The news that Apple was ending its exclusive relationship with AT&T  and would begin selling the iPhone 4 on Verizon’s network in the United  States was not a surprise, but the excitement was palpable nonetheless.         
“Freedom!” bellowed Jon Stewart on “The Daily Show,”  in a segment in  which people described their relationship to AT&T as that of slaves  to their masters,  subjects to their tyrants.          
 
Given the dissatisfaction with AT&T, it is easy to look at other  parts of the world and wonder why this didn’t happen sooner. After all,  the iPhone is available on multiple carriers in many European markets.   France even has a law that would have made AT&T’s exclusive  agreement with Apple illegal. Almost half of mobile phone customers in  the largest European countries do not have contracts with wireless  carriers, and can switch phones from one network to another with ease. 
The continent’s system is looser in part because  Europe settled on a  single technological standard for wireless carriers 20 years ago.   Countries there wanted to ensure that their citizens’ phones would work  as they traveled throughout the Continent. No such agreement was reached  in the United States, which had recently deregulated its telephone  industry, and carriers built their networks on separate technologies. 
“I’d call it the culture of competition,” said Alex Hills, a professor  of engineering and public policy at Carnegie Mellon, explaining why a  single standard was not set in the United States. “There was interest in  allowing the standards to compete with one another, and let the market  decide who would win.” 
That’s not to say that American policymakers have been hands off;   cellphone users have been gaining more freedom.  In 2003, wireless  customers were given the right to move their phone number from one  network to another, for instance.  And the federal government   ruled in  July that users could legally bypass Apple’s software restrictions  for the iPhone, a process known as jailbreaking. This decision reduced  Apple’s control, but its iPhones were still not able to connect to other  3G wireless networks. 
“In a European country, for a government to say you cannot have  exclusive relationships with phone manufacturers, that’s a very simple  thing,” said Charles Golvin, an analyst with Forrester Research.  “However, in the U.S. it’s a more complex technical problem.” 
Such technical barriers, of course, are not insurmountable. WhenApple  decided to work with Verizon, it built a new version of the iPhone to  work on the Verizon  network. But the new device comes with some  tradeoffs — for instance, the phone cannot handle a phone call at the  same time it is being used to access the Internet.        
Phone manufacturers and wireless carriers both have incentives to  restrict the choices available to consumers, through the sorts of  agreements that Apple has had with AT&T and now Verizon. For  carriers, being able to sell desirable phones allows them to lure  consumers to their networks, and they are willing to subsidize the cost  of the phone significantly in exchange. This gives phone manufacturers a  reliable way to distribute their phones, and brings the price of  increasingly sophisticated devices down to a level that seems reasonable  to the mainstream market. 
This tradeoff benefits consumers, as well. By agreeing to bind  themselves to AT&T for two years, iPhone owners paid for only about a  third of their phones; AT&T put up the rest. Europeans may be able  to leave their carriers the minute they think another company can do  better, but they pay significantly more upfront for that added choice. 
This doesn’t necessarily make them happier than the Americans raging  against AT&T. In November, ComScore, a marketing research firm,  asked mobile phone users to rank how satisfied they were with their  carriers, on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most satisfied. Only 11  percent of Americans gave their carriers a five or below. By contrast,  16 percent of Europeans ranked their carriers with a five or lower.         
The only question, then, is why don’t they switch?        
 
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