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To: Elroy who wrote (6338)5/19/1999 2:07:00 PM
From: Scrapps  Read Replies (2) of 9236
 
BellSouth's Ackerman Says Let the Bandwidth Race Begin

WASHINGTON, May 19 /PRNewswire/ -- When it comes to bringing high-speed Internet access to consumers, too much regulation of local telephone networks is a much bigger problem than any re-assembly of AT&T's (NYSE: T - news) monopoly, Duane Ackerman, chief executive of BellSouth (NYSE: BLS - news), said today.

''I am not as concerned about what AT&T can do as I am about what BellSouth can't do,'' Ackerman said.

Speaking at a Capitol Hill Congressional briefing hosted by Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), Ackerman said there are two primary networks that will bring Internet access to the mass market: cable and telephone. Cable is virtually unregulated, while local telephony faces a host of federal and state regulations that turn investment decisions into risky dilemmas rather than basic opportunities to win customers.

''On the cable side, the course for deployment is clear,'' Ackerman said. ''A cable company can invest its money, invent the technology, develop new products and services and serve its customers.

''On the phone side, the course is unclear,'' Ackerman said. ''If we invest in data, will we be required to un-bundle elements and sell them at a discount so our competitors can resell them without having the make the investment? Will we have to establish a costly separate subsidiary for data?''

Such costly requirements make it harder to justify investments in broadband, Ackerman said. ''There is tremendous imbalance -- in regulation, in risk.''

Ackerman noted that there already is competition in local telephony from a number of competitors, who are deploying high-speed Internet access to mainly business customers and continuing to gain bigger shares of that lucrative marketplace. Fewer regulations on broadband deployment by incumbent telephone companies would help a different, far less influential customer, Ackerman said.

''The rural and non-affluent neighborhoods will share in the benefits from letting the competitive race begin,'' Ackerman said.

BellSouth is a $23 billion communications services company. It provides telecommunications, wireless communications, cable and digital TV, advertising and publishing, Internet and data services to more than 34 million customers in 19 countries worldwide.

NOTE: For more information about BellSouth, visit the BellSouth Web page at bellsouth.com . BellSouth news releases dating back one year are available by fax at no charge by calling 1-800-758-5804, ext. 095650.

CONTACT: John Schneidawind of BellSouth Corporation, 202-463-4183

SOURCE: BellSouth Corporationhttp://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/990519/dc_bellsou_1.html
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