The company building the National Broadband Network has pushed back a full rethink of its controversial pricing structure by another two years.
Two of Australia's biggest telcos have raised concerns about NBN Co wasting money duplicating fibre networks already serving businesses across the country.
Internet service providers are worried that broadband services will suffer if the extra bandwidth is removed from the table in August.
The competition regulator has launched Federal Court proceedings against Dodo and iPrimus for allegedly misleading customers.
The telco's boss Kevin Russell says NBN wholesale prices and performance will both need to improve as the network rollout nears completion.
With people confined to their homes as part of nationwide social-distancing strategies,telco networks are confronting a spike in demand for data.
The National Broadband Network will no longer contact enterprise customers directly,a move that has been welcomed by the major telecom providers.
The class action was launched after a shock earnings downgrade in 2017 shaved hundreds of millions of dollars off the telecommunications company's market cap.
The boss of Vocus has urged the government to issue new directives to NBN Co after the internet wholesaler was pinged for discriminating between telcos.
Kevin Russell has criticised the wholesale prices charged by the $51 billion National Broadband Network as too high,allowing Telstra to dominate the market.
Vocus chief executive Kevin Russell was left bemused by a 10 per cent rise in the telecommunication company's share price on Thursday after posting results in line with guidance.