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・ Nippon Railway
・ Nippon Screw Weight System
・ Nippon Seinenkan
・ Nippon Sharyo
・ Nippon Sharyo DMU
・ Nippon Sheet Glass
・ Nippon Soda Co., Ltd.
・ Nippon Soul
・ Nippon Sport Science University
・ Nippon Sport Science University Fields Yokohama
・ Nippon Steel
・ Nippon Steel Yawata SC
・ Nippon Suisan Kaisha
・ Nippon Super Rugby League
・ Nippon Taiko Foundation
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone
・ Nippon Television Music Festival
・ Nippon Television Network System
・ Nippon Tornadoes
・ Nippon TV
・ Nippon Veterinary and Life Science University
・ Nippon Yusen
・ Nipponacmea
・ Nipponacmea concinna
・ Nipponacmea fuscoviridis
・ Nipponacmea gloriosa
・ Nipponacmea habei
・ Nipponacmea moskalevi
・ Nipponacmea nigrans
・ Nipponacmea radula


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Nippon Telegraph and Telephone : ウィキペディア英語版
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

, commonly known as NTT, is a Japanese telecommunications company headquartered in Tokyo, Japan. Ranked 65th in Fortune Global 500, NTT is the third largest telecommunications company in the world in terms of revenue.
The company is incorporated pursuant to the NTT Law (Law Concerning Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, Etc.).〔(English translation of the "Law Concerning Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, Etc." )〕 The purpose of the company defined by the Law is to own all the shares issued by Nippon Telegraph and Telephone East Corporation (NTT East) and Nippon Telegraph and Telephone West Corporation (NTT West) and to ensure proper and stable provision of telecommunications services all over Japan including remote rural areas by these companies as well as to conduct research relating to the telecommunications technologies that will form the foundation for telecommunications.
While NTT is listed on Tokyo, Osaka, New York, and London stock exchanges, the Japanese government still owns roughly one-third of NTT's shares, regulated by the NTT Law.
== History ==

Established as a monopoly government-owned corporation in 1952, was privatized in 1985 to encourage competition in the telecom market. In 1987, NTT made the largest stock offering to date, at US$36.8 billion.〔(MSNBC.msn.com )〕
Because NTT owns most of the last mile (FTTC or FTTB/FTTH), it enjoys oligopolistic control over land lines in Japan. In order to weaken NTT, the company was divided into a holding company (NTT) and three telecom companies (NTT East, NTT West, and NTT Communications) in 1999. The NTT Law regulating NTT East and West requires them to serve only short distance communications and obligates them to maintain telephone service all over the country. They are also obligated to lease their unused optical fiber (dark fiber) to other carriers at regulated rates. NTT Communications is not regulated by the NTT Law.
In July 2010, NTT and South African IT company Dimension Data Holdings announced an agreement of a cash offer from NTT for Dimension Data's entire issued share capital, in £2.12bn ($3.24bn) deal.
In late 2010, NTT's Japan-to-US transpacific network reached 400 Gbit/s. In August 2011, its network capacity was expanded to 500 Gbit/s.〔Sean Buckley, Fierce Telecom. "(NTT's Japan to U.S. network route reaches 500 Gbps mark )." Aug 3, 2011. Retrieved Aug 4, 2011.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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