CNN Doesn’t “Get” Mobile

 CNN MobileI really don’t understand CNN’s mobile web strategy. Their mobile site (mobile.cnn.com) can only be reached from phones on CNN’s network partners! The news network seems to be saying that they’d rather make a quick buck today from carrier deals than build their brand on mobile. This is all the more surprising because the CNN mobile site carries advertising which means lost ad revenue too.

Wikipedia calls CNN the second most watched (after the BBC) TV news source in the world. The network was also one of the first news providers to embrace the web, with the 1995 launch of cnn.com, now the third most popular news site (after Yahoo and the BBC) according to Alexa.

CNN ‘s mobile web site is actually very good, similar in concept to BBC mobile with a focus on hard news but also offering weather, entertainment “news”, stock quotes and a Sports Illustrated section. Until recently CNN Mobile was a text only wml site but now there’s a WAP2 edition spiced up with appropriately sized photos, as well as varied background colors and text formatting. But unless you are one of the “90 million subscribers in 24 countries” whose carriers (listed here) are CNN partners you will get a 403 Forbidden error or this helpful message when you browse to mobile.cnn.com:

“————-
We’re sorry but CNN Wireless content is restricted. You may be attempting to access us from an unauthorized mobile service provider, or it could be that your service provider is authorized but has failed to register a new gateway IP with us. In either case please contact your mobile service provider for more information. We regret the inconvenience.
————-“

That 90 million potential users is not a big number in the mobile universe representing less than 4% of the world’s 2.5 billion mobile phone users. Why on earth would CNN want to lock out so many eyeballs? CNN has no deals with any carriers in a number of English speaking countries with large numbers of mobile users including India, Pakistan, Nigeria and Kenya. In spite of having a Spanish edition, CNN is not available on any South American carriers. Even in the US, users on Alltel, US Cellular and other regional carriers are blocked from accessing CNN. In addition, you can’t get to CNN Mobile if you are using a proxy based browser like Opera Mini or Palm browsers Xiino or WebPro, regardless of who your carrier is.

There is a way to access some of the stories from CNN with a phone on an “unauthorized provider”. Unified Mobility has a “demo” of CNN Mobile News at 206.130.125.133/mobile.php?UMPG=index with most of CNN’s top news stories. But that’s one inconvenient url and the Unified Mobility demo is missing CNN’s images as well as the sports, weather and stock quotes sections of the real CNN mobile.

In the wasteland of US TV news broadcasting, CNN markets itself rather successfully as an impartial, open, transparent, globally aware source of news. Why on earth do they follow such an archaic mobile marketing model – tied to walled gardens and carrier deals. The fixed internet began with similar restrictive telco based access to ISP portals and evolved to today’s rather open web were content providers vie for traffic mainly on content and buzz. It seems obvious that the mobile web is gradually moving to a similar open model. CNN has the content to compete in the open market – why do they restrict themselves to 4%?

12 thoughts on “CNN Doesn’t “Get” Mobile

  1. CNN mobile is now blocked from international locations. I’ve been able to use it from Australia (my carrier is Optus, one of the Big Three here), but it now says the service is “unavailable in my area.” What kind of nonsense is that?

  2. mobile.cnn.com doesn’t work but m.cnn.com works just fine with a desktop browser.

    You can even mess with user agent strings in Firefox to see different styles. I like the lighter version of their iPhone m.cnn.com site better.

  3. I have been visiting this site a lot lately, so i thought it is a good idea to show my appreciation with a comment.

    Thanks,
    Jim Mirkalami

    PS: I am a single dad. ;)

  4. Nope, I can’t get it to work on my phone either with Opera Mini or with the T-Mobile browser. I’m guessing that although they’ve done a deal in the US with T-Mobile, it doesn’t cover off us lowly T-Mobile customers in the UK. Guess I’ll stick to the wonderful BBC then!

    What seems *really* daft to me is that this is an ad-funded site according to MocoNews (1) so wouldn’t more eyeballs be relevant to them?

    Doh!

    (1) http://www.moconews.net/entry/419-cnn-mobile-launches-announces-content-blogs-first-advertiser/

    or http://tinyurl.com/27tl98

  5. mcdj,

    I’m glad wap.cnn.com works for you. That means that:

    1) Your provider has an agreement with CNN.

    2) You are using a browser that goes through your provider’s gateway, like the phone’s built in browser.

    Try using Opera Mini or even your desktop browser and I’ll bet you will see:
    Forbidden Your client is not allowed to access the requested object”

    CNN can of course do anything they want it’s their site. The point I’m trying to make is that they are violating the open access concept of the World Wide Web and driving potential customers to their competitors.

    Dennis

  6. UPDATE!!! Here’s a heads-up on the CNN mobile URL – Unified Mobility created a separate portal of mobilized sites at http://www.mdog.com (with your mobile browser), on which CNN is featured (also super cool sites like IMDB, Ebay, CitySearch). At the http://www.mdog.com home page, choose “Web”, “news” and you’ll see CNN in the list. Thanks for your visits and we hope this new portal meets all of your mobile needs. Best Regards from all of us!

  7. You know, i sort of wondered about that, since there’s links to Cingulars website on every CNN page (add to medianet home).

    Pretty bogus on CNN’s part, but they’re not the only one. I know I’ve seen other sites with similar models.

    Peace.

    Supertrucker

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