
In a historic shift for the American telecommunications industry, rivals AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon have reached a preliminary agreement to form a joint venture aimed at eliminating wireless dead zones. This unprecedented alliance plans to pool spectrum resources to develop direct-to-device (D2D) satellite connectivity, allowing standard smartphones to link directly to orbital networks. Industry experts view this move as a defensive reaction to the rapid market dominance of SpaceX’s Starlink, which already provides robust satellite-to-phone services. While the partnership aims to provide ubiquitous coverage in rural and remote areas, it currently lacks a definitive legal structure or deployment timeline. Consequently, some analysts suggest the announcement was timed strategically to complicate Starlink’s impending IPO and signal a competitive front against Elon Musk’s growing aerospace influence.
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