Mexican telecommunications regulator (IFT) published the guidelines for the deployment, access, and shared use of telecommunications and broadcasting infrastructure.
These operating rules seek to promote the development of infrastructure such as public telecommunications networks, broadcasting stations, and complementary equipment, and encourage companies to share their infrastructure.
The document that was published in the official gazette of the nation (DOF) states that it is intended to “establish conditions that allow the access of different concessionaires to the infrastructure elements of other concessionaires installed in buildings, shopping centers, subdivisions, hotels or any other real estate, in order to promote the efficient development of telecommunications and broadcasting and the provision of such services under conditions of competition and free competition.”
Full Content: BN Americas
Want more news? Subscribe to CPI’s free daily newsletter for more headlines and updates on antitrust developments around the world.
Featured News
Beijing Court Upholds Copyright in Landmark Decision on AI-Generated Images
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Price-Fixing Scandal Rocks European Construction Giants in US Court
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Google Ad Chief Jerry Dischler Steps Down Amid Antitrust Scrutiny
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Meta’s Ad-Free Subscription Service Faces EU Legal Challenge
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
UK Court Empowers Antitrust Watchdog to Probe Apple’s Dominance
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Horizontal Competition: Mergers, Innovation & New Guidelines
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Innovation in Merger Control
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Making Sense of EU Merger Control: The Need for Limiting Principles
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Sustainability Agreements in the EU: New Paths to Competition Law Compliance
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI
Merger Control and Sustainability: A New Dawn or Nothing New Under the Sun?
Nov 30, 2023 by
CPI