Five-month investigation

Published: 8 October 1999 y., Friday
Singapore_s telecommunications regulator, the Telecommunications Authority of Singapore, said a scheme by the country_s largest ISP SingNet was not anticompetitive. The authority investigated complaints from rival operators that a promotion that absorbs the telephone call costs of subscribers through a deal with parent company SingTel is not unfair. Singapore_s telecommunications regulator has ruled that a scheme by leading Internet service provider (ISP) SingNet that absorbs the telephone call costs of subscribers is not unfair. SingNet_s "Tide the Tough Waves" promotion promises to subsidize all its subscribers_ time-based Internet telephone calls through an agreement with parent company Singapore Telecommunications Ltd (SingTel). Competitors Pacific Internet ltd and CyberWay lodged a complaint with the Telecommunications Authority of Singapore (TAS), claiming such cross-subsidization was anti-competitive. The TAS spent five months investigating the claims and has now ruled the promotion fair and not predatory. "After an extensive five-month investigation, TAS ascertained that SingNet was not engaging in any unfair practices," said the regulator, in a statement, claiming there was no instance of any cross-subsidization by SingTel of the time-based charges.
Šaltinis: Newsbytes
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 »

Hackers urge boycott of record industry bounty

Angered by the music industry's bid to close down Napster and MP3.com, a group of computer hackers are organizing a boycott of a competition to win $10,000 more »

Pentium 4 launch looks like Halloween

Intel Corp. may have a Halloween treat for tech trick-or-treaters -- the launch of the Pentium 4 processor for desktop PCs. more »

The Olympics' Upset Winners

A large number of news and information sites are seeing double-digit traffic increases tied to the Games. more »

Religious Radio Programming Will Hit The Web

Salem Communications, a major owner of religious radio stations, will soon offer its syndicated programming to various Web-based formats. more »

Olympic Video Pirates

Pirate broadcasters using the Internet to distribute unlicensed video footage seem to be staying away from the Olympic Games more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Aren't You Bored with Standing in a Queue?

Now the system of payments for utilities www.payments.5ci.lt is being created. more »

Congress Next in Copyright Tiffs

Copyright holders are predicting a grim battle in Congress next year as a result of the ongoing Napster lawsuit. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »