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http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2009/062909bradner.html
How
cellular handset exclusivity fails
Cellular handset lockin, such as the iPhone with AT&T,
are getting FCC and congressional attention
'Net Insider By Scott Bradner ,
Network World , 06/29/2009
I
suppose that some people did buy iPhones because the phones worked on the
AT&T cellular network. This is supposition on my part because I have not
seen any articles claiming this to be the case nor have I read any blogs
commentaries that support the concept. In fact, when the iPhone first came
out, about all of the discussion that was not about the iPhone itself but about
how annoyed people were that they would be forced to use the AT&T network.
There is now a rising chorus of voices saying that such exclusive arrangements
are not in the best interests of consumers.
By
all reports, the exclusive deal for the iPhone
has been great for AT&T. They now have more than 78 million wireless
subscribers, up 24% from a year ago, due in no small part to the iPhone. The
exclusive arrangement seems to be a very mixed bag for Apple. It has been able
to extract concessions and revenue from AT&T far beyond what any other
handset manufacturer has been able to do but it is clear that having the iPhone
tied to a single carrier significantly reduces the overall sales of the device.
For example, Research In Motion's BlackBerry Curve outsold Apple iPhones in the
first quarter of 2009.
A major factor may have been that the Curve is available on all four
major U.S. carriers. I expect that Apple would actually sell many more iPhones
and make much more money if it was not in the exclusive arrangement with
AT&T. But Apple would have less leverage on what kinds of packages the
carriers offered and likely would not be able to get as much of a revenue
stream from post sales payments from the carriers.
Apple
has gone further that many people like in
trying to enforce the exclusive arrangement. Timothy Maun has a good article in
the Wisconsin Law Review on the legal
non-niceties of what Apple has been doing. (See "IHack, therefore iBrick:
Cellular Contract Law, the Apple iPhone, and Apple's Extraordinary Remedy for
Breach" here.
Acting
FCC chair Michael J. Copps has announced that the FCC will open
a proceeding to "closely examine wireless handset exclusivity
arrangements."
Incoming
FCC Chair Julius Genachowski has indicated support for this investigation.
Congress has also gotten into the act -- for example, Sen. Kerry asked
Genachowski to answer a question on handset exclusivity as part of his
confirmation hearings.
As
you might expect, AT&T has come out strongly in favor of this type of
exclusive deal. Using the kind of logic too often presented by big carriers
whenever anyone suggests introducing actual competition into the carrier world
in the United States -- Paul Roth said in sworn congressional testimony that
removing exclusive deals "would serve only to harm consumers." (See
"FCC to probe exclusive mobile handset deals" here.)
He
went on to claim that "devices would devolve into the lowest common
technical denominator." That, of course, would only be the case if the
handset manufactures collectively decided that they no longer had to compete
against each other at the very time that full competition was required.
I
hope that the FCC investigation is not fooled by that type of nonsense and that
the buying public will see full competition between both carriers and handset
manufactures without the distortion imposed by requiring someone to get a
handset they do not want in order to use a carrier that gives them better
service or be forced to use a poor carrier to get the phone they want.
Disclaimer:
Harvard students do not have complete freedom in what classes they have to take
but the constraints are minor compared the handset deals. In any case the
university has not offered an opinion on the desirability of iPhones on other
carriers so the above is my opinion.
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