 Jim GurdPremium join:2000-07-08 Plymouth, MI | reply to openbox9
Re: When does it stop? said by openbox9:Where exactly is the anti-trust that you are concerned about? There will still be competition...not that anyone ever likes to consider satellite providers in their competition arguments. Satellite is competitive when it comes to video, but not internet. Internet service has atrocious latency issues due to the satellites being 22,500 miles high in the sky. -- We don't care. We don't have to. We're the phone company.
-- Ernestine |
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 openbox9 join:2004-01-26 Alexandria, VA kudos:2 | Not disputing the latency. This thread is really questioning the antitrust comment made above. You support my statement regarding competition and that there isn't an antitrust concern with AT&T purchasing a sat TV provider. |
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 | said by openbox9:Not disputing the latency. This thread is really questioning the antitrust comment made above. You support my statement regarding competition and that there isn't an antitrust concern with AT&T purchasing a sat TV provider. I believe the antitrust falls into the realm of bandwidth ownership. They have the copper lines, U-verse fiber, and 700mhz spectrum, now they are going after another medium of communication (maybe even Dobson Communications - largest independent wireless provider). It is the same thing as one company owning a piece of all forms of transportation. Shipping, air, railroads, and trucking. If it owns a good enough piece of the individual transportation networks it is a matter of time before they start to become the monster. Look at Micro$oft, of course they were not the only operating system around, but when they started to provide media players, browsers, word processors, etc. they got tossed into the antitrust pit. |
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 openbox9 join:2004-01-26 Alexandria, VA kudos:2 | said by ossito16:I believe the antitrust falls into the realm of bandwidth ownership. They have the copper lines, U-verse fiber, and 700mhz spectrum, Did I miss the announcement about the 700 MHz spectrum? Other companies have the things that you mentioned so I'm not seeing that issue.said by ossito16:Look at Micro$oft, of course they were not the only operating system around, but when they started to provide media players, browsers, word processors, etc. they got tossed into the antitrust pit. There were other reasons why Microsoft was sued, such as forcing OEMs to play along with certain tactics. The tying of media player, and IE to the OS was a BS part of the allegation IMO. Every other OS that I've touched does similar things. So, back to your original antitrust statement, unless AT&T starts to force OEMs into non-favoring situations or they start to use their market strength in an anticompetitive manner, I don't see the antitrust issues. |
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