Should I be worried?
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 05/17/99
AT&T is my long-distance phone company. MediaOne provides my
cable TV and Internet services. Now it seems that I'll be getting
all three services from AT&T as a result of the company
buying MediaOne.
That in itself is not a reason to worry, but there are aspects of
this acquisition that have me wondering. AT&T is paying about
$4,700 per subscriber for MediaOne. The deal is the latest by
AT&T in a year in which the company will spend almost $110
billion - just about twice its $53 billion revenue for 1998 - for
cable TV companies. I sure hope AT&T will not try to recover
all its $4,700 out of my cable bill next month.
AT&T wants to use the newly acquired last-mile connectivity
to offer local and long-distance phone and Internet services
without having to deal with the local Baby Bell telephone
companies. I can easily see why any organization with half a clue
would want to avoid depending on the Baby Bells to deploy any
technology more sophisticated than a Princess phone.
Take a look at the mind-numbing slowness with which the Bells
deployed ISDN service and the equivalent (at best) deployment
strategy for digital subscriber line.
AT&T will face some significant regulatory issues. FCC chief
William Kennard says the MediaOne deal "warrants very
careful scrutiny." And according to the Federal
Communications Commission, AT&T cable ownership will far
exceed the maximum amount permitted by current regulations. But
pundits seem to think AT&T will get past the hurdles after
some pain.
AT&T may face other issues. For example, a bill was recently
introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that would
require cable companies to open their infrastructures to
competitive ISPs, as companies have already had to do in Canada.
This would destroy much of the economic advantage of owning the
cable infrastructure. There are also one or two killer technical
hurdles that must be overcome to get reliable and reasonable
quality telephone service over the cable TV infrastructure.
I have two additional concerns. AT&T has been planning to
offer Internet service only through its relationship with @Home.
I do not know how that will affect my, up to now, excellent
MediaOne Internet service. I'm also considerably worried about
the implications of the deal that AT&T has made with
Microsoft to use Windows CE-based set-top boxes in 2.5 million
homes. I want to have uninterrupted IP access to the Internet
from my own computers, and I am far from sure that I can get that
with Microsoft's "the PC is the home controller"
philosophy.
If AT&T manages to get past the regulators and remembers to
actually offer Internet service (rather than some other service
through which the company defines the applications I can run) and
telephone service, this could be a very good deal for us all.
Disclaimer: Harvard trains regulators in some areas and disdains
them in others, but the above are my musings.