January 10, 2008

House Committee Launches Probe of FCC Management

The House Energy and Commerce Committee announced a formal investigation of the FCC. The House Energy and Commerce Committee will seek to determine whether agency procedures are "being conducted in a fair, open, efficient and transparent manner," according to a letter sent to Mr. Martin that was signed by committee chairman Rep. John Dingell (D., Mich.), Rep. Bart Stupak (D., Mich.), Rep. Joe Barton (R., Texas) and Rep. John Shimkus (R., Ill.). WSJ ARSTECHNICA
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November 02, 2007

FCC's Martin squeeze play on media consolidation

Kevin Martin pulls a surprise hearing about media consolidation, one day before the comment deadline, with only 5 days warning to his own commissioners, and none to the public.

Check out PeerFlow's take on this at FCC: Trick or Treat! Media Consolidation
Posted by wbia at 16:32:16 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

October 26, 2007

And if Email Portability is not enough, how about a tax on Email?

The ban on Internet tax set to expire Nov 1 unless extended by Congress. Current law, which is set to expire on November 1 unless Congress acts, defines the term as "a service that enables users to access content, information, electronic mail, or other services offered over the Internet, and may also include access to proprietary content, information and other services as part of a package of services offered to users." Read more here on News.com

Posted by wbia at 18:49:52 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

October 24, 2007

FCC asked to mandate email forwarding...

The Federal Communications Commission is being asked to do a remarkably silly thing: create mandatory "e-mail address portability."

The idea is that because the U.S. Post Office offers to forward physical mail, and because FCC rules require telephone service providers to offer number portability, the same principle should be extended to e-mail accounts.

I can't bear to write any more at this time about this nonsense, read more about this here at News.com

Posted by wbia at 19:15:19 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 17, 2007

Paetec buys McLeodUSA

The WSJ reporting;

Paetec Holding Corp. last night sealed a deal to purchase telecom provider McLeodUSA for $492 million, marking the end of independence for one of the leading lights of the dot-com boom.

Under the terms of the deal, Fairport, N.Y.-based Paetec will swap 1.3 of its shares for each McLeod share, which is privately held after a crippling debt load sent it through a series of bankruptcy proceedings. Paetec will be issuing 40 million shares to pay for the transaction, while also taking on $65 million of McLeod's net debt. McLeod is based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

The combination will create one of the largest rivals to AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications for business-telephony services. For the 12 months ended June 30, Paetec and McLeod reported combined revenue of $1.6 billion. The deal should eventually create annual cost savings of $30 million, the companies said.

Such combinations have become increasingly important as both Verizon and AT&T have become ever larger through acquisitions of their own. "The consolidation of the larger carriers has strengthened our position," said Paetec Chief Executive Arunas A. Chesonis. "They feel they don't have any choices."

After the deal is completed, Paetec is expected to have 3.4 million access lines. It will also have 17,000 miles of fiber-optic routes, used to connect cities including Dallas, Houston and Seattle.

With credit markets in turmoil, overall merger-and-acquisition activity has slowed. But the exit of other investors has created an opportunity for corporations, which can use their own securities in stock-swap transactions such as that in the Paetec-McLeod deal.

The structure should also help improve Paetec's debt ratios, from 3.9 times its debt to adjusted cash flow to 2.9 times.

The deal is a humbling end for McLeod, which was valued at $670 million in January 2004, when investors bid up the stocks of companies building up fiber-optic capacity. But a glut of capacity and competitors made the business difficult to sustain. Dozens of competitive phone companies went out of business or had to find consolidation partners. Paetec emerged as one of the survivors.

Paetec shares were up 33 cents, or 2.8%, to $12.13 Friday in 4 p.m. Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading. The shares are up 32% since Jan. 3.

Posted by wbia at 16:01:22 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

August 11, 2007

Quite Summer

Not much for news so far this summer to speak of. The FCC Whitespace auction ruling came out, though no one really knows what that will really do for increasing Wi-Fi broadband or for Public Safety. News Release

A true friend of the WBIA Earl Comstock resigned from COMPTEL back in May, we wish him all the best for the future.

Posted by wbia at 12:43:38 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

May 29, 2007

Unlimited Broadband?

There’s a dirty little secret in the broadband industry: Internet Service Providers (ISPs) don’t have the capacity to deliver the bandwidth that they claim to offer. One way ISPs attempt to conceal this problem is to place a cap of say 1GB per-month per user, something which is common in the UK for many of the lower-cost broadband packages on the market.  For the rest of the story "Click Here"
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March 19, 2007

ISPs Challenge FCC Rule

EarthLink Inc., Time Warner Telecom Inc. and a host of small Internet service providers went to court to challenge regulatory action that they say puts wireline phone companies in control of high-speed broadband access to the Web. In arguments before a federal appeals court, the Internet service providers, or ISPs, challenged a Federal Communications Commission decision to lift regulations that required companies that run wireline phone networks to sell access to competing sellers of broadband service.

Source: WSJ

 

Posted by wbia at 11:36:45 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |