Have the copyright bullies pushed too hard?
The week in Business Spectator the discussion focuses on the owners of the film Dallas Buyers Club and the multinationals supporting the world wide fight against illegal downloading have adopted tactics that go too far.
The secret trade deal that rewrites Australian telco rules
Will there be anything left of the Australian telecommunications industry if the government signs up to a secret trade deal?
The NBN endgame
The NBN end game is unexpected and how the government might disaggregate and sell off the NBN assets is discussed this week in Business Spectator. Last year Communication Minister Malcolm Turnbull trumpeted the reports of the six National Broadband Network (NBN) related reviews and audits as justification for the government’s decision to implement the mixed-technology roadmap. Hidden amongst the hubris were a few gems the
NBN's FTTN confusion makes any guarantees pointless
his week in Business Spectator the focus is on the long awaited launch of NBN's nascent fibre-to-the node (FTTN) is fast approaching and with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission potentially set to give the green light later this month, the moment of truth on just what speeds FTTN customers will get is fast approaching for Communications minister Malcolm Turnbull and the NBN.
NBN, British Telecom and turning back the clock
This week in Business Spectator NBN boss Bill Morrow recently highlighted that the company formerly known as NBN Co has instigated an information sharing scheme with UK’s biggest telco British Telecom (BT). It’s an informal agreement and while Morrow says it’s all a friendly exchange of knowledge to bolster NBN’s understanding of efficient network rollout and learning from BT’s extraordinarily high rate of fibre to the node (FTTN) deployment, is th
Is an NBN compromise still possible?
The bipartisan agreement on the renewable energy target demonstrates how an industry body can work for an outcome that finds the middle ground. The Clean Energy Council has led the way and demonstrated that the Communications Alliance should be pushing for a bipartisan solution for the National Broadband Network.