ETF
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Google, Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile Respond to FCC ETF Questions Found under: Google, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, AT&T, FCC, ETF, The Big Four and Google have all responded to the FCCs ETF-related questions. You should remember how the Commission wants to know more details about the whole early termination fees issue and how all the major U.S. carriers and Google have been asked to present their ETF policies.T-Mobile wants just a single 200 ETF which can be ...
submitted by MobileTopSoft on 27th Feb 2010 (via feedproxy.google.com)
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1
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In response to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regarding early termination fees (ETF), AT&T, Verizon Wireless, Sprint, and T-Mobile have all said that the fees were set to help recover the cost of financing handset prices. According to the Associated Press, AT&T senior vice president Robert Quinn said that customers clearly understand that they have
submitted by FeelPhones on 25th Feb 2010 (via feelphones.com)
1
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US Carriers Respond to FCC Inquiry on ETF All four leading wireless carriers in the US have responded to an inquiry from the Federal Communications Commission on their early termination fees, and Google is also added to the list. The FCC has previously set a February 23 deadline for the companies to deliver their responses, and it seems that all the necessary paperwork has been shipped in time...
submitted by Softpedia on 25th Feb 2010 (via news.softpedia.com)
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ARTICLE: Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Google answer FCC ETF inquiry You may remember the FCC's inquiry into Verizon Wireless' $350 'advanced device' early termination fee this past December, followed by inquiries into AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Google earlier this year.  The FCC seems concerned that there is no standardized structure for ETFs in the wireless industry, except to say that everyone has them.  So, they created a q...
submitted by PhoneDog on 24th Feb 2010 (via feeds.phonedog.com)
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Following the previous FCC inquiry, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless along with Google have once again responded to the FCCs ETF inquiry by stating their defense of early termination fees. All four carriers and Google filed their respective official responses on Feb. 23, stating that customers are already well informed about ETFs before committing to
submitted by PhoneNewsCom on 24th Feb 2010 (via phonenews.com)
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The country's four nationwide carriers defended their early termination fee (ETF) policies in separate filings with the FCC yesterday...
submitted by WirelessWeek on 24th Feb 2010 (via wirelessweek.com)
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The nation's Tier 1 wireless carriers and Google strongly defended their early termination fee policies, arguing they are transparent about the terms of the fees and that ETFs protect device subsidies. The operators--AT&T Mobility, Sprint Nextel, T-Mobile USA and Verizon Wireless--and Google responded to questions the FCC posed in late January. The probe, part of the commission&#...
submitted by FierceWireless on 24th Feb 2010 (via fiercewireless.com)
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All those involved had met the Feds request for a response to the FCC's letter about ETF's by February 23rd...
submitted by PhoneArena on 24th Feb 2010 (via feedproxy.google.com)
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Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Google all respond to FCC's ETF inquiry All of the players roped into the FCC's early termination fee inquiry -- T-Mobile, Sprint, AT&T, Verizon, and Google -- have met the Fed's February 23 deadline for responding, and needless to say, you could destroy a small forest with the amount of paperwork that's been sent back to Washington. The majority of the inquiry focused on carriers' ETF pricing structure and w...
submitted by EngadgetMobile on 24th Feb 2010 (via engadget.com)
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1
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After flak from the FCC, Google reduces ETF for Nexus One Early Termination Fee was on the growing list of complaints against Googles SuperPhone. Now, Google has decided to trim it down. If Nexus One customers canceled their contract within the first 120 days of purchase, they would have to pay a massive amount of   $550 ($350 from Google as Equipment Recovery Fee, $200 from T-Mobile
submitted by OnlyGizmos on 11th Feb 2010 (via onlygizmos.com)
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