The current situation is like it's nationalised - but instead of the lines being owned by the government, they are owned by a company that will always put their own profits first.
Which makes the whole situation so ridiculous - one company in charge of all of the lines in Ireland - it's not good news for consumers.
You have a regulator that despite been given a months notice by Eircom that there were problems with Smart and were going to take this action, decides to bury their heads and hope their problems go away.
What is it that the regulator could have done here? They regulate, not interfere in day to day business operations? You want them to make up the rules as they go along?
No, but surely if they know that a company that they supposedly regulate is in financial difficulty and that 40,000 people are about the lose their services, they can intervene and try to broker some deal to ensure that consumers don't lose out.
They did it quickly enough once Eircom pulled the plug.
Did they think Eircom were bluffing or something when they said they would do it.
But other than the laying of separate networks/new lines (as SMART tried to do), there isn't really a way around that, is there?
You mean interfere in normal business practices? That's hardly the right thing to do?
It is not normal business for one company to owe another nearly 4m in arrears
One of the major arguments for the regulation of crucial industries is the prevention of a market failure that will effect a large number of people.
Is it possible for the govt to CPO back the infrastructure and let them all (Eircom, EsatBT, UTV etc.) have an equal playing field? As long as Eircom own the copper they have the advantage. Smart's difficulties are just a symptom of a bigger problem.
Probably a cultural thing. Most of us grew up in the P&T generation and there was no division between the infrastructure and the services that can be run on that infrastructure. All people did back then was make phone calls (or even dial-up connections). Now that you can have broadband with one company and phone calls with another one, it makes more sense to divide the network from the services.Does anyone know why Eircom wasn't split into networks and carrier service at the time of the IPO?
Regarding, problems with Smart billing services, you can bet that people will have had similar experiences with other companies. I used to have broadband and telephony with EsatBT up till about 1.5 years ago. I switched to NTL for broadband. EsatBT still charged me for broadband 4 months after it was disconnected. Only an email to Bill Murphy sorted that mess out. .
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