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5G contributed €2 billion to French GDP in 2020

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Subscriptions accounted for just €13 million but income will soar with Industry 4, according to Arthur D. Little’s report

The French 5G sector generated nearly €2 billion in revenue in 2020, according to an end of year study by analyst Arthur D. Little, reports Light Reading. Half the money went to infrastructure building by Orange, Bouygues Telecom, SFR and Free. The other half was spent on 5G end-user devices. 

So far the subscriptions to 5G postpaid plans have raised €13 million. How will their contribution to the industry’s gross domestic product rise in 2022? Could fixed wireless access (FWA) help deliver to subscribers? The report suggests that 5G private networks will be the best bet for industrial scale gratification.

For consumers the operators all now offer 5G plans with large inclusive data allowances. Orange and Bouygues Telecom both currently cap their plans at 200 GB. SFR offers an unlimited 5G plan. Free, the disruptor, offers unlimited 5G to those subscribers on its Freebox home broadband and TV plans. 

Build 5G fields and subscribers will come

The construction of France’s 5G infrastructure started in September 2020, after a delayed spectrum auction process that began with the 3.5GHz band. In some regions spectrum auctions were only recently concluded. By the end of 2020 all four operators had activated their 5G networks started marketing their debut 5G services.

The latest figures from French telecoms regulator Arcep have Iliad-owned Free in the vanguard of commercial deployment of 5G sites.

Could fixed wireless access set them Free?

By October 2021 Free had 12,000 5G sites up and running, mostly in the 700MHz to 800MHz band. Bouygues Telecom had 5,003 sites, Altice France-owned SFR had 3,160 and Orange with 2,473. By contrast, Orange leads the way on the 3.5GHz band, with 2,177 sites broadcasting on that particular brick-penetrating, urban friendly frequency. 

Orange, Bouygues Telecom and SFR all use the 1.8GHz and 2.1GHz frequencies too.

By 2022 each national operator with a 5G license must have deployed 3,000 5G sites, said the Arcep report, while the number of sites deployed must be greater than 8,000 (including 4,000 in low density areas) by 2024. 5G slicing should be available from 2023 and networks should be “100 per cent 5G” by 2030.

5G will do the business for France by 2027

Arthur D. Little’s report predicts that 5G investments at €1.5 to €2.2 billion, while revenue is expected to be round €23 to €28 billion by 2027, depending on how quickly 5G systems are adopted.

By that time five vertical sectors will account for 75 per cent of the money spent on business applications. Taking the average mean of the analysts’ approximations, Industry 4.0 is likely to make €1.6 billion, Transport will move €1.1 billion, Energy and water will splash €325 million, Health will cough up €415 million and Agriculture will yield €410 million.

The 5G sector supported 250 companies in 2020, of which 180 are French, employing between 6,000 and 8,000 people. In the long term, the analyst predicts that employment will rise to 100,000 people.

Tech Mahindra and Nokia working to take industrial private 5G global

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Customised pre-integrated apps can slash times but make work safer

Technology service provider Tech Mahindra (TechM) has formed a pact with Nokia with the stated ambition ‘to drive 5G private wireless adoption globally’.

The integrator will use Nokia’s private wireless Digital Automation cloud DAC system for customers across industries and automate 5G Private Wireless network management as a service running in the cloud

TechM will apply its specialist industry knowledge to run its systems such as Factory.NXT and Mining.NXT over 5G. It will also apply its domain expertise in planning, design, deployment and management of private wireless networks for enterprises.

Their joint offering will apply TechM’s sector-specific industry knowledge and applications on Nokia’s 5G-designed DAC automation system for 5G to solve the business problems of enterprise customers. 

Easy apps spread productivity benefits

The rationale is that by bundling these into an integrated service they can speed the adoption of 5G in industries across the globe. The initial target benefactors are manufacturing, transport, health, oil & gas, logistics, agriculture and entertainment.

Tech Mahindra claims its enterprise network services cover the entire network stack. Nokia in turn offers comprehensive experience in shaping its technology to the way different industries work. Its DAC can expand across any size of industrial plant to provide a high-performance private wireless network over 4.9G/LTE and 5G connectivity. The partners claim to have a suite of applications for each enterprise in each industry. 

 “Nokia has supported the digital transformation of over 380 enterprises globally with our private wireless offerings. We are excited to collaborate with Tech Mahindra to bring our global private wireless expertise to upgrade their offering and customer experience worldwide,” said Chris Johnson, head of global enterprise business for Nokia.

Port and mining customised for 5G

TechM’s pre-integrated 5G for enterprises targets the four critical areas of performance, said Manish Mangal, TM’s global head of 5G and network services business.

Production efficiency, operating maintenance cost, inspection/error related downtime and the cost of training are the main problems that TM aims to solve, said Mangal. He claimed that the Factory.NXT and Mining.NXT apps can raise efficiency by eight per cent, decimate maintenance and operating costs and slash 60 per cent off training times. The Port.NXT system is customised to support high bandwidth and low latency use in container management, digital operations and workers safety, claims TM.

“We bring the full ecosystem of people and processes, then we customise and pre-integrate them for every industry from healthcare to manufacturing and deliver similar benefits,” said Mangal.

Zain Jordan to deploy end-to-end automous testing and benchmarking

The operator has chosen Infovista, which specialises in network lifecycle automation (NLA), to monitor and optimise its mobile network 

Zain Jordan, the country’s leading mobile network operator, has selected Infovista’s TEMS Sense, TEMS Director and Planet products to provide mobile network testing, benchmarking, planning and optimisation solutions as part of the network’s modernisation.
 
The intention is for the operator will gain the ability to examine the service quality from an end-user’s perspective, then use that data to inform and optimise how its networks are managed today, and how best to evolve them.

Making Sense of network data

TEMS Sense provides multi-mode network testing and measurement which Zain can use to undertake active testing statically, on foot or in a vehicle, for all Jordan’s live mobile networks.

Data for key performance indicatiors will include network quality, efficiency and throughput to enable Zain to monitor quality of experience delivered by each operator to help in its own network optimisation.

TEMS Director, delivered from Zain Jordan’s cloud infrastructure, acts as a ‘fleet management’ backend, effectively managing the distributed network of active probes, remotely pushing testing scripts to them to gather data such as the success/failure rate on calls during moments of peak traffic.

This data among other can be then combined with Planet, Infovista’s radio frequency planning software and optimisation solution, to help Zain plan, design and optimise its 3G and 4G networks.

 

Why are operators being so slow to embrace eSIM?

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Kate O’Flaherty asks if operators are more focused on possible downsides for them, rather than experience upsides for their customers?

Today, there are 1.2 billion eSIMs installed in connected devices, and that number is set to surge to 3.4 billion over the next three years, according to analyst Juniper Research.

Powering smartphones through to IoT devices, eSIM has multiple benefits, including flexibility, reliability and security. Many flagship smartphones support the technology and common frameworks by mobile giants Apple and Google are helping to fuel its growth. So why are operators being so slow to embrace eSIM?

Easy switch

On the surface, mobile operators’ concerns are obvious. eSIM allows customers and users to easily switch provider, making it difficult to prevent churn. The costs for operators can be high, and introducing eSIM can be technically complex – especially in the IoT space where a need for wireless technology combined with hardware and management tools requires specialist vendors.

In the consumer market, eSIM makes it easier for customers to change provider, which can bring downward pricing pressure. This makes it a threat to operators, says Kester Mann, Director of Consumer and Connectivity at CCS Insight.

In addition, says Mann, “The technical side can be complicated and difficult, and device support is an issue: Only a limited number of devices include support for eSIM.”

While eSIM has a positive impact on manufacturing costs, it is being introduced in newer flagship smartphones first, and these are more expensive, says Peter Jarich, Head of GSMA Intelligence. However, he points out, the dynamic will change as companies such as Apple and Google introduce cheaper eSIM devices.

The Covid-19 pandemic has been another obstacle to adoption, slowing eSIM launches in the second half of 2020, GSMA data shows. Some operators have delayed their eSIM implementation projects to focus on key priorities, such as mobile network resiliency, according to Jarich.

Drivers for eSIM

Adoption has slowed, but eSIM isn’t going to fade away: vendors operating in the space say the drivers are in place for the technology to take off. This doesn’t have to be complex, because most operators already have access to subscription platforms via their existing SIM vendors to allow them to deliver consumer eSIM, says Hamish White, Founder and CEO of eSIM as a service provider Mobilise.
 
He points out that “all major SIM vendors – including Thales, Giesecke & Devrient and IDEMIA – have eSIM platform offerings”.
 
In addition, global standards for eSIM set by the GSMA are already available. “The common eSIM integration specification means there are no barriers for operators in specific countries,” White points out.
 
Taking this into account, White thinks one reason operator uptake is slow is because the technology can facilitate easier switching to competitors. He points to “a general lack of focus on customer experience improvements, such as in-app eSIM provisioning among operators; prioritising other product implementations deemed to have a higher business priority; project backlogs; and lengthy delivery cycles”.

Challenging certification

There is also a challenging certification process for operators to navigate, and setting up the customer onboarding process can be difficult. Onboarding eSIM customers typically happens in two ways – using a QR code or a mobile app, says White. “For a superior customer experience, using an application is by far the better choice, since customers can activate their subscription in just one quick tap.”
 
However, while launching an app is simple for customers, it’s complex for operators. The GSMA has cooperated with application marketplaces such as Apple’s App Store and Google Play to create a regulated process for launching in-app eSIM offerings. But in-app eSIM provisioning depends on an API called a local profile assistant, which operators can only access once they prove their compliance with the subscriber management system provider.
 
The situation is even more complex due to the differences between Android and Apple applications. “This regulatory minefield, paired with a complicated, lengthy process adds to hesitation to adopt eSIM technology,” says White.
 
He says this complexity means it can typically take up to a year in normal circumstances to create a GSMA-compliant eSIM solution; even longer since the pandemic.

Changing ecosystem

If operators are to embrace eSIM soon, especially in large scale IoT, changes will need to be made. Today many 3G and 4G mobile operators own their SIM management platform. If a user has to switch to a different service provider, the ecosystem can deny moving the IoT device from one wireless network to another, says Vijay Anand, Assistant Vice President, Technology, and Chief IoT Architect, Capgemini Engineering.
 
He says it can make the management of large IoT deployments “chaotic, complex and potentially costly”.
 
Taking this into account, Anand thinks there is a need for every eSIM supplier to have a common management platform. “The platform can support multiple operators to keep the connectivity process as simple as possible.”
 
Slow adoption is frustrating for manufacturers, which want operators to embrace eSIM, but it’s not going to happen overnight. While 80% of manufacturers and 90% of operators say they will offer eSIM by 2025, operators want to embrace eSIM as a hybrid model, according to a recent study by Truphone and Mobile World Live.
 
This is partly due to supply chain issues: Operators cite availability as a key barrier to implementing the technology, with 48% claiming it is a challenge second only to cost.

The churn concern

There are obstacles to adopting eSIM, but churn should not be operators’ main concern. In fact, eSIM makes it more important to differentiate through the customer experience, which many operators are already doing.
 
“Offering a superior customer experience through eSIM outweighs the risk of increased churn by providing customers with a more tailored solution that meets their digital needs,” White says.
 
And disruptive operators could even adopt the technology as a churn reducing factor, says Mann. “Or maybe those that feel they have a premium network may use eSIM to encourage people onto their own network,” he suggests.
 
It won’t happen straight away, and that’s partly because 80% of consumers aren’t aware of eSIM, GSMA data found. “Raising consumer awareness of eSIM and explaining and promoting its benefits is key to driving market adoption,” says Jarich.
 
It’s not just down to mobile operators – the industry as a whole has an important role to play.
 
 

More mobile subscribers will be targeted by fake health adware

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With Xmas over, a cyber threat report from Allot finds 2022 will see criminals mounting their own fitness campaigns with browser hijackers and Flubot jabs

Adware is the primary threat to customers of Europe’s mobile operators, according to the latest report from Israeli-base security intelligence service Allot. The end of the shopping festivals and the start of new year fitness fads could see more attempts to trick consumers through fade health advice.

Around 75 per cent of cyber attacks blocked by its Allot NetworkSecure (ANS) are adware but that range includes increasingly aggressive tactic now adopted by criminals. 

Season of consumption is over

As usual cybercriminals exploited the human gullibility arising from frenzied consumption on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, public holidays (notably Christmas) and lotteries. ANS says it blocked millions of attempted phishing attacks in Q2 of 2021.

Those criminal opportunities have passed with the end of the shopping season. However, public concern over health issue is an increasingly popular bait to trick their victims. ANS says Flubot is still active, with 421,905,856 threats blocked during H2 2021. Flubot has proved very profitable for the cybercriminals specialised in stealing personal and financial data. 

Now criminals want to get hwealthy

However, the fastest growing threat is omnatuor, which first appeared in the second half of 2021. In September alone, the total number of blocks had to triple because of the rise of this new tactic.

In the second half of 2021 ANS blocked 2.97 Billion cyber threats on behalf of Europe’s mobile operators, a rise of 500 per cent on the equivalent half of 2021. The report says the two types of threats that were most blocked were Flubot C&C URLs and omnatuor.com, which Allot describes as ‘a very aggressive adware infection’. 

“Adware is not just a nuisance,” said Vered Zur, marketing VP for Allot. “Adware can spawn spyware, phishing attacks and other malicious threats. The rise of omnatuor.com is proof that cybercriminals constantly find new ways to victimise people.” 

Orange Spain launches 10 Gbps XGS-PON services

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The operator will launch commercial 10-Gbit-capable, symmetric passive optical network (XGS-PON) services in five Spanish cities running on ZTE kit

Orange Spain is to launch commercial XGS-PON services – broadband and Wi-Fi – at up to 10Gbps in Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Valencia and Zaragoza (pictured). 



This is Orange’s first attempt at delivering 10Gbps broadband to retail users and follows a successful trial i
n October 2021 when Orange Spain demonstrated a live test of ZTE’s F8648P XGS-PON optical network terminal (ONT) on its network.

The ONT achieved an uplink/downlink speed of 8.6 Gbps, close to the theoretical peak rate of XGS-PON, and after more rounds of testing and evaluation, Orange Spain chose to go with ZTE and its F8648P XGS-PON ONT.



ZTE’s ONT provides a 10 Gigabit Ethernet downlink port to meet users’ current and future access requirements. The ONT supports eight spatial streams and Wi-Fi 6 technology, enabling up to 6 Gbps physical layer rates for a maximum of 128 end-user devices.

Virtualisation and automation will bring a shared future to benefit all

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Abdallah Nassar, Chief Engineering and Network Officer at Orange Cameroon, talked to Annie Turner about the long but fast-moving journey from telco to techco

Abdallah Nassar has been in his job at Orange Cameroon for four years. In that time, he’s won two Awards and been nominated as running the Best Network by nPerf (2019, 2020) and by Ookla as Best Mobile Coverage (2019, 2020), Fastest Mobile Network (2020) and Best Mobile Network (2020).

He stressed that virtualisation is the future of the network, so automation of the network, tools or process must be talked about in that context. He explained that his company began to pay serious attention to virtualisation when it was looking at how best to provide content to customers, how to combine content with data services, how to gain greater speed and agility – and ensure quality of services.

This article was originally published on FutureNet World and is reproduced here with kind permission.

Local market conditions

As is common in many markets, customers typically have more than one SIM card and switch between them depending on what they are doing. He says, “In terms of [absolute numbers] we are not claiming we are first in the market” with about 12 million customers but claims to lead the market in terms of coverage, service quality and products. The population of Cameroon is a little over 27.5 million.

Most notably, the operator offers mobile banking services across its African operating companies under the Orange Money brand. In July, Emmanuel Tassembedo, the former Head of Orange Money Cameroon, announced his company has a 70% market share of the mobile banking market on Orange Money’s tenth anniversary of operations in Cameroon.

Previously Tassembedo estimated that the operator’s cumulative monthly transactions amount to CFA800 billion ($1.37 billion) during this year, making an estimated total of CFA9.6 trillion ($16.414 billion) for the year or about twice Cameroon’s state budget for 2021.

Meeting demands

Demand for data on Orange Cameroon’s network is growing at 200% year on year, which results in the infrastructure becoming increasingly challenging in terms of maintenance, capacity, technology updates and more. Nassar says, “We realised this complexity cannot continue in the same way, using the same type of equipment, dimensioning, and legacy technology…we started to look how we can deal with all this.”

He says, “So the first step was we needed to invest but also lower operational costs – how could we create a significant cost saving while we’re investing? That started the idea of virtualisation, of putting all our system in a virtual environment, because it comes with more agility, more flexibility and on a bigger scale than normal legacy equipment.”

What exactly does Nassar mean when he talks about virtualisation – network functions virtualisation (NFV) or full-blown cloud native? He says it’s an evolving mixture and explains that while some operators use public clouds like AWS, Google Cloud or IBM Cloud, Orange chose a different way. Nassar says, “We are investing in our own cloud and recently launched our first vEPC [virtual evolved packet core] on it: we built our own public cloud infrastructure using systems from different vendors.” .

This first vEPC is to help Orange Cameroon handle data more efficiently on 3G and 4G infrastructure, but Nassar adds, “We need to be independent…this kind of an investment gives us a different position versus the competition which also has vEPCs, but they use vendors’ infrastructure or a vendor’s virtualised system.

“We want to be independent because when we talk about scaling, we mean different kinds of scaling: we can use this infrastructure for investment in our own systems and we can even offer it to the public. That’s why we call it Orange public cloud.”

Think global, act local

While building and controlling its own telco cloud is in line with group-level strategy, Nassar says that execution is “country by country. We are talking about virtual environments, but you still need a certain type of infrastructure in place and in Africa there is a lot of limitations on international transit, so it’s much better to put things in place locally and reserve international connectivity for customers’ use.

“This is why we cache content in the country – things like Meta, so Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp – to lower the costs of international transit and give our customers better experience. Also, [we cache] the entire Google platform, from YouTube to all the others, and recently we put Netflix in place.”

How does the virtualisation and keeping-it-local strategy work for the enterprise or B2B market in Cameroon? Nassar explains there are two sectors. At the moment, the much larger one is private businesses, most especially micro financial institutions and banks, as well as logistics including local transport and sea-borne and other international transport. Almost all of them have systems hosted on Orange’s own public cloud, using the operator’s equipment in its own data centres.

He elaborates, “We’re talking about big players in the market and in various domains such as transport, banking, micro-finance and breweries”. He notes, “The public or government sector is totally different,” displaying natural caution regarding issues like security and the maturity of technology, but Orange Cameroon expects the pace to pick up here too.

Enter automation

Having got that first vEPC up and running, Nassar says, “The second step is to virtualise all [the EPC] and new services, along with classic services for a mobile operator such as VAS [value-added services] and triple-play services. Step by step we are increasing the scalability of this public cloud system to virtualise our whole environment.”

Is this move to cloud and virtualisation preparing the way for 5G? He states, “It is one of many steps that we are taking to prepare the ground for 5G. It is an ambition, but a difficult ambition for this continent because there are many dependencies. We are trying to benefit from each step, although the virtualisation and automation are essential steps toward 5G.”

Nassar says, “The idea of having a virtual environment really is to simplify our operational method…but this virtual system will require a lot of frequent maintenance. To do that manually is very painful and human error could have a huge impact. When we talk about virtualisation, we cannot ignore that we need certain types of automation to be in place too.

Fault management, predictive maintenance

What automation is Nassar talking about? “We are talking about orchestration [by which I mean] an automated system that will eventually harmonise and simply the workflow of our systems, which will give us the ability to better analyse, anticipate and correct,” he says.

“There is also automation from robots which experience the network, products and services like a customer and tests them nonstop. We are not sitting in the office waiting for the customer to inform us something is not working. Our robots run all the time to identify particular types of service interruption by simulating certain situations, for example during a high utilisation period, so we can do preventive maintenance while the orchestration tries to harmonise the functionality of different nodes to make it all work together.”

Does Orange Cameroon build its own artificial intelligence (AI) models for fault management and predictive maintenance? Nassar says his company aims to develop support for ongoing maintenance and simulations of maintenance on its own cloud but is still in the process of evolving from a classic telco to a data-driven company, relying on vendors’ AI and automation solutions in the meantime.

He describes this shift as “a very long journey” but adds, “We are moving very fast. We even recently opened our Open RAN Lab, which is unique – we are asking the other operators to come and test and experiment with us. The idea is that it will help all the operators to go faster with their deployments.”

Nassar says the motivation behind Open RAN is to allow operators to act faster in the future, and to lower operational costs while using the RAN as platform for innovation in business and operational models. He explains, “The future of the current Open RAN will not only provide interoperability and standardisation of RAN elements, but also it will allow different dimensioning of your network. You will have a better control on your resources – that is, frequency, radio, equipment and power resources.”

He continues, “Open RAN will open the door to wider competition between vendors and if we continue that way, not only will the operators benefit from this interoperation between vendors’ equipment and more network flexibility at a lower cost, but also it enables the operators to come together.

“The future O-RAN will have the capability to merge the environment – allow it to act as a single operator with potentially many operators and vendors at the same site to offer a universal platform.”

Nassar says, “I see the future where all the resources in terms of vendors, equipment, frequencies and passive infrastructure, such as towers, will be shared by many operators that differentiate themselves based on the services they run on those platforms.”

Vodafone Idea adopts plan making Indian government its largest shareholder

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The company is staggering under the weight of $27 billion gross debt. This intervention prevents its collapse, but long-term prospects are little improved.

Bloomberg reports that Vodafone Idea’s board has approved a rescue plan put forward by the Indian government by which the operator will convert some payments due to the Indian exchequer into equity, giving an almost 36% stake to the Indian government. This makes the Indian government the largest shareholder in the country’s third largest phone operator.

Existing shareholders, including the founders, will have their shareholding diluted: Vodafone Group Plc will own around 28.5% and Aditya Birla Group will have about 17.8% in the company after the conversion, according to the plan approved by the board.

An Indian government representative declined to comment.

Desperate measures

The joint venture to form Vodafone Idea, took place in 2018 with the intention of the combined entity being better able to weather the battering forces of Reliant Jio’s highly disruptive entry into the market with 4G services in 2016, funded by the Reliant Industries empire which is controlled by Asia’s richest person, Mukesh Ambani. This well-funded entry into the market resulted in seven main players consolidating to three.

Before Jio’s entry, Vodafone was India’s largest operator.  Vodafone Idea’s gross debts total almost Rs2 trillion (about $27 billion).

The disruption caused by Jio combined with the multi-billion pound debts that accrued alarmingly after a series of rulings by India’s Supreme Court allowed the government to spread its net wider to charge higher historic higher taxes and fees, and apply interest to them – known as adjusted gross revenue (AGR).

India’s Supreme Court upped the ante in October 2020 upheld an earlier ruling that Vodafone Idea should pay $7 billion, $4 billion of which were back penalties and payable within three months. Reliance Jio got off much more lightly than its two rivals, having only entered the market in 2016.

A matter of principal

As Nick Read, CEO of Vodafone Group, pointed out at a press conference in November 2019, only $900 million of that $4 billion was the principal, the rest is interest, fees and penalties.

At the same briefing, Read threatened to liquidate the Indian opco if the remedies requested from the Indian government were not met but at that time expressed confidence that his “shuttle diplomacy” with the government would be successful.
 
Vodafone entered the Indian market in 2007 and immediately became embroiled in a $2.5 billion tax dispute with the Indian Income Tax Department over its purchase of Hutchison Essar Telecom Services.

Vodafone Idea’s Chair warned of the company’s imminent collapse last August and was thrown a lifeline by the government in September.
 
If the government accepts Vodafone Idea’s proposal, it will walk away with a stake of 35.8% in return for delaying payment of the adjusted gross revenue and spectrum fees accumulated over four years.
 
While the government is anxious to avoid creating a duopoly of Jio and Airtel, its intervention is unlikely to improve Vodafone Idea’s bleak outlook: the operator has lost almost 10% of its subscriber base in the last year, bringing it to 269 million in October – which are the latest available figures.
 
Some analysts suggest that it probably lost a further 2 million subscriptions in Q4.
 
Bharti Airtel, which is in a stronger position, said last week that it would not convert the interest it owed the government into equity, but would pay the spectrum and AGR dues. Bharti Airtel’s subscriber base rose to 354 million in October from 330 million a year earlier, according to Bloomberg said.
 
You can read about the secrets of its success from this interview with its enterprising CTO, Rahul Atri, here.

 

UK operators warned that roaming charges and eSIM could catalyse customer reaction

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VMO2’s inaction on roaming charges could be unintended masterstroke

UK comms giant Virgin Media O2 (VMO2) has been praised for not bringing back roaming charges for its customers if they go to Europe. However, some analysts say this is more about fear of the new eSIM on customer loyalty as consumers learn how easy it is to switch.  

VMO2 has not prepared plans to bill-shock its UK customer when they travel in Europe. However, last year its rivals EE, Vodafone and Three all announced plans to charge their customers a daily flat fee to use their data and minutes in the EU.

More recently, however, EE and Vodafone said they would delay their roaming charge schemes while they investigated the unexpected technicalities involved. Was VMO2’s roaming charge inaction due to practicalities rather than philanthropy?

VMO2 wants to give customers certainty 

Even before the merger with cable TV company Virgin Media, mobile operator O2 had well documented struggles with accurate billing, having been fined £10.5 million in February for overcharging customers and a further £150,0000 for stalling the investigation by regulator OFCOM.  

Now VMO2 has presented its decision not to attempt to reintroduce roaming fees, as a benevolent attempt to give customers of O2 and Virgin Mobile a sense of certainty.

“Unlike all the other major mobile networks who are bringing back roaming fees, we will not be following suit,” said Gareth Turpin, chief commercial officer for mobile at VMO2, “with many Brits now looking to plan a trip abroad, we’ve got our customers covered and extra roaming charges will be one less thing to worry about.”

Philanthropy inaction

UK consumer body Which? praised VMO2 for taking this line. 

“After the disappointing news that EE and Vodafone are planning to reintroduce roaming charges in the coming months, it is reassuring that Virgin Media O2 is offering some certainty to customers on O2 or Virgin Mobile by not reintroducing roaming fees in Europe this year,” said Sue Davies, Which? head of consumer protection policy.

However, as the most complained about telco in the UK, according to Ofcom, is it likely that VMO2 passed up on roaming charges out of concern for its customers? Or was it because its billing systems are not ready?

Don’t awaken the eSIM monster

“That’s possible,” said Dean Bubley, founder of Disruptive Analysis, “or [it could be] just that making the changes would be expensive compared to the gain.”

In an analysis published on Linkedin, Bubley said that mobile network operators really won’t want their best customers to discover the powers that new eSIMs will give them to switch to alternative operators.

“I think this is partly a recognition of technological shifts and their attendant risks,” said Bubley, “The last thing MNOs want to do is to incentivise their customers to explore the eSIM capability of modern smartphones, such as downloading roaming profiles, or local in-country second SIMs. Roaming fees would massively accelerate customer disloyalty.”

Ericsson secures Cloud RAN as Rohde & Schwarz validates small cell

Ericsson’s Open RAN system builders get new tools that make security scale from small cell to global cloud

Two significant technology breakthroughs have been announced that could help infrastructure builders fortify their 5G networks. At a micro-level, German test specialist Rohde & Schwarz and Qualcomm Technologies have validated small cell testing, so that system builders can use mmWave technology as a building block for 5G network with greater confidence. At the other extreme, Ericsson-built cloud radio access networks (Cloud RANs) have passed a security audit, making this a robust option for infrastructure hyper scalers.

The Cloud RAN from network equipment maker Ericsson has passed an independent Network Equipment Security Assurance Scheme (NESAS) audit, making it fully compliant with the security requirements defined by global standards organizations 3GPP and GSMA.

The Security Reliability Model 

The NESAS audit of Ericsson Cloud RAN follows earlier compliance recognition for Ericsson’s Core, Transport and Radio Access Network (RAN) portfolios.

GSMA introduced NESAS as a common security assurance framework for secure product development and product lifecycle processes across the mobile industry. Conformance with NESAS is an integral part of the vendor’s Security Reliability Model (SRM) according to Per Narvinger, Ericsson’s head of product area networks.

Cloud-based RAN deployment is an important step towards a more open RAN architecture because it can provide inherent security advantages such as isolation and geographical redundancy. On the other hand, the cloud introduces new security risks according to Ericsson’s technical paper Security Considerations of Cloud RAN.

Your cloud has many points of attack

Traditional attacks against the RAN and Coren aside, the cloud infrastructure has many other  vulnerabilities, including micro-services, container engines, host operating system and third-party hardware, which can be exploited in cloud-based RAN and Core systems.

“Security is a key cornerstone in the design of our products. In the days of software and hardware disaggregation it is even more important that security is built in from the start,” said Narvinger. “Having Cloud RAN confirmed as NESAS-compliant adds another layer of credibility and trustworthiness to our Ericsson radio access network (RAN) portfolio.”

Good day for small cell validation 

The products examined were the Central Unit-Control Plane, Central Unit-User Plane, the Distributed Unit (DU) and RAN Service Discovery. Ericsson’s NESAS compliance processes underwent a complete audit by a GSMA-approved, independent auditor.

Meanwhile Christoph Pointner, senior VP mobile radio testers at Rohde & Schwarz, said the breakthrough in testing equipment was a great day for small cell validation.

“OEMs worldwide rely on Qualcomm Technologies’ platform for their small cell products,” said Pointner, “with its new functionality specialising on small cell testing, which is already validated for QDART for Small Cells, OEMs can be confident that our test solution is ready to fulfil their testing needs, whether for in the lab or production line.”

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