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positive steps towards drafting regulations.The Internet Service Providers' Association of South Africa (ISPA) has welcomed the news that the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) has taken a number of positive steps towards drafting regulations for local loop unbundling.
positive steps towards drafting regulations.![]()
LOL yeah ICASA do a "sceintific" study on Wikipedia ffs!Come on ICASA - Many countries have done this already so just copy them ffs. All we want is for other companies to get access from the Main Distribution frame to the Street Cabinet and thereafter the customer's dropwire. Companies can deploy their own DSLAMS and/or Softswitches in Telkom exchanges and run their own backhaul from there. With the glut of fibre being laid all over the place, backhual is readily available in most hot spots.
Read the article "Internet in Australia" on wikipedia for how this can be done.
There is very little of that (mostly limited to estates) , overwhelming majority of ADSL lines are pure copper from the exchange building to the customer.Telkodemonopolies has since partially invested in fibre optic cabling between exchanges and roadside distribution boxes - specifically for [Local Loop] ADSL bandwidth.
There is zero business motivation for Telkom to perform these upgrades on existing lines, as it would not be funded by any additional revenues. Whether ADSL customers are on the end of a long copper line and or a FTTC based one, they would be paying the same.that is exactly why Telkodemonopolies has been putting in fibre optic between exchanges and roadside DBs - it shortens that Copper length on the Local Loop