Mobile Message Services and Communications Policy (original) (raw)

24 Regulating the Mobile Telecommunications Industry: The Case of Australia Regulating the Mobile Telecommunications Industry: The Case of Australia

2014

The adoption of mobile services has achieved a spectacular growth in many countries around the world. However, regulators in these countries are finding that existing regulatory frameworks are not suitable for dealing with these services. This paper employs qualitative evidence to investigate how regulation can affect mobile services in the Australian mobile telecommunications industry and draws from it to propose an innovative regulatory framework. The framework is comprised of five major components: consumer and intellectual property protection, market and resources access, and environmental protection. These components encompass the interests of the stakeholders operating in mobile industry and given its dynamic and complex nature, co-regulation is an effective approach that can be used to minimize costs and enhance compliance. 1.

Regulating Mobile Services

International Journal of E-Business Research, 2011

While the development of mobile services is experiencing a spectacular growth in many countries worldwide, existing regulatory regimes are ill equipped for dealing with them. In this paper, the authors use qualitative evidence to investigate the manner in which institutional regulatory factors, including legal, societal, and economic factors, can impact mobile services in the Australian mobile telecommunications industry. These factors are important as they shape both the nature of emerging mobile services and their diffusion trajectory. The investigation culminates with an innovative institutional regulatory framework that includes factors such as consumer and intellectual property protection, market and resources access. The authors argue that co-regulation, a mixture of direct monitoring and intervention of regulators through legislation and complete industry self-regulation, is an effective approach for regulating the mobile telecommunications industry. Given the complex and dyn...

Counting the Casualties of Telecom: The Adoption of Part 6 of the Telecommunications ACT 1997 (CTH)

Federal Law Review, 2009

I wish to thank Lesley Hitchens, Angus Corbett and the two anonymous referees for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article; Anne Hurley and the staff of the Communications Alliance for providing me with access to internal Alliance documentation and the librarians at the Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts and the Australian Communications and Media Authority (Sydney) for permitting me to use their collections.

Regulating the Mobile Telecommunications Industry: The Case of Australia

Communications

The adoption of mobile services has achieved a spectacular growth in many countries around the world. However, regulators in these countries are finding that existing regulatory frameworks are not suitable for dealing with these services. This paper employs qualitative evidence to investigate how regulation can affect mobile services in the Australian mobile telecommunications industry and draws from it to propose an innovative regulatory framework. The framework is comprised of five major components: consumer and intellectual property protection, market and resources access, and environmental protection. These components encompass the interests of the stakeholders operating in mobile industry and given its dynamic and complex nature, co-regulation is an effective approach that can be used to minimize costs and enhance compliance.

Framing Australian Telecommunication Policy: A Case Study of the 1996'Review of Standard Telephone Service'

Media International Australia, Incorporating …, 2010

This article discusses the influence of sociolinguistic structures such as metaphors and narratives as organising cognitive frames on telecommunication policy, its representation in the media and other public documents. In particular, it identifies the tension between competing narratives of national development and competition in the public debates and official records of the 1996 Review of Standard Telephone Service. The article argues that metaphors and narratives perform similar but distinctive persuasive and formative functions that extend beyond mere description. Collectively, they influence not only what we think of telecommunication technology and associated policy but how we imagine alternative policy scenarios and future technological innovation.

New Communication Markets: Regulating in the “Commodity” Supply Environment

Javnost - The Public, 1995

Private stakeholders and public policy makers in Europe, North America and Asia have come to regard the communication infrastructure - or the ‘information highway’ - as a major piece of a complex economic and political puzzle. Once the puzzle is complete, they suggest, all the social and economic benefits of the information society will become available to citizens and businesses. Electronic modes of communication have been experiencing very rapid innovation and developments in telecommunication, computing and software technologies are changing the way we interact in the world. This paper focuses on the reconfiguration of policies and regulations which is proceeding alongside innovations in communication technologies. The paper addresses: 1) Are the predominant characteristics of policy and regulation in the 1990s adequate to ensure that the ‘information highways’ will be accessible ? 2) In the face of uncertainty and the limited resources of policy makers, where should available resources be focused? 3) Will the twenty-first century see the withering away of regulation, or a renewal of public policy and regulation in the ‘public interest?

Policy options for the new telecommunications

prepared for the STOA Programme of the European Parliament, Maastricht, MERIT, 1995

This report was commissioned to examine the policy choices and regulatory mechanisms for telecommunication infrastructure and services that will be needed to achieve the European Union's (EU) goal of acquiring a leading position in the Information Society. The need for political action at the European level has been recognised if the social, cultural, political and economic benefits of the investment in information and communication superhighways is to be realised.

Communications Policy Theories and Issues, 2010

Culture, politics, economics and technology all impact upon policy decisions. To investigate the factors that influence communications policy, however, one has to go beyond conventional views of media and communication studies and combine these with policy studies. Communications Policy: Theories and Issues utilizes new research to highlight key debates and developments, and addresses a broad spectrum of contemporary concerns regarding the structure and the organization of communications systems in the past, present and future. Combining theoretical analysis with empirical research findings, this comprehensive text explores the contemporary theories and issues in communications policy that affect all democratic societies as they seek to address the challenges of emerging information and communications technologies. Featuring contributions from distinguished authors across a range of media disciplines, Communications Policy introduces challenging ideas about how communications should be structured in the future and is essential reading for all policy makers, researchers and students of communications policy.