AT&T Tells FCC It's Time to Cut the Cord

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In response to a Notice of Inquiry released by the Federal Communications Commission to explore how to transition to a purely IP-based communications network, AT&T has declared that it's time to cut the cord. AT&T told the FCC that the death of landlines is a matter of when, not if, and asked that a firm deadline be set for pulling the plug. AT&T said in its response to the FCC that "with each passing day, more and more communications services migrate to broadband and IP-based services, leaving the public switched telephone network ("PSTN") and plain-old telephone service ("POTS") as relics of a by-gone era." It also stated "It makes no sense to require service providers to operate and maintain two distinct networks when technology and consumer preferences have made one of them increasingly obsolete." Stacey Higginbotham notes that one in five Americans rely exclusively on plain old telephone service and AT&T in its filing doesn't offer a way to bridge the gap for that 20 percent of Americans relying only on landlines, nor does it address what an all-IP future means for the 33 percent of Americans who have access to broadband but do not subscribe. (12/31)


AT&T Tells FCC It's Time to Cut the Cord AT&T asks FCC to set date to scrap old phone system (Reuters) AT&T Wants Phase Out of Old Telephone Technologies (BroadbandBreakfast.com) AT&T to FCC: Let My Landlines Go! (GigaOm)