30

Mar

2011

UK mobile industry losing £140 million per year on premium rate fraud?

Author: The Fonecast

The UK mobile industry is losing up to £140 million a year on premium rate fraud, according to BillingScore.

It says network operators take around 30% from billing charges to cover fraud and bad debt, which means the cost of fraud affects all the players in the mobile industry, including SMS wholesalers, aggregators, content providers, retailers and consumers.

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30

Mar

2011

The week's mobile industry headlines, plus a conversation with Bob Sweetlove of HSC

Author: The Fonecast

In this week's edition of The Fonecast we catch up with Bob Sweetlove of HSC. He tells us the secret of winning a Mobile News Award - HSC picked up the 'best airtime distributor' prize earlier this month - and discusses some of the current trends in distribution.

Plus, as usual, we take a look at all the big news stories that affect the UK mobile industry… from developments with the BlackBerry PlayBook to a brand new mobile payment service.

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29

Mar

2011

Podcast - 30th March 2011

Author: The Fonecast

This week we're talking to Bob Sweetlove of distributor HSC about the company's recent Mobile News Award for 'best airtime distributor'. And, as usual, we look at the latest industry headlines, from the BlackBerry PlayBook to mobile payments.

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29

Mar

2011

Three UK moves into annual profit for the first time

Author: The Fonecast

Hutchison Whampoa, the parent company of Three UK, has published its results for 2010.

Total revenue for the business was up 8% to almost HK$326 billion (around £26 billion), with the 3 Group reporting its first-ever positive earnings. It now has over 29.6 million 3G customers worldwide.

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29

Mar

2011

Amazon launches cloud-based music... but full service is not for the UK

Author: The Fonecast

Amazon.com has launched a new music service called Amazon Cloud Drive, along with web-based and Android-based music players. It enables customers to store music online and then play it on any Android mobile device or web-connected computer.

Customers can save new Amazon MP3 purchases in 'the cloud' and can also upload their existing MP3 or AAC music collection.

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