@jbtaylor on tech

I'm a spokesman for Sprint. This personal site is where I share news stories and my views about our company, our phones and other devices. I also write a bit about tech policy, the wireless industry and life in Washington, D.C.

To ensure that Sprint's lawyers continue to support employees' use of social media, please read the disclaimers on my "About this Posterous" page.

Want to break up with AT&T, Verizon or T-Mobile? Tell them with a song!

I thought our ad team had a hit with the Now Network widget, but this just may be better. If you haven't heard about our "Any Mobile, Anytime", you may want to check it out. Basically, with the plan, you can call anyone with a cell phone and it doesn't count against your bucket of minutes. (This blows up the calling circles from the other guys.)

Meanwhile, click on the link and watch a goodbye song for your carrier. (And learn more about the "Any mobile, Anytime" plan.)

Oh, and here's the news release with the back story about Mobilegoodbye.com.

Not all the Videos Dan Hesse Cuts are in Black and White; Some are Green

Have you seen the latest issue of Newsweek? This week, Newsweek named Sprint Nextel as the 15th greenest company in the U.S. -- we're the top ranked telecom on the list! We couldn't be more pleased.

At Sprint, we're working very hard to operate our business in a more sustainable way. (It's gratifying that people are starting to notice.)

To learn more, visit Sprint.com/green.

There's No Such Thing as a Free Lunch or a Free Conference Call

My friends who work in non-profits know how to stretch a dollar. That's why they were pretty excited when they found out they could obtain "free" conference calling services for their work.

The problem is these calls aren't really free. The carriers who market this service to non-profits are exploiting a loophole in the system that telecommunications companies use to pay one another for voice traffic delivered from one telecom network to another. If regulators allow this practice to continue, it could jeopardize the ability of your mobile carrier to continue to include unlimited long distance as part of your wireless call plan. 

Fortunately, this week, state regulators in Iowa took a strong step to stop this abuse. In a decision announced on Sept. 21, the Iowa Utilities Board ruled against the telecom companies who have exploited the loophole. At one point in the order, the Board had some pretty strong words for the firms who've abused the system. The Board said: 

Moreover, the Board finds that the acts of some of the Respondents regarding backdating of bills and contract amendments to make the contracts and bills look like they were older was an abuse of a generally-accepted practice. The backdated documents were created to conceal truths from the FCC and this Board, calling into question the credibility of all of the testimony and supporting documents attributed to those Respondents.

The Board also said that some of these companies, "attempted to manufacture evidence to make it appear that they had complied with their tariffs when they had not."

That's why the Board ordered these firms to refund the money billed to AT&T, Qwest and Sprint Nextel.

At Sprint, we think that the Iowa Utility Board has made the appropriate decision – one that is based on the facts, data-driven and rendered from the most complete record of testimony before any regulatory body in the country. We believe the Board’s decision provides a blueprint for other state regulatory utility commissions, courts and the FCC to resolve these longstanding disputes.

Our Take on Net Neutrality

This morning Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the FCC, delivered a speech at the Brookings Institution here in Washington, D.C. where he outlined his plans for formalizing the principles of network neutrality. 

We issued the following statement to reporters seeking a reaction from Sprint Nextel:

Sprint Nextel agrees with Chairman Genachowski that consumers are well served by an open Internet. That’s why we offer consumers open handsets and have long worked with independent software developers who want to create applications for Sprint handsets – next month we host our ninth Sprint Applications Developers Conference. It’s also why we’re investing in the technology and deploying an open 4G network – the first of the national wireless carriers to do so.

 

Put simply, Sprint wants customers to be able access the applications and the Internet sites they want, when they want to. We look forward to working with the Chairman and the rest of the Commissioners as they work to establish these new policies in a way that meets the expectations of consumers, recognizes the limits of wireless technology and preserves the obligations of carriers to operate networks in a reasonable and responsible manner.