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Ofcom says mobile contracts should ditch inflation-related price rises

Ofcom says mobile contracts should ditch inflation-related price rises

UK telecoms regulator Ofcom wants to ban inflation-related rises in phone and broadband contracts. Instead, it says any potential mid-contract price rises should be set out in pounds and pence.
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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

Friday, November 2, 2012

Apple, Google Maps run afoul of South Korea

VOA News writes:

Some map applications are stirring up trouble, virtually erasing South Korea's claims to an island chain also claimed by Japan.

​​Both Apple and Google have removed the Korean name for the islands from their English and Japanese map services.

South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young said Thursday the government is launching a formal objection with Apple.

"We greatly regret Apple's policy [that it will have three different names for the disputed Dokdo islet]. At the moment we heard Apple's new policy, our government official clearly expressed that we cannot accept it," he said.

The small island chain is known as Dokdo in Korean and as Takeshima in Japanese. The English versions of the map applications now identify the islands as Liancourt Rocks.

Park Hye-jung, a 26 year-old student from Seoul, says Koreans have a right to be upset.

"I think it is wrong to indicate Dokdo, located in our territory, as Takeshima or any other name," he said. "Those [Apple and Google] are companies which people from all over the world use, and their indicating Dokdo as Takeshima or as another name, not ours, will make it difficult for us to let people from all over the world know that Dokdo is under South Korean sovereignty."

Japanese officials have been increasingly aggressive in pushing for the use of the Japanese name for the islands as they press their claims to the territory.

Originally published on voanews.com

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