Oy vey. Once again Israeli buyers of a hip gadget are about to get ripped off – with the “authorities” doing everything they can to make sure they get “theirs” (as in their money) out of the pockets of the schnook customer.

I know it sounds cynical, but it’s the only logical explanation I can come up with for why the Communications Ministry is banning iPads from Israel. In this age of instant communications, fast and efficient shipping, and open markets (ie nearly zero customs duties), getting a device like an iPad should be a piece of cake. For example, at this site, with shipping costs and taxes, you would be able to have a $499 iPad delivered directly from Apple in the U.S. to any Israeli address for $660 – a pretty reasonable price.

But like with so many other items (coincidentally, mostly from Apple), the markup is going to be much higher, because “they” are going to do their best to prevent customers from getting reasonably priced iPads – basically forcing Israelis who want one to get it from the local Apple license-holder (the iDigital retail store, which is NOT an Apple store!) for a premium price, just like they did with the iPhone. The difference is that the iPhone was a lot easier to hide, so the customs people have a much better chance of nabbing iPads when people try to smuggle them in!

So why can’t you bring an iPad into the country? According to this article in Ha’aretz (the same story appeared in numerous Hebrew publications),

the decision follows the refusal of the ministry’s engineering staff to compromise on testing the device’s suitability and compliance with Israeli wireless networks… For now, the ministry has not given the device categorical approval required for wireless devices; and ministry officials say its wireless technology is not compatible with Israeli standards.

“The iPad device sold exclusively today in the United States operates at broadcast power levels [over its Wifi modem] compatible with American standards,” explained the officials. “As the Israeli regulations in the area of Wifi are similar to European standards, which are different from American standards, which permit broadcasting at lower power, therefore the broadcast levels of the device prevent approving its use in Israel,” said the officials.

Huh? Doesn’t the whole world – U.S. and Europe included – use IEEE 802.11 Wifi standards? Aren’t there all sorts of Wifi-based devices produced all over the world that can be used internationally? What do they mean by “broadcast levels?”

Here’s the picture I have been able to put together – and it ain’t a pretty one. Without getting too technical: The Wifi chipset used by the iPad is BroadComm’s BCM4329 Low-Power 802.11n with Bluetooth® 2.1 + EDR and FM (Tx and Rx). 80211N is a relatively new addition to 802.11 standards, and it’s relatively rare in Wifi devices, so far. The fact that it is “low power” is also apparently behind complaints by many users that the iPad drops out of networks more readily than other devices, like Macbooks. This chipset includes Wifi and FM radio reception and transmission capabilities (in order to allow you to, for example, use your car FM radio to listen to music from your device while driving).

So, it’s possible that this is what the engineers meant when they said there were “different standards,” although 802.11n is in use in Europe as well. It would seem to me that they main bugaboo here is the chipset’s ability to broadcast, usually frowned upon in Israel.

But here’s what gives the game away: The BroadComm BCM4329 chipset is the SAME ONE in use in the latest editions of the iPhone and the iPad Touch – both of which are sold right here in Israel, by iDigital! Get it? If the problem is the Wifi chipset, then what difference does it make if it’s installed in an iPhone, iPod, or iPad? None! It only makes a difference to someone (or some entity) that has an interest in carving out for itself as much of a monopoly as they can get away with!

Now, I’m no engineer, but I do know how to Google – and it took me about 45 minutes to come up with this data (the things I go through for you people!). But certainly one would expect engineers from the Communications Ministry to have put two and two together and realized that they had already approved use of this Wifi chipset in Israel! If I could figure it out, they could too.

The thing is, there is no one to lobby for approving the iPad, no one to point this out to – and now that the engineers have made their decision, any change is going to have to go through “channels.” And where will those channels channel through? Why, right through iDigital, the Israeli “experts” on all things Apple. And what do you think iDigital is going to say when asked if they recommend unfettered importation of an item they are planning to sell eventually, for more money of course? I may be a cynic, but I know how the game is played!


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22 Responses to “The iPad Ban in Israel: Is it Really About ‘Standards?’”
  1. FriendFeed Comment


    The iPad ban in Israel: What it’s REALLY all about – [link to post] http://friendfeed.com/e/adee84e3-9e3f-4ea2-a04b-d8e37d049260

    Posted using Chat Catcher

  2. Twitter Comment


    The iPad ban in Israel: What it’s REALLY all about – [link to post]

    Posted using Chat Catcher

  3. Twitter Comment


    @acedetect more info on the ipad ban in Israel. [link to post]

    Posted using Chat Catcher

  4. Adam Neira says:

    With Israel being such a high tech country this news is very surprising. (Most be some sort of security concern with spectrum and frequency.) If it is about a bureaucracy needing oversight and thus levying a fee then I have some sympathy with that. Technology must be under the sovereignty of government, not the other way around. Laws must be heeded, and boundaries even apply to cyberspace. (I don’t mind that Israel has higher standards than other countries. I actually want that to be the case.) A state of pure messianic anarchism is still a long way off.

    Some more information about the real reasons for the ban please…

  5. What is your source for the 3GS iPhone having the BCM4329 chipset? According to http://www.phonewreck.com/2009/06/19/iphone-3gs-teardown-and-analysis/ it has the BCM4325 that is not “n” compatible.

    From Apple iPhone site: Wi-Fi (802.11b/g)
    ( http://www.apple.com/ca/iphone/specs.html )

  6. Gray says:

    Yup, I found that info about the iPad having the same chip as the newest IPhone and IPod Touch, too. So, the official explanation makes no sense at all. Those ministry spokespeople should be ashamed to play the public for suckers in such an easily debunkable way. And I read somehwere that their minister, Moshe Kaboom (or what’s his name?) wasn’t informed and is going ballistic now. Well, maybe that will leave an impact on the officials…

  7. newsgeek says:

    Hi – thanks for writing! I actually saw it in a couple of places, and I linked one of them – http://www.9to5mac.com/ipad-FM-radio-34093674 – in the article.

  8. newsgeek says:

    Hi Adam, thanks for writing. Just to give you my credentials: I have four Macs, including two Macbooks, my kids have between them three iPod Touches, 2 iPod Classics, and numerous and sundry lesser iPods. So I a) am pro-Apple, and b) know the area well, and have had extensive dealings with the Apple reps here (both as a customer and writer for the Jerusalem Post).

    Given the fact that the iPad is being held up because of its Wifi – ie the Wifi hardware that is “not compatible”; and given the fact that at least two Apple products use the SAME chipset, and are sold here in Israel without a problem; and given the fact that the Israeli representatives of Apple have pulled various shtick in the past, resulting in Macbooks that cost nearly double in Israel than they do in the U.S. (note that there is no meches/import duty on any laptops anymore!) – well, you could understand why I am being “choshed b’ksheirim.” I wish it were otherwise!

  9. FriendFeed Comment


    What the iPad ban in Israel is really all about – [link to post] http://friendfeed.com/e/c5508164-df78-42f1-bec3-7cd715ab644a

    Posted using Chat Catcher

  10. Twitter Comment


    So, why DID Israel ban iPads? Possible answer here – [link to post]

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  11. Twitter Comment


    What the iPad ban in Israel is really all about – [link to post]

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  12. Brian says:

    I’m in the computer import business here in Israel bringing only PCs. I’m very well acquainted with he Ministry of Communications procedures for bringing products into Israel and I ship 100% by air from the US. The whole system is a money making scam and has nothing to do with standards. Hopefully the shock of seeing the MoC making fools of Themsevels and Israel on the tv news in the US will wake some people up here.

    The only difference between the US and Israel should be 16% for VAT and a few dollars for Hebrew on the keyboards. Now the addictions to credit is another problem here but all in all the PC laptop market is not far from the US. The Apple prices through iDigital are another story….

    Typed on my iPad :-)

  13. Twitter Comment


    The iPad Banned in Isreal – [link to post]

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  14. newsgeek says:

    Great comment! Unfortunately I think you’re wrong about the Ministry – it would take a lot more than one round of looking like fools to wake them up!

  15. james braselton says:

    hi there we should refuse too help pro technolgies like japan soo japan has 40 gb/s or 40 gegabytes per second intenet soo you can fill a 64 gb ipad in 1.5 seconds or less and japan suport multi-terabyte ipods your right they dont ban 64 gb ipod touches wich has the same capacity as the 64 gb ipad it be some thing if it was a 640 petabyte ipad but we do have 1 terabyte ssd for concumers too buy but not petabytes or google bytes or super massive black hole ssd or hdd or LHDD for laser hard drives

  16. Commentator says:

    Why am I not surprised that in a country whose former Prime Minister is under police suspicion of bribe-taking (and this isn’t the first time high officials have been found to be corrupt), some lower level government employees are also apparently on the take?

    As a friend and frequent visitor to Israel, I hate that this is so, but apparently Israel has become part of the Middle East in more ways than geography.

    I’m shocked, shocked that there is corruption in the Middle East. :-)

    In this case it is for Apple to find a cure, and that remedy may lie in pulling the license of the local (non-Apple) distributor if possible, or sharply limiting shipments until he straightens out.

  17. Twitter Comment


    The real reason behind #Israel’s temporary ban of the #iPad – greed! [link to post]

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  18. Twitter Comment


    The real reason behind Israel’s temporary ban of the #iPad – greed! [link to post]

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  19. arie says:

    The real problems is that communication minister in Israel is leaded by a group of morons that does not have any clue about communication.

    Israeli standars are same as european so the Ipad is OK from the standars point of view. Furthermore, there are lots of devices (Macs, Ipods Iphones) in Israel with similar standards already approved.

    I believe now this morons are waiting for a leder to get down from the tree as it;s a joke all over the world.

  20. Mike says:

    The maximum power is limited in software or firmware, so the same chipset can have different maximum transmitting power.
    Different countries have different tx power limits, and the US allows higher power than Israel or EU.

    Here is the freq/power regulations list by country:

    http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory/Database

    It’s still doesn’t explain though, why they decided to ban iPad and not all other US electronics with Wi-Fi chips.

  21. laurent says:

    Hi Everyone – its seems that focusing so much on the technical aspects of the ban took the attention away from what John Le Carre always says: “follow the money”. The technical inconsistencies raised here are clear and obviously someone (if israeli consumers push hard) will have to address them.
    First of all, our former prime minister and current President, Sir Shimon Peres used to be the minister of communication. His son, is one of the major shareholder in iDigital and the managing partner of the largest israeli VC. This guy is connected up the A.. to all possible government offices.
    Remember the iPhone? How long did it take for israeli consumer to actually be able to get an iPhone??? how many israeli got their iphone before it was officially imported by iDigital? in other terms, iDigital lost millions because people outsmart them and bought their own iPhone.
    My assumption is simple: they dont want to make the same mistake with the iPad and found a very easy way (and easy guy at the ministry of communication) to actually help them out with this little issue…;)
    Follow the money track and you’ll see who’s benefiting from this ban… and it’s certainly not the israeli consumers.

  22. Scott says:

    It is getting easier. I got an iPhone for 1,599NIS through Modacom (US company selling here in Israel…via the net); see address/number below. Was a little nervous, but learned the wife lives here, the husband there. Getting ready to order the 3Gs, for 1,999. Can’t beat the price/service.

    If you are nervous about buying over the net (although my Visa card will let me cancel should they not send me the phone), they will sell them and deliver locally (Tel Aviv / Ra’anana), but I didn’t want to pay 400 NIS more.

    I called them at 052.775.2915 in Israel and 312.212.3668 in the States, but they may have a web site by now.

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