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Ofcom helps protect customers against unexpected roaming charges

Ofcom helps protect customers against unexpected roaming charges

UK service providers must notify customers when they connect to a different network

New rules from UK telecoms regulator Ofcom will protect customers when they use their mobile phone on a foreign network. In addition, customers will be alerted if they are inadvertently roaming, perhaps because they're near an international border.
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Global smartphone market is set for recovery, says new forecast

A new forecast from research specialists Canalys shows the smartphone market is set to recover next year. Worldwide shipments declined by 12% last year but that decline is expected to slow to 5% this year.
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Vodafone and Three plan to merge their UK businesses

Vodafone and Three plan to merge their UK businesses

New Hutchison/Vodafone network would be biggest UK operator

Vodafone Group plc and CK Hutchison Group Telecom Holdings Limited have agreed to combine their UK telecommunication businesses, respectively Vodafone UK and Three UK. The merger will create a large new network operator to compete with Virgin Media O2 and EE.
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UK mobile payment service Paym to close in March 2023

UK mobile payment service Paym will close on 7th March 2023. The service, which allowed users to make and receive payments using their mobile phone numbers, was launched in 2014.
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Qualcomm legal action moves forward in the UK

Qualcomm legal action moves forward in the UK

Which? seeks payout for Samsung and Apple smartphone owners

Consumer protection organisation Which? has been given permission by the UK's Competition Appeal Tribunal to represent Apple and Samsung smartphone buyers in a legal case against chip manufacturer Qualcomm.
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Opinion Articles

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Why there's no point putting NFC in the Apple iPhone 5

Mark Bridge writes:

A report in The Independent says Apple won’t be putting a Near Field Communication chip in the next version of the iPhone. Although Apple is thought to be working on its own NFC service connected to iTunes, it’s said to be “concerned by the lack of a clear standard across the industry”.

On the surface, that phrase doesn’t make sense. Both Visa and MasterCard already produce NFC-equipped contactless payment cards - and plenty of retailers have equipment to process them.

Sounds like a clear standard to me.

However, there is something standing in the way of mobile payment adoption. The issue, as Mary Carol Harris of Visa Europe explained at Mobile World Congress 2011, is that credit and debit cards are provided by your bank. Sticking NFC in a phone doesn’t make it a ‘mobile wallet’ any more than giving it a magnetic strip or a signature panel would. You’ve got to get your card information on the device before you can use it for payments… and that needs your bank. Either the bank needs help from the network operator to put secure information on the SIM - or it needs help from the manufacturer or OS provider to get it into the phone.

Actually, there’s a third way. It involves creating your own payment service and then persuading the payment providers to connect with it. That, I reckon, is what Apple has up its glossy white sleeve.

And that’s why there’s no point in putting NFC in the iPhone 5. Apple’s not quite ready yet. But things’ll be different by the time we reach the iPhone 6 (or the iPhone 5GS, whatever it’s called).

Apple may well see the lack of an industry standard for NFC. But that’s only because it’s looking for its own NFC standard to be adopted.

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Recent Podcasts

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Ofcom prepares the UK for 4G, WAC joins the GSMA and O2 talks about compensation

Podcast - 25th July 2012

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