http://www.finance24.com/Finance/Companies/0,,1518-24_1649961,00.html
M-Web raises telcos concerns
20/01/2005 16:24 - (SA)
Shoks Mzolo
Johannesburg - SA's leading internet service provider (ISP) M-Web on Thursday told the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) that sections of the Telecommunications Act that were not in line with the Ministerial Determinations should be repealed.
M-Web's regulatory director Richard Heath said the ISP was of the view that what Communications Minister Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri said last September spelled the way to a liberalised environment provided for in the Act.
As such this requires Icasa to convert the Ministerial Determinations into entitlement for value added network service (VANS) providers.
M-Web argued that applying the Act's clauses that needed to be repealed - post February 1 - nullified the Ministerial Determinations.
Other information and communications technology (ICT) players - such as Telkom - are opposed to self-provisioning for VANS and instead insisted that in terms of the Act, VANS are not permitted to carry voice.
Matsepe-Casaburri said in her policy announcement, VANS may carry any protocol, a point Telkom described as "unfortunate" and a deviation by the minister.
The group is of the view that the reference to "any protocol" is superfluous.
M-Web also expressed concern at the fact that monopolies, such as Telkom with its undersea cable monopoly, can hamper fair competition by charging high fees.
Telkom bought into this cable, while it was still a Public Owned Company, paying no taxes. IMO, this cable should be declared The Property of the people of South Africa. BTTB's opinion.
Wholesale rates
The lack of market forces to determine fair pricing would lead to a scenario whereby such monopolies hold the whole industry to a ransom.
To deal with this, M-Web wants Icasa to adopt some mechanisms that would enable it to intervene in case a pricing dispute arose among ICT providers.
If no such mechanisms exist, monopolies can refuse to charge wholesale rates to their peers or even deviate from the agreed pricing as they please, which would in the long run affect the country's economy.
M-Web provides a wide range of exclusive content, differentiated tools and services, best-of-breed technology guarantee and internationally sourced research and development to benefit its more than 332 000 dial-up subscribers and 14 000 broadband subscribers.
Among others, it offers products and services for businesses to integrate their ICT infrastructure and business processes with the internet.
M-Web is Naspers' wholly-owned subsidiary while Telkom is 38%-held by the government.
Icasa is working around the clock towards a fully functional framework for the telecommunications sector ahead of February 1.
Edited by Mahap Msiza
It is defintely more apparent that their is more and more pressure on Telkom for it to get off it's high horse. About time we heard more from MWeb. BTTB.
M-Web raises telcos concerns
20/01/2005 16:24 - (SA)
Shoks Mzolo
Johannesburg - SA's leading internet service provider (ISP) M-Web on Thursday told the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) that sections of the Telecommunications Act that were not in line with the Ministerial Determinations should be repealed.
M-Web's regulatory director Richard Heath said the ISP was of the view that what Communications Minister Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri said last September spelled the way to a liberalised environment provided for in the Act.
As such this requires Icasa to convert the Ministerial Determinations into entitlement for value added network service (VANS) providers.
M-Web argued that applying the Act's clauses that needed to be repealed - post February 1 - nullified the Ministerial Determinations.
Other information and communications technology (ICT) players - such as Telkom - are opposed to self-provisioning for VANS and instead insisted that in terms of the Act, VANS are not permitted to carry voice.
Matsepe-Casaburri said in her policy announcement, VANS may carry any protocol, a point Telkom described as "unfortunate" and a deviation by the minister.
The group is of the view that the reference to "any protocol" is superfluous.
M-Web also expressed concern at the fact that monopolies, such as Telkom with its undersea cable monopoly, can hamper fair competition by charging high fees.
Telkom bought into this cable, while it was still a Public Owned Company, paying no taxes. IMO, this cable should be declared The Property of the people of South Africa. BTTB's opinion.
Wholesale rates
The lack of market forces to determine fair pricing would lead to a scenario whereby such monopolies hold the whole industry to a ransom.
To deal with this, M-Web wants Icasa to adopt some mechanisms that would enable it to intervene in case a pricing dispute arose among ICT providers.
If no such mechanisms exist, monopolies can refuse to charge wholesale rates to their peers or even deviate from the agreed pricing as they please, which would in the long run affect the country's economy.
M-Web provides a wide range of exclusive content, differentiated tools and services, best-of-breed technology guarantee and internationally sourced research and development to benefit its more than 332 000 dial-up subscribers and 14 000 broadband subscribers.
Among others, it offers products and services for businesses to integrate their ICT infrastructure and business processes with the internet.
M-Web is Naspers' wholly-owned subsidiary while Telkom is 38%-held by the government.
Icasa is working around the clock towards a fully functional framework for the telecommunications sector ahead of February 1.
Edited by Mahap Msiza
It is defintely more apparent that their is more and more pressure on Telkom for it to get off it's high horse. About time we heard more from MWeb. BTTB.