AT&T, Verizon Under US Investigation For Collusion To Lock In Customers (nytimes.com) 39
bongey writes: AT&T and Verizon are currently under investigation for colluding with the GSMA standards group to thwart eSIM technology and hinder consumers from easily switching wireless carriers. eSIM technology lets people remotely switch wireless providers without having to insert a new SIM card into a device. According to The New York Times, the two companies "face accusations that they colluded with the GSMA to try to establish standards that would allow them to lock a device to their network even if it had eSIM technology." The Justice Department opened the investigation roughly five months ago after at least one device maker and one wireless carrier filed formal complaints. Compare cell plans at Wirefly to see the current plans being offered by AT&T and Verizon.
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Yeah, Trump HATES golf. Well known fact.
eSIM? No thanks. (Score:2)
Instead of a carrier lock, I'll have a device lock. How can I be sure that I can move my network ID from one phone to another? And what about that pocket full of SIM cards that I can just plug in when I go overseas?
A lot of my right wing friends (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, we either do something or we do nothing, but the cell phone companies are going to do stuff whether we like it or not.
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They whine on every topic no matter how trivial. The same reasons are always to blame - Obama, liberals, regulations, feminists, and elitist educated types telling me to read.
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Verizon and co colluded to prevent people from switching from easily changed SIM cards to some electronic system that'd make it harder to switch carriers? Verizon?
And now they're being sued for being anti-competitive?
Is this bizarro world?
You really misunderstood something. In an ESIM device, there is no SIM slot. A generic SIM (or UICC) is permanently embedded into the device. When you activate it on the carrier, that ESIM is programmed with your carrier's data. AT&T and Verizon are being accused of trying to prevent (or just make it harder) for the ESIM to be reprogrammed if you move to another carrier. Essentially locking the entire device to their network after the initial programming.
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What's the process for eSIM programming? (Score:3)
It's only better if the entire process can be handled without dealing with a carrier storefront activation process, otherwise swapping SIM cards is dead easy and gives the carrier you're moving from absolutely no way to block it (barring a carrier locked phone).
Will phone makers have some magic process that allows me to enter the data held by the SIM (and, ideally, save it, so I can e-switch between eSIM profiles)? Please tell me it won't involve a web site or some other transactional system that won't work in half the countries, half the time.
Part of me thinks eSIM makes some sense but it also seems like the prime beneficiary are Apple and other handset makers who are wringing their hands over physical ports, not consumers who want to change carriers.
And as usual, it's easy to see how the handset makers and carriers will collude against the consumer. The carriers will give in to the handset makers desire to not have a slot, the handset makers will make sure switching eSIM data is complicated and requires a store visit or some other carrier impediment.
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While Apple and other device manufacturers surely appr
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Bad news, swb. The programming process is driven by the carriers. Normally via a webpage connected to their provisioning systems. You basically sign up for service with a carrier, the carrier sends a request to an SMDP+ provider, and the SMDP+ provider gathers up all the information (assigns an IMSI, etc.) and creates a profile and sends it to the device. This is a current project I'm involved with at work (I work for a large regional cell provider)
So how the hell does a person do this within an hour of landing at a foreign airport, especially in a third world country?
When I went to London I planned ahead and had a friend in the UK buy and activate a pay as you go SIM from Asda for me. He mailed it over, and I had it with me on the plane. But even if I hadn't planned ahead, there were a whole mess of SIM card vendors at the airport and it would have been easy to get one on the spot. I had my phone up on a local UK number/plan before we left the air
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Easy. You'd go to your device, click "subscribe to new service" or whatever, and you'd get a list of providers, pick one, log in or create a new account, and your phone either grabs the existing account, or creates a new one and activates itself.
Remember, the goal is to buy a device, and then have the ability to at your leisure pick a provider from the on-screen menu.
Apple loves this bec
Locking - ESIMS & Cool Phones (Score:1)