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Fake Chrome OS Screenshots Punk Tech Media Mystery Blogger Comes Clean
By controlling entry, carriers are in a position to exercise strong control over the design of mobile equipment. They have used that power to force equipment developers to omit or cripple many consumer-friendly features. Carriers have also forced manufacturers to include technologies, like "walled garden" Internet access, that neither equipment developers nor consumers want. Finally, through under-disclosed "phone-locking," the U.S. carriers disable the ability of phones to work on more than one network.If such control were removed, anyone could use any device to connect to a wireless network. For Skype, it could mean a whole new world of potential users of their service being opened up to them. The cellular companies aren't about to take such a threat to their lucrative business model without a fight. CTIA blasted the petition Skype filed with the FCC:
"Skype's self-interested filing contains glaring legal flaws and a complete disregard for the vast consumer benefits provided by the competitive marketplace," said Steve Largent, chief executive of the CTIA in a prepared statement. "Skype's 'recommendations' will freeze the innovation and choice hundreds of millions of consumers enjoy today. The call for imposing monopoly era Carterfone rules to today's vibrant market is unmistakably the wrong number," Largent said.The Carterfone decision itself drew from the 1934 Communication Act. Cellphone companies that think thirty-nine years should distance them from Carterfone should keep the time gap between the Communication Act and Carterfone in mind. --- Add to
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Fake Chrome OS Screenshots Punk Tech Media
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