As AT&T falls behind T-Mobile in streaming, an executive blames net neutrality

Unlike some of its competitors, like Comcast and T-Mobile, which have released products that some believe violate the FCC’s net neutrality regulations, AT&T was apparently forced to shelve several new products as a result of the new regulations.

Speaking at the Phoenix Center’s annual U.S. Telecoms Symposium earlier this week, AT&T senior vice president Bob Quinn said that, since the FCC reclassified broadband as a utility, the company has “had to shelve a bunch of stuff because we’ve got to wait and see.”

The new legal environment has also restricted AT&T’s ability to develop new services, Quinn said at the event. 

“Since the Open Internet order came out we’ve had weekly calls with the business units and literally 15 lawyers who are all trying to figure out whether that stuff we’ve invested in … would be a violation of the order,” he said, according to a Politico report

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Network World Colin Neagle