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BT Group

 
Hoover's Profile: BT Group plc
 
(NYSE:BT) (London:BTA)
Company Financials
Income Statement
Balance Sheet
Cash Flow Statement

Contact Information
BT Group plc
BT Centre, 81 Newgate St.
London EC1A 7AJ, United Kingdom
Tel. +44-20-7356-5000
Fax +44-20-7356-5520

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.btplc.com
Employees: 107,021
Employee growth: (4.3%)

Once upon a time, BT Group rivals could have fit into one of the company's signature red phone booths. Though competition has taken a toll, BT Group still wears the crown as the UK's leading telecommunications carrier. The BT Group offers local and long-distance phone service through nearly 22 million access lines (comprising about 15 million residential and more than 6 million business connections). It also provides Internet access and other data services, with more than 12 million broadband lines in operation. Through its Openreach unit, BT provides local network services. BT Group operates primarily in the UK, but its empire spans 170 countries including key markets in Western Europe and North America.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending March, 2009:
Sales: $31,909.6M
One year growth: (23.8%)
Net income: ($120.8)M

Officers:
Chairman: Sir Michael D. V. (Mike) Rake
Chief Executive and Board Member: Ian P. Livingston
Group Finance Director and Board Member: Anthony E. A. (Tony) Chanmugam

Competitors:
AT&T
Cable & Wireless
Verizon

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Company News: BT Group
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Company History: BT Group plc
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Incorporated: 1984 as British Telecommunications plc
NAIC: 513310 Wired Telecommunications Carriers; 513322 Cellular and Other Wireless Telecommunications; 513330 Telecommunications Resellers; 514191 On-Line Information Services; 551112 Offices of Other Holding Companies

BT Group plc was formed in 2001 to serve as the holding company for British Telecommunications plc. British Telecommunications came into being in early 1984 through the transformation of a former state utility, at a turning point in the development of U.K. and European telecommunications. Since being privatized, BT has maintained its position as the dominant provider of local and long-distance telephone service in the United Kingdom, but has faced increasing competition and seen its market share fall as the English government continues to deregulate the market. BT has subsequently looked abroad for its future growth and is in the process of developing a global telecommunications network for multinational companies.

British Telecommunications' administrative and technological roots are mingled with those of the U.K. Post Office and reach back into the second half of the 19th century, when inventors at home and abroad, such as Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, and Guglielmo Marconi, were applying electromagnetic principles to the development of practicable forms of telecommunications. Out of this the modern telegraph, followed by the telephone, was born. In 1850 the first submarine telegraph cable was laid across the English Channel. In 1878 Bell demonstrated his newly patented telephone to Queen Victoria, and in 1879 England's first telephone exchange opened in London. It was in the United Kingdom, too, that the first international telephone call was made, in 1891, between England and France. The telegraph and telephone were at first exploited by private enterprises, but they were gradually taken over by a U.K. government department, the General Post Office. The reversal of that nationalization process was completed in the early 1990s.

In 1869 the Postmaster General was granted the exclusive right to transmit telegrams within the United Kingdom. At first the telephone was slow to catch on and was not regarded by the Post Office as a serious threat to its telegraphic network. The first independent U.K. telephone service provider, Telephone Company Ltd., was set up in 1879 and in 1880 merged with its competitor, Edison Telephone Company, to form United Telephone Company. Seeing that the telephone was beginning to take customers away from its telegraph service, the Post Office embarked on a series of protective measures, and in 1880 the government brought an action against the recently formed United Telephone Company, claiming that it was operating in contravention of the Telegraph Act of 1869. The High Court subsequently decided that the telephone was a form of telegraph. The merger was revoked, and telephone companies were required to be licensed by the telegraph monopoly holder, the Post Office.

The next stage in the process of squeezing out competition and establishing a state telephone monopoly was the building up of the Post Office's own system. In 1896 the Post Office completed its improved telephone network by taking over the trunk lines of National Telephone Company, the largest of its licensees, and started to set up its own local telephone exchanges. It was then decided that more national licenses would be granted. National Telephone Company continued to operate a local service until its license expired in 1911, but in 1912 the Post Office was granted a monopoly on the supply of telephone services throughout the United Kingdom. It took over all of National Telephone Company's exchanges and opened an automatic exchange in Epsom, south of London.

Since 1899 several of the larger towns and cities, including Glasgow, Brighton, Swansea, Portsmouth, and Kingston upon Hull (Hull), had each been operating an independent local telephone service, but their number gradually dwindled as they were bought out by National Telephone Company or the Post Office. In 1913 only Hull was left. By cooperating with successive competitors--National Telephone Company and the Post Office--it survived, first as the Hull Corporation Telephone Department, a municipal enterprise run by the Hull City Council, and since 1987, as a limited company, Kingston Communications (Hull) PLC, wholly owned by Hull City Council and a licensed public telecommunications operator (PTO), with interconnection agreements with BT and BT's competitor, Mercury Telecommunications Limited.

A landmark in the prehistory of BT was the Post Office Act of 1969, which changed the status of the Post Office. This former government department became a state public corporation under the Secretary of State for Industry. The telecommunications services remained in the Post Office but were divided from the postal services into Post Office Telecommunications.

Three further events marked the telephone industry's move toward an environment of free competition. First came the passage of the 1981 British Telecommunications Act, which took Post Office Telecommunications out of the Post Office, turning it into an autonomous, though still state-owned, body known as British Telecommunications Corporation or, more familiarly, British Telecom. Second was the 1984 Telecommunications Act, by which BT was privatized, the telecommunications market was further liberalized, and a regulatory body was set up. Third, the Duopoly Review in 1990 resulted in the government's 1991 decision to further increase telecommunications competition. The government also decided to sell off its remaining shares in BT, although this decision was not influenced by the Duopoly Review.

In July 1981 the British Telecommunications Act, which separated telecommunications from the Post Office and set up a new state public corporation to supply them, also gave the government powers to license competitors in the operation of the domestic telephone network. As well as modifying the state company's statutory monopoly of the telephone network, this act took away its monopoly in the provision of telecommunication equipment, leaving it only with the right to supply and install a subscriber's first telephone. The act not only opened the market to competition in value-added services, such as data processing and storage, but also allowed other providers to use BT's lines.

In October 1981 Mercury Telecommunications Limited was chosen to receive a 25-year renewable license to operate a national and international digital network--a system that encodes information as a series of on-off signals--to compete with BT's trunk traffic. Mercury had been set up early in 1981 by British Petroleum, Barclay's Merchant Bank, and Cable and Wireless plc (C&W) to enter the business of long-distance communications, offering a customized service to companies. The license allowed it to interconnect with the BT network and to enter the European and U.S. sectors. In 1983 the government undertook for seven years not to license any company but BT and Mercury to carry telecommunications services over fixed links. Under this duopoly policy, Mercury, which began operating in 1986, was to be BT's single serious network competitor until the early 1990s. Less than a year after the 1981 act, the government announced its intention to privatize the British Telecommunications Corporation.

At the end of 1982 the first telecommunications bill had reached the committee stage, when the general election of May 1983 was called. The bill immediately died, but was presented again in the new Parliament and finally became law in its second form, the Telecommunications Act of April 12, 1984. It had undergone 320 hours of debate and discussion, during which BT itself had briefed members of Parliament on its views and interests. By the act, BT lost its exclusive right to run telecommunications systems, and all PTOs had to be licensed. The new company was to be sold as an integrated organization. Fragmentation, similar to the breakup of American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) in the United States, would have left the resultant entities too small to defend the home market from foreign competition, to stand up to multinationals in the world markets, and to command the technology and the financial strength for adequate research and development. In November 1984, 3.01 billion ordinary shares of 25 pence were offered for sale at 130 pence per share, the first figure being the nominal or face value of the share, and the second its sale price, or market value, at the time of sale. The government retained a 48.6 percent stake in the new company, valued at the time of sale at £7.8 billion. All the offered shares were bought.

Under the terms of the 1984 act, BT's main activity was to supply telecommunications services in the U.K. market of 55 million people in accordance with a 25-year operating license from the Department of Trade and Industry. Starting in 1984, BT's performance and development were conditioned by an official regulatory body, the semi-independent Office of Telecommunications (Oftel), set up in August 1984 under the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and headed by the Director General of Telecommunications (Bryan Carsberg being the first to hold the post). A major role of this body was, by simulating the effects of real competition, to prevent BT from abusing its inherited dominance of the U.K. telecommunications market during the process of deregulation. Nevertheless, the fairness of the competition was often disputed by interested parties. In its severely regulated environment, BT had lost the security of being a state monopoly, without gaining the freedom of action of a wholly autonomous business. Oftel monitored BT's pricing, accounting, investment policies, and quality of services; issued licenses to additional competitors; and continued to facilitate the interconnection of rival services to the BT network. Competitors, for their part, tended to feel that BT was favored by the regulator. The new British Telecommunications plc created by the 1984 act then shared its monopoly in telecommunications systems with Mercury as well as Kingston Communications, plus some general licensees.

When BT became a separate state corporation in 1981, before its rebirth in 1984 as a privatized company, it inherited from its Post Office days an evolved network. This network had to be brought up to date at the same time BT was taking on competition from operators starting from scratch. These competitors were using the latest technology, without public service obligations, and were able, for example, to go straight to digital systems and cheaper and more efficient fiber-optic cable, while BT still had copper wire circuits to be amortized. BT kept technology in the forefront, however, and spent 2 percent of its turnover on research and development to keep it there. The domestic telephone services sector was by far BT's largest operating division in terms of assets, revenue, and number of employees. In 1990 it accounted for nearly 75 percent of turnover. Its core business was the public switched telephone network (PSTN). The 20 millionth U.K. telephone was installed in 1975, the system became fully automatic in 1976, and in the early 1990s BT, with more than 25 million lines, operated the world's sixth largest telephone network, with nearly 100,000 public pay phones. In 1990 BTUK--the product of the 1987 merger of BT's local communications services and national networks divisions--was operating more than 7,000 local exchange units, of which nearly half were already digital.

Meanwhile, Mercury's market share in the early 1990s was variously estimated between 3.7 and 5 percent, but was increasing markedly. An efficiency and investment effort was BT management's response to this new competition and to growing demands and service expectations from its customers. Waiting times for connections and repairs were reduced, and new digital equipment was introduced into the network, including exchanges that use microchip technology to integrate the switching and transmission elements of the network, resulting in a higher quality of service and improved voice transmission. All trunk exchange units were digital since June 1990. BT aimed to have a fully digital network by the year 2000. In addition, new products, such as microwave radio transmission in the city of London, were offered.

Another area within which BT faced stiff competition was the capricious mobile communications market. BT's Mobile Telephone System 4, a noncellular service introduced in 1981, with 7,000 subscribers at the beginning of 1990, had capacity problems at peak periods and was being replaced by a cellular network, Cellnet, shared by BT's 60 percent and Securicor Communications. Its rival, using another network, was Racal-Vodafone. In February 1989 BT bought, for £907 million, a 20 percent interest in McCaw Cellular Communications, Inc., a U.S. mobile cellular telephone and broadcasting systems provider and operator.

In the late 1980s, BT offered a wide range of VANS--value-added network services, including such electronic mailbox services as Telecom Gold and Message Handling Service--in the United Kingdom. In November 1989, to further its strategies in the home and international VANS market, BT bought, for £231 million, the U.S. company Tymnet, one of the largest VANS companies in the world, and consolidated some of its own international services under a new company, BT Tymnet Inc. BT started setting up an ISDN--integrated services digital network--that could eventually replace the other networks by offering all data, voice, text, and image network services at high speed, with circuit-switched digital connections from a single access point. Although ISDN was of primary importance in BT's plans for the future, like other telecommunications firms, BT had to move slowly in this area, needing to await definition of international standards and to raise the consciousness of potential customers. A pilot service was launched by BT in June 1985 that by the end of 1989 was available to 75 percent of business users.

In the early 1990s BT faced major changes. The duopoly policy was reviewed in 1990, and a report issued in January 1991 was followed two months later by a government recommendation that both BT and Mercury should face greater competition in local, trunk, and international services. BT was still barred from offering entertainment services on cable television, but after some hard bargaining, Bryan Carsberg, director of telecommunications; Peter Lilley, secretary of state for trade and industry; and Iain Vallance, BT's chairman, agreed on amendments to BT's 25-year license. BT was then allowed to proceed with further rebalancing between telephone rentals and call charges and with customized tariffs. It was announced that the sale of a slice of the government's residual share in BT would take place in November 1991.

In the face of increasing competition, BT engaged in a rationalizing and restructuring operation. In the year ending March 31, 1990, a slimming-down and cost-control operation began, covered by an exceptional charge of £390 million. In the following year, 18,800 jobs were shed and overtime work was cut, while another 10,000 terminations were planned for 1991-92. In April 1991 the reshaped company announced that the three former operating divisions, BTUK, comprising Local Communications Services and National Networks; BTI, British Telecom International; and CSD, Communication Services Division, would be replaced. In their stead were placed two major divisions that dealt directly with customers: Personal Communications and Business Communications, both supported by a Products and Services Division. BT's international and U.K. networks were brought together into a new Worldwide Networks Division, and some business activities best managed separately, such as mobile communications and operator services, comprised a new Special Business Division.

Early in 1991 BT's intensified drive to consolidate its image as a smart, market-oriented world organization with a human face was signaled by its integration of the current BT acronym into a new blue and red logo, representing a dancing piper apparently delivering a sound message. A new designer image was commissioned for the group and was widely publicized; public telephones were replaced by newly designed models; and the bright yellow of BT vehicles began to be replaced, in a notoriously expensive replace-or-respray operation, by a stylish gray.

As the 1990s continued, BT's challenges became more intense. While at least 98 percent of its revenues and profits continued to come from its home market, the additional competition allowed under the 1991 review of the duopoly policy combined with continued moves by Oftel to reduce BT's monopoly began to seriously erode BT's position in the U.K. market. From 1991 to early 1996, some 150 firms started operations in the United Kingdom that were competitive with BT, several of the most important of which were cable firms owned by U.S. Baby Bell companies. As a result, BT's share of the U.K. telephone market tumbled, with its residential customer market share falling from 99 percent in 1991 to 93 percent in 1995 and its business customer market share falling from 94 percent in 1991 to 83 percent in 1995. Some analysts were predicting that by 2000 BT's share of the U.K. residential market would fall to as low as 65 percent.

In response, BT continued the cost-cutting program it began in 1990. More than 100,000 jobs had been eliminated by 1995, reducing the BT workforce from 239,000 in 1990 to 137,500 in 1995. The program was to be continued into the late 1990s, moving toward a goal of a 100,000-employee workforce with productivity levels in line with the Baby Bells. BT's upstart competitors also forced the company to upgrade its service and lower its prices since they were luring away BT customers by offering low prices and better service. In fiscal 1995 BT reduced prices on both domestic and international long-distance calls, adding up to more than £800 million in savings for its customers for the year. That same year, BT increased capital expenditures 23 percent in order to improve customer service and upgrade its network.

Meanwhile, the often cantankerous relationship between BT and Oftel grew more confrontational in the mid-1990s. Perhaps not coincidentally, these BT-Oftel battles took place after 1993, the year in which the British government sold nearly all of its remaining stake in BT for $7.43 billion. In 1995, BT expressed support for the development of number portability--the ability of customers to keep the same phone number even if they changed telephone suppliers--but objected to a plan that the company felt would place a disproportionate share of the costs on BT. In response to BT's rejection of the plan, Oftel referred the matter to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission, the first time BT had been subjected to such a referral. Later in 1995, the regulator announced that it wanted to reduce BT's return on capital from the 15.6 percent of 1995 to as low as 8 percent. If forced to accept this, the company's ability to invest for future growth might be seriously damaged. Such a possibility sent BT stock plunging throughout 1995.

The overall impact of the competition and regulation showed clearly in BT's revenues and profits. The company revenue growth had stagnated, with the £13.15 billion figure of 1991 only increasing to £13.89 billion in 1995. Profits fell in three of the four years from 1992 to 1995, and fell overall from £2.04 billion to £1.74 billion.

Embattled at home and certainly facing more and more pressure there for the foreseeable future, BT almost had no choice but to look overseas for its long-term survival. Early attempts at international expansion had failed, including the 1986 purchase of Mitel Corp., a Canadian phone equipment manufacturer that BT sold in 1992 at a loss of £120 million ($200 million); and the company's stake in McCaw Cellular, which it sold in 1992 to AT&T (which had just purchased a larger stake in McCaw) at a profit exceeding £200 million ($333 million). According to Vallance, these investments no longer fit into the company's international plans, which now centered around building a global telecommunications network offering comprehensive services to multinational corporations. Vallance's first attempt at this failed, however. In 1991 the company set up a subsidiary, Syncordia Corp., in Atlanta, Georgia, to start such a network on its own, but had little success attracting either customers or the telecommunications partners it needed around the world to make the venture succeed.

Syncordia was shut down three years later, after BT realized it had erred attempting to go it alone. In mid-1993, BT's second attempt to go global began with the announcement of an alliance with the major U.S. telecommunications firm MCI Communications Corp. The alliance, which received final approval in mid-1994, involved BT purchasing a 20 percent stake in MCI for £2.86 billion ($4.2 billion). The two firms set up a joint venture called Concert Communications Company, based in England, which was 75 percent owned by BT and 25 percent by MCI. Syncordia was folded into the new venture, which would inherit Syncordia's charge of providing telecommunications services for multinational corporations.

To make Concert work, however, BT needed additional partners in other areas of the world. Over the next few years, BT set up alliances with several European companies including Norwegian Telecom, Tele Denmark, Telecom Finland, and Banco Santander of Spain. A foothold in the important German market also was secured in a 1995 alliance with the German conglomerate Viag AG, in which the partners planned to start a joint venture that would offer Concert services. BT now had a solid network of partners in Europe and North America, but remained weak in the critical Asian market, having allied only with International Telecom Japan Inc., a small international carrier. Meanwhile, AT&T was working furiously to set up its own system of global alliances through its WorldPartners program. By 1995, while AT&T had had more success than BT in Asia, having established partnerships with KDD of Japan and with Singapore Telecom, the U.S. giant was having difficulties making inroads in Europe.

In the midst of the difficult 1995 BT endured, two top executives left the company, one retiring and one resigning. Vallance decided to step aside as CEO, while remaining chairman, and turned to an outsider, Peter L. Bonfield. Taking over as CEO in early 1996, Bonfield had been the chief executive of ICL PLC, a British computer company owned by Fujitsu Ltd. Observers noted that Bonfield's experience with Japanese business practices might help BT in its effort to enhance its alliances in Asia.

Heading into the new century, British Telecommunications was certainly being squeezed in its still all-important home market. Its international activities were still very much in a start-up phase and needed time to turn the company's huge investments in them into profits. The question was whether its cash would be drained faster at home than its payoff abroad. Perhaps, therefore, needing to move faster than AT&T to secure a global network, it appeared in early 1996 that BT might try effecting a major merger to gain its missing Asian link. The most significant possibility was that BT would merge with Cable and Wireless plc (C&W), which owned 80 percent of the main home market competitor of BT, Mercury. Merger talks between C&W and BT began in late 1995. If it happened, the merged firm would have to sell off Mercury, but more important, BT would have gained C&W's 57.5 percent stake in Hong Kong Telecommunications Ltd. and its telecommunications businesses in Japan and Australia. BT might finally break free of its dependence on the U.K. market.

As the 21st century loomed, British Telecom found itself under increasing pressure to look abroad for new opportunities to expand its business. A number of factors contributed to the urgency of BT's position. By mid-1996 the Office of Telecommunications, wary of the near-stranglehold BT held on the domestic market--the company was still providing phone service to nearly 90 percent of all English households--was already beginning to implement measures that would help reduce consumer telephone rates by up to 40 percent within a five-year span. At the same time, the regulatory agency introduced procedures that greatly simplified the process by which customers were able to transfer phone numbers to new accounts. The new rules delivered a significant blow to BT; by the end of 1997, the company was losing close to 60,000 domestic customers a month. Finally, the imminent unification of Europe, along with the broader trend toward globalization, threatened to make the British phone industry too competitive for BT to retain its position as the United Kingdom's telephone powerhouse.

In the information age, it was becoming clear that corporations needed to be able to provide a full range of phone, Internet, and wireless services in order to remain competitive. Believing that the Internet would soon account for a higher volume of communications traffic than the telephone, BT began searching for a high-powered merger, with the aim of establishing itself as an international corporation with the capacity to meet the technological needs of the new century. Although C&W seemed in many ways a perfect fit, the companies were ultimately unable to work out a deal, and BT was forced to look into other options. One possibility was to join forces with MCI, a company in which BT already owned a 20 percent stake. The two corporations entered negotiations in the summer of 1996, and by the following summer were on the verge of inking a $22 billion agreement. The deal stalled in August 1997, however, with MCI's announcement that it expected to suffer losses of up to $800 million for the previous year. The news struck trepidation in the hearts of BT's majority shareholders, and the two companies entered renegotiations. Unfortunately for BT, the merger was suddenly blindsided in October 1997, when Worldcom Inc., a fast-rising U.S. telecommunications firm, made an offer for MCI that exceeded BT's by nearly $13 billion. BT once again found itself without a partner.

The company immediately began searching for other possibilities. In July 1998 it entered into a promising new partnership with AT&T, wherein the companies merged their international operations into a single entity. The combined businesses had the potential to generate more than $10 billion in revenue annually, and to place the two industry giants in a position to gain a foothold in newly deregulated telecommunications markets worldwide. One particularly attractive target was Japan; in March 1999, the companies acquired a combined 30 percent stake in Japan Telecom, the country's fourth largest telephone company. Encouraged by the initial promise of the joint venture, the companies pooled their global wireless phone operations in September 1999. The new company, called Advance, boasted more than 41 million customers across the world, and promised to generate more than $12 billion a year.

In the end, however, BT's international expansion strategy proved to be hastily conceived. For one, Advance took longer than expected to generate a substantial product line. Worse, BT's efforts to achieve a wide global reach over a short period ultimately spread its resources far too thin, and by May 2001 the company had accumulated $43 billion in debt and was reporting its first fiscal year loss since becoming privatized. Under siege by investors, Chairman Sir Iain Vaillance resigned, and BT was forced to dump several of its minority holdings in overseas telecommunications companies, including its shares in Japan Telecom. By October the joint venture with AT&T was defunct, and the company had undertaken a massive restructuring. The result was the formation of the BT Group, which became the holding company for British Telecom. Although the divestitures and the streamlining of its business operations had helped BT get a handle on its debt, it was clear that the company needed to seriously rethink its ambitions for the future.

Principal Subsidiaries

BT Australasia Pty Limited (Australia); BT Cableships Limited; BT Cellnet Limited; BT Communications Management Limited; BT (Hong Kong) Limited; BT Ignite GmbH (Germany); BT Ignite GmbH & Co. (Germany); BT Ignite Nederland BV (Netherlands); BT North America Inc. (U.S.); BT Property Limited; BT Subsea Cables Limited; BT Telecomunicaciones SA (Spain); BT (Worldwide) Limited; BT Wireless Limited; Clear Communications Limited; Esat Digifone Limited (Ireland; 50.5%); Esat Group Limited (Ireland); Farland BV: Manx Telecom Limited; Syntegra Groep BV (Netherlands); Syntegra SA (France); Syntegra (USA) Inc.; Telfort Mobiel BV (Netherlands); Viag Interkom GmbH & Co.; Tell Limited; Yellow Book USA Inc.; Yellow Pages Sales Limited.

Principal Operating Units

BT Ignite; BTopenworld; BT Retail; BT Wholesale; BTexact Technologies.

Further Reading

Competition and Choice: Telecommunications Policy for the 1990s, London: HMSO, March 1991.

Cowell, Alan, "British Telecom Chairman Quits amid Stockholder Anger," New York Times, April 27, 2001, p. C2.

Dwyer, Paula, "The Sun Never Sets on British Telecom," Business Week, December 7, 1992, pp. 54-55.

Eglin, Roger, "BT Prepares to Beat the World," Management Today, July 1993, pp. 9-10.

"Europe" and "The United Kingdom," DATAPRO Reports on International Telecommunications 1990-91, Delran, N.J.: McGraw-Hill, 1990-91.

Flynn, Julia, and Mark Lewyn, "Why Telecom's Odd Couple Is Trying So Hard," Business Week, September 20, 1993, pp. 96, 98.

Flynn, Julia, Catherine Arnst, and Gail Edmondson, "Who'll Be the First Global Phone Company?," Business Week, March 27, 1995, pp. 176-80.

Flynn, Julia, Mark Lewyn, and Gail Edmondson, "What a Time to Take Over at British Telecom," Business Week, January 29, 1996.

Hass, Nancy, "The Whipping Boy: Meet British Telecom's Iain Vallance, the Rodney Dangerfield of Telecommunications," Financial World, September 15, 1992, pp. 48-49.

Hudson, Richard L., "BT Faces a Line of Potential International Competitors," Wall Street Journal, April 29, 1993, p. B4.

Lewis, Peter H., "MCI and British Telecom to Join Networks for Internet Market," New York Times, June 11, 1996, p. D5.

"Major Telecommunications Companies in Europe," Profile of the Worldwide Telecommunications Industry, Oxford: Elsevier Advanced Technology, 1990.

Newman, Karin, The Selling of British Telecom, London: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1986.

Purton, Peter, "Is BT Lost in the Fog of World Events?," Telephony, December 7, 1992, pp. 7-8.

Schiesel, Seth, "AT&T and British Telecom Merge Overseas Operations," New York Times, July 27, 1998, p. A1.

"Shooting a Line," Economist, July 10, 1993, pp. 62-63.

— Olive Classe


 
Wikipedia: BT Group
Top
British Telecommunications Group plc
Type Public (LSE: BT.A
NYSEBT)
Founded 1 October 1981
Headquarters London, England, UK
Area served Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Key people Sir Michael Rake, Chairman
Ian Livingston, Chief Executive
Industry Telecommunications
Products Retail and Wholesale local, national and international telecommunications products and services,
broadband and internet products and services,
IT and Network Solutions,
Mobile service as a Molo
Revenue £ 21.390 Billion (2009)[1]
Operating income £ 819 million (2009)[1]
Net income £ 248 million (2009)[1]
Employees 108,500 (2008)
Website www.bt.com

BT Group plc (formerly known as British Telecom and still occasionally referred to by that name), is the privatised UK state telecommunications operator. It is the dominant fixed line telecommunications and broadband Internet provider in the United Kingdom. BT operates in more than 170 countries[2] and over a third of its revenue now comes from its Global Services division.[3]

BT Group is the largest communications service provider in the United Kingdom. It is also one of the largest communication companies in the world. The Company is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

Contents

History

Early years

Prior to the formation of British Telecom, telecommunications were handled by the General Post Office
British Telecom "T" symbol, 1980–1991
British Telecom logotype, 1980–1991
BT "piper" logo, 1991–2003. This logo can still be seen on some public telephone boxes in the UK
BT "Connected World" logo, 2003–present

A number of privately owned telegraph companies operated in Britain from 1846 onwards. Among them were

  • The Electric Telegraph Company,
  • British and Irish Magnetic Telegraph Company,
  • British Telegraph Company,
  • London District Telegraph Company,
  • and the United Kingdom Telegraph Company

The Telegraph Act 1868 passed the control of all these to the newly formed GPO (General Post Office)'s "Postal Telegraphs Department"

With the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876 the GPO began to provide telephone services from some of its telegraph exchanges. However in 1882 the Postmaster-General, Henry Fawcett started to issue licences to operate a telephone service to private businesses and the telephone system grew under the GPO in some areas and private ownership in others. The GPO's main competitor the National Telephone Company emerged in this market by absorbing other private telephone companies, prior to its absorption into the GPO in 1912.

The trunk network was unified under GPO control in 1896 and the local distribution network in 1912. A few municipally-owned services remained outside of GPO control. These were Kingston upon Hull, Portsmouth and Guernsey. Hull still retains an independent operator, Kingston Communications, though it is no longer municipally controlled.

In 1969 the GPO, a government department, became the Post Office, a nationalised industry separate from government. Post Office Telecommunications was one of the divisions.

Formation of British Telecom

The British Telecom brand was introduced in 1980. On 1 October 1981, this became the official name of Post Office Telecommunications, which became a state-owned corporation independent of the Post Office. In 1982 BT's monopoly on telecommunications was broken, with the granting of a licence to Mercury Communications.

Privatisation

The privatisation took place in 1984, with the sale of 50.2% of the shares in the company (incorporated in 1984 as British Telecommunications plc) to the public in November.

The company changed its trading name to "BT" on 2 April 1991. The remaining state holdings in the company were sold in 1991 and 1993. In 1996 Peter Bonfield was appointed CEO and Chairman of the Executive Committee, promising a "rollercoaster ride".[4]

On 18 June 1992 BT registered its domain name BT.com — today it is one of the few companies to own a two letter domain name.[5]

In the 1990s, BT entered the Irish telecommunications market through a joint venture with the Electricity Supply Board, the Irish state owned power provider. This venture, entitled Ocean, found its main success through the launch of Ireland's first subscription-free dial-up ISP, oceanfree.net. As a telecoms company it found much less success, mainly targeting corporate customers. BT acquired 100% of this venture in 1999.

BT’s attempted global alliances

MCI

In June 1994 BT and MCI launched Concert Communications Services which was a $1 billion joint venture between the two companies. Its aim was to build a network which would provide easy global connectivity to multinational corporations.

This alliance progressed further on 3 November 1996 when the two companies announcement that they had entered into a full merger agreement to create a global telecommunications company to be called Concert plc, which would be incorporated in the UK with headquarters in both London and Washington DC. This would have given BT an entry into the US market and MCI a global reach. The merger proposition gained approval from the European Commission, the US Department of Justice and the US Federal Communications Commission and looked set to proceed.

However, in light of pressure from investors reacting to the slide in BT's share price on the London Stock Exchange, BT reduced its bid price for MCI, releasing MCI from its exclusivity clause and allowing it to speak to other interested parties.[6] On 1 October 1997, Worldcom made a rival bid for MCI which was followed by a counter-bid from GTE[7]. Because Worldcom used its stock to leverage its purchase, as opposed to cash (used by BT), it was able to outbid BT. MCI accepted the Worldcom bid and BT pulled out of its deal with a generous severance fee of $465 million.

BT made even more money when it sold its stake in MCI to Worldcom in 1998 for £4,159 million on which it made an exceptional pre-tax profit of £1,133 million. As part of the deal, BT also bought out from MCI its 24.9% interest in Concert Communications, thereby making Concert a wholly-owned part of BT.

The reaction to the failure of the deal in the City of London was critical to the future of then Chairman Iain Vallance and CEO Peter Bonfield, and the lack of confidence from the failed merger would ultimately lead to their removal.[8]

AT&T

As BT now owned Concert, and still wanted access to the North American market, it needed a new partner. An AT&T/BT option had been mooted in the past, but stopped on regulatory grounds due to their individual virtual monopolies in their home markets. By 1996, this had receded to the point where a deal was possible. However, the former monopolies clashed in management and culture – and the alliance never really worked from the start. Also, during the proposed MCI merger position, BT/MCI had placed a series of nominated customers inside Concert to overcome regulatory issues, leaving Concert with a sales force. On merger with AT&T, it was reversion to delivery of a series of Global products, and two competing owners – which robbed Concert of revenues and left its management disillusioned.

At its height, the Concert managed network directly reached more than 800 cities in 52 countries, and interlinked to about 240 other networks to extend access to 1,300 cities in 130 countries. Although Concert continued signing customers, its rate of revenue growth slowed, so that in 1999 David Dorman was made CEO with a brief to revive it.

In late 2000 the BT and AT&T boards fell-out – partly due to each partner's excess debt, and the resulting board room clear-outs – partly due to Concert's $800 million annual losses. AT&T recognized that Concert was a threat to its ambitions if left intact, and so negotiated a deal where Concert was split in two in 2001: North America and Eastern Asia went to AT&T, the rest of the world and $400M to BT. BT's remaining Concert assets were merged into its BT Ignite, later BT Global Solutions group [9].

BT Ireland

In 2000, BT acquired Esat Telecom Group plc, and all its subsidiary companies, and Ireland On Line.[10] It also purchased Telenor's minority shareholding in Esat Digifone. The Esat Telecom Group was split in two: the landline and internet operations were combined with Ocean and became part of BT Ignite. Esat Group was renamed Esat BT in July 2002, and eventually BT Ireland in April 2005. Esat Digifone became part of BT Wireless before being spun off into a separate independent company mmo2 plc (now Telefónica Europe). EsatBT installed the first DSL lines in Ireland, to try and compete heavily with former state telecoms company Eircom and operate one exchange, in Limerick. They are the second largest fixed line telecommunications company in Ireland behind incumbent Eircom. BT Irelands CEO is Chris Clark, known for his indepth speeches and penchant for the Young Scientist Competition.

2001 debt crisis

By 2001, BT had a debt of £30 billion, much of which was acquired during the bidding round for the 3rd generation mobile telephony (commonly known as 3G) licences.[11] It had also failed in its series of proposed global mergers, and the funds flowing from its then virtual monopoly of the UK market place had been largely removed. It was also headed by two executives who had little support from the London Stock Exchange, particularly in light of a 60% drop in share price in sixteen months.[12]

The first manoeuvre was to create confidence in the management team. Philip Hampton joined as CFO, and in April 2001 Sir Iain Vallance was replaced as Chairman by recognised turn around expert Sir Christopher Bland. The company then began to sell off or sell and lease back a large part of its assets.

Europe’s largest rights issue

In May 2001 BT carried out corporate Europe’s largest ever rights issue, allowing it to raise £5.9 billion.[13] A few days before, it also sold stakes in Japan Telecom, in mobile operator J-Phone Communications, and in Airtel of India to Vodafone.[14]

Sale of Yell Group, and the demerger of O2

In June 2001 BT's directory business was sold as Yell Group to a combination of private equity firms Apax Partners and Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst for £2.1 billion.[15]

A large demerger followed in November 2001, when the former mobile telecommunications business of BT, BT Cellnet, was hived off as a separate business named "mmO2".[16] This included BT owned or operated networks in other countries, including BT Cellnet (UK), Esat Digifone (Ireland), and Viag Interkom (Germany). All networks now owned or operated by mmO2 (except Manx Telecom) were renamed as O2. The de-merger was accomplished via a share-swap, all British Telecommunications plc shareholders received one mmO2 plc and one BT Group plc (of which British Telecommunications is now a wholly owned subsidiary) share for each share they owned. British Telecommunications plc was de-listed on 16 November, and the two new companies started trading on 19 November.

Aftermath

At the end of the series of sales, in October 2001 Sir Peter Bonfield resigned,[17] and was replaced by former Lucent CEO Ben Verwaayen[18].

Having promised a "rollercoaster ride", during Bonfield's tenure the share price went from £4 to £15, and back again to £5.[4] Bonfield's salary to 31 March 2001, was a basic of £780,000 (increasing to £820,000) plus a £481,000 bonus and £50,000 of other benefits including pension. He also received a deferred bonus, payable in shares three years' later, of £481,000, and additional bonuses of £3.3 million.[19] Andreas Whittam Smith writing in The Independent newspaper called Bonfield, Chairman Vallance and Deputy Chairman Lord King "The men who broke the bank at British Telecom".[20]

mmO2 plc was replaced by O2 plc in a further share-swap in 2005, and subsequently bought in an agreed takeover by Telefónica for £18 billion and delisted.[21]

BT's recent developments

In February 2005, BT acquired El Segundo, California-based telecoms giant Infonet (now re-branded BT Infonet), giving BT access to new geographies. In April 2005, it bought Radianz (now rebranded as BT Radianz), which expanded BT's coverage, provided BT with more buying power in certain countries and importantly gave access to the financial markets.[22]

Openreach was announced in September 2005 at the instigation of Ofcom to provide an open and equal service of provision and repair in the "last mile" of copper wire. This business was formed from 25,000 engineers previously employed by BT's Retail and Wholesale divisions. It is designed to ensure that other communications providers (CPs) have exactly the same operational conditions as parts of the BT group. It opened for business on 11 January 2006.[23]

In August 2006 BT acquired online electrical retailer Dabs.com for £30.6 million.[24] The BT Home Hub was also launched in June 2006.[25]

In October 2006 BT confirmed that it would be investing 75% of its total capital spending, put at £10 billion over five years, in its new Internet Protocol (IP) based 21st century network (21CN). Annual savings of £1 billion per annum are expected when the transition to the new network is complete in 2010, with over 50% of its customers transferred by 2008. That month BT took a major step forward when the actual process that will be used to transfer the first customers on to 21CN was successfully tested at Adastral Park in Suffolk.[26]

In January 2007, BT acquired Sheffield based ISP, PlusNet plc, adding an additional 200,000 customers. BT have stated that PlusNet will continue to operate separately out of their Sheffield head-office.[27]

On 1 February 2007 BT announced it had agreed terms to acquire International Network Services Inc. (“INS”), a leading global provider of IT consulting and software solutions. This professional services acquisition will increase BT's presence in North America and will significantly enhance BT's consulting capabilities.[28]

On 20 February 2007 BT announced that Sir Michael Rake, then chairman of accountancy firm KPMG International, would succeed Sir Christopher Bland, who stepped down in September of that year.[29]

On 20 April 2007 BT announced the acquisition of Comsat International which provides network services to the South American corporate market.[30]

BT acquired Wire One Communications in June 2008 and folded them into BT Conferencing, their existing conferencing unit as a new video business unit/ref. BT Conferencing is now the global leader in video conferencing services and solutions.[31]

On 28 July 2008, BT announced the acquisition of Ribbit, of Mountain View, California, "Silicon Valley's First Phone Company." Ribbit provides Adobe Flash/Flex APIs, allowing web developers to incorporate telephony features into their Software as a Service (SaaS) applications.[32]

On 14 May 2009 BT said it was cutting up to 15,000 jobs in the coming year after it announced its results for the year to 31 March 2009.[33]

In July 2009 it was announced that BT had offered workers a long holiday for an up front sum of 25% of their annual wage or a one-off payment of £1000 if they agree to go part time.[34]

Operations

British Telecommunications plc (BT) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of BT Group plc and encompasses virtually all businesses and assets of the BT Group.[35] BT Group plc is listed on stock exchanges in London and New York.

BT runs the telephone exchanges, trunk network and local loop connections for the vast majority of British fixed-line telephones. Currently BT is responsible for approximately 28 million telephone lines in the UK. Apart from Kingston Communications, which serves Kingston-upon-Hull, BT is the only UK telecoms operator to have a Universal Service Obligation (USO) which means it must provide a fixed telephone line to any address in the UK. It is also obliged to provide public call boxes.

BT's businesses are operated under special government regulation by the British telecoms regulator Ofcom (formerly Oftel). BT has been found to have Significant Market Power in some markets following Market Reviews by Ofcom. In these markets, BT is required to comply with additional obligations such as meeting reasonable requests to supply services and not to discriminate.

As well as continuing to provide service in those traditional areas in which BT has an obligation to provide services or is closely regulated, BT has expanded into more profitable products and services where there is less regulation. These are principally, broadband internet service and bespoke solutions in telecommunications and information technology.

BT Group is organised into the following business divisions:

  • BT Retail: Retail telecoms services to consumers
  • BT Wholesale: Wholesale telecoms core trunk network
  • Openreach: fenced-off wholesale division, tasked with ensuring that all rival operators have equality of access to BT's own local network
  • BT Global Services: Business services and solutions (formerly BT Ignite and BT Syntegra)
  • BT Exact / One IT: used to handle consultancy and internal IT. Now been replaced by BT Design.
  • Group operations: handles security, research and development, and other functions for BT Group Plc such as legal services

From 1 July 2007 two additional divisions were put in place:-

  • BT Operate took responsibility from BT Wholesale for the roll-out and maintenance of the group's new IP based fixed-line network, known as 21st Century Network (21C).
  • BT Design pulled together IT designers from BT Retail, BT Wholesale, BT Global Services and OneIT to design services on the 21C network.[36]

Financial performance

Year ended Turnover (£m) Profit/(loss) before tax (£m) Net profit/(loss) (£m) Basic eps (p)
31 March 2009 21,390 (134) (81) 3.2
31 March 2008 20,704 1,976 1,738 21.5
31 March 2007 20,223 2,484 2,852 34.4
31 March 2006 19,514 2,633 1,644 19.5
31 March 2005 18,429 2,693 1,539 18.1
31 March 2004 18,519 1,945 1,414 16.4
31 March 2003 18,727 3,157 2,702 31.4
31 March 2002 18,447 1,461 1,008 12.1
31 March 2001 17,141 (1,031) (1,875) (25.8)
31 March 2000 18,715 2,942 2,055 31.7
31 March 1999 16,953 4,295 2,983 46.3
31 March 1998 15,640 3,214 1,702 26.6
31 March 1997 14,935 3,203 2,077 32.8
31 March 1996 14,446 3,019 1,986 31.6
31 March 1995 13,893 2,662 1,731 27.8
31 March 1994 13,675 2,756 1,767 28.5
31 March 1993 13,242 1,972 1,220 19.8
31 March 1992 13,337 3,073 2,044 33.2

Analysis of figures

After a pay rise of over 40%, BT's chief financial officer, Hanif Lalani, became one of the very few UK financial directors whose annual remuneration exceeds £1 million. He became CEO of BT Global Services in October 2008 and was replaced as BT Group CFO by Tony Chanmugam on 1 December 2008.

In recent years, the strategy of BT plc has been to reduce its dependence on traditional voice revenues and instead obtain an increasing portion of its turnover from so-called New Wave revenues. At the heart of this strategy is BT Global Services, which has won many significant contracts in the commercial and public sectors, in part through its portrayal as a "momentum story".

There is, however, increasing disquiet among analysts that the annual growth of the Global Services business has been unimpressive, and that BT has been using prior year adjustments to achieve favourable growth figures.

Take the quarter ended 30 September 2005, for example. At the time, BT said the external revenues of its Global Services division were £1,740m. However, a year later, BT revised this figure downwards to £1,703m. This enabled BT to claim growth of 3.5%, instead of the dismal 1.3% it would have been forced to announce if it hadn't adjusted the prior year's figures.

BT has made a habit of adjusting the previous year's revenue figure every quarter. Only once in the past year has BT adjusted the figure upwards rather than downwards.

Sources

  1. Financial Director
  2. Google spreadsheet based on BT's quarterly financial reports
  3. Reuters financial data for BT for 2009

Environment

In 2004, the BT Group signed the world's largest renewable energy deal with npower and British Gas, and now all of their exchanges, satellite networks and offices are powered by renewable energy. BT is a member of the Corporate Leaders Group on Climate Change. They signed a letter urging the government to do more to tackle this problem. Janet Blake, head of global corporate social responsibility (CSR) at BT, says that she would like to see incentives that find ways of awarding those companies that focus on climate change by making investments in green business models.[37]

BT has made it clear that it has an ambitious plan to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.[38] Its strategy includes steps to reduce the customer's, supplier's, employee's, and its own footprints. BT has actually pledged to achieve an 80% reduction by the year 2016, which will require further efficiency improvements.[39]

Market position and power

In 1984 the Telecommunications Act set the framework for a competitive market for telecoms services by abolishing BT's exclusive right to provide services. In the early 1990s the market was opened up and a number of new national Public Telecommunications Operators (PTOs) were given licences. This ended the duopoly that had existed in the 1980s when only BT and Mercury were licensed to provide fixed line telecom networks in the UK.

Recent and future plans

  • BT's 21st Century Network (21CN) is a network transformation project which will see the UK's telephone network move from the present AXE 10/System X Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) to an IP/MPLS system. BT envisages annual savings of £1 billion when the transition to the new network is complete. Capital expenditure is put at £10 billion.[40]
  • In April 2007, BT launched a new online service called BT Tradespace. According to BT the new service is a "social media platform dedicated to small businesses."[41]
  • In December 2006, BT launched BT Vision, a broadband Television service with the ability to watch programmes from previous weeks or months. According to BT PLC Today, companies including BBC Worldwide, Paramount, Warner Music Group, Cartoon Network and the National Geographic Channel, have already signed deals with BT Vision. Microsoft announced on 9 January 2008 that BT Vision services will shortly be made available on the Xbox 360.[42]
  • In May 2008, BT launched BT Total Broadband Anywhere,[43] an all-inclusive package which offers a free, internet-capable smartphone – the BT ToGo and BT’s Total Broadband service in the home.

BT's "Web patent"

In 2001 BT discovered it owned a patent (U.S. Patent 4,873,662) which it believed gave it patent rights on the use of hyperlink technology on the World Wide Web. The corresponding UK patent had already expired, but the US patent was valid until 2006. Opponents of BT's claim held that the patent had never been valid, due to prior art by both Douglas Engelbart and Ted Nelson's Project Xanadu. Nevertheless on 11 February 2002, BT began a court case relating to its claims in a U.S. federal court against the Internet service provider Prodigy Communications Corporation. The U.S. court ruled on 22 August 2002 that the BT patent was not applicable to Web technology, and granted Prodigy's request for summary judgement.[44] The issue of prior art was thus not addressed.

Controversy

Behavioural targeting

In early 2008 it was announced that BT had entered into a contract (along with Virgin Media and Talk Talk) with the spyware company Phorm (responsible under their 121Media guise for the Apropos rootkit)[45][46] to intercept and analyse their users' click-stream data, and sell the anonymised aggregate information as part of Phorm's OIX advertising service.[47][48] The practice, known as "behavioural targeting" and condemned by critics as "data pimping", came under intense fire from various internet communities and other interested-parties who believe that the interception of data without the consent of users and web site owners is illegal under UK law (RIPA).[49][50][51][52] At a more fundamental level, many have argued that the ISPs and Phorm have no right to sell a commodity (a user's data, and the copyright content of web sites) to which they have no claim of ownership. In response to questions about Phorm and the interception of data by the Webwise system Sir Tim Berners-Lee is quoted as saying:

"It's mine - you can't have it. If you want to use it for something, then you have to negotiate with me." —Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2008[53]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c BT: Preliminary Results 2009
  2. ^ BT around the world
  3. ^ Summary of BT results for 2008
  4. ^ a b BBC News | BUSINESS | Sir Peter Bonfield: A profile
  5. ^ List of Large Corporations that own a Two Letter Domain
  6. ^ MCI to weigh WorldCom bid as BT merger process grinds on
  7. ^ GTE Plans a $25 Billion Cash Bid to Make It a 3-Way Fight : Battle to Acquire MCI Heats Up - International Herald Tribune
  8. ^ MCI and WorldCom - How British Telecom Fell Short at Competitive Intelligence
  9. ^ Articles
  10. ^ BT beats conflict of interest by buying both sides
  11. ^ BBC News | BUSINESS | BT attacks debt mountain
  12. ^ BBC News | BUSINESS | Vallance resigns from BT
  13. ^ BT wraps up share sale
  14. ^ BT retreats from Japan and Spain
  15. ^ BT sells Yell for £2.1 billion
  16. ^ Shareholders give thumbs up to BT wireless spin-off
  17. ^ BBC News | BUSINESS | BT chief quits early
  18. ^ BBC News | BUSINESS | BT lures Lucent boss with £7m package
  19. ^ BT's Sir Peter Bonfield stands to gain extra £3.3m in share bonuses
  20. ^ Andreas Whittam Smith: The men who broke the bank at British Telecom
  21. ^ BBC NEWS | Business | Telefonica bids £18bn for UK's O2
  22. ^ BT goes home
  23. ^ BT's Openreach could have to list separately
  24. ^ BT buys on-line retailer Dabs.com
  25. ^ Thomson ships BT home hub
  26. ^ BT transfers first customer lines to 21CN network
  27. ^ Bt buys PlusNet for CRM system
  28. ^ BT buys former Lucent division INS
  29. ^ Datamonitor ComputerWire - BT Appoints New Chairman to Replace Bland
  30. ^ BT buys Comsat
  31. ^ BT buys Wire One
  32. ^ BT buys Ribbit for $105m
  33. ^ BT to shed a further 15,000 job losses BBC News, 14 May 2009
  34. ^ [1]
  35. ^ "2008 Annual Report Overview". http://www.btplc.com/report/report08/overview/index.htm. 
  36. ^ "Two new BT businesses after a radical shake-up". Financial Times. 25 April 2007. 
  37. ^ Interview: CSR delivers £2.2bn for BT - 30 Oct 2006 - IT Week
  38. ^ Climate change
  39. ^ Climate change - BT's Vision and Strategy
  40. ^ BT's 21CN website
  41. ^ BT's corporate website
  42. ^ BBC NEWS | Technology | Xbox will host BT's TV service
  43. ^ Laura Bundock (2008-05-08). "Go Online Anywhere: BT's New Service". Sky News. http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30400-1315312,00.html. 
  44. ^ BT’s “Hyperlinking” Patent Litigation Fails
  45. ^ F-Secure Spyware Information Pages: Apropos
  46. ^ F-Secure Spyware Information Pages: PeopleOnPage
  47. ^ ISP data deal with former 'spyware' boss triggers privacy fears
  48. ^ How Phorm plans to tap your internet connection
  49. ^ Web users angry at ISPs' spyware tie-up
  50. ^ Data pimping: surveillance expert raises illegal wiretap worries
  51. ^ Net think thank: Phorm is illegal
  52. ^ The Phorm “Webwise” System - a Legal Analysis
  53. ^ Web creator rejects net tracking

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