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[PDAs/Phones]| Wednesday 2nd April 2008 |
Martin says he will circulate a proposal among the four other FCC commissioners dismissing the petition which Skype, a unit of eBay, had filed a little over a year ago with the communications regulator.
"In light of the (wireless) industry's embrace of a more open wireless platform, it would be premature to adopt any other requirements across the industry," Martin said in prepared remarks at the annual US wireless industry trade show in Las Vegas.
To cheers from the audience of mobile industry insiders, Martin said he was opposing the Skype petition because of a need to strike a balance between supporting innovation and investments in network infrastructure by telephone companies.
At the centre of Skype's petition are open-platform "Carterfone"
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In recent years, the two largest wireless carriers, AT&T and Verizon, have agreed to abide by open-access principles.
The FCC imposed open-platform requirements on a large block of the 700-megahertz wireless spectrum recently auctioned by the government. The block was acquired by Verizon.
But Martin said he has opposed other network-opening proposals that he said would undermine investment incentives.
"This careful balancing of spurring innovation and consumer choice while encouraging infrastructure investment is critical to the wireless industry's continued impressive growth," Martin said.
Martin's proposal to dismiss the Skype petition got a cool response from one of the two Democratic commissioners on the FCC, Michael Copps.
"This is not the time for the FCC to declare victory and withdraw from the fight for open wireless networks," Copps said.
"While we are all encouraged by preliminary commitments from some of the major carriers, we haven't seen the details yet on how they are going to proceed - and the devil is always in the details, isn't it?" Copps said.
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