0 to divide a business into separate parts:
The gas company will unbundle its three businesses - storage, connection and metering.
1 to start to sell a product or service separately when previously it had been sold together with others:
First, most other sources do not ' unbundle' corruption across various functions of government, but provide only a single broadly-defined indicator.
We must "unbundle the events"—to use the famous phrase.
The electricity producers should not also handle electricity distribution to customers; there is a need to unbundle the electricity sector.
But perhaps the most important change this report calls for is for rapid action to unbundle the local loop.
What has been an issue is changing the selling of the television rights; unbundling them.
That is why we support the case for unbundling broadcast rights for sport.
Now, after 20 years of complaints and unsatisfactory arrangements, we are having to "unbundle" those rather silly artificial creations.
Secondly, where do we stand on the principle—whether it is right or wrong of unbundling the loop?