Statement of the Problem We would like to study and understand the use and ownership of landline phones and the use and ownership of Canadian mobile phones. Currently there is insufficient information to gather topics on how Canadians respond to eradication of landlines. Failure to solve this problem raises the risk of harming the company's financial situation. We will do our utmost to research and provide valuable information to our customers. The latest statistics, sites, and articles from trusted sources are used to achieve the goal of obtaining the necessary information.
The committee currently has certain jurisdiction over the provision of fixed telephone service in Canada. It is primarily restricted to major existing telecommunications carriers such as Bell Canada and Telus, and other traditional fixed telephone services (but not Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)). It began to phased out the regulation of these services, and the committee believes there is sufficient competition for such services. Sometimes the CRTC is blamed on Canada's current mobile phone industry and has only three domestic mobile operators - Bell Mobile, Telus Mobility, and Rogers Wireless - and a few MVNOs operating on these networks It is. In fact, in addition to the problem of "excessive taste", the committee has little to do with cell phone service regulation (for example, an operator may give preferential prices or services to specific users more than other users without just reason) ).
Mobile networks are rapidly spreading in sub-Saharan Africa, but the penetration rate of fixed lines in seven surveyed areas is close to zero. The median of these countries is only 2%, which states that there is a valid fixed telephone at home, the median is 97% and there is no phone. There is little difference in the ownership of landlines in the country. Fixed-line telephones are rare in Africa. In contrast, 60% of Americans have a fixed phone at home. (However, the proportion of wireless home in the US has increased rapidly in the past ten years as the number of fixed phones has decreased.