On TV.com: TOP 10 Shows CANCELED Too Soon
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

July 7th, 2009

USDOJ scrutinizing handset exclusivity contracts

Posted by Jason D. O'Grady @ 7:55 am

Categories: AT&T, Apple, Legal

Tags: Handset, Wireless, Telecom Industry, Government, Telephony, Cellular Phones, Wi-Fi, Telecommunications, Wireless And Mobility, Networking

http://ethisphere.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/doj.gifIf you’ve been complaining to the Department of Justice about your unhappiness that the iPhone is only available on AT&T Wireless in the U.S. (a familiar refrain), your complaints haven’t fallen on deaf ears.

The WSJ reports (Google link) that the the U.S. Department of Justice has opened an inquiry into potential anti-competitive practices by the country’s largest wireless carriers. The government is apparently concerned that companies like AT&T Wireless are abusing the market power they have amassed in recent years.

The law that covers such behavior, the Sherman Antitrust Act, has been used in the past against giants ranging from Standard Oil to Microsoft Corp. It lay essentially dormant during the Bush years, with the agency bringing no major case. The telecom industry is among several sectors now coming under scrutiny. Others include health care and agriculture.

A hot-button issue that the government could take issue with is handset exclusivity contracts like the one that AT&T has with Apple to distribute the iPhone in the United States. Although the WSJ notes that the telecom review isn’t a formal investigation of any specific company and that it is expected to cover a wide range of technologies including, but not limited to, landline voice, broadband and wireless services. The wireless carriers argue that limiting exclusive deals would hurt innovation.

Who’s right in this situation? Do the carriers have the right to sign exclusive deals with handset makers? Or does that unfairly limit the choices that consumers have?

Jason D. O'GradyJason D. O'Grady is the editor of PowerPage.org, which has been publishing daily mobile technology news since December 1995. For disclosures on Jason's industry affiliations, click here or to view Jason's full profile click here.

Email Jason D. O'Grady

Subscribe to The Apple Core via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 13 Talkback(s)
Carriers do hurt innovation
Not the limiting of exclusive contracts hurt innovation but
the very existence of it. If their claim was true, the likes of
Nokia, Sony Ericsson, LG and Samsung would still have
been in th... (Read the rest)
Posted by: rhon@... Posted on: 07/08/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
"limiting exclusive deals would hurt innovation"?  markbn | 07/07/09
That's like the DOJ forcing Microsoft to make  AdventTech67 | 07/07/09
You're wrong  markbn | 07/07/09
As I understand it AT&T needed to change their network for visual email.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/07/09
RE: As I understand it AT&T needed to change their network for visual email  markbn | 07/07/09
Exclusivity offers suck, and should be illegal.  xXSpeedzXx | 07/07/09
Re: Exclusivity offers suck, and should be illegal.  rabber | 07/07/09
Some moot points you made...  i8thecat | 07/08/09
Why stop at cell phones?  GuidingLight | 07/07/09
Not a bad idea IMO  markbn | 07/07/09
It's everywhere, It's everywhere  kennmsr | 07/07/09
?  markbn | 07/08/09
Carriers do hurt innovation  rhon@... | 07/08/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Smart Tech Expert advice on innovations in healthcare and the green technologies that make it happen. Find out more
  • Smart Business Discussion and advice on management issues that revolve around making your world smarter and more useful. More Smart Advice
  • Smart People The best and worst moves in the management and strategy trenches. Learn More