http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/16/AR2010021605260.html?wpisrc=nl_pmtech

     

Verizon Wireless to welcome rival Skype onto its smartphones

 
  John Stratton, left, executive vice president of Verizon Wireless, and Josh 
Silverman, chief executive of Skype, announce their plan to put Skype on 
BlackBerrys and other Verizon smartphones. (Business Wire) 

      
By Cecilia Kang
Washington Post Staff Writer 
Wednesday, February 17, 2010 

Verizon Wireless said Tuesday that it would add Skype's Internet phone 
application to some of its smartphones, signaling a possible shift in the 
wireless industry's stance against allowing customers to use competing 
technologies on its networks. 

The companies said in a joint news conference at the Mobile World Congress in 
Barcelona that starting in late March, Verizon's 90 million customers will be 
able to download the free voice and videoconferencing software program onto 
nine smartphones offered by the carrier, including the BlackBerry Curve and 
Motorola Droid. 

With the application, a Verizon cellphone user could call a fellow Skype 
subscriber for free anywhere in the world. Calls to any non-Skype user would be 
counted against the user's voice minutes. The application will incorporate 
instant messaging, social networking tools and eventually videoconferencing, 
the companies said. To use the software, Verizon customers would need to have a 
voice and data plan. 

Analysts said the move reflects the wireless industry's growing recognition 
that Internet data plans will provide a significant source of revenue as more 
consumers buy smartphones, surf the Web and download applications. Wireless 
companies will increasingly seek to distinguish themselves by offering 
applications they once feared would erode their main business -- traditional 
voice services. 

"Voice dollars are coming down, and you are seeing more competition from 
prepaid minutes-use like from Boost," said Tole Hart, an independent wireless 
analyst. "So companies want to be able to show they have additional 
applications that are most desirable for people to use." 

Skype, which was launched in 2003 and has 500 million subscribers worldwide, 
aspires to become the dominant communications platform for the Internet, be it 
over cellphones, television sets or computers. The company has been partnering 
with television makers -- and now a communications service provider -- to 
expand its service beyond the PC. 

"Customers want a lot more from us. They want Skype everywhere and seamlessly 
integrated," said Josh Silverman, Skype's chief executive. 

The companies said their agreement is exclusive and will extend to other parts 
of Verizon Communications' business, including its broadband and television 
service, FiOs. The executives did not discuss financial aspects of the deal, 
including how revenue would be shared from Skype calls. 

The deal marks a sharp contrast to a years-long regulatory battle between the 
companies over so-called net-neutrality rules that would prevent carriers from 
blocking certain Internet applications on their networks. 

As the Federal Communications Commission attempts to craft those rules, Verizon 
is fighting against what it describes as over-regulation. Skype continues to be 
among the most vocal corporate proponents of the rules. 



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