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Technology Stocks : Voice-on-the-net (VON), VoIP, Internet (IP) Telephony

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To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (2264)1/4/1999 11:44:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (11) of 3178
 
U.S. regulators urged to speed Internet access Related
Items

December 30, 1998 -- The
Telecommunications Industry
Association on Tuesday told federal
regulators that advanced technology
giving consumers faster access to
Internet and other services is not being
deployed to all Americans at a pace
Congress had intended.

The technology, called advanced
telecommunications capability, would
allow consumer access to a range of
services through telephone lines, cable
lines and even wireless systems. In 1996,
Congress amended cable laws allowing
such expansion.

But the group warned the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) that
this capability is, "not being deployed to
all Americans in a reasonable and timely
fashion. It urged the FCC to remove
regulatory barriers to investment in
telecom capability and asked that the
agency help encourage competition.

"We believe there is a clear demand for
advanced telecommunications capability
and the equipment exists today to deploy
such technologies," the group wrote.
"The bottleneck in bringing advanced
services to consumers resides in
regulatory barriers and inadequate access
for competitive providers."

For example, cable modems are being
deployed, but as currently configured
they "fall short" of standards qualifying
as fully advanced telecommunications
capability.

Nationwide at the end of 1998, digital
subscriber line services (DSL) -- which
can be provided through telephone lines
-- had about 25,000 subscribers, according
to the group. Cable modem services had
about 700,000 subscribers.

"Considering that in a country of 250
million people, telephone penetration is 94
percent and 65 percent of residences
subscribe to cable television services ... it
is clear that advanced telecommunications
capability is not being deployed," the
group said.
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