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Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Carriers Begin Neutralizing the Wireless World

AT&T, Verizon, and Google maneuver ahead of looming "Net neutrality" regulations.
By David Talbot

The specter of the FCC's "Net neutrality" regulations looming over the wireless Internet are shaping events unfolding this week.

On Tuesday, in a turnabout, AT&T said it would allow iPhone owners to use Internet telephone services such as Skype via its 3G wireless network instead of just Wi-Fi. This means that people with Internet data plans can cut back on phone minutes and make near-free international calls via the wireless Internet.

Then, today, Google and Verizon Wireless agreed to collaborate on phones, PDAs, and netbooks, creating a mobile-Internet juggernaut based on Google's open-source Android mobile operating system. This will pose another big challenge to AT&T and Apple, which have sold more than 50 million iPhone and iPod Touch gadgets. Verizon has more than 87 million customers.

Interestingly, AT&T's turnabout came amid an FCC investigation into why Apple rejected Google Voice, telephony software for the iPhone. But the context is broader than that: the FCC's chairman--Obama appointee Julius Genachowski--announced in a recent speech that he would propose Net neutrality regulations that would force Internet services providers to offer equal access to the Web and all of its services and applications to all customers. Importantly, he made it clear that these proposed rules would also apply to wireless Internet access. (The actual draft regulations are due later this month.)

Skype complained to the FCC two years ago about AT&T blocking its software on iPhones. The impact could be huge: Skype says its iPhone and iPod Touch applications have been downloaded six million times.

"These two recent developments show that the devices are becoming less of a bottleneck to choosing carriers and applications, meaning that there's healthy competition even in the wireless arena," says Mung Chiang, a Princeton electrical engineering professor who is working on broadband access algorithms.

Today Genachowski hailed AT&T's move as "a decision I commend." Also citing Verizon's announcement, he added: "These are both wins for consumers."

Comments

  • We stand at a fork in the road
    In the 2007-11-26 episode of NPR's "Science Friday" we learned that big phone companies were responsible for delaying cell phone technology development by 10-20 years.

    http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/200711162

    So on the one hand we have Apple working with AT&T to stifle innovation (while making much more money for both of them) while on the other hand we have Google working with carriers to bring out an open phone which any programmer could contribute to.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    neilrieck
    10/08/2009
    Posts:20
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • Defeating Net Neutrality By Embracing It
    I suspect that AT&T is merely going limp on the FCC in an effort to demonstrate how silly application neutrality is likely to be. AT&T's network is so wildly overloaded that the idea of VoIP over 3G with any semblance of acceptable voice quality will be rapidly proven laughable. After that, maybe the FCC will begin to understand that there's a little more to traffic engineering than waving a magic wand and exhorting us all to get along.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    theradicalmo...
    10/08/2009
    Posts:13
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
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