Singapore - Regulator Says SingNet_s Toll-Free Net Access Scheme Is Fair.
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.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
The owners of domain names who have not paid their registration fee could find their corner of the internet sold off to the highest bidder.
more »
President Clinton cemented a key building block of Internet commerce Friday, signing legislation that makes contracts signed by computer equal to those sealed in pen and ink.
more »
Canada has become a laboratory for the automobile industry's experiment with selling cars to consumers over the Internet.
more »
On the 23 of June, appearing in Moscow at a seminar of an Intel on electronic commerce, the president and the main executive director of this corporation Dr. K.Barrett has outlined the strategy on global distribution of electronic business.
more »
Microsoft has continued to strengthen its grasp on the global browser market, according to new statistics from WebSideStory’s Statmarket.
more »
Clicking on to the Malaysian Government's new Web site is more like opening the pages of a dusty official manual than entering the cyberspace world of eye-catching images and instant information.
more »
Europe's antitrust chief said Monday he will reject the $115 billion WorldCom-Sprint megamerger unless the companies come up with another plan to ease concern over its combined Internet dominance.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
In his "first-ever" national Webcast, President Clinton today intends to unveil a series of e-government initiatives that the administration contends will make the federal government far more Internet-accessible.
more »
A study of 170 online retail sites finds that on a whole, customer service is not great and the overall level of security and privacy protection is negligable.
more »