to even continue. It certainly isn't enough to convince me that no further pressure is needed.
You having trouble understanding the point here? The point I made was that the situation is quite different than 1968. You disagreed, but have yet to explain why. Instead, when I called you on it, you started discussing that things are still bad... which wasn't the point I was making at all.
Besides, I would disagree that things are as bad as you say, and again, if you look at the trends, they're moving in a much more open direction.
You have failed to explain why, given those trends, the FCC needs to step in. If history has shown us anything, when the FCC steps in, bad stuff happens.
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No, you seem to be confused. Check which message you were replying to. You do know how to used threaded mode in your own forum, don't you? Mitchell made that comment, no me. And I used the China analogy, not Mitchell.
You having trouble understanding the point here?
The confusion seems to be yours.
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As far as CDMA opening, I'm looking forward to seeing what Verizon's open access rules do. At this point though, it really sounds like more of the same, even if they are open you still need to have that particular model of device approved by them before you can have it on their network. I won't call CDMA totally open until I can walk into a Best Buy, pick what cell phone I want, then walk over to their carrier services desk and choose my plan and features.
Though to counter this you have IMO Alltel going the exact opposite direction and actually locking down their phones harder then they were before, if you want confirmation of this check Howard Forums.
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Re; Skype Petition
With regard to competition in the world of handsets, please give that tired "Industry Shill" argument a rest.
Handsets are the "golden key" to the handcuffs that hold so many subscribers hostage. As long as they keep dolling out features a little bit at a time and don't *quite* hit the "sweet spot". They can continue to sell a new handset every 18 to 24 months and continue to keep customers for another 24 months with the threat of early termination fees.
The real deal is that if competition in handsets were open, the incumbent carriers might actually have to be competitive on price once again.
And we both know that after all the PAC money they've sprinkled on both parties, they wouldn't want that to happen.
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Re: Re; Skype Petition
Wow. Are you new here? Considering how often I slam the mobile operators, it's rather ridiculous to claim I'm an "industry shill."
Just because I disagree with you doesn't mean I'm a shill.
The real deal is that if competition in handsets were open, the incumbent carriers might actually have to be competitive on price once again.
Again, I absolutely agree (did you even read what I wrote?!?). All I'm saying is that the market is heading in that direction already. There's no reason to force the market there.
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