Jump to content

SMS.ac, Inc.: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Friday (talk | contribs)
removing afd notice
Criticism: titles of refs
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 20: Line 20:


==Business model==
==Business model==
SMS.ac derives its revenue through revenue-sharing arrangements with [[cellular]] carriers.
SMS.ac derives its revenue through revenue-sharing arrangements with [[cellular]] carriers. Specifically, it sends users reverse-billed [[SMS]] text messages, which incur a small charge to receive.
The CEO of SMS.ac, in a speech at Global Mobile Congress 2004, made the following remarks:
The CEO of SMS.ac, in a speech at Global Mobile Congress 2004, made the following remarks:
* ''"Mobile operators are uniquely positioned to benefit from revenue shares derived from even the smallest transactions. As a focal point of this nascent but exploding industry, it is important for operators to enter quickly into equitable revenue share agreements with third parties. (To operators) Open your billing systems and you will prosper."''
* ''"Mobile operators are uniquely positioned to benefit from revenue shares derived from even the smallest transactions. As a focal point of this nascent but exploding industry, it is important for operators to enter quickly into equitable revenue share agreements with third parties. (To operators) Open your billing systems and you will prosper."''
Line 28: Line 28:


==Criticism==
==Criticism==
*Sms.ac is noted in the blog community for its vigorous legal response to online criticism.[http://www.banpremiumsms.com/vmurphy.PDF][http://joi.ito.com/crap/ITOCeaseDesist.doc]
*Sms.ac is noted in the blog community for its vigorous legal response to online criticism.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.banpremiumsms.com/vmurphy.PDF | title=Trademark infringement notice | publisher=[http://www.banpremiumsms.com Banpremiumsms.com] (PDF)}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite web | url=http://joi.ito.com/crap/ITOCeaseDesist.doc | title=Cease and desist letter | publisher=JOI ITO (.doc)}}</ref>
*In March 2005 the Belgian newspaper De Standaard (March 23, 2005, "Onderzoek naar sms-site") reported that users of the "free" SMS service were subsequently charged €0.25 per message for receiving unwanted messages.
*Phone users are often billed for supposedly "free" services that they say they never ordered. <ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/22/business/ptend23.php | title= The End User: Noticing a red flag | publisher=[[International Herald Tribune]]}}</ref>
*Cellphone giant [[Sprint]] no longer accepts messages from, or does business with, sms.ac. <ref>ibid</ref>
*sms.ac asks for the password to users' email accounts so that it can look up their address books and send invitations to their friends. <ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/yourmoney/sns-yourmoney-0501reality,0,5712434.story | title=Message to the wise about text trick | publisher=[[Chicago Tribune]]}}</ref>

==See also==
==See also==
* [[Micropayments]]
* [[Micropayments]]

Revision as of 23:04, 12 July 2006

SMS.ac Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryTelephony
Founded2001
HeadquartersSan Diego, California, USA
Key people
Michael Pousti, Chairman and CEO
ProductsSMS messaging
Revenueunknown
unknown
Number of employees
unknown
Websitewww.sms.ac

SMS.ac, Inc. is a mobile data communications company based in San Diego, California.

Membership

SMS.ac claims over 30 million registered users in more than 180 countries, making it the largest community of registered mobile users in the world.[1][2]

Business model

SMS.ac derives its revenue through revenue-sharing arrangements with cellular carriers. Specifically, it sends users reverse-billed SMS text messages, which incur a small charge to receive. The CEO of SMS.ac, in a speech at Global Mobile Congress 2004, made the following remarks:

  • "Mobile operators are uniquely positioned to benefit from revenue shares derived from even the smallest transactions. As a focal point of this nascent but exploding industry, it is important for operators to enter quickly into equitable revenue share agreements with third parties. (To operators) Open your billing systems and you will prosper."
  • "Nearly 2 billion people worldwide are already paying their mobile providers for mobile phone use. Now, imagine if your company can harness the power of microbilling. If your business has not already embraced an aggressive strategy to evolve to a mobile content or application company, drop most everything you’re doing and prepare your content for mobile. Just be sure to base your offerings on communication. It’s all about communications – not just content."
  • “If we try and tether the growth too early with compliance and regulations, the chances that we’ll do more harm than good is almost a certainty."
  • "Integrated billing is the path to the future. Refine and improve the process for third-party entities to collect revenues and get paid. Achieve predictability with billing. Work towards standardization. Without this, the industry won’t ever be real.”

Criticism

  • Sms.ac is noted in the blog community for its vigorous legal response to online criticism.[3]

[4]

  • In March 2005 the Belgian newspaper De Standaard (March 23, 2005, "Onderzoek naar sms-site") reported that users of the "free" SMS service were subsequently charged €0.25 per message for receiving unwanted messages.
  • Phone users are often billed for supposedly "free" services that they say they never ordered. [5]
  • Cellphone giant Sprint no longer accepts messages from, or does business with, sms.ac. [6]
  • sms.ac asks for the password to users' email accounts so that it can look up their address books and send invitations to their friends. [7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "A Ringing Headache?". Forbes. 22 June 2005.
  2. ^ "SMS.ac". FierceWireless.
  3. ^ "Trademark infringement notice" (PDF). Banpremiumsms.com (PDF). {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Cease and desist letter". JOI ITO (.doc).
  5. ^ "The End User: Noticing a red flag". International Herald Tribune.
  6. ^ ibid
  7. ^ "Message to the wise about text trick". Chicago Tribune.