Does JOE Threaten YouTube, Hulu, NetFlix Access?
There's a lot to be worried about in those Commercial Agreements, according
to Debbie Goldman, telecommunications policy director for the Communications
Workers of America, which is the union representing Verizon's workers. "Our
concerns with the deal focus on the Commercial Agreements," Goldman said. "We fought hard to get
some redactions unredacted. Some people who are able to see them say they
are seeing some very disturbing things.
"One of the concerns is an agreement that would lock competitors out of
backhaul," Goldman explained, saying the agreement would require backhaul
services to go to a cable company. "Where any cable company agrees to
match the price. This raises huge red flags under antitrust law." Backhaul
is the connection between wireless towers and the Public Switched
Telephone Network, which are controlled by the big telephone companies
such as Verizon and AT&T.
"Another thing [is] provisions that would make it more difficult for
over-the-top video," Goldman said. She said this could effectively kill
YouTube, Hulu and NetFlix, and similar video services, but that it goes far
beyond that. Goldman said that even the makeup of the board that governs the
JOE is a secret. Goldman noted that Verizon is keeping these secrets even from
the FCC by redacting documents sent to the commission and providing electronic
filings that cannot be opened.
Verizon didn't respond to eWEEK's
May 17 request for comment on these concerns and the terms of the JOE before this
article was published.
The industry concerns about the behavior of Verizon and the cable companies
have caused a number of companies to create an organization called the Alliance
for Broadband Competition. Members of the Alliance include Sprint and T-Mobile
as well as public interest groups such as Public Knowledge. Art Brodsky, communications
director for Public Knowledge, said this issue has been building since the deal
was announced last year.
"This is profoundly anti-competitive and anti-consumer," Brodsky
said. He noted that the chief of the FCC's Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
is
already asking some very pointed questions about Verizon's plans, including
its plans for the deal with the cable operators. Brodsky said part of the deal
is an agreement not to compete, which he said is the definition of antitrust.
"What's going to happen next is that the Commission and the [U.S.
Department of Justice] anti-trust division are going to make a call on it. It's
a very complicated deal, and it will reshape the communications industry. It
will blow up the communications act of 1996." Public Knowledge has filed a
petition with the FCC to remove the secrecy
around JOE.
Verizon's actions have also prompted a letter from Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wisc.,
to Verizon's General Counsel Randal Milch demanding an explanation for its
discontinuation of DSL service immediately after the company promised to Kohl's
committee that this wouldn't happen. Kohl is chairman of the Senate
Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights. In his
letter, Kohl said that Verizon's action reduces choices for customers, contrary
to what the company promised.
Currently, the government's investigation of Verizon's interaction with the
cable companies is just starting to heat up. The DOJ has begun an
investigation, as has the FCC. Dozens of companies have filed petitions with
the FCC not to allow Verizon's spectrum buy. It appears that what Verizon hoped
would be an under-the-radar transaction is instead going to gain a lot of
scrutiny.








