The Samsung Galaxy S5 is on sale now in South Korea, two weeks early - much to Samsung's surprise.
The S5 is set to go on sale around the world on April 11,
hitting shop shelves in 150 countries before the month is out. But the
wait is too long for impatient South Korean carrier SK Telecom, which
has made the phone available today for around 866,800 won.
Korean networks were keen to get the S5 into the hands of phone fans
early because they're not allowed to sign up new customers in parts of
April and May, as punishment from the government for illegally
subsidising new customers. The sanctions mean SK Telecom, KT Corp and LG
Uplus Crop would have had to sit on their hands as the S5's official
release date came and went.
So SK Telecom has defied Samsung and
started shifting the S5 early. "We just wanted to provide the device to
local users as soon as possible. It is for the good of our subscribers,"
an official from SK Telecom told Korea Herald.
Samsung released the following statement: [we have] "provided mobile carriers with a
limited number of units for marketing and pre-sales activities, but the
decision to release the device early in the Korean market was made by
the mobile carrier itself, independently of Samsung. We express our
regret at this decision and we are working to verify all the facts."
It's
a heck of an audacious move for a mobile carrier to risk its
relationship with the world's biggest mobile phone manufacturer on its
own turf - and it sets a heck of a precedent. Networks and
carriers around the world must be very curious to see what will happen
next.
Source: CNET
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