Final deadline looms on AT&T, O2, iPhone deal as hostile networks bid for glory

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iPhone exclusivity will end - the only question is which network you want to run your Apple mobile on.

There’s big battle between mobile networks in the UK, and network coverage is key to this. It’s why so many people involved in running the UK’s many outdoor music festivals turn to Vodafone or Orange because both networks are thought to offer more effective coverage.

There’s nothing worse than SMS messages arriving 12 hours late, or dropped calls when you’re trying to get a band into Glastonbury festival. Just because it’s a festival doesn’t mean you’re not organised.

This is why AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson set tongues wagging last night when he revealed that “there will be a day when you are not exclusive with the iPhone.”

Stephenson was speaking at Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech conference following AT&T’s publication of its financial results this week.

It’s believed AT&T’s deal for iPhone exclusivity in the US is up for review next year. The CEO seems happy with the arrangement so far, saying AT&T's deal with Apple is working "really, really well.” However, he does concede that network quality is the biggest reason people switch to different carriers. (Or jailbreak their phones).

iPhone exclusivity also means AT&T attracted 1.4 million new subscribers in its just gone quarter, and shifted 2.4 million iPhones - over a third to new customers. However, the company also concedes the subsidy required for the iPhone does impact overall profitability,but sees it as a trade-off for growing market share. In any case, iPhone users use and pay for more for data than those using any other smartphone.

That’s why Verizon is probably in talks with Apple to offer the (a CDMA version of) iPhone on its network. And it’s not just Verizon.

In the UK, The Guardian this morning informs that Vodafone is wooing Cupertino in an attempt to win the device for its network.

Andy Halford, chief financial officer of Vodafone said the network - which sells the device in 11 countries now - would be keen to offer it in more territories: "It's a good product and we would love to have it in the portfolio in more countries," he said.

This follows weeks of speculation that Orange and T-Mobile also want in on the deal. T-Mobile even buys iPhones abroad in order to sell them to O2 defectors.

With a million iPhones sold in the UK at this point, and the need to be tied to O2 one of the biggest stumbling blocks for some potential iPhone users, it makes some sense for Apple to consider widening the addressable market in hitherto “exclusive” areas.

An iPhone could even become useful at big outdoor music festivals if the network it was on had better rural coverage, and you owned one of the truly impressive FreeLoader Solar Chargers, of course. (The Freeloader being the best portable solar charger we’ve looked at so far, BTW).

In any case, given the pending DOJ antitrust investigation into iPhone exclusivity, Apple may have to completely abandon the exclusive arrangements it reached when negotiating its initial agreements to launch the iPhone in various countries.

Just look at Canada to see the preparations being made by other carriers there....

Comments (7)

OMG
1) If ATT looses exclusivity, only T-Mobile benefits, not Verizon
2) DOJ has no power whatsoever to force Apple to drop exclusive deal for example in Finland. Only Americans can write such a BS.

Don't say OMG

The US government has no case to end Apple's exclusive agreement with AT&T. They're blowing smoke. I repeat, there is no way the government can force Apple to work with other phone carriers.

If iPhone exclusivity dies Tmobile will be the only other carrier offering it in the US most likely. The government can say they have to sell it on other carriers but cannot tell apple that they have to build an entirely different chipset for their phone to work on other carriers, that's way too much power. If Verizon wants the iPhone then switch to GSM like everyone else in the world, strangely enough that's what they're doing with 4G around 2010-2011, so we may see an iphone with them on their 4G network but no way will there be a CDMA version. Inventory in Apple stores would be insane having to stock 8 versions instead of 4 (black and white 16gb and black and white 32gb) then trying to figure out which will sell better and how many to stock.

OK I get that other networks in the UK want the iPhone and I think that is a great idea but what is this article going on about with the festivals etc? O2 have the O2 wireless festival? And I went to glastonbury this year and had coverage on my iphone (O2). yes it was worse than usual at times but so was my girlfriend's with T mobile. And I moved from orange purely because of its terrible coverage in the part of the countryside where I live.

I really feel like this post is two cobbled together stories of no real relevance.

Ah - so there's a notion"

1/I was at Glastonbury, of all my friends, O2 gave the worse coverage - what use a plan to meet on Saturday when you get it on Sunday am?

2/ Vodafone by general consensus is still best in rural zones.

3/ Wireless festival is rubbish, though that is an opinion. I mean, really, a brand sticking a name on a bill and calling it a festival does not make a Glastonbury. It's still a big party tho. But not a festival/

4. Burning Man is a Festival. As is Glastonbury. Wireless just isn't.

5/ Feel what you like.

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