SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : WCOM -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Anthony Wong who wrote (2487)5/26/1998 3:57:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 11568
 
WorldCom to operate GEIS network
By Tim Clark
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
May 26, 1998, 12:05 p.m. PT

In a major strategic shift, GE Information Systems, the biggest player in electronic data
interchange (EDI) e-commerce, will let telecommunications giant WorldCom operate
its secure private network.

GEIS, a unit of General Electric, will focus on EDI services
(electronic transactions sent computer-to-computer without
human intervention), messaging gateways, extranets,
electronic catalogues, and online marketplaces.

For WorldCom, GEIS represents another deal that
guarantees a long-term service contract. In a similar
arrangement last fall, WorldCom bought the former
CompuServe network and America Online's network
operations in return for a multiyear deal to provide network
services to AOL.

"We believe the electronic commerce game is going to be
won at the solutions level, not the transport level," GEIS spokesman John Berry said.

Separately, newcomer Sage Networks has acquired a former IBM Web hosting
infrastructure in Washington, D.C. Sage also signed a long-term contract with
KnowledgeLink Interactive, to host infoMarket and Newsstand, two former IBM
services KnowledgeLink recently acquired. The deals also enable Sage to offer Lotus
Notes, Domino, and enterprise hosting services.

E-commerce analyst Torrey Byles, president of Granada Research, termed the
GEIS-WorldCom deal "a watershed event."

"They're going away from owning the network plumbing to selling value added
services," Byles said, noting that EDI competitors Harbinger and Sterling Commerce
already lease the networks used for their value added networks (VANs).

"The amount of investment you need to put into the network to stay competitive has
grown tenfold," said Jim Macioce, GEIS vice president of operations. "WorldCom also brings economies of scale because of its size."

In three to five years, once the deal is fully implemented, GEIS will gain 658 new
dial-up access points and 104 frame relay sites, tripling its points of presence
worldwide. WorldCom will assume operating control of 22 GEIS network service
centers but GEIS will retain 4 data centers where it implements e-commerce services.

WorldCom also will get GEIS network facilities in a number of areas where it currently
has thin coverage, including China, Europe, and Latin America. WorldCom, parent of
Internet backbone provider UUNet, also has enough capacity for GEIS to offer
bandwidth-hungry applications like voice and video.

Under the agreement, 57 GEIS employees will be transferred to WorldCom, but no
layoffs are planned. Financial terms of the deal, under which the transition will begin
July 1, were not disclosed.

Prior to this agreement, GEIS has used WorldCom among the 20 network providers
for its secure private network, both in the United States and in Great Britain.

Macioce said WorldCom's aggressive growth and planned investments in infrastructure
gave it the bulk to handle the network needs of GEIS, which has more than 90,000
trading partners on its network and also operates the internal network for General
Electric. Key elements include plans to spend $2.9 billion this year to build
infrastructure and acquisitions of ISP UUNet and competitive access carriers MFS and Brooks Fiber.

But WorldCom's acquisitive growth has raised the hackles of others, including the
European Union and the U.S. Justice Department , both of which are investigating
WorldCom's proposed buyout of MCI on antitrust grounds.

news.com