Mark Bridge writes:
The Information Commissioner's Office - the UK authority that upholds information rights - has published details of its recent case involving T-Mobile. Contact information and expiry dates for minimum-term contracts were being sold to third parties, enabling mobile phone dealers to target potential customers who were in a position to sign a new contract... which could earn the dealer hundreds of pounds for a new connection.
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Mark Bridge writes:
On Monday there seemed to be a dearth of mobile news as the industry held its breath and waited for Steve Jobs to speak.
Why there was quite so much breath-holding beats me, because Apple had already told us what the announcement was going to cover. Anyway, we learned about iOS 5, which will arrive in the autumn, and its 200 new features – including a new messaging service called iMessage.
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Two former employees of T-Mobile UK who stole customer information and sold it to other businesses have been ordered to pay a total of £73,700 in fines and confiscation costs. David Turley and Darren Hames pleaded guilty to a number of offences under Section 55 of the Data Protection Act last year.
T-Mobile contacted the Information Commissioner's Office in 2008 after discovering that customer names, addresses, telephone numbers and contract end dates were being passed on to third parties.
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O2 has publicised its response to Ofcom's proposals for auctioning the UK radio spectrum that'll be used for 4G LTE mobile services. Ofcom is proposing 'caps' to prevent any single bidder gaining a large amount of spectrum, along with 'floors' of minimum ownership.
In a statement, O2 said "we believe that the proposed spectrum floors are a state aid and are therefore illegal under EU law."
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Visa Inc announced yesterday that it's acquiring Fundamo, a South African company that provides mobile financial services platforms for network operators and financial institutions.
In addition, Visa announced a new, five-year commercial agreement with UK-based mobile money service Monitise plc.
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