[opendtv] News: Verizon Plans Wider Options for Cellphone Users
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2007 08:45:45 -0500
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/28/technology/28phone.html?th&emc=th
Verizon Plans Wider Options for Cellphone Users
By LAURA M. HOLSON
Published: November 28, 2007
In a major shift for the mobile phone industry, Verizon Wireless said
yesterday that it planned to give customers far more choice in what
phones they could use on its network and how they use them.
While there are technical limitations involved, the company's move
could lead to an American wireless market that is more like those in
Europe and Asia, where a carrier's customers can use any compatible
phone to easily reach a wide array of online services - and take
their phones with them when they switch companies. The move, which
surprised industry watchers because Verizon Wireless is known to be
highly protective of its traditional business, is part of a larger
shift in the communications world.
With the introduction of the iPhone from Apple, one of the first
mainstream multimedia devices, and Google's plan to make the software
that runs cellphones, the industry is being pushed toward a more open
approach.
Carriers like AT&T and Verizon Wireless, which is a joint venture
between Verizon and Vodafone, have spent billions on cell towers and
other infrastructure, and traditionally they have tightly controlled
what happens on their networks.
They decide what phones subscribers can use and then steer them
toward ring tones, television shows and other products they can buy.
The details of Verizon Wireless's alternative approach have yet to be
worked out. The company did not disclose how much the service would
cost or what rules would apply.
Lowell McAdam, chief executive of Verizon Wireless, said the company
would hold a meeting with mobile phone makers and programmers in the
first quarter of next year to talk about the service, with the goal
of introducing it next summer.
"The trend we see here is an explosion of innovation," Mr. McAdam
said. "People want to take so much of what's on the Internet and put
it on the phone."
Other companies are likely to feel pressed to follow Verizon's lead,
analysts and executives said. "If they don't change their own
business model, someone else will do it for them," said Roger Entner,
a senior vice president at IAG Research. "This way they have control."
Consumers are already able to add software and make purchases online
with many cellphones, but often the carriers do not make this easy,
preferring instead to highlight their own offerings on phone screens.
The carriers have also been at odds with Silicon Valley companies
like Google that want people to be able to use phones in much the
same way that they can use any PC for access to the Internet.
Verizon Wireless, too, is not abandoning its traditional service.
Instead it will offer a separate service plan allowing consumers to
buy a phone - one compatible with its network - and call a toll-free
number to have it activated. A Verizon lab will test whether the
phones can connect to the network, allowing the company to maintain
control over what devices are permitted.
Still, programmers will be able to develop software to run on the
phones without authorization from the company. "We will not be the
gateway to go through," Mr. McAdam said.
The company's move won praise from Google, Microsoft and the Federal
Communications Commission, among others, but consumer groups offered
a cautionary note.
"There are a lot of unanswered questions," said Gene Kimmelman, vice
president for federal affairs at Consumers Union, an advocacy group
in Washington. "We have significant concerns about prices being sky
high."
Another potential hurdle is the Verizon network's use of CDMA
technology, which is less common than the GSM technology of AT&T,
T-Mobile and many overseas carriers. As a result, users of Apple's
iPhone and many GSM-compatible phones will not be able to use
Verizon's service.
Still, added Mr. Kimmelman, "it's a step in the right direction."
That step has not come without a bit of prodding. Federal regulators
are moving to encourage the creation of a more open national wireless
network when they auction off spectrum licenses in January. The
auction rules require bidders to partly build a network that is
largely free from carrier constraints.
Among those expected to bid are Google, which many in the industry
say will be a formidable competitor to the likes of AT&T and Verizon.
Google has put together a consortium of companies to use its software
and help it turn mobile phones into hand-held computers. Mr.
Kimmelman said the Verizon Wireless announcement was fueling
speculation that it would be a bidder in that auction, too.
But analysts have noted that Verizon Wireless has been sending mixed
signals. It filed a petition in September with the federal courts
requesting a review of the auction rules on openness, calling them
"arbitrary" and "capricious." Mr. McAdam said his company filed the
petition not to halt competition, but because it believed "it was not
necessary for the F.C.C. to get involved."
He added that Google was not the enemy of the traditional
telecommunications companies that the news media made it out to be.
"It's very common and popular in the press to view Google and Verizon
at each other's throats," Mr. McAdam said. "We have far more in
common with Google in meeting demands of consumers than in conflict."
No matter the motivation, many expect the result to be good for
consumers. "This is only going to drive innovation for consumers,
which is a good thing," said Cyriac Roeding, who is in charge of
mobile content efforts at CBS.
If Verizon's effort is successful, then content creators, software
developers and device makers, who have chafed under the control of
the wireless companies, will need to show what they can do. At a
telecommunications conference in San Francisco, those groups were
outwardly hostile toward the carriers, complaining that they were too
controlling.
Now, Mr. Entner said, "the ball is in the court of the device
manufacturers and software developers."
"They have to put up or shut up."
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