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December 03, 2009 12:00 AM

AT&T 3G Lawsuit Laughed Out of Court

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In the days leading up to the release of the Google Android-based DROID smartphone, wireless giant Verizon launched a flurry of ads purporting to show that its 3G wireless network was demonstrably more widespread than rival AT&T's. AT&T, of course, is the exclusive US carrier for the Apple iPhone, and—as any iPhone user will tell you—AT&T's 3G network is tiny, ill-equipped to handle the iPhone's voluminous data traffic, and often completely unavailable. But AT&T shot back against Verizon, anyway, challenging Verizon's claims in court. But now, less than a month later, the lawsuit has been dismissed after a judge denied AT&T's request for a temporary restraining order.

The reason? Put simply, Verizon's ads are accurate.

"The truth hurts," Verizon noted in a statement. "AT&T did not file this lawsuit because Verizon's advertisements are untrue; AT&T sued because Verizon's ads are true."

At issue is an ad campaign called "There's a map for that," which is a takeoff of Apple's "There's an app for that" campaign for the iPhone. In the Apple ads, various iPhone apps are promoted to show that the iPhone platform has an app for virtually any need. In Verizon's case, the comparison is of AT&T's and Verizon's respective 3G networks, using a map of the United States to demonstrate each. Verizon's 3G map covers most of the country, while AT&T's is a spotty, barely visible web of tiny strands of coverage.

In other words, Verizon's ads and their depiction of each 3G network are accurate.

AT&T complained that the ads distorted the fact that AT&T's overall wireless network, which includes 3G coverage as well as older-generation, slower, non-3G networks, is more widespread than what is shown in the ads. But the Verizon ads never compared the overall size of both networks. They only compare 3G coverage, which is what smartphone users are looking for since the 3G areas transmit data at acceptable speeds.

"Verizon's side-by-side, apples-to-apples comparison of its own 3G coverage with AT&T's confirms what the marketplace has been saying for months: AT&T failed to invest adequately in the necessary infrastructure to expand its 3G coverage to support its growth in smartphone business, and the usefulness of its service to smartphone users has suffered accordingly," a Verizon court filing reads. "AT&T may not like the message that the ads send, but this Court should reject its efforts to silence the messenger."

The court did just that. And while that may seem like bad news for AT&T, the truth is, no one was ever fooled by the company's legal grandstanding. It's 3G network is widely considered the be the shoddiest of the major wireless networks in the United States, a fact that was coincidentally confirmed this past month in the latest issue of Consumer Reports, which rated AT&T's overall cell phone network as the worst of the major carriers. Even its voice network received the dreaded lowest possible score from the publication. When it comes to "irreparable harm," AT&T is its own worst enemy.

Is there an app for that?

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Comments
  • Joe
    3 years ago
    Dec 04, 2009

    US carriers are backdated anyway. Verizon is on CDMA, which is effectively dead because it doesn't offer an easy upgrade path to LTE without a lot of infrastructure changes, and is only really used in North America, making it worldphone-unfriendly. AT&T is on GSM, but failed to speed up their service to HSPA with a sizeable access area.

    Either Verizon needs to switch to HSPA, or AT&T needs to work out a tower-sharing deal.

    Canada is getting more and more competitive with Europe in technology, and is quickly leaving the US behind. All 3 major providers offer HSPA, and 2 already have HSPA+. Now if only we could get more reasonable data rates.

  • 3 years ago
    Dec 03, 2009

    I'm thinking that by sideswiping Apple that Verizon has a snowball's chance in he@@ of getting the iPhone. Think about it they could have used any other phone, looks like a iPhone in the Land of Misfit toys ad, they could have gone with any slogan but chose "There is a map for that". All well and fine and I appreciate the snark, however if you are hoping to get the iPhone probably not the best move.

    And I don't buy the defense it was to show Apple ATT's inadequate network, this was designed to attack Apple in an oblique. Apple is now likely to go to T-Mobile first and then to add insult to injury Sprint before Verizon ever gets considered.

    I also find it amusing that people are actually rooting for Verizon, against that big old mean Apple. Who turned down who first? from a global perspective Verizon turning down Apple turned out to be the best thing ever.

    Of course with our typical American blinders on we assume that in order for Apple to be successful, the iPhone has to be on Verizon. Wrong. The iPhone is already a success in the US despite the spin to try and make it otherwise.

    I for one would love to see all those iPhones on Verizon so we can see how truly "reliable" their network is, Can you hear me now indeed.

    And in closing this isn't about ATT; to me all of the cell carriers are equally scummy, its a question of which one stinks the least. And I got news for everyone on the Pro-Verizon, Big Red is hardly pristine and stinks just as bad, just in their own unique way.

  • 3 years ago
    Dec 03, 2009

    I'm thinking that by sideswiping Apple that Verizon has a snowball's chance in he@@ of getting the iPhone. Think about it they could have used any other phone, looks like a iPhone in the Land of Misfit toys ad, they could have gone with any slogan but chose "There is a map for that". All well and fine and I appreciate the snark, however if you are hoping to get the iPhone probably not the best move.

    And I don't buy the defense it was to show Apple ATT's inadequate network, this was designed to attack Apple in an oblique. Apple is now likely to go to T-Mobile first and then to add insult to injury Sprint before Verizon ever gets considered.

    I also find it amusing that people are actually rooting for Verizon, against that big old mean Apple. Who turned down who first? from a global perspective Verizon turning down Apple turned out to be the best thing ever.

    Of course with our typical American blinders on we assume that in order for Apple to be successful, the iPhone has to be on Verizon. Wrong. The iPhone is already a success in the US despite the spin to try and make it otherwise.

    I for one would love to see all those iPhones on Verizon so we can see how truly "reliable" their network is, Can you hear me now indeed.

    And in closing this isn't about ATT; to me all of the cell carriers are equally scummy, its a question of which one stinks the least. And I got news for everyone on the Pro-Verizon, Big Red is hardly pristine and stinks just as bad, just in their own unique way.

  • subzerohitman721
    3 years ago
    Dec 03, 2009

    Great job, Verizon. The best AT&T could do was hire Luke Wilson for a commercial spot. The other Wilson. The semi-famous brother of the big star Owen Wilson. In other words, lame.

    Verizon may lock down their stuff, but their 3G network is great. My parents both use Verizon and they get great service. Infact, I just might be leaping to Verizon's service in 2011 should the iPhone makes its debut or some better Android phone. Still tempted by the Samsung Moment and the HTC Hero, so I am just going to see what both carriers do in 2010.

    Verizon definitely wins this battle. Everyone was talking about the Droid commerical's, there's a map for that, and land of misfit toys commercials. Nobody cared about AT&T's response, because we know that they suck.

    It's just too bad that AT&T can't get their game together. Oh well, that's what we've got competition for.

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