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To: Cap_Loss_Cfwd who wrote (58251)5/24/1999 6:42:00 PM
From: Tradegod  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Some interesting comparisons:

I guess we could agree this last wave started about noon on October 8:

Here are some inets closing prices then and now and the "bang" of each
since then.
(I've rounded to nearest dollar)

STOCK 8-Oct TODAY "BANGER"
NITE 3 59 19.7
EBAY 10 183 18.3
EGRP 3 50 16.7
NTBK 4 41 10.3
EXDS 10 76 7.6
AOL 21 120 5.7
AMZN 29 117 4.0
BRCM 31 103 3.3
ATHM 37 115 3.1
MSPG 25 73 2.9
YHOO 52 138 2.7

Old guard is weaker: Law of large numbers?



To: Cap_Loss_Cfwd who wrote (58251)5/25/1999 8:37:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Internet firms urge FCC to ensure cable open access
By Aaron Pressman
WASHINGTON, May 24 (Reuters) - America Online <AOL.N>, MCI
WorldCom Inc. <WCOM.O> and other Internet companies again urged
federal authorities to bar cable operators from striking
exclusive deals on new high-speed Internet service offerings,
participants in closed-door talks said on Monday.
Internet providers want to be sure that consumers will
enjoy the same open access to their services via cable networks
that they now have over phone lines, and not have to "pay
twice" the way some cable operators want them to.
Federal Communications Commission staff heard detailed
pitches from the Internet companies along with responses from
cable operators, who oppose any new regulations.
The meeting was to continue on Tuesday as part of an
"informal, educational" session on the convergence of the cable
and Internet industries, attendees said.
The FCC has twice turned aside Internet companies' pleas on
cable Internet services, but AT&T Corp.'s <T.N> planned
acquisition of MediaOne Group Inc. <UMG.N>, the long distance
giant's second major cable purchase, has renewed the interest
of regulators and lawmakers in Congress as well.
Under current law and FCC rules, phone companies offering
high or low speed Internet access must offer customers a choice
of Internet service providers -- companies that provide
features like e-mail and Web page hosting.
But the same rules do not apply to cable operators. AT&T,
for example, requires customers of high-speed cable Internet
access to purchase the services of AtHome Corp. <ATHM.O>, a
cable-owned provider controlled by AT&T, for a single price.
Cable Internet customers may also reach AOL or other
providers, but still must pay for the cable operator's
provider.
Internet companies argue that by, in effect, forcing
customers to pay twice to reach them, the cable companies are
stifling competition and could potentially exercise undue
control over Internet content.
MCI WorldCom chief policy counsel Jonathan Sallet said the
FCC ought to make open access to cable Internet service a
prerequisite to approving AT&T's merger with MediaOne.
"We believe open access to the nation's cable systems will
guarantee that consumers can use the Internet any way they
choose," Sallet said.
Cable companies say the FCC has no authority to interfere,
and that the exclusive deals are needed to pay for the
expensive upgrades necessary to allow Internet service to be
offered over cable wires.
AT&T spokesman Jim McGann said MCI and others "happen to be
wrong." McGann said AT&T was acquiring cable companies
primarily to compete in the local telephone market against the
regional Bell companies.
On the open access issue, McGann said: "The FCC has looked
at it. They said they will monitor it and that's the
appropriate role for the government at this point."
Last week, FCC chairman William Kennard asserted that his
agency had authority to require cable operators to change their
practices. But Kennard said he had not heard a good suggestion
for how open access rules could be crafted without creating
excessive regulation.
In addition to MCI, AT&T and AOL, other companies expected
to speak at the two-day meeting included Cox Communications
Inc. <COX.N>, Bell Atlantic Corp. <BEL.N> and the Commercial
Internet Exchange.
FCC officials attending included top staff from the
agency's cable and common carrier bureaus.
FCC officials had little comment Monday on the meetings but
said a statement might be issued on Tuesday.