Text Messaging. How much do you pay?
The New York Times has published an article, that describes what kind of profit wireless carriers actually make:
TEXT messaging is a wonderful business to be in: about 2.5 trillion messages will have been sent from cellphones worldwide this year. <!–more–>The public assumes that the wireless carriers’ costs are far higher than they actually are, and profit margins are concealed by a heavy curtain.
Senator Herb Kohl, Democrat of Wisconsin and the chairman of the Senate antitrust subcommittee, wanted to look behind the curtain. He was curious about the doubling of prices for text messages charged by the major American carriers from 2005 to 2008, during a time when the industry consolidated from six major companies to four.
So, in September, Mr. Kohl sent a letter to Verizon Wireless, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile, inviting them to answer some basic questions about their text messaging costs and pricing.
All four of the major carriers decided during the last three years to increase the pay-per-use price for messages to 20 cents from 10 cents. The decision could not have come from a dearth of business: the 2.5 trillion sent messages this year, the estimate of the Gartner Group, is up 32 percent from 2007. Gartner expects 3.3 trillion messages to be sent in 2009.
So… you’ve got a great texting deal? You are paying too much!
Previous Stories
- Wal-Mart to start selling iPhone Sunday
- Latest release from Apple - Mactini
- Firefox Extensions Pack
- World’s First Triple-Engine Web Browser
- First Deep Space Internet
- Datamancer’s Steampunk Laptop
- Great Russian Firewall
- T-Mobile Google Android Commercial
- 7 reasons to avoid Flash when designing a website
- The Top 10 “Top 10 iPhone Flaws” lists
- Meet the T-Mobile G1 (Gallery)
- Apple iTunes 8.0 available for download
- Dazzle DVD Recorder - great video capture solution