

2014/05/22 AT&T’s DirecTV Acquisition Places Major Bet on Proposed FCC Net Neutrality Rules
Strategy Analytics Predicts "Stars are Aligning for Seamless Broadband Services"Boston, MA - May 19, 2014 - AT&T's planned acquisition of DirecTV offers benefits in the form of a nationwide footprint for AT&T as a Video Over the Top (OTT) and pay TV operator and ties in with the company's already strong IPTV, broadband and wireless businesses, according to new research from Strategy Analytics' Service Provider Strategies and Wireless Networks & Platforms services.
Combined with the FCC's new proposed rules for Net Neutrality/Open Internet Broadband and the Comcast / Time Warner merger, the stars are all aligning for different reasons to create Seamless Broadband services across wired – cable and telco - and wireless – satellite and mobile – networks.
In two new reports Strategy Analytics covers these hot topics:
- Service Provider Strategies analyzes the business impact of AT&T's acquisition in "Is AT&T Showing Interest in DirecTV?"
- Wireless Networks and Platforms looks at how AT&T's actions appear to align with the new moves by the FCC in "Stars Align for Seamless Broadband Access as AT&T buys DirecTV and FCC Revisits Net Neutrality Rules."
Sue Rudd, Director, Service Provider Analysis for Wireless Networks and Platforms commented that: “AT&T will probably be able to integrate DirecTV spectrum and delivery mechanisms as well as OTT Video services even more rapidly if the new FCC Net Neutrality rules are adopted. It looks as if AT&T has placed a major bet on this happening. These new FCC rules could dramatically simplify the delivery of multi-device multi-service ‘multiplay' bundles across fixed and wireless; and even stimulate innovation in fixed telco services based on mobile features."
Mobile Broadband is beginning to be viewed by the FCC as ‘just another access technology'. If the eventual FCC ruling eliminates differences between fixed and mobile broadband access regulations, it could accelerate Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC) and make it much easier organizationally for ILECs to deliver next generation services seamlessly across both fixed and mobile or satellite access. This could in turn lead to significant telecomms cost reductions as processes merge across fixed and mobile operations."
Source: Strategy Analytics