Fierce
FCC Approves $1.1B Liberty-GCI Deal
The Federal Communications Commission has approved John Malone’s (Liberty Interactive) $1.1 billion deal to buy Alaskan cable and phone company General Communication Inc. (GCI). The Justice Department signaled last July it had no antitrust issues with the deal. GCI has about 108,000 cable sub in Alaska and is the state’s largest telephone and wireless company. The FCC imposed no conditions in granting the application, saying it posed no potential harms to the public interest. In the same order it denied the petitions to deny or condition the deal.
The rumors of Google Fiber’s death have been greatly exaggerated
[Commentary] Few stories in tech have been more breathlessly hyped on the way up and gleefully eulogized on the way down than Google Fiber. Since Google announced last fall that it was pausing Google Fiber’s expansion into new markets, Access, the Google subsidiary that houses Google Fiber, has laid off more than 20% of its workforce, faced continued delays in Fiber’s existing markets and gone through three chief executives (or four, depending on how you’re counting). By any traditional yardstick of success, Google Fiber has been a failure.
The top 7 cable, satellite and telco pay TV operators in Q3 (Fierce)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 11/14/2017 - 15:57Could Verizon's tower-building pact with AT&T be a step toward network-sharing? (Fierce)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 11/14/2017 - 15:56How the top 7 wireless carriers stack up (Fierce)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 11/13/2017 - 13:42Verizon accuses T-Mobile of making up information on LTE-A deployments
Always one to pride itself on its technological achievements, Verizon isn’t taking any smack from T-Mobile, saying the operator made up claims about Verizon's technical achievements, many of them related to LTE Advanced. "They were very clearly misrepresenting Verizon's deployment and the leadership that we have taken in this new technology innovation and rollout," said Verizon spokeswoman Karen Schulz. To be sure, T-Mobile stands by its remarks.
Verizon accelerates copper-to-fiber transition, sets new network resiliency practices
Following 2012's Hurricane Sandy, Verizon has put together a new set of flood barrier and network transformation methods that are designed to achieve two goals: keep its wireline network operational and hasten its ongoing copper-to-fiber migration. During Sandy, which flooded several of its service and central offices, the service provider reported $1 billion in damage due to water and related storm damage.