On Jul 18, 2011, at 3:43 AM, Harald Welte <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 08:52:37PM +0900, Seungju Kim wrote:
>> I see that pretty much every vendor in GSM industry uses their own
>> dialect in their core network products, I wonder why. What do they
>> achieve from it while killing compatibility with other products from
>> other companies?
> 
> It's pretty simple: They ensure the operator is in a "vendor lock-in"
> and thus has to buy all equipment from the same vendor.
> 
> Thus, there is no real competition and the original "mix and match" idea
> as defined in the GSM specs is rendered void.
> 
> As an equipment supplier, you can then extort a lot of money from the
> operator, since switching from one supplier to another and replacing
> equipment is an expensive proposition.
> 
> What I'm personally surprised though is why nobody hires people (like us)
> to develop translators / gateways between those dialects.  That's
> probably a hell lot cheaper than replacing your core network from one
> vendor with another vendor...

I think it is because of the user agreement, I do not think that mobile 
operators are allowed to trace the dialects. Have you heard of a game 
Starcraft? Its end user agreement says that users must not sniff packets nor 
make gateways that mimics their protocols. Of course source modifications are 
not allowed either. I think there are such agreement between mobile operators 
and equipment suppliers about which we do not know much. That also could be 
another reason why used network equipments are so hard to get.

> Regards,
> 
> -- 
> - Harald Welte <[email protected]>           http://laforge.gnumonks.org/
> ============================================================================
> "Privacy in residential applications is a desirable marketing option."
>                                                  (ETSI EN 300 175-7 Ch. A6)
> 


Reply via email to