A lawsuit against AT&T Corp

Published: 26 October 1999 y., Tuesday
GTE Corp. has filed a lawsuit against AT&T Corp.,as well as its exclusive provider of broadband Internet access services, Excite@Home, saying that AT&T and Excite@Home have set up a business arrangement that denies consumers a choice in who they want as their preferred broadband services provider. GTE also named Comcast as one of the defendants, along with AT&T subsidiary Tele-Communications Inc. GTE said that other Internet service providers should be able to get access to the AT&T-controlled cable pipe, and that if this cannot happen, consumers will be forced to use AT&T_s preferred providers for their cable Internet access, even if they want a competing provider. In a quick response to the charges, Excite@Home issued a compact statement saying that since the Telecommunications Act of 1996 became law, "GTE has spent millions on lawyers in an effort to prevent consumers from reaping the benefits of competition as the law intended." The company also said that GTE also has "lost every significant case." "It would be absurd for the court to find that the antitrust laws should be used to protect an entrenched monopolist, such as GTE, with a greater than 95 percent market share from a new competitor, like Excite@Home, who has less than a 2 percent market share," Excite@Home also said, though it did not describe what it meant by market share. At issue in the lawsuit is the case of open access, or, as AT&T terms it, forced access. AT&T when it bought TCI declined to open up its new cable infrastructure to competing Internet service providers that want to offer broadband services, saying that they are under no obligation to do so. Instead, AT&T forged an exclusive agreement with Excite@Home to provide cable-based broadband Internet access until 2002. Competing ISPs, including some of the baby Bells and incumbent local exchange carriers like GTE and US West Inc., along with companies like America Online Inc.,have argued that it is anti-competitive to keep the networks closed since cable is one of the best ways to receive broadband services. Several courts have disagreed and AT&T currently is appealing a case in Portland, Ore., and surrounding Multnomah County. The FCC, meanwhile, has officially stated that it will not get involved with forcing open access upon AT&T or other cable operators.
Šaltinis: Newsbytes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Mapping the New Internet

Expert says it will take a new attitude to squash spam, wire your washer, and identify the next IM more »

A Linux Desktop Bonanza

Linux desktop vendors Xandros and Linspire (also known as Lindows) are offering more desktop software for less, and, in the case of Xandros, for nothing more »

Traditional School Moves to the Internet

Penki kontinentai” implements the first unique project of electronic school in Lithuania. This project must change collaboration between teachers and students improve expedition, information search and change such a negative view of school in general.

more »

Windows 'Lock-In' Worries

Microsoft Corp.'s plans for a common set of services that promise its server platform products will work better together are being met with skepticism. more »

New Prescott Pentium 4 processors on tap from Intel

Among the eight new chips will be Intel's first workstation processors with 64-bit extensions technology more »

The Changing Face of E-Mail

Information overload will drive e-mail into the ground unless software vendors act now and make major changes to the 30-year-old technology more »

AMD Refreshes Athlon 64 CPUs

Four 64-bit chips with fast cache join Athlon family. more »

Sony to exit key handheld arenas

Sony is scaling back its Clie handheld line and will bow out of the U.S. and European markets for PDAs more »

CeBIT America means business

In its second year, show improves in size and focus more »