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Locked cellphones no longer a lock in phone industry

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Uncle Sam wants to hand you the keys to your cellphone.

A federal agency is pressing wireless phone companies to start “unlocking” customers’ phones. A locked phone will work only on the network of the carrier that sold the phone. The change would make it easier for consumers to shop for service from other carriers.

“It’s one less obstacle for the consumer to face in deciding whether to move to another carrier,” said Jeff Silva, an analyst at Medley Global Advisors. “At the end of the day, that’s what it’s all about.”

There are other moves to make your mobile phone more mobile. A federal judge in Kansas recently asserted a subscriber’s right to sell a phone – including that new, upgraded one fresh out of the box.

Even some of the technology differences that make it hard to switch carriers without switching phones are eroding.

Wireless carriers say locking phones allows them to offer expensive new devices at discounted prices that customers can afford. And those devices are tuned specifically to the carrier’s network, which means they won’t work well on other networks.

“While the promise of universal compatibility by unlocking a device is enticing, we’re not quite there yet, and may never be,” said Bill Moore, whose company, RootMetrics, tests carriers’ networks for reliability and performance.

If vast numbers of cellphones are unlocked, the U.S. wireless industry may have to adjust its standard business model.

Though consumers can buy an unlocked phone for the full price of $650, most sign up for two-year service deals and get a discounted phone from the carrier.

Cellphone companies charge us a hundred bucks or two, but we pay the rest back as part of our monthly bills, or as an early termination fee if we don’t keep up.

To cement the deal, wireless carriers lock the phone so it only works on their network.

T-Mobile is one carrier focusing on a different model. It sells phones on an installment plan separate from the service. Consumers still pay for their phones through the carrier, and if they cancel the service, they owe the balance due on the phone.

Because the cost of the phone is no longer part of the monthly bill, consumers can see more easily how much they’re paying for service.

Unlocking all phones would reinforce that focus. Carriers could compete harder on prices or continue to emphasize faster networks, better coverage and even brand cachet.

The U.S. market would move closer to the cellphone deal that prevails in Europe.

There, customers select and buy a phone first, often saving up to pay the full price, though discounted phones are available with service plans.

Mostly, Europeans stick with one phone longer but change carriers more often. Switching carriers is a relatively easy matter of buying a subscriber identity module card, or SIM card, from the new carrier and plugging it into the phone.

U.S. travelers with the right unlocked phone can move across Europe by swapping SIM cards along the way.

The hurried push to unlock cellphones comes from the Federal Communications Commission. For nine months it has negotiated with the industry’s standard-bearer, CTIA-The Wireless Association.

“Enough time has passed, and it’s now time for the industry to act voluntarily or for the FCC to regulate,” the commission’s new chairman, Tom Wheeler, said in a letter last month to CTIA’s president, a post Wheeler once held.

Most customers don’t know it, but wireless carriers have unlocking policies in place now.

Generally, carriers say they will unlock phones once customers have completed their service deals, paid for the phone through installments or met an early termination fee. Military personnel also can get their phones unlocked upon deployment.

But Wheeler in his letter called on wireless carriers to go a couple of steps further and notify customers when their devices are eligible for unlocking — or better yet to unlock them automatically without charging a fee.

Smaller and regional carriers strongly support unlocking phones, said Tim Donovan of the Competitive Carriers Association. They often can’t get manufacturers of the newest phones to build models for their networks, but they could offer service to customers with unlocked phones from other networks.

T-Mobile not only sells phones on an installment plan. It also takes advantage of unlocked phones.

A year ago, its ads urged consumers to join the pink network by bringing over an unlocked AT&T iPhone. The company was acknowledging what consumers already were doing. More than a million iPhones operated on T-Mobile’s network, though it did not offer the device.

But there’s a reason T-Mobile ran those ads instead of Sprint or Verizon. T-Mobile and AT&T both use the same basic network technology, called GSM.

Sprint and Verizon use a different technology, called CDMA, that is incompatible with GSM phones.

“That has gotten lost in the debate” about unlocking, said Jot Carpenter, vice president of government affairs for CTIA-The Wireless Association. Other differences make Sprint’s and Verizon’s networks distinct from each other. ———


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