- The
Carterfone is a
device invented by
Thomas Carter. It
connects a two-way
radio system to the
telephone system,
allowing someone on the
radio to talk...
-
phone lines (known as the
landmark Carterfone decision) on June 26, 1968. The
original cordless phones, like the
Carterfone, were
acoustically (not electrically)...
-
beginning of the ham
radio operators, even commercially, as the case of
Carterfone (with
lawsuits filed by the
companies to
which it was connected), but...
- from a
monopoly to a
competitive business. This
further changed in FCC's
Carterfone decision in 1968,
which required the Bell
System companies to
permit interconnection...
-
recommendation of
approval by the FCC. On June 26, 1968, the FCC
ruled in the
Carterfone case that AT&T's
rules prohibiting private two-way
radio connections to...
- Desk blog,
January 14, 2013. (2007) "Wireless Net Neutrality:
Cellular Carterfone and
Consumer Choice in
Mobile Broadband"
Archived 2015-02-13 at the Wayback...
-
towards Hush-A-Phone users. A
second court decision in 1968
regarding the
Carterfone further allowed any
device not
harmful to the
system to be
connected directly...
-
telephone set, not
electrical connections to the
telephone line. The
Carterfone decision of 1968, however,
permitted customers to
attach devices directly...
- Hush-A-Phone in 1957. In 1968, the FCC
permitted consumer use of the
Carterfone, a
device that
connected the
landline network to CB
radio networks, thus...
-
telephony in the
United States combined with the
recent Hush-A-Phone and
Carterfone decisions required that all
telephone answering machines be connected...