Close X
Saturday, November 2, 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 launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved

    Apple launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved
    Info-tech giant Apple has launched a new update of its operating system for iOS8 cellphones, claiming it resolved the problems which forced the company...

    Apple launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved

    Texting with Google Glass distracts drivers

    Texting with Google Glass distracts drivers
    "Texting with either a smartphone or Google Glass will cause distraction and should be avoided while driving," said lead researcher Ben Sawyer from the University...

    Texting with Google Glass distracts drivers

    Now, Software To Print 3D Maps For The Blind!

    Now, Software To Print 3D Maps For The Blind!
    Japan's cartographic authorities have announced the development of software that allows one to download data

    Now, Software To Print 3D Maps For The Blind!

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year
     Microsoft is likely to launch smartphones with Opera Mini as default browser from early next year, an official of the browser firm said Wednesday.

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future
    Researchers have improved a liquid battery system that could enable renewable energy resources to compete with conventional power plants.

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory
    Do you believe that a person travelling in a high-speed rocket would age more slowly than people back on Earth?

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory