Britain's biggest technology magazine
SEARCH FOR: IN:
Guest  Level 00    Register Log in

News 

[PSUs]
Thursday 2nd August 2001
Germans join Japanese in WAP charging 3:09PM, Thursday 2nd August 2001
German telecommunications giant Deutsche Telekom, following the lead given by Japan's NTT DoCoMo, has announced that it will be charging users to access certain Web sites on mobile phones from November, with plans to do the same in the UK in conjunction with One 2 One.

The company's mobile Internet portal is set to charge the equivalent of about £6 for a package of services including sports, financial and music news and a food guide. A similar service is then planned for the UK and Austria.

Half the revenues from the service will be shared with the content providers, a move which Deutsche Telekom hopes will drive standards up, as it has in Japan. Until now European WAP content has been criticised, but it is argued that in Japan DoCoMo's I-mode service has forced content providers to increase the quality of output in order to persuade potential customers to pay.

However, it might not be quite so easy
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
to replicate DoCoMo's success in the rest of the world. Only about 20 per cent of the Japanese have Web access from the desktop and so have to rely on mobile content. Consequently, there is less of a "free-Internet" culture.

Lesser factors might also come in to play. Much of I-mode's usage occurs on public transport, upon which Japanese commuters are heavily reliant. This is a variable factor in other countries and in the US, for instance, public transport is very much subservient to the private car.

DoCoMo has also been successful in differentiating what they provide from what is widely available on the Internet. I-mode is sold as a service - do you want to buy stock quotes, sports results, the weather, etc? - not as an alternative way to surf the Web. But it is unclear whether the same distinction can be made elsewhere, where nobody expects to pay for electronic information, even if they will quite happily pay for it on other media.

Nonetheless, Deutsche Telekom's plans may help to make it easier for companies to sell over the Internet. M-commerce (e-commerce on mobile devices) transactions could be charged to customers' phone bills rather than credit card accounts, turning the phone into an "electronic wallet".

Submit to: Digg  |  Slashdot  |  Del.icio.us  |  Technorati

Related News



Compare Broadband
Broadband?
Compare 50+ packages
Enter your postcode below:
Powered by:
Top 10 Broadband
Bookstore Top 5

Columns

Under Development: Shock of the new

David Robinson attempts to teach some old dogs a new trick or two as he tries to drag one of his customers - and the Inland Revenue - into the 21st century. › See full Opinion