In the United States, cable operators[?] had not been having an obligation of providing access to its facility to other competing businesses. On the other hand, local telephone providers with the physical infrastructure, or imcumbent local exchange carriers[?] (ILECs), had the obligation. This asymmetrical scheme of regulation became a problem when two industries' business come to overlap and the boundary erode. This transformation of industrial landscape, often called convergence[?], happened in the broadband Internet service provider market. To make matters worse, the cable operators were the leading camp although local telephone carriers were burdened by the open-access obligation.
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