in the end though, at least in the case of Apple, the answer to the question may be in the contract with ATT. That contract is very likely worded so that ATT has the exclusive rights during the contract period to all voice service and all cellular data service provided to Apple devices (which could also be why any tablet won't happen until the contract is over. at least one with 3g). Thus Apple had to cut down Skype and cut out Google Voice for bypassing ATT service in violation of said contract.
Which could put the whole issue into the hands of the FCCs review of the legality of carrier/device locking. If they decide the time has come to unlock all phones from all services, Apple will have no choice but to allow a full version of Skype and also Google Voice. Although any such decision might allow current contracts to play out, just no extensions and all new devices are sim unlocked.
My only hope is that the FCC doesn't have the power to force any company to make devices for all carriers. I would rather Apple spend their time making the current iphone better rather than having to make a Verizon/Sprint capable phone
You may be right. It could be a contractual obligation to AT&T, but then it is just as wrong. Although, with regard to Google Voice, it isn't really the reasoning as Skype. I can see why AT&T would block VOiP and could actually agree with it, though I am a proponent of net neutrality. But in the case of Google Voice, the calls are still made over AT&T's voice line and they do not then lose the related revenue. What they lose is the long distance charges, but using alternative LD providers and calling cards is legal and should not be allowed to be the reason for denying the service or app. Also, killing the GV app, if for this reason, was stupid because you can still use the service on the iPhone, just not through a native app.
For the tablet, rumours are that it will go to Verizon. After seeing what happened when the turned down the iPhone, they might be more willing to a better contract with Apple.
Carriers would better convert their unused voice minutes in data ones and lease them to all kinds of skypes. Everyone could become happier.
Quote:
Originally Posted by zorinlynx
The whole concept of charging for celphone minutes is outdated, really.
Cel service should be transitioned into flat rate data, with everything going over IP. They can make money off it; look how inexpensive unlimited minutes plans are now.
And I bet the companies would save some money too from not having to meter calls anymore.
Of course, you can't do this with pre-paid services, but those are in another boat anyway.
When using 3G service, not Edge, voice and data are passed on the same channel. Voice traffic is basically going in a form of over VOIP along with the normal data traffic. The carriers are just holding on to the old way of doing things. Circuit switch voice is soooo obsolete.
When using 3G service, not Edge, voice and data are passed on the same channel. Voice traffic is basically going in a form of over VOIP along with the normal data traffic. The carriers are just holding on to the old way of doing things. Circuit switch voice is soooo obsolete.
Quite so. It's now merely the question of business model. But dinosaurs can't catch an acorn as quickly as a scrat
Which could put the whole issue into the hands of the FCCs review of the legality of carrier/device locking. If they decide the time has come to unlock all phones from all services, Apple will have no choice but to allow a full version of Skype and also Google Voice. Although any such decision might allow current contracts to play out, just no extensions and all new devices are sim unlocked.
My only hope is that the FCC doesn't have the power to force any company to make devices for all carriers. I would rather Apple spend their time making the current iphone better rather than having to make a Verizon/Sprint capable phone
We can only hope that the time has come. As remarked elsewhere, it's time the carriers (and cable companies, and other ISPs) are transitioned into dumb, neutral, unlimited pipes for a flat monthly fee. The era of allowing them to leverage their control of network access to force revenue out of customers and control what their customers can do should have been ended long ago. It's not in the public interest to allow this to continue: it stifles innovation and progress and harms consumers and business.
Frankly, I'm sure Apple would be very happy to allow a full blown Skype app on the iPhone. It's in their best interest to do so. They might not be so happy to allow Google Voice, but, c'est la vie.
As to forcing manufacturers to make devices for all carriers, this simply won't happen; it goes beyond the authority of the FCC. I would however like to see the FCC/Congress force the carriers to, in the future, create compatible networks on our spectrum which we are allowing them to use for our benefit. This would be absolutely no different than the mandate for TV stations to switch to broadcasting in HD. Along with unlocking, and treatment of wireless networks as no different than wired, this would create a level playing field for carriers, phone manufacturers and consumers and would well serve the public interest by increasing competition, stimulating innovation, and increasing consumer choice.
Here is the problem I think ATT has with GV. If they decided to go with a FAV Five plan, cellphone users would essentially have unlimited calling at the cheapest plan that allowed Fav Five calling. All calls would be made and received via your google number. So....an ATT customer could get unlimited calling, SMS and data for a US price of $70. Versus $30 for data, $20 for unlimited text, $100 for unlimited calling....$150 total!
Sounds great. Lower prices like that would give AT&T a major competitive edge in the market. New customers would flock to them, especially if they increased the subsidies on the phones.
Here is the problem I think ATT has with GV. If they decided to go with a FAV Five plan, cellphone users would essentially have unlimited calling at the cheapest plan that allowed Fav Five calling. All calls would be made and received via your google number. So....an ATT customer could get unlimited calling, SMS and data for a US price of $70. Versus $30 for data, $20 for unlimited text, $100 for unlimited calling....$150 total!
That may well be their reasoning, but if so, it is incredibly and unbelievably flawed.
1) Even without a native GV app on your iPhone, you still have 100% access to exactly what you described.
2) GV apps are available for other devices on the AT&T network.
3) What you described (free/cheap LD) is exactly what you can do on AT&T, every other cell carrier or your home line using calling cards or outbound call forwarding services. It is essentially using an alternative long distance provided. Laws and regulations already make this available to you, whether on AT&T or not.
4) Other apps provide SMS on iPhone and are allowed
5) Other apps automate using alternative long distance (calling cards, outbound call forwarding) and are allowed
So, they aren't really blocking what the want to block in this case. What they are trying to block is a legal alternative to profitable services they offer that are supplementary to the primary services that you contracted from them (voice and data service does not mean you have to use their LD service). And why block it on the iPhone but not on BB?
The problem is that AT&T is selectively saying "no Skype" on the iPhone when it allows it on other devices on their network. There's no good reason for that. The same for Sling player.
It's probably because the iPhone is "too popular" and it really would affect their bottom line.
I wonder if their will be the same wailing and gnashing of teeth and cries of 'unfair, unfair' if google does get investigated? Or is it only wrong to question Apple and their policies?
It's wrong when any company does it. I'm glad that Google is also getting investigated. I really couldn't care less though because I'm an iPhone user and Apple/AT&T's practices bothers me.
The problem is that AT&T is selectively saying "no Skype" on the iPhone when it allows it on other devices on their network. There's no good reason for that. The same for Sling player.
It's probably because the iPhone is "too popular" and it really would affect their bottom line.
It actually support the other side of the argument --- that AT&T has nothing to do with this "ban".
Plenty of other cell phone carriers ban VoIP outright --- O2 in UK, T-Mobile in Germany.
We may not like it, but all of these companies must be free to restrict, or not restrict, whatever they want. As consumers we have the best option... to not use their services if we are unhappy with those restrictions.
True True and true. But tell me...have you ever paid your credit card bill over the phone and was charged a processing fee of 4.95? What about paying your mortgage bill online for a fee...vs sending a check out by mail? Convenience! It's more convenient to do everything in one place than having to go to multiple places to get the job done.
But in the end, you are still right. What do you think is the reason for banning the app?
Given Apples ambiguous reason for why, we can't really know. What we do know:
1) Denying the app does not block any of the features of the GV service.
2) Other devices are allowed to have GV native apps on the AT&T network.
3) Other apps on the iPhone duplicate features provided by GV, individually, if not as a whole. This includes, SMS, calling cards, alternate long distance.
4) Third party GV apps were approved and for sale months ago and pulled very recently
5) The only way they could really block access to GV would be to block every single GV phone number and URL.
6) Google stated that the reason given by Apple for denying the app was that it duplicated existing functionality, even though lots of apps do so, including the features that GV offers.
With these givens, I can speculate on the real reason. I believe it is because of Push Notifications in iPhone 3.0 and what it means for VVM (and SMS to a lesser degree). As we have said, the all functionality of a native app is already available and cannot be clocked simply by blocking the app. Google can and will likely just release a web app for the iPhone that has all of the same functionality. But VVM is different. Having access to a third party voice mail system is no big deal on the iPhone. Basically, it would be no different than calling into your home a checking messages remotely. But, with GV, the messages would be left at the GV phone number that you give out and that rings your iPhone. Additionally, without a native app, then you would not receive a notification of new messages, expect perhaps through an email. Without instant notification, the usefulness of an addon voice mail service is questionable at best. But iphone OS 3.0 brought Push. Now, when you get a new message, you would get an instant notification. You could open your GV app and browse your voice mail, just like VVM and listen to messages as you wish, just like VVM...except that you can also read a transcription of your voice mail. Now you have a legitimate reason to dump your VVM service. This isn't an option right now with AT&T, but with other carriers it is. Apple makes a lot of money from VVM, both through VVM server sales to the carriers and a recurring sub fee from the carrier for every subscriber. This is real money Apple would lose and they would lose it internationally.
To me, this is the only reason that makes sense. Blocking customers access to cheap or free long distance, is not only virtually impossible for AT&T but would guarantee they would be investigated. It also makes no sense, as they aren't blocking other ways to do it, both from google and other companies or even users direct dialing calling cards. AT&T just doesn't benefit from simply denying the App in any real way. BlackBerry doesn't have a native VVM service yet, so RIM has no reason to block GV and so it is allowed. This would also explain why the third party apps were allowed months ago. Before Push notifications, no one cared about the VVM feature from GV. If users had to keep opening the app to check for new messages every 10 minutes they might use it, but no way they would drop their trusty iPhone VVM service.
Anyway, with the givens that we do know, no other reason makes sense to me. It could have been AT&T's decision or at least pressure, as little sense as that makes in this case. It could have been Apple independently deciding against the app for the own interests. In either case, it was a dick move and it shouldn't matter that Apple is involved for people to see this. But because it is Apple, many can't see the problem and if we question it, we are trolling misfits who hate Apple.
Why is AT&T getting blamed for all this? AT&T has not previously banned anything similar.
Mainly because AT&T openly admitted in the past that they were involved in denying apps they didn't want on their 3G network. Sling is the best example and AT&T made no secrets of their involvement. My carrier would have no problem with Sling over 3G, but because of AT&T, I can't use it. Similarly, when the first tethering app was made available, AT&T complained and Apple pulled it. My carrier explicitly allows tethering and AT&T's influence on Apple prevented me from being Apple to tether until Apple provided a way for carriers to enable and disable a formal tethering option per device.
For Apple to restrict a VoIP app from running on 3G has NO benefit to Apple, so it only makes sense this restriction was put in place (and is clearly in the TOS for the SDK) at the request/demand of their carrier partners, with AT&T being front and centre.
Why is AT&T getting blamed for all this? AT&T has not previously banned anything similar.
Apple and AT&T have essentially come out to say that they crippled the Slingbox application to work only over wifi to prevent excess load on the network. While AT&T isn't directly responsible for the decisions Apple makes, they do influence Apple.
Except that the full version of Slingplayer is available on other cell phone platforms that are available with AT&T.
Munster just said that there is going to be a much better appletv in the future --- so was it Apple that shot Slingplayer down because the new appletv will have those exact functions?
Sorry to cut your quote short. Thanks for the detailed reply. I was unaware VVM was fee based outside the US. That, would make sense as to why the apps were pulled
No problem, it was sort of long.
VVM being an option depends on carrier and plan. With my carrier in Canada, when the iPhone 3G was first launched, you could get VVM as part of an iPhone package, as part of an iPhone Value Pack (SMS, WhoCalled, etc included) on top of your voice and data plans or you could get it as a stand alone option. I chose the stand alone option. Today, it is not available on it's own, but only as part of iPhone plans or iPhone value packs. But most people I know that bought iPhones kept their original voice plan and added VVM though one of the value packs. A proper native GV would hit the carrier even harder then, because the people that have the value packs only got them for SMS and VVM. A GV app would allow them to dump the whole value pack, costing the carrier more. For me, they would lose $8 a month if I dropped VVM. For people with Value Packs, it would be closer to $15 or $20 per month they would lose. But GV isn't available in Canada yet, so my disagreement with denying the app is more on principle.
Maybe AT&T will start allowing more al carte options for iPhone users instead of the required pre-built plans. If and when they do this, GV becomes a threat to them. For now, it is a possible threat to Apple and other carriers. Doesn't make it right to block the app though.
You also said you would agree if AT&T made customer buy unsubsidized phones. They can, but you now don't agree?
As far as where profits and revenue are going, no, not all revenue can go to AT&T just because they are the provider. With your ISP at home, do you only visit sites and use internet services that are owned or approved by your ISP? If not, then you are potentially creating revenue and profit for the sites you visit and the services you use that are not going to your ISP. Would you honestly wait for your ISP to permit you? If you have ever used a third party calling card at home or on your cell, you are redirecting revenue from your provider...should you not be allowed to do this?
Comparing your ISP provider with mobile phone carrier is very poor considering, if you read your binding agreement, you know the little words in your contract that you don't read, your ISP provider is providing you a service to internet. Not sure what you are trying to get at.
In your contract it states it provides you a service to internet and if you undertake anything illegal, YOU are responsible. BTW I know in USA, some iSP providers block sites, so is that not similarly to Apple blocking Skype?? Let's not use that example, very poor indeed.
Comments
indeed.
in the end though, at least in the case of Apple, the answer to the question may be in the contract with ATT. That contract is very likely worded so that ATT has the exclusive rights during the contract period to all voice service and all cellular data service provided to Apple devices (which could also be why any tablet won't happen until the contract is over. at least one with 3g). Thus Apple had to cut down Skype and cut out Google Voice for bypassing ATT service in violation of said contract.
Which could put the whole issue into the hands of the FCCs review of the legality of carrier/device locking. If they decide the time has come to unlock all phones from all services, Apple will have no choice but to allow a full version of Skype and also Google Voice. Although any such decision might allow current contracts to play out, just no extensions and all new devices are sim unlocked.
My only hope is that the FCC doesn't have the power to force any company to make devices for all carriers. I would rather Apple spend their time making the current iphone better rather than having to make a Verizon/Sprint capable phone
You may be right. It could be a contractual obligation to AT&T, but then it is just as wrong. Although, with regard to Google Voice, it isn't really the reasoning as Skype. I can see why AT&T would block VOiP and could actually agree with it, though I am a proponent of net neutrality. But in the case of Google Voice, the calls are still made over AT&T's voice line and they do not then lose the related revenue. What they lose is the long distance charges, but using alternative LD providers and calling cards is legal and should not be allowed to be the reason for denying the service or app. Also, killing the GV app, if for this reason, was stupid because you can still use the service on the iPhone, just not through a native app.
For the tablet, rumours are that it will go to Verizon. After seeing what happened when the turned down the iPhone, they might be more willing to a better contract with Apple.
Carriers would better convert their unused voice minutes in data ones and lease them to all kinds of skypes. Everyone could become happier.
The whole concept of charging for celphone minutes is outdated, really.
Cel service should be transitioned into flat rate data, with everything going over IP. They can make money off it; look how inexpensive unlimited minutes plans are now.
And I bet the companies would save some money too from not having to meter calls anymore.
Of course, you can't do this with pre-paid services, but those are in another boat anyway.
When using 3G service, not Edge, voice and data are passed on the same channel. Voice traffic is basically going in a form of over VOIP along with the normal data traffic. The carriers are just holding on to the old way of doing things. Circuit switch voice is soooo obsolete.
When using 3G service, not Edge, voice and data are passed on the same channel. Voice traffic is basically going in a form of over VOIP along with the normal data traffic. The carriers are just holding on to the old way of doing things. Circuit switch voice is soooo obsolete.
Quite so. It's now merely the question of business model. But dinosaurs can't catch an acorn as quickly as a scrat
Which could put the whole issue into the hands of the FCCs review of the legality of carrier/device locking. If they decide the time has come to unlock all phones from all services, Apple will have no choice but to allow a full version of Skype and also Google Voice. Although any such decision might allow current contracts to play out, just no extensions and all new devices are sim unlocked.
My only hope is that the FCC doesn't have the power to force any company to make devices for all carriers. I would rather Apple spend their time making the current iphone better rather than having to make a Verizon/Sprint capable phone
We can only hope that the time has come. As remarked elsewhere, it's time the carriers (and cable companies, and other ISPs) are transitioned into dumb, neutral, unlimited pipes for a flat monthly fee. The era of allowing them to leverage their control of network access to force revenue out of customers and control what their customers can do should have been ended long ago. It's not in the public interest to allow this to continue: it stifles innovation and progress and harms consumers and business.
Frankly, I'm sure Apple would be very happy to allow a full blown Skype app on the iPhone. It's in their best interest to do so. They might not be so happy to allow Google Voice, but, c'est la vie.
As to forcing manufacturers to make devices for all carriers, this simply won't happen; it goes beyond the authority of the FCC. I would however like to see the FCC/Congress force the carriers to, in the future, create compatible networks on our spectrum which we are allowing them to use for our benefit. This would be absolutely no different than the mandate for TV stations to switch to broadcasting in HD. Along with unlocking, and treatment of wireless networks as no different than wired, this would create a level playing field for carriers, phone manufacturers and consumers and would well serve the public interest by increasing competition, stimulating innovation, and increasing consumer choice.
Here is the problem I think ATT has with GV. If they decided to go with a FAV Five plan, cellphone users would essentially have unlimited calling at the cheapest plan that allowed Fav Five calling. All calls would be made and received via your google number. So....an ATT customer could get unlimited calling, SMS and data for a US price of $70. Versus $30 for data, $20 for unlimited text, $100 for unlimited calling....$150 total!
Sounds great. Lower prices like that would give AT&T a major competitive edge in the market. New customers would flock to them, especially if they increased the subsidies on the phones.
Here is the problem I think ATT has with GV. If they decided to go with a FAV Five plan, cellphone users would essentially have unlimited calling at the cheapest plan that allowed Fav Five calling. All calls would be made and received via your google number. So....an ATT customer could get unlimited calling, SMS and data for a US price of $70. Versus $30 for data, $20 for unlimited text, $100 for unlimited calling....$150 total!
That may well be their reasoning, but if so, it is incredibly and unbelievably flawed.
1) Even without a native GV app on your iPhone, you still have 100% access to exactly what you described.
2) GV apps are available for other devices on the AT&T network.
3) What you described (free/cheap LD) is exactly what you can do on AT&T, every other cell carrier or your home line using calling cards or outbound call forwarding services. It is essentially using an alternative long distance provided. Laws and regulations already make this available to you, whether on AT&T or not.
4) Other apps provide SMS on iPhone and are allowed
5) Other apps automate using alternative long distance (calling cards, outbound call forwarding) and are allowed
So, they aren't really blocking what the want to block in this case. What they are trying to block is a legal alternative to profitable services they offer that are supplementary to the primary services that you contracted from them (voice and data service does not mean you have to use their LD service). And why block it on the iPhone but not on BB?
Na, just in the dark ages.
Yeah it definitely feels like it sometimes.
It's probably because the iPhone is "too popular" and it really would affect their bottom line.
I wonder if their will be the same wailing and gnashing of teeth and cries of 'unfair, unfair' if google does get investigated? Or is it only wrong to question Apple and their policies?
It's wrong when any company does it. I'm glad that Google is also getting investigated. I really couldn't care less though because I'm an iPhone user and Apple/AT&T's practices bothers me.
The problem is that AT&T is selectively saying "no Skype" on the iPhone when it allows it on other devices on their network. There's no good reason for that. The same for Sling player.
It's probably because the iPhone is "too popular" and it really would affect their bottom line.
It actually support the other side of the argument --- that AT&T has nothing to do with this "ban".
Plenty of other cell phone carriers ban VoIP outright --- O2 in UK, T-Mobile in Germany.
http://www.wirelessweek.com/Operator...IP.aspx?terms=
Why is AT&T getting blamed for all this? AT&T has not previously banned anything similar.
What happened to "Android will be the best phone because it will be open"?
It will be open to the finest apps Google can offer.
True True and true. But tell me...have you ever paid your credit card bill over the phone and was charged a processing fee of 4.95? What about paying your mortgage bill online for a fee...vs sending a check out by mail? Convenience! It's more convenient to do everything in one place than having to go to multiple places to get the job done.
But in the end, you are still right. What do you think is the reason for banning the app?
Given Apples ambiguous reason for why, we can't really know. What we do know:
1) Denying the app does not block any of the features of the GV service.
2) Other devices are allowed to have GV native apps on the AT&T network.
3) Other apps on the iPhone duplicate features provided by GV, individually, if not as a whole. This includes, SMS, calling cards, alternate long distance.
4) Third party GV apps were approved and for sale months ago and pulled very recently
5) The only way they could really block access to GV would be to block every single GV phone number and URL.
6) Google stated that the reason given by Apple for denying the app was that it duplicated existing functionality, even though lots of apps do so, including the features that GV offers.
With these givens, I can speculate on the real reason. I believe it is because of Push Notifications in iPhone 3.0 and what it means for VVM (and SMS to a lesser degree). As we have said, the all functionality of a native app is already available and cannot be clocked simply by blocking the app. Google can and will likely just release a web app for the iPhone that has all of the same functionality. But VVM is different. Having access to a third party voice mail system is no big deal on the iPhone. Basically, it would be no different than calling into your home a checking messages remotely. But, with GV, the messages would be left at the GV phone number that you give out and that rings your iPhone. Additionally, without a native app, then you would not receive a notification of new messages, expect perhaps through an email. Without instant notification, the usefulness of an addon voice mail service is questionable at best. But iphone OS 3.0 brought Push. Now, when you get a new message, you would get an instant notification. You could open your GV app and browse your voice mail, just like VVM and listen to messages as you wish, just like VVM...except that you can also read a transcription of your voice mail. Now you have a legitimate reason to dump your VVM service. This isn't an option right now with AT&T, but with other carriers it is. Apple makes a lot of money from VVM, both through VVM server sales to the carriers and a recurring sub fee from the carrier for every subscriber. This is real money Apple would lose and they would lose it internationally.
To me, this is the only reason that makes sense. Blocking customers access to cheap or free long distance, is not only virtually impossible for AT&T but would guarantee they would be investigated. It also makes no sense, as they aren't blocking other ways to do it, both from google and other companies or even users direct dialing calling cards. AT&T just doesn't benefit from simply denying the App in any real way. BlackBerry doesn't have a native VVM service yet, so RIM has no reason to block GV and so it is allowed. This would also explain why the third party apps were allowed months ago. Before Push notifications, no one cared about the VVM feature from GV. If users had to keep opening the app to check for new messages every 10 minutes they might use it, but no way they would drop their trusty iPhone VVM service.
Anyway, with the givens that we do know, no other reason makes sense to me. It could have been AT&T's decision or at least pressure, as little sense as that makes in this case. It could have been Apple independently deciding against the app for the own interests. In either case, it was a dick move and it shouldn't matter that Apple is involved for people to see this. But because it is Apple, many can't see the problem and if we question it, we are trolling misfits who hate Apple.
It actually support the other side of the argument --- that AT&T has nothing to do with this "ban".
Plenty of other cell phone carriers ban VoIP outright --- O2 in UK, T-Mobile in Germany.
http://www.wirelessweek.com/Operator...IP.aspx?terms=
Why is AT&T getting blamed for all this? AT&T has not previously banned anything similar.
Mainly because AT&T openly admitted in the past that they were involved in denying apps they didn't want on their 3G network. Sling is the best example and AT&T made no secrets of their involvement. My carrier would have no problem with Sling over 3G, but because of AT&T, I can't use it. Similarly, when the first tethering app was made available, AT&T complained and Apple pulled it. My carrier explicitly allows tethering and AT&T's influence on Apple prevented me from being Apple to tether until Apple provided a way for carriers to enable and disable a formal tethering option per device.
For Apple to restrict a VoIP app from running on 3G has NO benefit to Apple, so it only makes sense this restriction was put in place (and is clearly in the TOS for the SDK) at the request/demand of their carrier partners, with AT&T being front and centre.
It actually support the other side of the argument --- that AT&T has nothing to do with this "ban".
Plenty of other cell phone carriers ban VoIP outright --- O2 in UK, T-Mobile in Germany.
http://www.wirelessweek.com/Operator...IP.aspx?terms=
Why is AT&T getting blamed for all this? AT&T has not previously banned anything similar.
Apple and AT&T have essentially come out to say that they crippled the Slingbox application to work only over wifi to prevent excess load on the network. While AT&T isn't directly responsible for the decisions Apple makes, they do influence Apple.
Munster just said that there is going to be a much better appletv in the future --- so was it Apple that shot Slingplayer down because the new appletv will have those exact functions?
Sorry to cut your quote short. Thanks for the detailed reply. I was unaware VVM was fee based outside the US. That, would make sense as to why the apps were pulled
No problem, it was sort of long.
VVM being an option depends on carrier and plan. With my carrier in Canada, when the iPhone 3G was first launched, you could get VVM as part of an iPhone package, as part of an iPhone Value Pack (SMS, WhoCalled, etc included) on top of your voice and data plans or you could get it as a stand alone option. I chose the stand alone option. Today, it is not available on it's own, but only as part of iPhone plans or iPhone value packs. But most people I know that bought iPhones kept their original voice plan and added VVM though one of the value packs. A proper native GV would hit the carrier even harder then, because the people that have the value packs only got them for SMS and VVM. A GV app would allow them to dump the whole value pack, costing the carrier more. For me, they would lose $8 a month if I dropped VVM. For people with Value Packs, it would be closer to $15 or $20 per month they would lose. But GV isn't available in Canada yet, so my disagreement with denying the app is more on principle.
Maybe AT&T will start allowing more al carte options for iPhone users instead of the required pre-built plans. If and when they do this, GV becomes a threat to them. For now, it is a possible threat to Apple and other carriers. Doesn't make it right to block the app though.
You also said you would agree if AT&T made customer buy unsubsidized phones. They can, but you now don't agree?
As far as where profits and revenue are going, no, not all revenue can go to AT&T just because they are the provider. With your ISP at home, do you only visit sites and use internet services that are owned or approved by your ISP? If not, then you are potentially creating revenue and profit for the sites you visit and the services you use that are not going to your ISP. Would you honestly wait for your ISP to permit you? If you have ever used a third party calling card at home or on your cell, you are redirecting revenue from your provider...should you not be allowed to do this?
Comparing your ISP provider with mobile phone carrier is very poor considering, if you read your binding agreement, you know the little words in your contract that you don't read, your ISP provider is providing you a service to internet. Not sure what you are trying to get at.
In your contract it states it provides you a service to internet and if you undertake anything illegal, YOU are responsible. BTW I know in USA, some iSP providers block sites, so is that not similarly to Apple blocking Skype?? Let's not use that example, very poor indeed.
Actually i do, but very poor choice.
Oh, just read Wobegon's post ... seems we are incorrect and as he says ..."False comparisons do not a valid argument make."
Bogerty!
Apple allowed Skype onto the App Store, but it's Wi-Fi only.
Google allowed Skype onto the Android Market, but calls are made over the cellular tower, thus using up the customers minutes.
All better now.
p.s., That's my signature you quoted. It wasn't part of my argument.