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

U.S. "pleasantly surprised" by bug_s scarcity

At Peterson Air Force Base, U.S. and Russian military experts marked the new year_s arrival in Moscow and Washington without incident. more »

A false report

British train Web page suffers hack. more »

New cyber-assault methods pop up

Denial-of-service attacks could come during Y2K weekend. more »

ZyXEL wins again

ZyXEL omni.net ISDN Terminal Adapters Win more »

Millions must upgrade browser

But don_t blame Y2K: Digital certificates set to expire. more »

More profitable businesses

Qualcomm narrows focus, sells handset business. more »

Australian Airline Wins Domain Name Court Case

Australia_s largest airline, Qantas Airways, wrestled control of an Internet domain name from a cybersquatter after it won an important court case across the Tasman in New Zealand. more »

E-Shopping Maintains Record Pace

Holiday shoppers continued to crowd the online stores as the number of visitors from home and work to e-commerce sites increased 37 percent for the week ending Dec. 19, versus the week ending Dec. 20 last year, according to new figures. more »

Growing demand

Why Should Red Hat Be Allowed To Rewrite Wall Street_s Rules? more »

Strong Customer Base

AOL, Microsoft, CBS, NBC Buy Into Encoding.com more »