The global launch of Samsung Electronics Co’s latest smartphone has been upstaged by South Korean mobile network companies.
SK Telecom, South Korea’s largest mobile carrier, said it would start selling the Galaxy S5 yesterday — two weeks before the scheduled sales launch on April 11.
Samsung said in a statement that it was “very puzzled” by SK Telecom’s decision and was deciding how to respond. It said its schedule of overseas launches remained unchanged.
Other mobile operators, KT Corp and LG Uplus Corp, are following SK Telecom’s move to release the phone early.
The unusual step comes as SK Telecom and other mobile carriers face a 45-day suspension from accepting new customers as a penalty for providing illegal phone subsidies.
South Korea’s telecommunications regulator put two other mobile carriers on suspension from this month, while SK Telecom must halt selling new phones starting on April 5, a week before the Galaxy S5’s global launch.
Mobile carriers already have the S5 in stock as Samsung provided them for marketing activities and to fulfil pre-orders on the launch date.
Samsung announced the latest iteration of its Galaxy S smartphone last month in Barcelona, Spain.
The world’s largest smartphone maker refrained from packing too many new features into the phone, saying the S5 will go back to basics.
However, the S5 comes with tweaks that are intended to appeal to fitness fans, such as a built-in heart rate monitor, pedometer and fitness tracker.
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