MacUpdate Weekend Sale :This weekend MacUpdate has slashed prices on Painter 12 and Painter Lite. Painter 12 retails for $429, but has been reduced by 54% to $199. Painter Lite has seen a 58% price cut from $69 to $29. Hurry, because these deals are only available until May 19th 2013.      

Leap joins in objections to AT&T, T-Mobile merger

updated 02:30 pm EDT, Tue May 24, 2011

 

Leap says ATT T-Mobile would concentrate power


Cricket's parent company Leap Wireless provided its own objection on Tuesday to AT&T's proposed buyout of T-Mobile. The carrier suggested that letting the deal go through would lead to "alarming concentration" by putting too much power in the hands of two carriers, AT&T and Verizon. A merger would only hurt customers, it said.

The sentiments mirror those of Sprint, which at a Senate hearing earlier this month warned of a carrier duopoly and referred to AT&T and Verizon often as "the two Bells," alluding back to the days of a single-company monopoly over landline phone service in the US. MetroPCS has been concerned as well and urged that, if a deal went ahead, the FCC should require AT&T divest some of its network to create a more even playing field for smaller providers.

AT&T has tried to play a patriotic angle on the merger by arguing that it would spur jobs and expand LTE-based 4G to as much as 97 percent of the US population, covering rural areas that might not necessarily get the access. Quality on AT&T would also allegedly get better since AT&T could use both its own spectrum and T-Mobile's to fill out bandwidth needs.

Opposing carriers and advocacy groups have pointed out that some of the promises were either for goals it would likely already meet or contradicted historical tendencies. Most mergers usually result in job cuts and little to no immediate job expansion. Much of the US was already due to be covered by LTE and wouldn't necessarily see much more gain from a merger. Concerns also exist from consumer interest group Public Knowledge that AT&T is sitting on spectrum it could use for its existing network and may just be a "serial acquirer" that makes up for shortcomings through takeovers.


By Electronista Staff

toggle

Previous Comments

  1. charlituna

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Sep 2009

    +1

    the bigger concern

    isn't two or even three major companies. It's the power of those companies to get exclusive contracts for major devices like the Droid and iphone and keep it forever. Many of these smaller companies can serve the devices as well as ATT but they take a hit because the general public is either unaware of the possibility of unlocking, doesn't want to pay for it or is just insulted by the whole thing. If they could "legally" go to any carrier because the device is sold unlocked they would go for the best deal carrier wise which could make a dent in ATT in particular


Login Here

Not a member of the MacNN forums? Register now for free.

 
close
Photo
toggle

Network Headlines

toggle

Most Popular

Sponsor

Recent Reviews

Brother HL-3170CDW LED Printer

We've mentioned before that we are far from a paperless society. For now, at least, there are tasks that require a piece of paper for ...

HTC One

It is hard to overstate just how critically important the HTC One is to the Taiwanese company’s fortunes. Despite its alarming decline ...

Samsung Galaxy S 4

Samsung's new flagship Android smartphone, the Galaxy S 4, faces even stiffer competition than its popular predecessor. With a five-in ...

Sponsor

 
toggle

Popular News