|
|
|
|
|
by josteink
2035 days ago
|
|
I’ve been living in Norway since I was born back in the 70s. We’ve never had carrier-branded phones. Not one. Only thing sold has been generic phones which accepts a generic SIM. And that’s how the market is supposed to work. Free competition on devices. Free competition on service. Customers can combine as they like. Granted you could buy carrier-locked phones rebated through a contract, but the carrier lock was time-limited and reversible and the phone was a generic, international model. Carrier-branded phones was definitely not a EU-wide phenomenon. If anything the introduction of the iPhone in Europe (launched using the very confusing US carrier-model) was what started pushing carriers into attempting to making new restrictions on how people were allowed to use their (formerly unrestricted) subscriptions. So you got it pretty much 100% backwards. |
|
In the UK there were DEFINITELY carrier branded phones, tethering was disabled by many carriers, and you couldn't even use a regular SIM card in a non-phone device - you needed a "data sim".
I travelled around Europe for 2 years using local SIM cards - and also encountered carriers which disabled tethering.
There were even android apps specifically to work around these tethering restrictions, by making the phone act as a proxy.