this post was submitted on 08 Feb 2024
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Heh. In Australia, everyone must have access to standard phone services and at the same price everywhere. If a telco dropped their copper infrastructure, it must be for a replacement that is just as reliable and costs nothing to the consumer. The idea is that everyone has a right to telco services with the ability to always be able to contact emergency services.
Recently a telco had all their services go down. Immediately the fed started investigating. The latest ongoing is the telco had to disclose to them that ~2500 emergency call attempts failed...
The Australian Consumer Watchdog would not allow AT&T to do what they're doing unless they pay for it all and prove that the new tech will be faultless.
The downside is Australia is huge and population low, so new infrastructure costs a lot per capita.
That's the way it was supposed to be in the US too. But it hasn't played out that way. They've pulled this exact trick before and the second they get permission they start cutting off towns. And knowing the CPUC they aren't going to have to fight very hard to get that permission.