THE WRAP: India seeks web censorship; KT 2G switch off halted
Staff writer |
December 09, 2011
telecomseurope.net
It was the week that saw India push web sites to censor themselves, as KT was forced to delay its 2G network shutdown and Chinese telcos offered concessions to end an antitrust probe.
According to the New York Times, acting telecom minister Kapil Sibal held a meeting with officials from the companies to ask them to censor disparaging or defamatory content about people including party officials. The companies are resisting, citing the obvious infeasibility of monitoring such a large volume of content.
South Korean incumbent operator KT suffered a blow to its LTE plans this week after a court ordered the operator to
keep its 2G network running despite acquiring approval from the KCC last month.
KT had planned to shut down the network this week to free up the 1800-MHz band in order to refarm it for LTE. But following a class-action lawsuit filed last week by disgruntled 2G customers, a court suspended the KCC’s approval of the shutdown, putting the plan on hold. No word as we went to press on how the decision will impact KT’s launch of its LTE service, which was
scheduled for this week.
It was also the week that China Unicom and China Telecom offered olive branches to regulators, in an attempt to
close an antitrust probe into their internet access pricing practices.
Apple faces a European antitrust probe over its
e-book deals with publishers Hachette Livre, Harper Collins, Simon & Schuster, Penguin, and Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holzbrinck. The European Commission will investigate whether the agreements breach anti-cartel laws.