AT&T Claims Sling Made Changes To Get On The iPhone; Sling Has No Clue What AT&T Is Talking About
from the say-what-now? dept
We noted in the past how odd it was that AT&T blocked something like the place-shifting Sling Player from the iPhone, but allowed place-shifting streaming TV apps from partners like MLB.com. So it was worth highlighting that, recently, AT&T changed its mind and began allowing Sling, though in the announcement, it claimed that Sling worked with AT&T to make changes to the app to make it okay. Apparently, no one ran that bit of PR by Sling, who quickly spoke up to say it simply wasn't true:"We didn't change anything... AT&T never discussed any specific requirements with us."Perhaps what actually "changed" was the fact that the FCC has become interested in AT&T blocking apps in anti-competitive ways... Funny that AT&T didn't mention that part.
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So?
So, what's wrong with that? Remember, we don't need no stinkin' neutrality rules.
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Re: So?
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My Opinion
Nobody has a "right" to have their app published by Apple for use on Apple's hardware. If they choose not to accept an app, the developers can take their program to the Google phone, or develop their own platform and market against the iPhone.
If Apple and ATT want to give their partners preferential treatment, that should be their choice. They are not the only game in town.
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Re: My Opinion
Hmm, so if AT&T were to partner with (or buy a stake in), say, Pizza Hut, it should then be OK for them to deny phone service to competing shops, huh?
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Re: Re: My Opinion
If you owned a pizza store, would you allow the competing pizza stores to come put up signs in your pizza store's window? Would it be appropriate for the government to tell you that you MUST let them put signs in your windows?
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Re: Re: Re: My Opinion
AT&T have all the right in the world to not let apps onto their own store, but they have no right to ban an app from their network and yes I know they build it and all that BS.
The truth though is that network is sitting on public property and should not be closed because it creates exactly this kind of problem were their own interests is not in synchrony with the market health.
Wait and see what happens without regulation, after the likes of AT&T start buying/merging/joining all entertainment companies and see the mess it will be after they start fighting, and sky-rocketing prices start to trick down to costumers who are really the ones who pay for it.
The thing that comes to mind is the guy not permitting other people to put anything on the streets because it harms them.
Like apple should not be allowed and it is not allowed to stop other from making hardware compatible to apple's hardware.
Or we want to go back to the time AT&T owned the phones insides our homes?
Those were not good times.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: My Opinion
The problem is not that we need to create laws for neutrality. We need to make sure the market supports competition on a level that would allow the market to sort this stuff out.
Real competition will result in "enough" neutrality to make consumers happy - which is the correct amount of neutrality.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: My Opinion
My restrictions are my business decisions. Maybe people want to bring their own shoes or their own bowling ball. What should they do? Go to another alley.
What should they not do? Demand that the government require that I allow them to bring whatever equipment they want into my alley. Demand that they use that equipment however they want to in my alley, despite agreeing to abide by my rules when they came in.
While the government is at it, the neighboring alley demands that I put up advertisements in my alley and let them leave stacks of coupons on all the counters. It's not fair competitions otherwise. So now people use your alley however they want, wearing whatever shoes the want, rolling the balls all over the place.
Then people complain that my alley is too chaotic, they complain about the crappy shoes some guy over in the corner is renting out (not my shoes of course), and the quality of the lanes that are being abused. Luckily there are ads all over my alley for the guy across the street.
The government should not be making business decisions involving how I manage my alley. If I manage it poorly, or don't provide the services or freedoms they want, they do have the right to not use my alley.
Verizon and ATT are Nationwide. Most cities also have U.S. Cellular, Sprint, T-Mobile. Beyond that, there are more regional companies which provide even further choices.
When it comes to government involvement, be careful what you wish for. You may own a business one day, and the competition across the street may walk up with a court order for you to give him advertising space in your establishment.
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Re: Re: Re: My Opinion
That doesn't answer the question, but I would like to point out that when it comes to their phone network, "It's their hardware", as you call it. And if they provide phone service to other pizza shops, then they do "allow companies that compete with their services use their platform to advertise their business" as you also put it.
But back to the question, "if AT&T were to partner with (or buy a stake in), say, Pizza Hut, it should then be OK for them to deny phone service to competing shops, huh?", why won't you answer it?
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Re: My Opinion
Ah, but don't forget that AT&T got some money or some exclusive rights from the government somewhere in the past. This should obligate them forever and for always to allow anyone else to do anything they want on the AT&T network, as well as for any employee of a competitor to come into an AT&T facility at any time to use the bathroom or check their email. Write your Congressperson!
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Re: My Opinion
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Re: Re: My Opinion
"Perhaps what actually "changed" was the fact that the FCC has become interested in AT&T blocking apps in anti-competitive ways.."
I don't believe controlling what apps you allow on your network is anti-competitive when the app developers are more than welcome to use one or more alternative networks.
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Re:
Quote:
“Key for us is Sling Media was willing to work with us to revise the app to make it more bandwidth-sensitive . They made important changes to more efficiently use 3G network bandwidth and conserve wireless spectrum so that we were able to support the app on our 3G mobile broadband network,” said Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO of AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets.
Truth:
Sling Media made no changes to their app, and are confused as to why he would even say such a thing.
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pwb is right, mike is wrong.
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2010/02/sling-we-didnt-work-with- att-for-3g-streaming-to-iphone.ars
over the course of at&t and slings work, sling was making general improvements to their platform which applied to all implementations... including at&t's 3g.
unless at&t was able to look at closed source code rather than just testing libraries, there's no way at&t would know whether the changes were for at&t alone or everyone using sling's platform.
in tomorrow's news, "Sling Media General Manager Skullfucks Blogosphere!"
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Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
ars got the update directly from sling themselves which debunks this whole childish he-said-we-did-but-we-didn't.
Um, Ars was the one who made the original report that this was based on.
over the course of at&t and slings work, sling was making general improvements to their platform which applied to all implementations... including at&t's 3g.
Of course they were making general improvements. Who suggested otherwise? Not us. But what the quote was questioning was AT&T's claim that Sling made changes directly to get on the iPhone:
Here's what AT&T said: "Sling Media was willing to work with us to revise the app to make it more bandwidth sensitive,"
And Sling's response: "We didn't change anything... AT&T never discussed any specific requirements with us."
And you're blaming ME for misinterpreting that?
It looks like Sling said exactly what we claimed, and then later backtracked just slightly, by admitting that they're always talking to AT&T as part of the general improvements.
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Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
you're simply repeating something which is known to be wrong, without even looking at the original report that was updated before you even posted this.
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Re: Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
Don't embarrass us like that or you *will* be banned (again). Now get out there and tell them that you didn't know what you were talking about.
Sling honchette:
Yes sir. Consider it done.
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Re: Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
Wow. You really do suck at reading comprehension.
(1) Ars quoted Sling saying exactly what we said.
(2) We wrote about it.
(3) Sling provided a quote that "clarified" but did not change the original, which is still correct.
(4) You claim *we* got it wrong?
Uh, yeah. Every time you post I understand more and more why you don't reveal publicly who you are.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
1) ars made their post last week.
2) sling made an official response to the ars post, pointing out that it's misleading... almost a week ago.
3) today, you parroted the first misleading post with total disregard to the update... that happened almost a week ago.
you're still a sensationalist.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
Ha! Just because you disagree with my opinion, and have repeatedly mistakenly claimed I made errors when the actual errors were in your level of comprehension, it does not make me a sensationalist.
But it does make you funny.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: pwb is right, mike is wrong.
- Sling didn't change anything at AT&T's request
- AT&T testing Slings app and found that they were wrong in their assumptions
- Sling was constantly making updates...but not at AT&T's request
So, what is misleading? AT&T's statement was false, plain and simple.
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As a result, I recommend you look at Mr. Wonderful. He really is cool.
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