This document provides labeling guidelines for telecommunications equipment in Oman. It outlines rules for dealers regarding labeling approved equipment with labels containing the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA) logo, type approval number, dealer number, and other details. Labeling aims to identify legal equipment, protect consumers, and help TRA inspectors distinguish approved from unapproved gear. Dealers have a 6-month grace period to begin labeling new imports and must label unsold stock by June 2011. Exemptions to labeling include equipment already installed in vehicles or networks and some modules.
152/2008 Formation& Regulating the Work Of Settlements Committeestraoman
This document establishes settlement committees to resolve telecommunications regulatory violations in three sentences:
The settlement committees will consist of senior managers from legal, economic, and relevant operational departments and have full authority to gather information to resolve applications by violators within 15 days of receiving notice of violations through negotiated agreements or referring cases to courts. Violators have the right to request a review of agreements within 30 days based on new information or errors and settlements aim to resolve matters confidentially without legally confiscated items being retained after relations are settled under telecom laws.
المشاورات العامة حول تقرير تعريف الأسواق و الهيمنة باللغة الإنجليزيةtraoman
This document provides a summary of a public consultation document issued by the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Oman regarding its analysis and recommendations on market definitions, dominance determinations, and related regulation in the telecommunications sector.
The document outlines the regulatory authority's process for defining relevant markets, assessing those markets for susceptibility to ex ante regulation due to dominance, analyzing dominance in relevant markets, and determining appropriate remedies. It includes the regulatory authority's preliminary analysis and recommendations in an annex. The regulatory authority is seeking public comment on its preliminary report and analysis to inform its final decisions.
This document provides labeling guidelines for telecommunications equipment in Oman. It outlines rules for dealers regarding labeling approved equipment with labels containing the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA) logo, type approval number, dealer number, and other details. Labeling aims to identify legal equipment, protect consumers, and help TRA inspectors distinguish approved from unapproved gear. Dealers have a 6-month grace period to begin labeling new imports and must label unsold stock by June 2011. Exemptions to labeling include equipment already installed in vehicles or networks and some modules.
152/2008 Formation& Regulating the Work Of Settlements Committeestraoman
This document establishes settlement committees to resolve telecommunications regulatory violations in three sentences:
The settlement committees will consist of senior managers from legal, economic, and relevant operational departments and have full authority to gather information to resolve applications by violators within 15 days of receiving notice of violations through negotiated agreements or referring cases to courts. Violators have the right to request a review of agreements within 30 days based on new information or errors and settlements aim to resolve matters confidentially without legally confiscated items being retained after relations are settled under telecom laws.
المشاورات العامة حول تقرير تعريف الأسواق و الهيمنة باللغة الإنجليزيةtraoman
This document provides a summary of a public consultation document issued by the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Oman regarding its analysis and recommendations on market definitions, dominance determinations, and related regulation in the telecommunications sector.
The document outlines the regulatory authority's process for defining relevant markets, assessing those markets for susceptibility to ex ante regulation due to dominance, analyzing dominance in relevant markets, and determining appropriate remedies. It includes the regulatory authority's preliminary analysis and recommendations in an annex. The regulatory authority is seeking public comment on its preliminary report and analysis to inform its final decisions.
522 tra position_onpassiveinfrastructurepc_artraoman
بيان هيئة تنظيم الاتصالات بخصوص المشاورات العامة على مشروع لائحة تأجير البنية التحتية غير النشطة والنفاذ إليها المملوكة لجهات من غير موفري خدمات الاتصالات.
Total fixed telephone lines decreased from October to December while total mobile subscribers increased, reaching over 3.2 million by December. Internet subscribers via broadband and dial-up also grew slightly over this period, with broadband subscribers exceeding 31,000 by December. Prepaid mobile and internet card sales declined some while postpaid mobile and fixed line subscribers remained steady.
This document contains subscriber data for internet, telephone, and mobile services in Malaysia for January, February, and March. It includes numbers for fixed internet subscribers, mobile broadband subscribers, fixed and mobile telephone lines, and mobile subscribers broken down by prepaid and postpaid. The estimated number of mobile internet users was calculated based on the average household size and percentage of the population over 5 years old.
The document shows subscriber statistics for fixed line, mobile, and internet services from October to December 2007. For fixed line, subscribers declined slightly overall but pre-paid increased. Mobile subscribers grew steadily each month to reach over 2.5 million in December, with post-paid also increasing. Internet subscribers rose gradually with DSL connections seeing the most growth.
The document shows subscriber numbers for fixed line, mobile, and internet services from April to June 2007. Fixed line subscribers increased slightly over this period, while mobile subscribers grew more significantly, rising from over 2 million in April to over 2.1 million in June. Internet subscribers peaked in May at just over 66,000 before declining slightly in June.
522 tra position_onpassiveinfrastructurepc_artraoman
بيان هيئة تنظيم الاتصالات بخصوص المشاورات العامة على مشروع لائحة تأجير البنية التحتية غير النشطة والنفاذ إليها المملوكة لجهات من غير موفري خدمات الاتصالات.
Total fixed telephone lines decreased from October to December while total mobile subscribers increased, reaching over 3.2 million by December. Internet subscribers via broadband and dial-up also grew slightly over this period, with broadband subscribers exceeding 31,000 by December. Prepaid mobile and internet card sales declined some while postpaid mobile and fixed line subscribers remained steady.
This document contains subscriber data for internet, telephone, and mobile services in Malaysia for January, February, and March. It includes numbers for fixed internet subscribers, mobile broadband subscribers, fixed and mobile telephone lines, and mobile subscribers broken down by prepaid and postpaid. The estimated number of mobile internet users was calculated based on the average household size and percentage of the population over 5 years old.
The document shows subscriber statistics for fixed line, mobile, and internet services from October to December 2007. For fixed line, subscribers declined slightly overall but pre-paid increased. Mobile subscribers grew steadily each month to reach over 2.5 million in December, with post-paid also increasing. Internet subscribers rose gradually with DSL connections seeing the most growth.
The document shows subscriber numbers for fixed line, mobile, and internet services from April to June 2007. Fixed line subscribers increased slightly over this period, while mobile subscribers grew more significantly, rising from over 2 million in April to over 2.1 million in June. Internet subscribers peaked in May at just over 66,000 before declining slightly in June.