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Best Posts in Thread: Oz telco -Telstra in the Philippines

  1. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    lol Like a little child that sees the neighbor's kid playing with a toy they have never seen before. Run off and tell mommy that they aren't sharing. I hope they don't let Globe and PLDT get their grubby little hands on the frequency. Everything they touch turns to sh*t and I'm certain they would do everything they could to overload the bandwidth to make Telstra's service worse.

    And if Globe/PLDT were smart they would avoid the 700MHz frequency and go with the 2.6GHz for LTE. The money is in the bigger cities where the 2.6GHz would be superior (shorter distance but allows for a lot more bandwidth). All they are trying to do is stop Telstra from entering the market by forcing them to share the 700MHz. Though providing internet over wireless to a large number of people is idiotic on Telstra's part. If they follow the same route that Globe and PLDT have went their service will be just as crap as what is already available here in short order. This country desperately needs wired internet infrastructure.
     
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  2. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    Let me try translating:
    "The Philippines is far too corrupt and too many people wanted hand outs. Paying out bribes to every congressman, city mayor and barangay captain that we would have had to deal with would have doubled our expected budget."
    "We still want to expand out business further into Asia, but not with those backwards and extremely-corrupt monkeys."
    "We tried being honest and transparent about our business plan in the Philippines.....then the competition (Globe and PLDT) took that information and then bribed politicians to make sure that we could never get the permits we needed and filed ridiculous lawsuits against us for trying to nudge in on their monopoly."

    The Philippines is its own worst enemy. Cut off their nose to spite their face.
     
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  3. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    A lot of the comments seem to coming from Aussies who have no idea that San Miguel is more than just a beer company. San Miguel is part of the oligarchy and have their hands in far more than just the alcohol cookie jar. But I have to agree with you, if I had billions to spend it certainly wouldn't be spent in the Philippines where the judicial system/government is beyond corrupt, contracts are about as useful as toilet paper and I couldn't own a majority share/say in a business I invested in.
     
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  4. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    The frequency is not the problem. It is them overselling the bandwidth (or not buying enough) and the over-reliance on wireless internet (lack of wired internet infrastructure) that makes the internet stuck here. The Philippines, like most countries in the world, mainly uses the 900/1800 frequencies for mobile (and 2G/3G) and 850/1800/2100 frequencies for LTE/4G internet (the US being one of the oddballs that decided to do their own thing with the frequencies.....much like our voltage and systems of measurement). So it's not the frequencies, it just comes down to greed, corruption and ignorance/stupidity on the Philippines part.

    Globe and PLDT filling suite for the 700 frequency was solely to block Telstra from entering the market. Globe and PLDT have absolutely no use for that frequency.
     
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  5. DaveD

    DaveD DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer Veteran Navy

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    Smartest thing they could have ever done in this situation. Had they stayed the course they would be licking their wounds for years to come. One thing the PI is good for is screwing the naive or unsuspecting foreigner out of their money by hook or by crook.
     
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  6. AlwaysRt

    AlwaysRt DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster Blood Donor Veteran Air Force Marines

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    Business isn't always about 'getting their fair share', sometimes it is about preventing the competition from getting theirs. PLDT's grab at the 700Mhz pie sounds like the equivalent of buying a patent to prevent the technology from being developed.
     
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  7. DavyL200

    DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    The Philippines' biggest phone and internet provider, PLDT, is preparing to take Telstra and its would-be partner San Miguel to court in an effort to strip the companies of their most valuable spectrum assets.

    Telstra is in the final stages of negotiating a multibillion-dollar joint venture with San Miguel to build a new mobile phone network in the Philippines, a relatively risky move in one of Asia's most hotly contested mobile markets. San Miguel president Ramon Ang wants the service to kick off from the first quarter of 2016.

    Both Globe and PLDT have asked the regulator to reassign part of SM's 7000MHz holding in a more equitable way.

    Raymond Tong, Goldman Sachs
    Telstra's biggest advantage is San Miguel's 90 per cent holding of 700MHz spectrum across the country. Spectrum is the electronic airspace that all broadcast technologies rely on and the 700MHz frequency band is the best at penetrating buildings and travelling long distances.

    But both of Telstra's would-be rivals, Globe Telecom and Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT), are demanding the local regulator force San Miguel to share its spectrum – which analysts warn would greatly decrease the potential advantages and profitability of the new ventures.

    PLDT head of Regulatory Affairs Ray Espinosa told Fairfax Media in an exclusive interview the company would begin lobbying Philippines President Benigno Aquino III directly this month. He added that its external legal team was preparing to launch legal action against the regulators, San Miguel and any of its partners unless the spectrum was shared.

    "The 700MHz as it is assigned today has been issued with the assumption that it will be used for broadcast purposes only [and] the companies that hold it cannot legally use it for mobile communications purposes," he said. "We are prepared to take vigorous action judicially if that's necessary for us to get our fair share of the frequency ... and that could mean bringing the case before our judicial courts. That would be against the regulators and the holders of the frequency.

    "We will also bring it to the attention of the office of the President to emphasise how important this is ... before the end of the year if not the early part of January."



    Read more: Telstra's Philippine venture threatened by legal action, presidential lobbying
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