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Ought Six
08-19-2009, 02:50 PM
Why AT&T Killed Google Voice (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204683204574358552882901262.html?m od=googlenews_wsj)


Telecom operators are yesterday's business. It's time
for a national data policy that encourages innovation.

By ANDY KESSLER
The Wall Street Journal -- Opinion
AUGUST 18, 2009


Earlier this month, Apple rejected an application for the iPhone called Google Voice. The uproar set off a chain of events—Google's CEO Eric Schmidt resigning from Apple's board, and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) investigating wireless open access and handset exclusivity—that may finally end the 135-year-old Alexander Graham Bell era. It's about time.

With Google Voice, you have one Google phone number that callers use to reach you, and you pick up whichever phone—office, home or cellular—rings. You can screen calls, listen in before answering, record calls, read transcripts of your voicemails, and do free conference calls. Domestic calls and texting are free, and international calls to Europe are two cents a minute. In other words, a unified voice system, something a real phone company should have offered years ago.

Apple has an exclusive deal with AT&T in the U.S., stirring up rumors that AT&T was the one behind Apple rejecting Google Voice. How could AT&T not object? AT&T clings to the old business of charging for voice calls in minutes. It takes not much more than 10 kilobits per second of data to handle voice. In a world of megabit per-second connections, that's nothing—hence Google's proposal to offer voice calls for no cost and heap on features galore.

What this episode really uncovers is that AT&T is dying. AT&T is dragging down the rest of us by overcharging us for voice calls and stifling innovation in a mobile data market critical to the U.S. economy.

For the latest quarter, AT&T reported local voice revenue down 12%, long distance down 15%. With customers unplugging home phones and using flat-rate Internet services for long-distance calls (again, voice is just data), AT&T's wireline operating income is down 36%. Even in the wireless segment, which grew 10% overall, per-customer voice revenue is down 7%.

Wireless data service is AT&T's only bright spot, up a whopping 26% per customer. How so? As any parent of teenagers knows, text messages are 20 cents each, or $5,000 per megabyte. After the first month and a $320 bill, we all pony up $10 a month for unlimited texting plans. Same for Internet access. With my iPhone, I pay $30 a month for unlimited data service (actually, one gigabyte per month). Is it worth that? The à la carte price for other not-so-smart phones is $5 per megabyte (one-thousandth of a gigabyte) per month. So we buy monthly plans. Margins in AT&T's Wireless segment are an embarrassingly high 25%.

The trick in any communications and media business is to own a pipe between you and your customers so you can charge what you like. Cellphone companies don't have wired pipes, but by owning spectrum they do have a pipe and pricing power.

Aren't there phone competitors to knock down the price? Hardly. Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile and others all joined AT&T in bidding huge amounts for wireless spectrum in FCC auctions, some $70-plus billion since the mid-1990s. That all gets passed along to you and me in the form of higher fees and friendly oligopolies that don't much compete on price. Google Voice is the new competition.

By the way, Apple also has a pipe—call it a virtual pipe—to customers. Its iTunes music service (now up to one-quarter of all music sales, according to NPD Market Research) works exclusively with iPods and iPhones. The new Palm Pre, another exclusive deal, this time by Verizon Wireless, tricked iTunes into thinking it was an iPod. Apple quickly changed its software to lock the Pre out, and one would expect Apple locking out any Google phone from using iTunes.

It wouldn't be so bad if we were just overpaying for our mobile plans. Americans are used to that—see mail, milk and medicine. But it's inexcusable that new, feature-rich and productive applications like Google Voice are being held back, just to prop up AT&T while we wait for it to transition away from its legacy of voice communications. How many productive apps beyond Google Voice are waiting in the wings?

So now the FCC and its new Chairman Julius Genachowski are getting involved. Usually this means a set of convoluted rules to make up for past errors in allocating scarce resources that—in the name of "fairness"—end up creating a new mess.

Some might say it is time to rethink our national communications policy. But even that's obsolete. I'd start with a simple idea. There is no such thing as voice or text or music or TV shows or video. They are all just data. We need a national data policy, and here are four suggestions:

• End phone exclusivity. Any device should work on any network. Data flows freely.

• Transition away from "owning" airwaves. As we've seen with license-free bandwidth via Wi-Fi networking, we can share the airwaves without interfering with each other. Let new carriers emerge based on quality of service rather than spectrum owned. Cellphone coverage from huge cell towers will naturally migrate seamlessly into offices and even homes via Wi-Fi networking. No more dropped calls in the bathroom.

• End municipal exclusivity deals for cable companies. TV channels are like voice pipes, part of an era that is about to pass. A little competition for cable will help the transition to paying for shows instead of overpaying for little-watched networks. Competition brings de facto network neutrality and open access (if you don't like one service blocking apps, use another), thus one less set of artificial rules to be gamed.

• Encourage faster and faster data connections to our homes and phones. It should more than double every two years. To homes, five megabits today should be 10 megabits in 2011, 25 megabits in 2013 and 100 megabits in 2017. These data-connection speeds are technically doable today, with obsolete voice and video policy holding it back.

Technology doesn't wait around, so it's all going to happen anyway, but it will take longer under today's rules. A weak economy is not the time to stifle change.

Data is toxic to old communications and media pipes. Instead, data gains value as it hops around in the packets that make up the Internet structure. New services like Twitter don't need to file with the FCC.

And new features for apps like Google Voice are only limited by the imagination. Mother-in-law location alerts? Video messaging? Whatever. The FCC better not treat AT&T and Verizon like Citigroup, GM and the Post Office. Cellphone operators aren't too big to fail. Rather, the telecom sector is too important to be allowed to hold back the rest of us.
_____

Mr. Kessler, a former hedge-fund manager, is the author of "How We Got Here" (Collins, 2005).

Sysiphus
08-19-2009, 03:42 PM
So, Google should team up with another wireless provider and produce its own device to challenge the iPod. And sell it for $200.

Ought Six
08-19-2009, 03:50 PM
Agreed. If device makers want to make their devices available through only one cellular service provider, that is none of the government's business.

The article does bring up some interesting points though about how changes in technology is changing the market. Voice used to be solely analog, both on wired and wireless connections. Data was a whole seperate realm. Now the two have become one, as it is all digital data. That is breaking down the old market models. The existing companies can slow this down, but not stop it.

As for ATT 'dying', I very much doubt that. You could have just as well said (and many people did) that when they were just a wired telephone company that cellular devices were their doom. They will probably adopt to the new market realities just as they have before.

Sysiphus
08-19-2009, 04:46 PM
Yup, AT&T is not going anywhere. U-Verse is actually pretty cool.

Ought Six
08-19-2009, 04:51 PM
Verizon FIOS is pretty much the same thing; broadband internet, TV and telephone delivered from a single local telco over a fiberoptic connection. You can get their cellphone service bundled in as well, if you wish. Either way you get all the services on a single bill at a discounted 'bundled' price. I assume that Qwest and any other big regional telcos offer similar services.

I am signing up for a Verizion bundle at my new place. Unfortunately, they do not have a fiberoptic line running down my street, so the TV portion will be DIRECTV satellite dish, and my net connection will be high-speed DSL. I am not a big fan of Verizon. I had them before, and had a lot of problems with them. But they are the only local provider, as there is no cable where I live, so I am stuck with them. The wireless and satellite net providers are the only options there to DSL, and they all pretty much suck.

Ought Six
08-21-2009, 01:04 PM
Google-AT&T-Apple fight over Net calls draws FCC interest (http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/telecom/2009-08-20-google-internet-calls-apple_N.htm)


By Leslie Cauley
USA Today
08/21/2009


Apple (AAPL) and AT&T (T) Friday are expected to tell the Federal Communications Commission why Google's free voice application, called Google Voice, is banned from the Apple iPhone. Google is also filing comments.
But Google (GOOG) may soon find itself on the hot seat as well, telecom and public policy analysts say.

Why: Consumers who use Android, the Google-developed operating system for wireless devices, can't use Skype, a leading Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service. A pioneer in free Internet calling, Skype allows you to talk as long as you want without draining cellphone minutes.

Android users get Skype Lite, a watered-down version of the original that routes calls over traditional phone networks — not the Internet. As a result, long-distance calls are still cheap or free, but cellphone minutes are gobbled up every time a Skype Lite call is made.

Ben Scott, public policy director of Free Press, a consumer advocacy group, says Google "is in an awkward spot. On the one hand, their application is being blocked on the Apple App Store. But on the other hand, they engaged in similar behavior" with Skype.

Skype, to some degree, is caught in the middle.

Android "does not support a full-featured version of Skype," Skype told USA TODAY. "In order to make Skype available on Android devices, as well as hundreds of other regular mobile phones, we designed Skype Lite."

In a statement prepared for USA TODAY, Google acknowledged that it "has the ability to filter," or block, VoIP. The search giant said it does that "at the request" of individual operators. Right now, there are just two Android devices in the USA: the G1 and MyTouch, both sold by T-Mobile.

Google's explanation would seem to suggest that T-Mobile requested the block on Skype, but the carrier says that's not the case. "T-Mobile has not asked Google to block that service," says spokesman Joe Farren, referring to original Skype.

Google says the latest version of Android for developers would support full VoIP, but no developer has submitted an app.

As part of its Google Voice probe, the FCC has asked Google to describe its process for "considering and approving" Android apps. The agency also asked the Web giant to specify the percentage of apps that are rejected and explain why.

Roger Entner, head of telecom research at Nielsen, says that with wireless red hot he's not surprised Google, Apple and the others are playing hardball. "They're all equal opportunity offenders."