PDAStreet.com > News > 1 in 4 iPhones Unlocked 1 in 4 iPhones Unlocked
By James Alan Miller
Of 1.45 million missing iPhones, it is believed AT&T is holding about 480,000 in inventory, leaving 27 percent of these iPhones with no official home. That's a little more than a million of the 4 million iPhones Apple shipped in 2007. Those iPhones were likely unlocked to work on carrier networks other than those of Apple's operator partners. 27 percent is also a far greater percentage of unlocked iPhone than what analysts expected. And since Apple gets a (unknown) percentage of the monthly service fees its carrier-partners recieve for each iPhone sold, the more iPhones that are unlocked the greater Apple's bottom-line is negatively affected. For example, Apple has often stated it would like to ship 10 million iPhones in 2008. Should 30 percent of those be unlocked, resulting in no ongoing revenue from carriers for Apple, then it would miss out on $500 million of expected revenue, according to one analyst. So why is the unlocked iPhone market so big? Demand. When Apple released the iPhone last June you could only use it on AT&T's wireless network, which remains true for the U.S. So, from the beginning, there's been those who've made it their mission to unlock the iPhone so it could be used with operators here and abroad other than Apple;s carrier partners. Even though there is an official way for some customers to unlock their iPhones in Europe now, by far the majority of iPhone unlocks are performed unofficially: Either one at a time by individuals for personal user or, of greater concern for Apple, in large quanteties for shippment overseas—mostly to markets (all of Asia, for instance) where the iPhone isn't available yet. [Via internetnews.com] Related Links:
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