Spend any time outdoors lately and you've likely noted an exceptional
 uptick in smartphone walker s— slower with the steps, eyes fixed on 
tiny screens. However you feel about the Pokemon Go phenomenon, it was 
only a matter of days before a leading wireless carrier offered free 
data to its customers playing the game.
The move was the latest in a long line of savvy salvos in the 
intense, ongoing competition among regional and national wireless 
carriers to attract and keep customers.  Indeed, a look at advertising 
buys over the past year reveals no fewer than 35 wireless companies 
taking to the airwaves some 440,000 times to make their case to 
consumers.  
Mobile Future conducted a recent video project aimed at capturing the
 frenetic pace and free-wheeling diversity of the wireless wars. You can
 watch it here.
Anyone who questions the competitiveness of the U.S. wireless 
marketplace need only turn on their television. The top four national 
wireless providers are routinely ranked among the top 10 U.S. 
advertising spenders as each seeks to one-up the other with attractive 
consumer deals and claims of network superiority.  
These intensive rivalries are not only a reality—but the defining reality
 of the modern U.S. mobile marketplace. And, the constant swirl and 
evolution of competitive offerings clearly empower consumers. One 
company dumps contracts. Others follow suit.  Data rollover plans come 
on the market. Rivals respond in kind. Wireless companies are 
perpetually seeking new ways to find an edge. 
Clearly, data is the belle of the ball: How much do you get, for what
 price and with what kind of rollover arrangement? Market rivals have a 
multitude of answers to these questions, and consumers freely sift 
through them for offerings that best suit their unique wireless way of 
life.  
One thing virtually all consumers agree on seems straight out of a 
Captain Obvious skit: Consumers are fans of free. They are all for new 
choices that allow them to use more data at less or no cost.  They 
appreciate, embrace and are excited for the free and low-cost 
offerings emerging in the marketplace. Indeed, a Mobile Future consumer survey found 88% of Americans did not want to see their government have any role in approving new wireless business models.  They want that job for themselves.
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Wireless competition abounds — to consumers’ and our nation's benefit:
•      It's the reason a full 92% of Americans can choose from at 
least four wireless service providers — including three or more 4G 
offerings. 
•      It's the reason we reached President Obama's goal of 
connecting 98% of the country to the mobile Internet — a year ahead of 
schedule.
•      It's the reason that the wireless consumer price index decreased by 45% since 1997 while overall consumer prices increased by 36% .
•      It's the reason U.S. wireless companies lead the world in 
investment in next-generation 4G — and ultimately 5G — wireless 
networks.
•      And, yes, perhaps it’s partly responsible for an inordinate 
number of your neighbors having a close encounter with a tree this 
weekend.   
The point is: In today’s competitive wireless world, the choice is 
always yours as consumers.  Market rivals are racing every day to dream 
up new ways to win and keep your business — creating fresh opportunities
 for consumers to take full advantage of all that mobile innovation has 
to offer. These are tangible benefits every American can safely grasp 
and use to their benefit in the real world.  Take that, Pikachu

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