Under a just-announced deal, the European mobile carrier Orange will be the exclusive source for the iPhone in the French market. The unlocked phone is concession to a French law that forbids companies to bundle a cell phone to a specific mobile operator.
According to a report in the International Herald Tribune, Orange will offer both a locked version for its French net for about $560 and an unlocked version for a higher, but undisclosed price. Both are expected to be unveiled in November.
Apple recently signed exclusive deals, similar to the one with U.S.-based AT&T, with Britain's O2, the wireless division of Spain's Telefonica, and with Germany's T-Mobile, a subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom.
According to the Tribune report, Orange wouldn't say whether it had agreed to give Apple a share of the service revenues generated by iPhone users. This is one of the most striking features of Apple's move into the mobile phone market. The Tribune quoted a Nortel executive on how revolutionary this change is: 'For operators, having an handset maker suddenly demand a slice of their revenues is like being asked to change your religion,' said Gerry Collins, the director of strategic marketing at Nortel Networks, a Canadian company that makes wireless phone networks. "This is really a significant change for the industry.
From the outset, Apple's decision has come under concerted attack by hackers trying to unlock the phone's SIM card, thereby allowing the phone to run on a network other than AT&T. Apple has made a just-as-concerted counter-attack to undo those hacks.
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