AT&T files a lawsuit against Verizon Wireless in an effort to stop its bigger mobile rival from using what it calls misleading coverage maps in advertisements that AT&T claims are causing it to lose incalculable market share. NEW YORK, Nov 3 (Reuters)AT&T Inc is suing Verizon
Wireless in an effort to stop its bigger mobile rival from
using "misleading" coverage maps in advertisements that AT&T
says are causing it to lose "incalculable market share."
According to the lawsuit which AT&T filed in Atlanta
federal court, a recently launched ad campaign shows maps with
white spaces that mislead consumers into thinking AT&T has no
network coverage outside of areas where it offers high-speed
mobile services, known as third-generation or 3G.
But AT&T argued that its customers can "fully use their
wireless devices outside of a '3G' coverage area and
undisputedly have coverage in areas depicted by white or blank
spaces on the maps used in Verizon's advertisements."
It asked the court for a temporary restraining order
against Verizon Wireless so its rival cannot benefit from the
ads while the court sets a date for a preliminary and permanent
injunction hearing.
Verizon Wireless, a venture of Verizon Communications Inc and Vodafone Group Plc, said the AT&T suit was
without merit.
Verizon Wireless spokeswoman Nancy Stark said the ads in
question "clearly state" that voice and data services are
available outside 3G areas. She said the ads were intended to
tell consumers about coverage for smartphones, which are used
for data services.
Since most of the U.S. population already use cellphones
for phone calls, operators are depending on high-speed data
service offerings to attract new customers or convince existing
customers to spend more money on cell services.
AT&T's exclusive U.S. right to sell Apple Inc's iPhone helped the No. 2 U.S. operator to gain market share from
Verizon Wireless during the quarter ended in September.
But since then, AT&T said the ads launched by Verizon in
October have caused it to lose market share.
AT&T described how the Verizon ads use maps comparing 3G
coverage in the Verizon Wireless and AT&T network, using color
to depict areas where each carrier has 3G and blank spaces to
in areas where 3G is not available.
Because Verizon uses white spaces in its own maps for areas
where it has no coverage, consumers are incorrectly
interpreting the blank spaces on the AT&T maps to mean it has
no wireless coverage in those areas, AT&T said.
"Verizon has stepped over the line of legitimate
comparative advertising," AT&T said in the lawsuit.
The case is AT&T Mobility LLC v. Cellco Partnership, U.S.
District Court, Northern District of Georgia, No. 09-3057.
(Reporting by Sinead Carew, editing by Gerald E. McCormick and
Tim Dobbyn)
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