­A number of the UK’s internet providers and mobile networks have signed up to a voluntary code-of-practice that will govern how they advertise their internet services to customers.

Together these companies – BSkyB, BT, O2, TalkTalk, Three, Virgin Media and Vodafone – account for 90% of all fixed-line broadband customers and 60% of all mobile customers in the UK.

In the mobile arena, Orange and T-Mobile are not a part of the agreement.

The new code will ensure that consumers have access to more easily comparable information about the traffic management practices of different broadband providers. For the first time, information will be provided in a common format to explain what traffic management techniques are used, when and with what impact for each broadband service currently marketed by the code’s signatories.

Antony Walker, Chief Executive of the Broadband Stakeholder Group, which facilitated this voluntary industry code of practice stated that there has been more heat than light in the debate about traffic management over recent years. This commitment to provide clear and comparable information in a common format is very important. It will not only help to ensure consumers are better informed about the services they buy and use, but will also provide a clearer picture for policy makers of the way in which traffic management is actually used in the UK market.

The code of practice will also take into account any Net Neutrality issues if they crop up in the UK.

Walker added that consumers need to be able to make informed choices about the services they buy while the policy makers need to be able to make informed decisions about the policy and regulatory framework they set. This new commitment provides an essential building block for getting both of these things right.

The code will be piloted in 2011 by the signatories and its implementation will be reviewed in early 2012 to fine tune the approach. Interested parties, such as consumer groups, will be invited to provide feedback as part of the review process. It is also hoped that more ISPs will sign up to the code following its launch.

The network’s first step will be to publish a common Key Facts Indicator (KFI) table, summarizing the traffic management practices they use for each broadband product they currently market. This will be available on ISPs’ websites by the end of June 2011.

BT has suffered a setback as the telecoms regulator Ofcom proposed cuts in the price of its wholesale products. Ofcom wants BT to reduce the price of its wholesale broadband products in order to improve internet access in rural areas.

The regulator also drew a lower-than-expected estimate of BT’s cost of capital the assumption of what it costs BT to fund its business. According to analysts, it could cut BT’s earnings by up to 8%.

Ofcom is aiming to ensure that broadband prices fall for consumers in rural areas and, potentially, to increase download speeds available to them. To achieve this, it is proposing that BT should cut the price of wholesale broadband products in parts of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, together with certain English rural areas.

These areas where BT is the sole provider of wholesale broadband services: mainly places not covered by infrastructure owned by Virgin Media, TalkTalk or British Sky Broadcasting. In those areas, Ofcom is proposing annual cuts in the price of BT’s wholesale broadband products of between 11% and 15% over the next three years, after inflation.

Ofcom’s calculations of its price controls for BT are partly based on its estimate of the company’s cost of capital.

It proposed a lower cost of capital for BT Openreach, the subsidiary that provides the company’s rivals with access to its fixed-line connections running to homes and offices.

According to BT, Ofcom’s proposed cost of capital for BT Openreach could reduce annual wholesale revenue by low tens of millions of pounds. It added that the regulator’s price controls for its wholesale broadband products should strike the right balance between control and incentives to invest in rural areas.

BT Group has proposed prices for broadband rivals to use its phone line poles and underground ducts for their own fibre-optic networks, in response to the industry regulators demands to increase competition. BT and Virgin Media are Britains only telecom companies with national fibre networks for super-fast broadband, and rivals are dependent on renting infrastructure to offer their own services.

Now were doing what we promised by offering the communications industry yet another way of accessing our network in order to deliver super-fast broadband speeds to homes and businesses, said Steve Robertson, chief executive of BTs local access division Open reach, in a statement.

Regulator Ofcom put forward proposals in October to increase superfast services through duct and pole sharing and by giving companies dedicated access to new fibre lines laid by BT.

Duct and pole access could encourage other providers to extend the reach of fast broadband services to more remote areas, potentially in combination with public funding at a UK or European level, Ofcom said at the time.

BT plans to charge 0.95 pounds a metre to rent space in its ducts for a year, which it said was 15 per cent lower than equivalent average charges across France, Spain, Portugal and Germany, and 21 pounds for a pole attachment.

BT said it expects commercial launch of duct and pole services in summer 2011 after consultation with the industry. BT shares closed down 1.9 per cent at 182.09 pence, underperforming the European telecoms index, which closed down 0.6 per cent.

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Virgin Media revenue rises in Q3

Virgin Media has revealed a 6.4% rise in revenues for its third quarter, ahead of analysts’ expectations. Sales of £978 million were together with an 11% increase in operating cash flow to £387 million, as average revenues per cable customer rose from £44.71 per month to £46.38.

According to Neil Berkett, chief executive of Virgin Media, 6% revenue growth for what is effectively a telco is pretty healthy.

Virgin’s rate of net new customer additions halved compared with the same period last year, with churn customers leaving slightly higher at 1.6%. Churn was higher and net additions lower than analysts’ expectations.

According to the CEO, in a quarter where there was significant activity between BT and Sky. The company is delighted by the number of products sold, highlighting a record 100,000 new subscribers to Virgin’s Sky Premium package of channels.

As per the company, it would start rolling out a new 100Mb per second broadband package to a potential 12.7 million connected households from December.

According to Mr Berkett, it might be the Ferrari in a Fiat fleet but it will carry with it a halo effect of having a Ferrari sitting there. The company has no intention to have a big Christmas splash. The company is absolutely on target for what is an extremely complex platform build.

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The BBC license fee over the next seven years has complied up to £830 million to help finance the expensive task of building superfast broadband networks in rural areas.

George Osborne, chancellor, announced in his complete spending review the location of four pilot projects that ministers hope will serve as models for how the public and private sectors should collaborate to build high-speed broadband networks in rural Britain.

The projects will be in the Highlands and Islands, North Yorkshire, Cumbria and Herefordshire. Broadband infrastructure is extensively seen as an important driver of competitiveness and innovation, and according to Mr Osborne, the government’s plans should help nurture creative industries such as advertising and media.

Ministers are particularly anxious to evade superfast broadband networks being confined to towns and cities, and are hoping that companies including BT can be persuaded to expand their high-speed infrastructure to rural areas by tapping public money.

BT, the UK’s leading fixed-line phone company, has constantly insisted that it cannot cover the cost of extending its urban-focused high-speed network to rural areas without some public funds. The government, after rejecting the former Labor administration’s plans for a telephone tax to fund superfast broadband, has instead chosen to take money from the BBC license fee.

According to Mr Osborne, the BBC would contribute £530 million from its license fee to superfast broadband by 2015, but the total could rise to £830 million by 2017.

BT welcomed the government’s pledge, and according to BT, the £530 million outlined by Mr Osborne would undoubtedly play a part in extending high-speed networks based on optical fibre.

Mr Osborne announced that BT and Virgin Media, the cable television operator, are both interested in participating in the four pilot projects.

BT is spending £2.5 billion on a high-speed network that should cover 4 million of the UK’s 26 million homes by the end of this year. The infrastructure should reach 17 million homes by 2015.Virgin Media’s superfast network covers 12.7 million homes, mainly in towns and cities. It is interested in expanding the infrastructure into rural areas, partly by tapping public funds.

According to Virgin, there’s a real opportunity to look at each area and ensure any public money is used to help find the best possible solution to benefit the local community.

The government’s plans are partly planned to ensure that all homes have broadband speeds of about 2 MB/ second by 2015, which is sufficient to watch video over the internet, such as the BBC iPlayer. An estimated 2 million homes do not have basic broadband of 2 MB/s.

The government also announced plans to sell a large chunk of radio spectrum currently used by Whitehall departments including the Ministry of Defense over the next decade. Some of the 500 megahertz of spectrum could be suitable for enabling web surfing on smartphones and laptops.

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If reports are to be believed, Virgin Media is close to signing a streaming music partnership with Spotify after it’s talks to offer unlimited downloads collapsed. The licensing negotiations with EMI, Warner Music and Sony Music Entertainment to make unlimited downloads available within an ISP package have hit a brick wall and so Virgin was forced to reconsider its music strategy.

Virgin has already signed a deal with Universal Music Group in June 2009 when it announced its plans to move into music downloads. Sources quoted above suggest Virgin is some way off signing up the other three majors. With these three companies blocking the deal, it is believed that it will take a further 12-18 month for Virgin Media to establish its own service so it has looked to other companies, namely Spotify, to partner with and offer a music service in the meantime.

Beggars Group head of digital Simon Wheeler outlined reservations about Virgin’s unlimited model at MidemNet in January this year. According to him, the model must first be put through a controlled trial so labels could better understand the impact such an offering would have on their core consumers’ spending.

According to sources, Virgin is very keen to get something off the ground, so while it can’t launch its own service; it has been looking to partner with a music service and is set to launch a new offering with Spotify. Its own music service has gone on the backburner for the time being.

According to another source, Spotify and Virgin Media are close to concluding a partnership deal. The finer details are not yet known, but Spotify will be offering new tools and content exclusively to Virgin customers as part of the arrangement.

According to a spokesperson from Spotify, the company is in continuing talks with a wide range of companies, including various ISPs, as they look to bring Spotify to more and more music lovers. However the company has no deal in place with a UK ISP.

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: With clouds hovering over the launch of TV over broadband network, Orange has still revised its plans to offer the service. Earlier, it was reported that the company had agreed a deal to use BT’s fixed line network.

In late 2007, plans to launch IPTV had been postponed by Orange but now it has expressed its keen interest on bundling a number of services into one package.

Presently, Virgin Media is the sole UK telco to offer quad-play (mobile, fixed voice telephony, broadband and TV).

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A number of changes to the management has been announced by Irish telecoms group, Eircom whose mobile division CEO left the company. Larry Smith who worked for the company as a CEO after five and a half years living and working in Ireland has decided to return to the States.

Retail operations of Meteor and Eircom has been planned to be merged over the next few months, following a shake-up of the company. Besides, the number of business units will also be rationalised to focus on customer groups across both landline and mobile.

Stephen Beynon, former Virgin Media manager has been appointed group managing director of consumer and small business, encompassing both arms of the company. With the modernization and restructuring of the business, transition unit has been established.

Accoring to Mr Paul Donovan, CEO, Eircom Group, the company and its members would like to thanks Larry Smith for his tremendous contribution and for making Meteor the successful and dynamic brand it is today.

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: 100Mb per second broadband service will be launched by Virgin Media this year to extend its speed advantage over rivals BT and British Sky Broadcasting.

A narrowing of full-year pre-tax losses for 2009 from continuing operations from £860.2m ($1.3bn) to £337.5m has also been reported by the company. 28,600 new cable subscribers signed up the network which is the largest number of net additions since the NTL-Telewest merger four years ago.

According to Neil Berkett, chief executive, Virgin’s 100Mbps service would become available to the first customers by the end of 2010; with deployment complete a year later and he also hoped that there will be demand for a 100Mbps product as more households want to watch an internet video, play online video games and download music simultaneously.

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UK cable operator NTL has announced alongside its third-quarter results plans to change its name to Virgin Media. The new name, which follows its merger with rival Telewest and takeover of Virgin Mobile, will be launched in the first quarter of 2007, with NTL and Telewest rapidly phased out. The cable operator showed for the third quarter a net loss of 37,300 customers, attributing it to changes in contract conditions and a high number of customers moving house. NTL added 78,100 internet customers and 22,200 TV subscribers, but telephony users fell by 54,600. The company plans to increase the use of flat-rate packages to boost phone customers. Average revenue per cable user increased to GBP 42.48 from GBP 42.21 in the second quarter. Virgin Mobile meanwhile added 122,700 customers for a total 4.511 million, helped by a summer free text promotion.Pro forma for the merger, the group’s revenues for the quarter rose to GBP 1.025 billion from GBP 883.2 million a year earlier, and operating cash flow improved to GBP 310.8 million from GBP 307.3 million. The net loss widened to GBP 104.2 million from GBP 99.3 million due to higher costs for amortisation, operations and integration. Cost savings for the merger are on track to reach GBP 250 million annually by the end of 2007.

Source-  telecompaper   

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