Telstra denies execs face jail

By AAP
14 December 2005 11:14 AM
Tags: spokesperson, telstra, asic, executives, aap, jail

Our content licensing agreement with AAP stipulates that the material must be taken down 30 days from the date of publication. Therefore this particular story, having exceeded that time frame, has expired. We apologise for any inconvenience.

AAP

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

    Telstra ignores the rules..AGAIN! Keith Styles -- 14/12/05 (in reply to #120125195)

    "Telstra executives do not face such penalties (jail).

    And why not?

    If it were any other company, the regulators would have no hesitation in asking for the maximum penalty to be applied so that the company exec's are in no doubt as to how they MUST behave.

    Once again Tel$tra appears to have been let off the hook and allowed privileges only available to members of parliament.

    Telstra ignores the rules..AGAIN! Keith Styles -- 14/12/05

    "Telstra executives do not face such penalties (jail).

    And why not?

    If it were any other company, the regulators would have no hesitation in asking for the maximum penalty to be applied so that the company exec's are in no doubt as to how they MUST behave.

    Once again Tel$tra appears to have been let off the hook and allowed privileges only available to members of parliament.

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Stilgherrian The challenge of government 2.0
    The Government 2.0 Taskforce released its draft report last week, and its recommendations for Open Government almost reads like a manifesto. Stilgherrian's guest on Patch Monday this week is the chair of the Taskforce, Nicholas Gruen.
  • Array The people's NBN, now with 1001 uses
    Faced with a renewed threat in newly-appointed Tony Abbott and unknown-quantity communications portfolio ankle-biter Tony Smith, Stephen Conroy responded this week in the way any politician would: he gave lots, and lots, and lots of speeches.
  • Array A guide to the future of the internet
    Last week we looked at the history of the internet in Australia. It's been around for 20 years and changed our lives in so many ways. Imagine what it could do given another 20 years.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured