Verizon Wireless says “text messaging not going up to $1,000,000 per text”

General

Verizon hit us up yesterday to let us know that what we reported the other day was just something being tossed around internally. It was not final. They’ve clarified their position on raising text messaging fees for content providers for us.

As Verizon Wireless continues to review the competitive marketplace, we constantly work to provide additional value to our customers, employees and other stakeholders.

We are currently assessing how to best address the changing messaging marketplace, and are communicating with messaging aggregators, our valued content partners, our technology business partners and, importantly, our friends in the non-profit and public policy arenas.

To that end, we recently notified text messaging aggregators – those for-profit companies that provide services to content providers to aggregate and bill for their text messaging programs -  that we are exploring ways to offset significantly increased costs for delivering billions upon billions of text messages each month.

Specific information in one proposal, which would impose a small per-message fee on for-profit content aggregators for commercial messages, has been mistakenly characterized as a final decision to implement.  We don’t envision this type of change to in any way affect non-profit organizations or political and advocacy organizations.

We have not increased the per-message cost to aggregators since our messaging service began in 2003, and we have never envisioned a cost to consumers or content companies, but rather on content aggregators themselves.  That draft was intended to stimulate internal business discussions and in no way should have been been released to the public and represented as a final document.

At Verizon Wireless, we strive to provide our messaging customers with maximum value, and work to implement business decisions that encourage the use of messaging between individuals and organizations in both the marketplace of ideas and the commercial marketplace, and we will continue to strongly encourage the use of our services by charitable organizations as they perform their good works.

Couldn’t make it through all that? No problem, we will summarize it for you, “This document was not for the public. It was meant for internal business discussion in regards to content aggregators. (Think sports scores, constant text updates, etc.) This is only a proposal and not a final decision to implement. We secretly love BGR.” Hey, maybe they forgot about that leaked Storm thing already…

17 Comments
  • JustMe

    To be honest, as long as they don’t raise the cost of unlimited texting I don’t really care what they do.

  • Robert

    nice job kelly, glad you posted a follow up, verizon isn’t all that bad it seems

  • Gauntlet Down

    >>> …we are exploring ways to offset
    >>> significantly increased costs for delivering
    >>> billions upon billions of text messages each
    >>> month…

    What a crock.

    Per message costs have plummeted, not risen.

  • bob

    Gauntlet is spot on. Text messaging is a small overheard for them, isn’t congress investigating why these rates have gone up so much? I can’t wait to get rid of verizon, I HATE supporting what they do. They’re the reason we (USA) is so far behind other countries in our mobile technology.

    Verizon, stop trying to nickel and dime every person that comes near your network!

  • Galvatron

    GO GSM cdma needs to go

  • vaxick

    So if Verizon went out of business all you would cry that AT&T isn’t being nice either.

  • MadMike

    It has nothing to do with CDMA vs GSM vs String & Paper Cups. Verizon is a publicly traded corporation that thinks its shareholders are more important than its customers. They see text messaging is popular, so they come up with some bullshit excuse to raise the rates.

    BG’s Ninja caught that, disclosed that, and Verizon saw how many people ripped shit about it and decided to come up with that 5 paragraph PR song and dance to wipe the egg off their face.

    Plain and Simple.

  • Joseph Singer

    Never have dealt with Rogers in Canada, eh?

  • phoneguy

    you guys are all so freakin stupid. This has nothing to do with the current .20cents per message that all carriers are charging their customers. This has to do with content subscribers who buy tens of thousands sometimes into the billions of text mesage in lump sums. These are the same companies that are charging you as customers the $10 premium txt plans so that they can send you a ringtone. Verizon wants to raise the amount that these companies buy in at. Has nothing to do with you or screwing the customer…

  • JustMe

    @phoneguy

    Very nicely put. Thank god someone else understands.

    I tell ya, some people will find a way to complain about anything, even when it doesn’t apply to them.

  • christina

    Didn’t text messaging start in ’01? My first cell phone had text messaging and it used to take hours to go through. Lol!

  • MadMike

    I just like complaining. I mean, C’mon – My name is MadMike. It’s kind of pointless and uneventful if I can’t complain about something. I mean, I can only bitch about Hippies for so long.

    God, I hate Hippies.

  • tony

    i think the reason that this might make people mad is because if they add an extra fee for companies like myspace or cnn to send text alerts, then those companies may just not support verizon anymore. 3 cents doesn’t sound like a lot but if you are sending 10 messages/day to 20 million verizon customers, that’s $600,000.

  • tiredofbs

    I believe the SMS had its 20th anniversery this year. I don’t think most people are complaining because of the fee, they worry about the downstream impact. If other companies begin to be charged for sending a text, that company might stop providing the text service or charge. 160k costs $0.20 and not a whole lot has changed over the years. I don’t get it. All of the providers are greedy with SMS. God forbid if the number of SMS are causing congestion, upgrade your network, stop charging $20/mo for unlimited. Its getting old. Thank god for Blackberry Messenger and most the people I communicate with have it as well. No 160k limit either. Yes, different technology, but a great alternative. Oops I guess I shouldn’t have mentioned that. I’m sure someone at a wireless company will want to charge us for each message now and claim its a per message licensing fee from RIM.

  • lefty

    @Madmike

    Verizon Wireless is not a publicly traded company. Do a little research. Thanks.

  • wrong

    New York Stock Exchange: Verizon Communications Inc.

    ” Overview

    Verizon Communications Inc., headquartered in New York, is a leader in delivering broadband and other wireline and wireless communication innovations to mass market, business, government and wholesale customers. Verizon Wireless operates America’s most reliable wireless network, serving nearly 69 million customers nationwide. Verizon’s Wireline operations include Verizon Business, which delivers innovative and seamless business solutions to customers around the world, and Verizon Telecom, which brings customers the benefits of converged communications, information and entertainment services over the nation’s most advanced fiber-optic network. A Dow 30 company, Verizon employs a diverse workforce of more than 228,600 and last year generated consolidated operating revenues of $93.5 billion.”

  • Wrong again

    Wrong again. Verizon communications is a publicly traded company. Verizon wireless is not. It’s a separate division of Verizon Communications. Owned in partnership by VZW and Vodaphone.

    It’s absolutely utterly impossible to buy shares for Verizon Wireless.

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