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Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Sure – Trust A Telco – Go Ahead…

May 5, 2008 by Mark  
Filed under Business

Sure – Trust A Telco – Go Ahead…

They are so incredibly brazen they throw the FCC’s rules back in their face upside down!
Despite the rules governing the 700 Mhz auction, Verizon has arrogantly decided that they are somehow not required to participate. Well, hell, that’s exactly what one ought to expect when there is a lawless administration, but that’s another story…
Google Accuses Verizon of Planning to Dodge 700 MHz Open Access Rules
Verizon has taken the public position that it may exclude its handsets from the open access condition. Verizon believes it may force customers who want to access the open platform using a device not purchased from …read more

700MHz Spectrum Auction Chatter [Post-Bidding]

April 9, 2008 by Mark  
Filed under Business

700MHz Spectrum Auction Chatter [Post-Bidding]

Bidders in latest FCC auction start talking
“The gag order that silenced those participating in the FCC’s auction that ended last month was lifted late Thursday (4/03). Now companies are free to discuss their plans and strategies for bidding in the auction.”
Yet its beginning to appear that part of the plans and strategies are to circumvent the FCC’s requirement for openness.
Speaking of Verizon in a later article, Marguerite Reardon tells us;

Google Improved Part of Your Future

April 4, 2008 by Mark  
Filed under Business

Google Improved Part of Your Future

Simply mho, but didn’t we really know this all along…
Google: Spectrum bid goal was openness, not winning
Google says it participated in the recent wireless spectrum auction not with the goal to win, but to help drive bidding high enough to ensure that open-access rules it had pushed for would be adopted.
“Google’s top priority heading into the auction was to make sure that bidding on the so-called ‘C Block’ reached the $4.6 billion reserve price that would trigger the important ‘open applications’ and ‘open handsets’ license conditions,” Richard Whitt, Washington telecom and media counsel, and Joseph Faber, corporate counsel, wrote in …read more


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