FCC Democrat says T-Mobile–Sprint merger ‘will end a golden age in wireless’

Subscribers:
4,200
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vXd1OCSuE8c



Duration: 2:22
38 views
2


Reported today on The Verge

For the full article visit: http://bit.ly/36yiTSl

Reported today in The Verge.

FCC Democrat says T-Mobile–Sprint merger ‘will end a golden age in wireless’

The Federal Communications Commission has officially released its order approving the merger between T-Mobile and Sprint following a contentious vote last month.

The writing has been on the wall since May, when FCC Chairman Ajit Pai signaled that he would approve the deal and recommend the same to his colleagues. The decision was formalized in the recent vote by FCC commissioners along party lines, with the two Democrats on the commission dissenting.

The Department of Justice has also approved the deal. As part of the regulatory review process, T-Mobile agreed to a time frame for deploying next-generation 5G networks and to divest Sprint subsidiary Boost Mobile. The merger still faces a lawsuit from a coalition of state attorneys general.

In dueling statements released today, Republican commissioners claimed the deal was in the economic interest of consumers and would improve wireless coverage and competition, ideas that have been disputed by consumer advocacy groups.

“In particular, the transaction will help secure United States leadership in 5G, close the digital divide in rural America, and enhance competition in the broadband market,” Pai said in a statement.

Democrats on the commission responded by slamming the decision. “Shrinking the number of national providers from four to three will hurt consumers, harm competition, and eliminate thousands of jobs,” Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement. The merger, she said, “will end a golden age in wireless.”

Commissioner Geoffrey Starks echoed similar concern. “In the short term, this merger will result in the loss of potentially thousands of jobs,” he said in a statement. “In the long term, it will establish a market of three giant wireless carriers with every incentive to divide up the market, increase prices, and compete only for the most lucrative customers.”




Other Videos By Colin Boyd SEO


2019-11-05Daily Crunch: Google announces open-source chip project
2019-11-05Subscription service for Mac apps Setapp extends to teams
2019-11-05Walmart reaches settlement with Tesla over solar panel fires, drops lawsuit
2019-11-05NBA TV goes over-the-top to offer live games and original programming to cord cutters
2019-11-05Seismic acquires Percolate to expand its marketing tools
2019-11-05Ninja’s new comic book turns Ninja into an actual ninja
2019-11-05Martin Scorsese defends his Marvel take and hits on a growing issue
2019-11-05Ford made an electric Mustang with a manual transmission
2019-11-05How to find the best deals during Black Friday and Cyber Monday
2019-11-05Democrats propose new federal agency to fight back against tech privacy scandals
2019-11-05FCC Democrat says T-Mobile–Sprint merger ‘will end a golden age in wireless’
2019-11-05Android Auto standalone app now available for Android 10 users
2019-11-05YouTube live streams get even more Twitch-like with Super Stickers launch
2019-11-05AT&T fined $60 million for throttling ‘unlimited’ data plans
2019-11-05Bing Announces Link Penalties via @martinibuster
2019-11-05Pinterest Launches a Refresh of Its Mobile App via @MattGSouthern
2019-11-05Tile’s $59 multipacks come with a free Google Nest Mini or Amazon Echo Dot at Best Buy
2019-11-05Walmart drops lawsuit against Tesla over solar panel fires
2019-11-05Google extends Shopping ads to more YouTube inventory
2019-11-05Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey dunks on Facebook’s new all-caps logo
2019-11-05EU proposes issuing its own digital currency to counteract the Libra effect