by Ryan Radia
October 15, 2008 @ 11:06 am
If you wanted to communicate over long distances in real-time 25 years ago, you had little choice but to rely on your local phone company for carriage. Email and mobile phones were still oddities, and neither SMS text messages nor tweets had even been conceived.
Federal regulators, concerned that some companies might not maintain a high level of service, imposed reporting requirements so the FCC could monitor phone companies and ensure calls were being handled properly.
Fast forward to 2008, and the traditional phone company…
Read the full story
by Ryan Radia
April 15, 2008 @ 10:50 am
With all the recent talk of net neutrality, it’s easy to lose sight of the fundamental problem with broadband in America: the skewed ISP marketplace. At the heart of the issue is the FCC’s antiquated regulatory approach that discourages infrastructure investment and distorts market functions.
America’s two largest phone companies, AT&T and Verizon, recently filed forbearance petitions asking the FCC for relief from various regulations. Verizon is asking for the freedom to set prices on wholesale connections to competitive local carriers, and AT&T has…
Read the full story