The smaller it is torn up the better.
Lets have lots of town & village telcos!
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"DH" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:1106973505.ad8c2bd68ed7041ff50c9aa04e6506ff@t eranews...
> Tear it up!
>
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> "nick" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:41fabb48$0$14613$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> Shoulda split BT up a decade ago.
>>
>> "six-toes" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:(E-Mail Removed) ups.com...
>> BT faces 'bogeyman' if it fails to open market
>> By Tim Richardson
>>
>> Published Friday 28th January 2005 16:43 GMT
>>
>> Ofcom has once again warned that BT's failure to restructure its
>> business and open up its market to genuine competition would make an
>> enforced structural split of the company a "real possibility".
>>
>> In November, Ofcom rejected calls to break up BT and instead urged the
>> telco to make "substantive behavioural and organisational changes" and
>> provide equal access to its wholesale product range. Such changes would
>> lead to greater competition and a better deal for consumers, said the
>> regulator.
>>
>> But if BT fails to make the necessary changes then Ofcom warned that it
>> would begin an Enterprise Act market investigation, and referral to the
>> Competition Commission in a bid to split up the UK's former telecoms
>> monopoly.
>>
>> With less than a week to go until BT is due to respond to Ofcom's
>> demands, Ofcom boss Stephen Carter told a meeting of the Westminster
>> eForum that the regulator remains committed to opening up the sector to
>> competition.
>>
>> "Let me be clear. The possibility of an Enterprise Act investigation is
>> not simply a bogeyman to secure the façade of co-operation from BT,"
>> he said on Wednesday. "It is and must remain a real possibility if,
>> reluctantly, we conclude that true equality of access cannot be
>> achieved."
>> What if?
>>
>> So, just for argument's sake, what if BT does not give the necessary
>> assurances that Ofcom wants? What if BT sticks two fingers up to Ofcom
>> and tells the regulator that it "cannot countenance the kind of
>> equality of access - behavioural change and product level equivalence -
>> that we [Ofcom] have said is essential?"
>>
>> Carter said Ofcom could use existing powers to tackle each of the
>> outstanding issues.
>>
>> "But to impose such remedies in the face of BT's active hostility...
>> would be a very complicated and time-consuming task. It would need to
>> be done case by case, product by product and market by market, with BT
>> having the opportunity to appeal our decisions at every stage."
>>
>> And although he accepts that the use of the Enterprise Act would lead
>> to delays and uncertainty, "imposing real equality of access in the
>> teeth of sustained opposition would impose even more delay and
>> uncertainty and ironically would probably involve not one but several
>> trips to the competition commission to resolve.
>>
>> "An Enterprise Act referral, whilst undesirable in many ways, would be
>> less undesirable than a protracted attempt to impose real equality of
>> access via the sector powers route," he said.
>>
>> However, unleashing the "bogeyman" would not happen overnight. Not only
>> would Ofcom have to digest fully BT's response, with all the signs
>> pointing to a Spring general election Ofcom does not feel this would be
>> a great time to announce decisions that "could have significant market
>> and public policy impact".
>>
>> Last weekend, BT boss Ben Verwaayen warned that more than half of UK
>> homes and businesses could be left without advanced broadband services
>> if Ofcom continues to press ahead with plans to make the UK's telecoms
>> sector more competitive.
>>
>> Verwaayen argued that the regulator's preference for local loop
>> unbundling (LLU) would lead to a new digital divide with rival telcos
>> cherry-picking the most lucrative exchanges leaving vast swathes of the
>> UK without up-to-date services. ®
>> Related stories
>>
>>
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