Spanish telecom operator Telefonica has reportedly entered into a strategic partnership with China Unicom, wherein both operators will use each other’s networks to expand their coverage. According to reports, the deal will provide Telefonica access to China Unicom’s network in the regions of Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, Australia, France and Sweden.

In return, China Unicom can reportedly increase its presence through Telefonica’s network in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Panama, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico, USA, Puerto Rico, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria Denmark, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Morocco, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Netherlands, Czech Republic, Romania, Sweden and Switzerland.

Reports suggest that Telefonica believes this agreement will help both operators expand their capabilities to provide telecom services to various customers in different geographic areas.

 

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The Ministry of Communications and Transportation in Mexico has reportedly approved Virgin Mobile Latin America’s (VMLA) request to offer wireless services as a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) in the country.

According to reports, Virgin Mobile is hopeful of offering its services within one year of its wholesale agreement with a mobile network operator.  Phil Wallace, Chairman, VMLA has reportedly said that by having their licence in hand they expect discussions with the operators to proceed along at a quicker pace.

As per sources, in June, Virgin Mobile had announced plans to launch MVNO services in Latin America, following which it signed an agreement with Movistar in Chile where it expects to launch its services by early 2012.

 

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Virgin Mobile, an innovative wireless service provider, plans to launch mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) services in Chile in Latin America by early 2012. As per reports, the company will use Movistar’s (Telefonica) network and has signed an agreement for the same. The company, which begins its MVNO services in Chile, plans to expand its services in Peru, Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Uruguay, Colombia and Mexico. The company aims to target the youth consumers by positioning itself as a fresh alternative to existing wireless providers.

As per sources, Richard Branson, Founder, Virgin, has said that they are very excited about what they have achieved in their first commercial operation in Chile. He added that this is a very interesting project for Virgin and they believe that all Virgin Mobile Chile clients will be very satisfied with the services they will offer with this launch. Further, Claudio Muñoz, Executive President, Movistar has said they are convinced that this agreement will make the telecommunications market grow in Chile. The fact that Virgin Mobile will start operating as a new mobile operator shows that this type of business is likely between companies.

 

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Telcordia stated that the company was awarded the contract to manage Mobile Number Portability services in Chile. As part of the contract, managed services, training and carrier-grade software solutions will be provided by Telcordia to the regulators of Chile while facilitating number portability launch for fixed and mobile services providers, slated for the later part of this year.

According to Cristian Cortés, President of Chile’s Number Portability Committee, Telcordia brings many years of telecommunications experience to ensuring a successful rollout of number portability in Chile, and this expertise is critical given their plans to take the system live before year end. In addition, their goal is to speed up the value and benefits of number portability to their nation’s population, increasing competition among service providers that ultimately drives lower prices and higher quality of service for consumers.

While Richard Jacowleff, President, Interconnection Solutions, Telcordia, stated that as part of the contract that the company won in Chile, the company will augment a business model for number portability that combines fixed and transaction-based fees.

Jacowleff believes that the new model strikes a balance between minimizing operator costs, making port transaction fees affordable and helping to ensure the number portability administrator properly invests in the infrastructure and management of services. He also expects that it will serve as a leading example for other countries in their approach toward number portability.

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The Chilean mobile network operator, Entel is known to have adopted Dual Carrier HSPA supplied by Ericsson, to upgrade its network. In theory, this will enable the mobile operator to provide peak download speeds of up to 42 Mbps.

However, Entel plans to offer 22 Mbps data speed to consumers while the average download speed will be 6 Mbps.

According to Nicolas Brancoli, Vice President of Unit Pacific for Ericsson in Latin America, the Chilean market has greatly benefited as a result of Ericsson partnering with Entel by way of a number of Hspa+ releases. In the process, high-speed broadband services were seen being deployed.

As per sources, there are more than 8 million customers using the Entel mobile networks, as on close of June. Entel’s market share stands at 35.5%.

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Google has introduced AdSense for mobile content in 15 countries. Following are the fifteen countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Czech Republic, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Nigeria, Philippines, Slovenia, Thailand, and Turkey.

AdSense is an ad serving application run by Google Inc. Website owners can enroll in this program to enable text, image, and video advertisements on their websites. These advertisements are administered by Google and generate revenue on either a per-click or per-impression basis.

For mobile websites, AdSense will automatically detect the type of phone viewing the site and deliver ads to match.

 

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Cellcrypt, the leading provider of encrypted voice calling on mobile phones, today announced that it reached an agreement with Telefónica, one of the largest telecom operators in the world, to include Cellcrypt Mobile™ in their product and service portfolio across the 13 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean where Telefónica operates.

Cellcrypt Mobile is used by governments and corporations globally and is a downloadable application for off-the-shelf smartphones that provides end-to-end encryption of voice calls over cellular (2G, 3G), Wi-Fi and satellite networks. Cellcrypt Mobile is certified to U.S. government National Institute of Standards and Technology FIPS 140-2 security standard and has been awarded the CESG Claims Tested Mark (CCTM) from the U.K. government’s information assurance authority.

The announcement is part of an extensive partnership agreement that allows Telefónica to promote, sell and support Cellcrypt Mobile and associated technologies within certain countries.

As Governments and Corporations increasingly use cell phones for operational and administrative communications they have an increased need for government-grade protection from increasingly sophisticated unauthorized interception threats. This protection is required end-to-end so as to assure users that they control the security of calls along all points of the call path between caller and recipient, and have adequately mitigated risks in compliance with internal security policies.

Cellcrypt’s software provides end-to-end voice call encryption on smartphones making secure calling with high voice quality and low latency as easy as a normal cell phone call. Utilizing the IP data channel, secure calls can be made using both Telefónica’s cellular and Wi-Fi® networks from the same handset. As a software-only solution, deployment to personnel can take as little as 10 minutes anywhere in the world. Only Internet access is required.

“We are delighted to be able to offer our government and corporate customers an end-to-end encrypted voice calling capability with strong, accredited cryptography and requiring no physical hardware. This is important as our customers have a need for rapid and flexible deployment and redeployment,” said Raul Fraile, Deputy Director Business Development, Applications and Partner Relationships of Telefónica Latinoamérica, “and the ability to have interoperability between several different brands of popular smartphones is also very important to more broadly meet the diverse needs of our customers.“

“Cell phones are the most convenient, and often only, option for many operational and administrative communications across governments and business – just as they are in our personal lives,” said Richard Greco, CEO of Cellcrypt. “One problem with cell phone eavesdropping is that you rarely know it has happened. Rather than hope that the inevitable sensitive and confidential conversations that occur on cell phones are not compromised, this solution means that Telefónica customers can depend on their cell phones to be a secure and exploit their mobility, convenience, ease-of-use and interoperability as an important communications asset.”

Telefónica is one of the largest telecommunications companies in the world in terms of number of accesses and market capitalization. Its activities are centered mainly on the fixed and mobile telephony businesses with broadband as the key tool for the development of both. The company has a customer base of more than 290 million customers around the world. Telefónica has a strong presence in Europe and Latin America, where the company focuses an important part of its growth strategy. Telefónica is a 100% listed company, with more than 1.5 million direct shareholders.

For more information please visit: www.telefonica.com.

 

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A recent research has revealed that Global use of ‘mobile finance’ surged in the past year as the spread of new technology and mobile banking infrastructure drove a huge increase in take-up rates around the world.

In countries as diverse as China, Brazil and Kenya, the number of new users of mobile banking soared over 100 percent in 12 months as banks leapfrogged traditional service models and moved directly to mobile.

The increases were not restricted to emerging markets alone though. Take-up rates also surged in the UK, the US, Singapore, South Korea and Sweden, where banks offered customers new services via their mobile handset. In China, mobile banking is used by 25 percent of consumers, up 150 percent from 2010.

In the UK, the proportion of people using mobile banking increased from 9.7 percent in 2010 to 20.4 percent in 2011, while in the US the rates rose from 11.4 percent to 21.9 percent. In Sweden it was greater still: 8.1 percent to 20 percent.

And while adoption rates increased, desire for mobile banking in areas where it is not widespread is strong, peaking in sub-Saharan Africa, where almost two-thirds (63 percent) of mobile owners expressed an interest in mobile banking. Developed countries such as the US, Singapore and Hong Kong have made minimal progression in mobile wallet adoption over the past year.

The US moved from 6 percent in 2010 to 8 percent in 2011, Singapore increased from 10 percent to 13 percent and Hong Kong from 16 percent to 17 percent. In contrast, mobile wallet usage in Chile was below 1 percent in 2010, but has risen to 7 percent in 2011, just one percentage point below the US and higher than Australia (6 percent), France (5 percent) and the Netherlands (5 percent).

In China, mobile wallet usage grew by 133 percent to 21 percent of consumers, in Brazil by 122 percent to 20 percent and in Kenya by 150 percent to 25 percent. The financial services that capture the highest interest in China are paying bills (25 percent), getting money out of the bank (15 percent), and receiving wages (15 percent).

China’s usage of mobile wallet is already a considerable 52 percent above the global average and less than a quarter (23 percent) of Chinese consumers says they are not interested in mobile wallet.

 

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A recent report by Global Mobile Suppliers Association (GSA) has revealed that around 208 operators are now investing in LTE, which is 98 operators more than in June 2010.

According to the report, the number of countries and territories where LTE systems are deployed or planned has increased by 32 in the same period.

The report confirms 154 firm LTE network deployments are in progress or planned in 60 countries, including 20 networks which have commercially launched. A further 54 operators in 20 more countries are engaged in LTE technology pilot trials or tests.

Taken together, it means that 208 operators in 80 countries are now investing in LTE. The report covers both LTE FDD and LTE TDD systems. The 60 countries and territories having firm LTE network commitments are Andorra, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong S.A.R., Hungary, India, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jersey, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Latvia, Libya, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Monaco, Namibia, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore , South Africa, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Tunisia, UAE, UK, Uruguay, USA, and Uzbekistan.

LTE networks are launched in 14 countries, namely Austria, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Lithuania, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Sweden, USA, and Uzbekistan. GSA forecasts that at least 81 LTE networks will be in commercial service by end-2012.

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Claro has inked a partnership deal with Samsung. Under the terms of the deal, Claro will exclusively offer Samsung’s new Galaxy line of smartphones on the Chilean market.

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