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The FCC, TWC, Skype, And The
Cellular Industry
On
March 1, 2007, the FCC
ruled in favor of a petition brought by
Time Warner Communications,
stating that local exchanges cannot deny access to wholesale
telecommunication carriers (TWC)
to provide services and exchange traffic, including voice over
Internet protocol (VoIP).
The decision overturned rulings in South
Carolina and Nebraska that allowed local rural exchanges to deny
access to wholesale carriers, arguing that the wholesale providers
were not true telecommunications providers, as they do not offer
services directly to the public.The FCC disagreed stating: "denying
wholesale telecommunications service providers the right to
interconnect with incumbent LECs... are inconsistent with the Act
and Commission precedent and would frustrate the development of
competition and broadband deployment."
In another somewhat related petition,
VoIP provider Skype has
asked the FCC to apply the Carterphone decision of 1968 to the
cellular phone industry, effectively forcing the cellcos to allow
outside devices and applications to connect to their network.
The
Carterphone ruling determined at the time that AT&Ts
telephone network stopped at the phone jack, ending a monopoly on
user hardware, and spurring a massive influx of new devices and
technological innovations in the market.
The Skype petition opens up a whole new can
of worms for the US cell phone industry, bringing them to the
forefront of the grass roots Net Neutrality debate. In his paper Dr.
Tim Wu details the techniques used by the cellcos Verizon, Sprint,
AT&T, and T-Mobile, to limit consumer access to devices and
applications such as WiFi, VoIP, Internet browsing and more.
Cell phone companies in the US not only
control the public airwaves they have been entrusted with, they also
sell the equipment that is used to connect to their networks, much
like AT&T did before the Carterphone ruling. They control access to
their networks by either disabling the
SIM chip on the phones
they sell, effectively locking it to the network, or by requiring
cell phones be registered with the carrier network through their
Electronic Serial Number (ESN).
Strict control of services allowed on the
American cellular networks has stifled developers and impeded the
development useful applications, severely limiting competition and
consumer choice. VoIP over WiFi
connections, advanced GPS
features, Bluetooth
wireless capabilities, and the development of advanced
SMS applications are just
some of the technology that has at one time or another been hindered
by the US cellular industry.
By ruling in favor of Time Warner, the FCC
sided with the big boys, and rightly so. Consumers should be able to
choose from a wide variety of applications, including VoIP, if it is
technologically feasible. For a service provider to deny them that,
simply because it doesn't benefit the carrier, is not only non
competitive, but somehow, just un-American.
Skype has also asked the FCC in its petition
to consider a method to create transparent and neutral standards in
the cellular industry, perhaps something like the IEEE standards
committee that has worked so well for wireless networking. Sounds
great! Developers and device manufacturers could work together to
foster competition and technological innovation, ultimately with
enormous benefit to the consumer.
Obviously, this is not something that the US
cellular industry would want, and would undoubtedly marshal all of
their considerable resources in opposition. A project of this
magnitude would also be an enormous undertaking for the FCC, and
could conceivably lead to yet another level of bureaucracy.
If it is truly the mission of the FCC to
foster competition, new technology, and to protect consumer rights
as the TWC decision implies, then there is a golden opportunity for
them to do just that in the petition from the little guy, Skype. As
guardian of the people's communication systems and the
public airwaves, to apply the Carterphone principals equally to all
the players in the Telecommunications Industry would seem, to me at
least, to be a no brainer.
Author Michael Talbert is a
certified systems engineer and web designer with over 7 years
experience in the industry. For more information on
Voice over IP
Telephony, visit the website VoIP-Facts.net, or the VoIP Blog
for up to date industry news and commentary.
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