Potentially dangerous telco equipment rife: ACA

Australia's telecommunications market is being flooded with equipment which does not meet technical standards, endangering consumers' lives and legal position, according to a paper released by the government regulator.

The Australian Communications Authority said in a discussion paper released today around one-quarter of telecommunications equipment, including such as fixed phones, mobile phones, fax machines and computer modems, and cable used by the industry, did not comply with its technical standards.

The ACA said such equipment could cause "considerable detriment" to end users in the form of poor service delivery, product failure and a lack of product safety, "including a risk to personal safety".

It added that such equipment could endanger network health and safety or fail to give access to an emergency call service.

"In addition to exposing consumers to risk, unscrupulous operators who avoid their legal responsibilities bring the industry into disrepute and cause significant detriment to the effective operation of competition in the customer equipment and consumer cabling marketplace," the ACA said.

It added that the supply of unlabelled or non-compliant customer equipment or customer cabling available for purchase exposes consumers to the risk of committing an offence.

The ACA indicated it would move to close a legal loophole whereby retailers and resellers were not covered by telecommunications laws governing the supply of unauthorised equipment.

"At the moment, it is not an offence for retailers or resellers to supply unlabelled or non-compliant items so there is no incentive for them to insist that manufacturers and importers provide them with compliant equipment," ACA chairman, Tony Shaw, said.

"The interests of consumers and the wider customer equipment and customer cabling industry can only be properly safeguarded by placing some responsibility on retailers and resellers to ensure that the products they sell are labelled and comply with the Telecommunications Act," Shaw said.

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