South Africa's Broadband Industry in Turmoil 31
Gldm writes from South Africa that "things are heading towards all-out war down here. Our regulatory board ICASA (think FCC) finally woke up and publihsed the results of hearings on 446 complaints about monopoly broadband provider Telkom, which was deregulated back in Febuary, and proposed new regulations to take effect in four weeks. ICASA demands the 3GB monthly traffic cap be removed, port shaping removed, minimum speed requirements be enforced, and that Telkom stop double-charging customers." Read on for the rest; it sounds like (for once!) broadband customers in the U.S. can be grateful for relatively good broadband, instead of envious of South Korea's ubiquitous high-speed access.
"Currently we pay exorbitant rates: a monthly fee for the physical line of R87, then Telkom charges a fee of R270 to R477 depending on line speed 192-512kbps, and THEN the standard ISP fee, which is typically another R300-500 or more. This means a total monthly DSL cost of around R1000 or about US $160 for a 512k line with 3GB of traffic before you get cut off, and all ports but 80 useless internationally. ICASA says Telkom should charge a fixed fee to cover the line cost when it is installed like every other country, not a monthly fee.
Telkom's response is that ICASA doesn't know how to run a network and this would make the network "unsustainable" and prevent them from recovering R1bn in investments. They've threatened to not only to stop investing in new infrastructure, but also shut down all DSL service in the country, bringing business to a standstill.
Local politcal group the Inkatha Freedom Party has sided with ICASA and is saying Telkom must not be allowed to hold the country hostage. They're calling for the Minister of Communications to step in, but so far no official word from high up in the government."
Re:Fake story (Score:3, Informative)
Checked on the parent post and what do you know .
Your 100% right , he is a bit ignorant indeed.
Why do people continually think of Africa as a single nation , Its an entire continent with many wide and diverse cultures . Taking three extremes
Its like saying the USA , Mexico and Lithuania and basically the same country.
Re:Fake story (Score:2)
So, which part of Africaland did you say you were from? It's only little, about the size of spain, which is a peninsula on the small island of Europe, off the coast of Florida, part of the great nation state of Melithica. I
Re:Fake story (Score:1)
Re:Fake story (Score:1)
More info (Score:3, Interesting)
We All Love hellkom
MyADSL (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MyADSL (Score:1)
What if there were, I don't know, TWO companies? What then?
Come chat about it on #myadsl on efnet. (Score:4, Informative)
I would have submitted this sooner, but it seems that any time I'm at work, if I try to post a comment on slashdot, it gives me "You can't post to this page." Yet it works fine at home on another ISP. I've tried asking what's going on, if it's some kind of domain ban, but nobody ever replied.
Re:Come chat about it on #myadsl on efnet. (Score:1)
Re:Come chat about it on #myadsl on efnet. (Score:2)
International calls from South Africa (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Dial a special number in the US. Let it ring and then put the phone down.
2. A machine in the US would then call me back.
3. The machine would then connect me to another phone line in the US, and I would dial the number I wanted in England.
This resulted in two phone calls from the US, one to SA and one to England. It was explained to me that this was *much* cheaper than paying the SA telecom's monopoly rates for one call
Does this sort of thing still go on?
Re:International calls from South Africa (Score:2)
Did they say this with a straight face? (Score:1)
"Icasa has displayed a fundamental misunderstanding in network design. It appears the findings are based on reports by parties at the hearings, and Icasa did not apply its mind on how broadband is offered worldwide."
ICASA says Telkom should charge a fixed fee to cover the line cost when it is installed like every other country, not a monthly fee.
I was going to crack a Nigerian Spam joke, but sometimes life provides its own punchlines.
Radically different cost structures (Score:2)
US traffic probably comes mostly from American sites, but also from English speaking countries around the world as well as European sites published in English, which is our defacto lingua franca.
South Africans probably browse sites from all over the world, like I do here in Finland: 99% of sites I visit come from overseas, which makes me a much more expensive customer than tha
Re:Radically different cost structures (Score:2)
Re:Radically different cost structures (Score:2)
errrrrrr (Score:1)
Re:errrrrrr (Score:2)
http://www.antitrust.co.za Fighting TELKOM (Score:1)
LOL 3GB cap!!! (Score:2)
Thank you puretna...
Loving the Abuse (Score:2)
And how does the regulators requiring the telco honor their agreements spell "turm
Re:Loving the Abuse (Score:2)
But someone did say that we shouldn't push for the best service possible here in the US - or at least blatantly implied it. When they said we should be "grateful" we have the service we do, rather than complain that it's not as good as Koreans have. It's very difficult to be both grateful for