Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri explained to a standing committee in the House of Commons on Monday that the technology company is investing significant amounts of ...
The issue is that they don’t have the imperative to do so because of the lack of competitive options for Canadians to switch over to if they’re not happy, he said. Scott said there are monetary penalties the CRTC can levy against Rogers, but he said those are more designed to ensure compliance with rules rather than as “punitive” measures. He said the project of separating Rogers’ wireline and wireless service could be done in “half the time it normally would” with Shaw’s resources. It’s probably going to do the opposite, as the market concentrates,” he said. “To be frank, this added layer of protection will be expensive. The deal is still awaiting approval from the competition bureau and the minister of innovation, science and economic development.
'Disappointed' Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri tells hearing into outage how the telecom vows to spend $250 million to fix a problem that took out the 'brain' of ...
He also said there should be legislative action and that Canadians need “more than tough talk and ministerial demands to CEOs.” He added that “communication with Canadians needs to be better and it needs to be, I think, prescribed.” He said the CRTC will look at that in the coming weeks. He said the company was preoccupied with two main questions: determining whether it had been hit by a cyberattack and also when it would be able to get its network back up. He said the CRTC could consider making other types of orders. Throughout the day, the issue of whether there is adequate competition in Canada’s telecom industry came up. He referenced previous comments he has made saying that he would not allow the “wholesale transfer” of spectrum licences from Shaw to Rogers. Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri said the company now plans to physically separate its wireless and internet networks to ensure more redundancy in the future. It should be the other way around,” Champagne said. McKenzie said there were no problems during the previous five phases. “It was a complete loss of connection.” “But we know it’s the right thing to do.”
Rogers chief executive officer Tony Staffieri today appeared alongside Ron McKenzie, the company's newly appointed chief technology officer, ...
“The challenge is to anticipate these kinds of technical challenges and have a degree of cooperation.” Additionally, he asked all telcos to establish a communications protocol with the government and customers when a failure occurs. The untimely outage occurred while the company is trying to persuade regulators to approve its acquisition of Shaw Communications for C$26 billion. Rogers uses hardware from a mix of vendors to build its networks, and it didn’t anticipate that the removal of a routing filter would not be handled identically on hardware across manufacturers. “There was no belief at the time, no information at the time that there [the update deployment] was going to be any issue. This became the key topic of discussion at the hearing.
Rogers Communications Inc. CEO Tony Staffieri faced questions from MPs about whether a lack of competition in the telecom sector might have contributed to ...
For years, the most popular internet browsers have included options to search for and visit websites in 'private' modes. 3 hr ago 3 hr ago 3 hr ago 3 hr ago 3 hr ago Not too conservative.' Trudeau announced Tuesday morning that the confidence-and-supply agreement has been brokered, and is effective immediately. The Conservative Party leadership race is well underway as contenders hold rallies, duke it out in debates, and slowly release more details of their policy platforms. With the nation's capital bracing for more protests over the Canada Day weekend, CTVNews.ca takes a look at where the main commissions and studies stand. Rather, Champagne was speaking on behalf of Canadians. Scott said he couldn't think of any provisions that might have prevented the outage.
engineers began the sixth step of a seven-step process to upgrade the core infrastructure that supports the company's wireless and broadband networks at 2:27 ...
The Competition Bureau is attempting to block the merger, arguing that it will result in poorer service and higher prices for cellphone customers. They had to disconnect the equipment that was causing the problem, redirect traffic and confirm the stability of the network before slowly bringing services back online. Have the Top Business Headlines newsletter conveniently delivered to your inbox in the morning or evening. The telecom said that, in the future, it will ensure its crisis response teams have alternative methods of accessing social-media accounts that are protected by two-factor authentication linked to Rogers devices. The committee may also ask about the network and operational changes the telecom plans to make in order to prevent future outages. Those differences are at the core of the outage Rogers experienced, the company said in the documents. The committee, which is made up of members of Parliament from all four major federal parties, is expected to grill him, Mr. Staffieri and Rogers chief regulatory officer Ted Woodhead on the five-day billing credit the company is offering to compensate its customers for the outage. In any case, the rival networks would not have been able to handle the sudden surge of traffic from Rogers’s 10.2 million wireless subscribers, the telecom said. Mr. Fernandes was in Portugal when the outage began, and he immediately started making arrangements to return to Canada, according to two sources familiar with his whereabouts. Rogers customers were unable to call 911, and the Interac debit system was also affected, causing issues for both consumers and businesses. This caused the core network to shut down. Rogers was unable to deliver four emergency alerts to its wireless customers in Saskatchewan, including three tornado warnings and one dangerous person report.
Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri spoke to Members of Parliament at the Industry and Technology Committee about its network outage.
He said Rogers continues to invest more than ever into its wireless and wireless networks. MP Brian Masse questioned the transparency of telecom executives meeting privately with Canada’s industry minister, to come up with solutions. University of Ottawa Law Professor, Michael Geist, said, “Disappointing INDU appearance from Minister @FP_Champagne on Rogers outage. Champagne’s appearance was disappointing, according to analysts. Staffieri continued to stress the Shaw deal would allow Rogers to make investments that “neither one can do on our own”, such as fast-tracking network resiliency and redundancy. When it came to describing the July 8 outage, the Rogers CEO said it “lasted little less than a day”, while adding it was longer for some customers.
Rogers says three tornado warnings, and an emergency alert about a dangerous person did not reach customers in Saskatchewan during its massive service ...
Rogers says four emergency alerts, all issued in Saskatchewan, did not reach customers during the blanket outage that knocked out mobile, landline and Internet service to millions of customers across Canada on July 8th. 3 tornado warnings and 1 dangerous person alert did not get through to people Rogers says three tornado warnings, and an emergency alert about a dangerous person did not reach customers in Saskatchewan during its massive service outage earlier this month.
The July 8 outage affected Rogers mobile and internet users, knocked out ATMs, shut down the Interac payments system and prevented calls to 911 services in ...
Champagne said on the day of the outage he reached out to Staffieri to inquire about the situation but the conversation was not between a CEO and a cabinet minister, rather Champagne was speaking on behalf of Canadians. The CEO further outlined some of the technical causes of the outage and what the company is doing to prevent additional outages, including a plan to separate the wireless and internet networks. Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith asked Staffieri whether the concentration of customers in one single company is a challenge to network resiliency during a House of Commons Industry committee meeting on Monday.
The CEO and President of Rogers Communications, Tony Staffieri, has laid out a plan to "win back" the trust of Canadians after the July 8 national outage.
The aim is to create an "always on" network to protect against widespread outages. In his opening remarks to the committee, Staffieri said, "we failed to deliver on our promise to be Canada’s most reliable network" before apologizing to Canadians. The CEO and president of Rogers Communications, Tony Staffieri, has laid out a plan to "win back" the trust of Canadians after the July 8 national outage.