Verizon Wants Trump To Kill Phone Unlocking. Consumer Groups Say That Will Drag U.S. Wireless Back To The Stone Age
from the enshittify-ALL-the-things! dept
With the Trump administration openly destroying whatever is left of U.S. federal corporate oversight, regulatory independence, and consumer protection standards, Verizon sees an opportunity. It’s asking the Trump FCC to roll back longstanding phone unlocking requirements, something consumer groups say will drag America back to the dark ages of cell phone enshittification.
Longtime BestNetTech readers probably recall that Verizon used to be utterly obnoxious when it came to absolutely everything about using your mobile phone. Just the clumsiest, lamest, ham-fisted bullshit.
For example, the company used to ban customers from using third-party apps (including basics like GPS), forcing you to use extremely shitty Verizon VCast alternatives that rarely worked. It also used to be absolutely horrendous when it came to unlocking phones, switching carriers, and using the device of your choice on the Verizon network.
The goal was always to limit your choice, hamper open competition, and dominate the app, hardware, and software markets, which Verizon couldn’t do organically or competently because, as a giant shitty government-pampered telecom monopoly, it was incapable of innovating. The result was just a parade of hot garbage, shitty apps, its own terrible app store, and a mountain of weird restrictions and fees.
Two things changed all that. One, back in 2008 when Verizon acquired spectrum with requirements that users be allowed to use the devices of their choice. And two, as part of merger conditions affixed to its 2021 acquisition of Tracfone. Thanks to those two events Verizon was dragged, kicking and screaming, into a new era of openness that was of huge benefit to the public.
Now, it’s much easier to use pretty much any app of your choice (within the admitted confines of sometimes erratic app store approval policies). It’s often trivial to bring the phone of your choice to the Verizon network, and to swap your phone and number whenever you’d like, usually with minimal penalty or annoying long-term contracts.
But the golden age of Trump corruption offers a chance for Verizon to roll back the clock. Verizon recently issued a filing with the FCC falsely claiming that they simply must be allowed to unfairly lock down mobile devices, because doing anything else harms competition and helps dastardly criminals:
“The Unlocking Rule applies only to particular providers—mainly Verizon—and distorts the marketplace in a critical US industry. The rule has resulted in unintended consequences that harm consumers, competition, and Verizon, while propping up international criminal organizations that profit from fraud, including device trafficking of subsidized devices from the United States“
Verizon, which quickly folded to Trump administration demands that it wasn’t sexist or racist enough in exchange for Frontier merger approval, has a long history of being completely full of shit on issues relating to consumer rights. And they’re particularly full of shit here.
Consumer group Public Knowledge filed a reply at the FCC debunking Verizon’s claims this week, noting that phone unlocking has been a massive boon to cell phone and app innovation, and that the company’s claims of rampant fraud are completely baseless:
“Fraud already exists across the industry regardless of lock duration. The only argument Verizon can make is that the risk of fraud is marginally greater because unlocked
devices are more valuable in the trafficking market. But it presents no data showing how much more profitable it is for traffickers to target Verizon over other providers, or that the delta in device value resulting from unlock status is large enough to drive targeting decisions.”
And while Verizon is right that U.S. unlocking requirements are inconsistent across carriers, that’s an argument for greater FCC oversight, not less. The Biden FCC was just finalizing a new proposal that would have required that all wireless providers unlock devices within 60 days of purchase. Everybody but major wireless carriers supported the change.
Not only is that effort dead now thanks to Trump’s election and Verizon lobbying, but Verizon’s pushing to eliminate all such requirements, driving progress violently backward. Verizon’s hoping that such rollbacks can be part of FCC boss Brendan Carr’s “Delete, Delete, Delete” deregulatory bonanza, in which he’s destroying consumer protection standards under the pretense of government efficiency.
As Public Knowledge notes, Verizon’s interest here is entirely self-serving, and the impact would be terrible for the wireless market, customers, and the environment:
“Phone locking distorts market competition, raises switching costs, and contributes to
unnecessary e-waste. It impedes consumers’ ability to take full advantage of the devices they
already own, forces them to purchase new phones unnecessarily, and reduces their freedom to choose more affordable or higher-quality service options.”
It’s not clear if Verizon will get what it wants. Verizon lobbyists have won every other major consumer rights battle in the modern cell phone era (FCC autonomy, net neutrality, privacy oversight, broadband discrimination reforms) so it’s not any sort of stretch to believe they’ll win this fight as well. Still, you can always reach out to FCC boss Brendan Carr to see if he’s going to wimp out here as well.
Filed Under: 5g, consumers, corruption, deregulation, mobile, open, spectrum, unlocking, wireless




Comments on “Verizon Wants Trump To Kill Phone Unlocking. Consumer Groups Say That Will Drag U.S. Wireless Back To The Stone Age”
Dragging us back to the stone age seems to be the point.
I wouldn’t be surprised, going back to the stone age seems to be point.
Combine that with a complete corrupt, openly bribable government, and this seems like Verizon will easily get their way with a properly applied bribe.
Don't — Encourage — Trump !!!
The Stone Age is where Trump wants the U.S. to be. If you want to put a negative spin on something, rather claim it would be dragging the U.S. “back” to the Biden Age. Or call it “woke”. “Stone Age”, in contrast, will be reflexively embraced.
Re:
As long as it isn’t the later Neolithic, which is where you get authoritarianism, agriculure, and urbanism, which they need for their bullshit.
Do they want to end BYOD?
Does Verizon want to end BYOD? I’ve been buying unlocked devices for my family directly from Moto, Google, and Apple for the last like 12+ years and putting Verizon SIMs in them…and my advice to people is, if you can afford it, buy unlocked, “stock” devices direct from manufacturer outlets, and avoid buying from carriers and cell phone stores.
Re:
The phone companies never wanted customers to be able to own their phones in the first place. As another commenter noted, they were forced to, in an anti-trust settlement.
That settlement never applied to cellular service, and they avoided allowing customer-owned cell phones for as long as they felt the market would allow. Basically until the iPhone came along, which they didn’t want to miss out on. I’m sure they’d love to go back to the old days—when they owned everything, talk time (local or long distance) was charged by the minute, and data was charged by the megabyte. And, of course, competitors were non-existant.
Didn't we settle this in 1984?
With the breakup of AT&T in the early 1980’s, customers were allowed to own their phonesets and could purchase phones from any supplier they wanted, not forced to purchase/lease/rent from the phone company. Why does that not apply to call phone carriers?
Re:
The legislators didn’t want to handicap an up-and-coming technology. It’s also why cell phone service doesn’t have to meet reliability or availability (“universal service”) guarantees, and doesn’t have price controls or mandated third-party network access (“CLEC”).
Perhaps one day in the distant future, if cell phones subscriptions ever become more common than landlines, these policy decisions will need to be revisited.
That said, as far as I know, nobody’s required to buy a phone from their carrier to get cellular service; pretty much all carriers accept customer-owned devices. The problem is that many Americas cannot afford cell phones, so they get overpriced leases instead, and those are locked. “The cost of being poor”, it’s called. The people in charge are so far from poverty that the idea of being unable to come up with a few hundred dollars doesn’t really occur to them.
Re: Re:
Something that’s never going to happen as long as cell “service” providers are allowed to continue their bullshit practices. Seems like everyone in America is in a perfect Catch-22.
Don’t tell the Republicans that. They’ll fall over themselves trying to get it done.
Re:
But to actually get it done, one would have to figure out how to make stones into tools. How likely is that?
Then we should return the favor and kill Verizon. Put their greedy asses out of business.