Telia will not appeal UMTS license decision

Published: 1 August 2001 y., Wednesday
Telia will not appeal the decision made by the country administrative court in Stockholm in which the court ruled that the UMTS licenses allocated by the National Post and Telecom Agency (PTS) should stand. "We will now put more effort into developing the network co-operation we started with Tele2 and utilise our technical competence to ensure that our customers gain access to the new UMTS services that will be made possible with the new third-generation technology," commented Telia CEO Marianne Nivert in a statement. The Swedish government recently invited UMTS operators in Sweden to participate in a dialogue to discuss Sweden's possibilities to maintain its world-leading position in information technology. In the invitation, the government also mentioned a few of the unclear issues concerning UMTS licenses that have emerged in the wake of the court's decision. The analysis that was conducted in conjunction with the court's verdict indicates that the county administrative court concluded that Telia was right on several significant points, and that the criticism aimed at the PTS for its license allocation process was justified. The review also shows that Telia has ended up in a "Catch 22" situation, in which the court states that the PTS made mistakes by not communicating the content of reports made by consultants, which were of importance for the way Telia's license application was evaluated. At the same time, the court chose later not to consider Telia's clarification of points brought up in the consultants' reports. Although Telia has a reason for appealing the court's decision, Telia chooses to refrain from driving the court case further. The government's initiative to discussions between UMTS operators and legislators will hopefully lead to greater clarity in licensing terms than continuing the appeal process.
Šaltinis: telia.se
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

RSA show pushes for global Web patrol

If a Web site in Israel breaks Italian laws, does the Italian Supreme Court have the right to shut it down? more »

The Real Price of Sex.com

The news reports say that Sex, the domain name, is worth at least US$65 million. more »

Adobe Gains on Amazon E-Book Deal

According to Amazon, the lineup of Adobe PDF titles to be offered on the e-tail giant's site illustrates 'the incredible versatility of digital content.' more »

Original Intel hacker's appeal denied

Randal Schwartz is something of a legend in the hacking community more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Open-source programming site expires

SourceXchange, an attempt to capitalize on the enthusiasm of the open-source programming movement, has shuttered its doors. more »

Germany's Net Idea: Electricity

Internet users in Germany will soon have a shockingly innovative way to access the Net more »

Japan Outlines Five-Year 'E-Strategy'

The Japanese government said it has compiled a strategy aimed at making Japan the world's most advanced IT nation within five years. more »

Designers adapting computers to human behavior

The largest international gathering on Computer-Human Interaction more »

The better methods

Two newcomers try new ways to collect data on Web surfers more »