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

Query-via-e-mail enabled

INFORMATION BUILDERS NEXT month will announce products to extend enterprise data to a variety of portable devices more »

Lycos sets eye on global gold with deal to build Olympics site

Waltham-based Lycos Inc. hopes a global deal with the sponsors of the 2000 Summer Olympics will provide a major boost to the company's worldwide visibility. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Japan launches Internet strategy

Japan is drawing up a five-year plan to surpass the United States as an Internet powerhouse through massive investment in high-speed infrastructure and scuttling laws that inhibit e-commerce. more »

Buy4Now plans to offer one million online items

Traditional retailers Superquinn, Heiton Holdings and Eircom have together taken a 41 per cent stake, valued at euro 4.8 million, in a new Internet shopping venture, Buy4Now.ie. more »

Australian Government Proposes Internet Naming Law

The federal government introduced the Telecommunications Legislation Amendment Bill 2000 into the senate. more »

FBI Arrests Man in Emulex Hoax Case

A 23-year-old college student was arrested Thursday and charged with staging one of the biggest financial hoaxes ever on the Internet and pocketing almost $250,000 by issuing fraudulent information on technology company Emulex Corp. more »

Gnutella girds against spam attacks

At last, there's a business model for Gnutella's rough-and-tumble world of file-swapping: spam. more »

You Are Welcome to Visit www.voting.lt

Perhaps it is very difficult to find somebody who is absolutely indifferent to the others’ opinion. There are many ways to get known what other people think: referendums may be organized, questionnaires of different kinds may be prepared. Here we introduce another way you may do it. more »

AOL Instant Messenger gets Napsterized

A new Napster-like program has sprung up online that piggybacks on America Online's popular instant messaging service, limiting swaps of music and other files to close, trusted groups of people. more »