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197 points LorenDB | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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Spivak ◴[] No.41908420[source]
T-Mobile's filing is shorter than the article: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/document/1017178290200/1

> T-Mobile estimates that its prepaid customers, for example, would see subsidies reduced by 40% to 70% for both its lower and higher-end devices, such as the Moto G, Samsung A15, and iPhone 12.

This is such a confusing line, you're in control of that. Also if that were true this would be great for you. Don't you want to be making more money? But in practice can you not just enforce this by contract? You must make a 12 month commitment to T-Mobile to qualify for discounted phones.

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cwyers ◴[] No.41908485[source]
In the pre-paid market niche, you have people who really struggle to put together the money for an iPhone 12 all in one go, and T-Mobile has essentially worked to create a razors/blade model with some obfuscation. It's possible that disaggregating phone plans from installment pricing would benefit consumers in the long run, but let's not act like everybody would be prepared to transition to that world immediately. (I don't think T-Mobile is exactly concerned for their customers, but this subsidy regime exists for a reason.)
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hnuser123456 ◴[] No.41908538[source]
I buy prepaid specifically so that I can own my own unlocked phone and be able to do what I want with it without thinking about the carrier. Price isn't the issue, ownership is.
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1. tptacek ◴[] No.41908600{3}[source]
OK, but you are in a tiny, tiny minority of customers that care about that distinction.