Sprint Sues AT&T Over 5G Branding (reuters.com) 70
Sprint Corp sued AT&T late on Thursday, saying it is misleading consumers into believing that they are using fifth generation wireless network, known as 5G, a technology that has not yet been widely deployed. From a report: AT&T customers are seeing "5G E" logo on their mobile devices in over 400 markets. Although users are still using 4G network, AT&T is calling it 5G Evolution, a faster version of its existing network and a first step on the road to 5G. 5G can offer data speeds up to 50 or 100 times faster than 4G networks.
Where is the FTC? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sprint Corp sued AT&T late on Thursday, saying it is misleading consumers into believing that they are using fifth generation wireless network, known as 5G, a technology that has not yet been widely deployed.
It's kind of annoying that the FTC [ftc.gov] (or whatever three letter agency with jurisdiction) isn't sitting on them hard about this fraud. Marketing spin is one thing but this is pretty deeply shady.
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Someone has to prove that "5G" actually means something when generational labels are mostly just marketing fluff.
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The stupid part is that it really doesn't matter how fast your connection is when the carriers impose such tiny bandwidth caps. It's like driving a formula one car on a track with a brick wall at the end of the quarter
Re:Where is the FTC? (Score:5, Insightful)
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The issue is that the FTC decides whether false claim was made but it doesn’t necessarily have 100% say that the claim itself was false. How would the FTC know that AT&T’s network isn’t “5G”. Someone has to decide what “5G” is. That would be under the FCC. The FTC would have to defer to the FCC as to whether AT&T’s network is 5G. Otherwise AT&T can claim that it means 5th generation which it would be the 5th generation for them.
As an example, if a
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I'm glad that Sprint is stepping up and taking this on. Under the current administration the FCC is less than useless.
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The FTC historically has never done much, it's pretty much toothless. This is why the anti-government crowd prefers having the FTC have jurisdiction rather than other departments with a better record at effectiveness.
The U.S. government needs FAR better management. (Score:3)
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If you ask me, 1080i is not HD either. Why they kept fucking interlaced formats when switching to digital, I'll never understand. What a bunch of dumbasses.
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Because 60p wasn't going to happen and sports broadcasting demands faster motion.
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But 720p is less problematic than 1080i. I've stopped counting the number of times I've seen bad de-interlacing on live TV years ago.
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Live TV doesn't need to be de-interlaced with anything but doubling. Each field should be interpolated separately and shown at the full 60Hz. There is no reason to combine that down to 30 frames.
Bad de-interlacing probably comes down to video that was not flagged as interlaced before it was compressed and ended up with bad artifacts as a result. Or your device was sending the video to your TV without it being flagged properly.
AT&T is calling it 5G Evolution (Score:2, Interesting)
And I'm calling it "5G dumbasses".
They should call it "4G E", for "4G enhanced" and it would probably be okay with everyone involved.
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that's what the "4G LTE" bullshit was.. fake "4G" that didn't quite meet the actual specs for it.. so technically, at&t's "5G E" is actually 3G (aka " 3.95G") masquerading as 4G but they're calling it 5G.
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LTE actually is 4G. What AT&T did was get phones with their branded firmware to display "4G" annunciator in W-CDMA HSPA+ mode. This is an enhancement to 3G UMTS W-CDMA and phones usually use a "3G H+" annunciator for it.
Everyone calls LTE 4G - it's a completely different technology (OFDMA/SC-FDMA with cyclic prefix rather than CDMA), and gives far better battery life as well as better data rates. But now AT&T is now using "5GE" branding for faster modes of LTE. Other carriers call this "4GX" and
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No, LTE was not/is not 4G. LTE Advanced *would* have met the requirements. Marketing folks fudged the names for marketing reasons.
Look at the ITU classifications and the actual specs of LTE
What standing does Sprint have? (Score:2)
5G in this context is a trademark of 3GPP. Only they can object to an unauthorized usage.
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5G in this context is a trademark of 3GPP. Only they can object to an unauthorized usage.
They're not objecting to an unauthorized usage, they're objecting to fraudulent usage which is designed to provide an unfair competitive advantage, which is an anticompetitive practice [classlawgroup.com].
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Sprint isn't accusing them of trademark infringement, they're accusing them of false advertising.
have the ITU revise the 5G spec to make it clear (Score:2, Interesting)
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So that just means that Sprint/FTC goes after them instead of AT&T. Or are you saying that anyone can just fund a trade group and shield themselves from scrutiny?
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Beat them at their own game. (Score:1)
Actually I find it funny the AT&T commercials that
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Sprint hasn't started with their 3G deployment though, they're just a few decades behind the curve.
A case of the pot calling the kettle black.. (Score:2)
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Sprint did the same thing in the past (Score:2)
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4.5G (Score:3)
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Why not be smart and use 4.5G?
Why spin something like that when you can sell your service on marketing hype knowing full well consumer protection laws in the USA aren't worth a damn?