Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Bell To Abide By Federal Ruling On High-speed Internet Infrastructure

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2016 10:58 AM
    TORONTO — Bell Canada says it will comply with a federal cabinet decision that supports a ruling forcing Canada's big Internet service providers to sell their high-speed infrastructure to smaller rivals.
     
    The company had asked the Liberal government to overrule a CRTC decision in July 2015 that requires it and other telecommunications giants to give independent Internet providers access to their fibre optic network at a wholesale cost.
     
    But the minister responsible for the telecom industry, Navdeep Bains, disagreed with the company's argument. He said Wednesday that middle-class and low-income families need access to affordable, high-speed Internet and the CRTC decision helps fufil that goal by enabling stronger competition.
     
    "The decision strikes the right balance between the private sector having incentive to invest and consumers having a competitive choice," he said in a statement.
     
    In its appeal to the federal government, Bell had said the regulation policy would discourage investments in broadband infrastructure, thereby stalling innovation and resulting in high-speed Internet reaching fewer rural communities as well as job losses.
     
     
    Bell said Wednesday it accepts the federal decision.
     
    "We'll abide by the rules and move forward," said spokeswoman Jacqueline Michelis in an email.
     
    Bell did not answer questions about any planned future investments in its fibre optic network. Since 2010, the company has spent $2.5 billion to build its fibre-to-the-home networks, according to its petition to the government.
     
    The Canadian Network Operators Consortium Inc., a non-profit association of Internet and telecommunications service providers working to advance competition concerns, has argued that Bell will continue investing in fibre optic networks regardless of the CRTC's regulation.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Apple Pay Launches In Canada For American Express Card Customers

    TORONTO — Apple Pay is now available in Canada for people with American Express cards using the latest iPhone models.

    Apple Pay Launches In Canada For American Express Card Customers

    As Google Presses To Get Self-Driving Cars To The Public, California Regulators Hit The Brakes

    As Google Presses To Get Self-Driving Cars To The Public, California Regulators Hit The Brakes
    Hustling to bring cars that drive themselves to a road near you, Google finds itself somewhere that has frustrated many before: Waiting on the Department of Motor Vehicles.

    As Google Presses To Get Self-Driving Cars To The Public, California Regulators Hit The Brakes

    Peer-To-Peer Payment Services Are Hot; Here's A Guide To Your Options

    Peer-To-Peer Payment Services Are Hot; Here's A Guide To Your Options
    Cash is passe, say digital mavens. If you really want to pay your friends back for that pizza party, use an app to shoot money to their mobile-phone number — or their Facebook account.

    Peer-To-Peer Payment Services Are Hot; Here's A Guide To Your Options

    Apple's iPad Pro: What's New, How It Works And Who Might Need It

    Apple's iPad Pro: What's New, How It Works And Who Might Need It
    About an inch longer than a standard sheet of paper, the Pro features a 12.9-inch diagonal display, giving it 78 per cent more surface area than the 9.7-inch iPad Air 2.

    Apple's iPad Pro: What's New, How It Works And Who Might Need It

    Review: YouTube Music Queues Up Music Videos And Keeps Groove Going With Intuitive Features

    Review: YouTube Music Queues Up Music Videos And Keeps Groove Going With Intuitive Features
    It's a video-first music service that also plays in the background like you'd expect a music app to do. That sets it apart from other music apps out there, many of which give you a choice of videos or songs, but not interchangeably.

    Review: YouTube Music Queues Up Music Videos And Keeps Groove Going With Intuitive Features

    Tim Cook Says Apple Will Resist British Government Attempt To Weaken Encryption In New Spy Law

    DUBLIN — Apple chief executive Tim Cook says his company will resist the British government's efforts to get access to encrypted data through a new spying law.

    Tim Cook Says Apple Will Resist British Government Attempt To Weaken Encryption In New Spy Law