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| Kevin S. DiLallo | |||||||
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Mr. DiLallo has negotiated custom network service arrangements, national wireless service agreements, local services deals, equipment purchases, and telecommunications outsourcings on behalf of large corporate users of telecommunications services, particularly in the information technology ("IT") industry. He has been deeply involved in federal and state regulatory issues affecting the IT industry, principally Internet, digital television ("DTV"), and other video matters. Mr. DiLallo spearheaded the successful effort by the Computer Industry Coalition on Advanced Television Service to persuade the Federal Communications Commission to reject a transmission standard for digital television that was anathema to computer applications and convergence, and he helped broker a settlement with the television broadcasting and consumer electronics manufacturing industries in which the affected industries agreed on a market-based approach to defining digital TV broadcasting formats. Mr. DiLallo has represented large corporate users of telecommunications services in court and administrative proceedings to enforce such users' rights against carriers under telecommunications agreements and tariffs. In addition to representing clients in numerous appeals of FCC decisions, he was deeply involved in the regulatory and judicial proceedings that resulted in AT&T's being allowed to offer individually negotiated service arrangements (under Tariff 12 and Contract Tariffs) and in the regulatory re-classification of AT&T. In addition, Mr. DiLallo has counseled corporate clients on compliance with federal and state privacy laws, telemarketing laws, and authorization and tariffing requirements for providers of telecommunications services, as well as related corporate law issues. Mr. DiLallo received his B.A. in 1981 from the University of Virginia, and is a 1986 graduate of Case Western Reserve University Law School, where he was the Executive Notes Editor of the Case Western Reserve Law Review. He is a member of the Bars of the District of Columbia, Maryland, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, and the United States Courts of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Fifth, and Eighth Circuits. What Will Open Access Mean to You? Negotiating Enterprise Wireless Agreements |
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