There were a few interesting developments. Unlike in the US, the iPhone will not only be sold by the carrier and by Apple, but by a third party store, Europe’s Carphone Warehouse.
As predicted, the world’s largest carrier Vodafone refused Apple’s terms, and so Apple went with other carriers — O2 in the UK, Orange in France and T-Mobile in Germany; Jobs reportedly will be making the other announcements over the next two days. Interestingly, these are all the former national monopoly phone companies (BT spinoff O2 is now owned by the Spanish Telefonica monopoly).
The London Times reports O2 will give Apple 10% of the revenue from the iPhone, while the Guardian put it at 40%. (I suspect that’s for data revenues or profits, not the gross). Telefonica’s CEO aggressively fought to get the deal away from Orange and T-Mobile (both with big UK operations).
Also odd is that in June Orange sounded angry at Apple’s control of the music download market, but now (according to Le Figaro) is willing to pay Apple more than 10% of revenues for exclusive rights in France.
The Guardian said that the carriers were annoyed at getting pitted against each other to pay Apple the highest possible price — exactly as Apple did with Verizon and Cingular in the US. Students, what would we call this?
Photo from SlashGear.
Technorati Tags: Apple, iPhone, Orange, O2, Steve Jobs, T-Mobile
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