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Wikipedia

Orange S.A.

Orange S.A. (French pronunciation: ​[ɔʁɑ̃ʒ ɛs ɑ]), formerly France Télécom S.A. (stylized as france telecom) is a French multinational telecommunications corporation. It has 266 million customers worldwide and employs 89,000 people in France, and 59,000 elsewhere.[4] In 2015, the group had revenue of €40 billion.[5] The company's head office is located in the 15th arrondissement of Paris.

Orange S.A.
FormerlyFrance Télécom S.A.
TypePublic (Société Anonyme)
IndustryTelecommunications
Founded1 January 1988; 35 years ago (1988-01-01) (as France Télécom)
1 July 2013; 9 years ago (2013-07-01) (as Orange)
HeadquartersIssy-les-Moulineaux, France
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Products
Revenue 42.52 billion (2021)[2]
€2.52 billion (2021)[2]
€778 million (2021)[2]
Total assets €108.07 billion (2021)[2]
Total equity €35.36 billion (2021)[2]
OwnersFrench State (23%)
Public float (77%)[3]
Number of employees
132,002 (2021)[2]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.orange.com (group)
www.orange.fr

Orange has been the company's main brand for mobile, landline, internet and Internet Protocol television (IPTV) services since 2006. The Orange brand originated in the United Kingdom in 1994 after Hutchison Whampoa acquired a controlling stake in Microtel Communications: that company became a subsidiary of Mannesmann in 1999 and then was acquired by France Télécom in 2000. The France Télécom company was rebranded to Orange on 1 July 2013.[6]

The company has faced criticism due to the Orange S.A. suicides.

History

Nationalised service (1878–1980s)

In 1792, under the French Revolution, the first communication network was developed to enable the rapid transmission of information in a warring and unsafe country. That was the optical telegraphy network of Claude Chappe.[7]

In 1878, after the invention of the electrical telegraph and then the invention of the telephone, the French State created a Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs. Telephone Services were added to the ministry when they were nationalised in 1889. However, it was not until 1923 that the second 'T' (for 'telephones') appeared and the department of P&T became PTT.

In 1941, a General Direction of Telecommunications was created within this ministry. Then, in 1944, the National Centre of Telecommunications Studies (CNET) was created to develop the telecommunications industry in France.[citation needed]

In the 1970s, France attempted to make up for its delay in developing communications infrastructure, compared to other countries, by launching the programme "Delta LP" (increasing the main lines).[citation needed] It was at the time when the majority of the local loop was built; that is all the cables linking the users to the operator. Moreover, with the help of French manufacturers, digital switching, the Minitel and the GSM standard were invented by engineers and CNET researchers.

In 1982, Telecom introduced Minitel online ordering for its customers.[8]

Creation of France Télécom (1988–1997)

Until 1988, France Télécom was known as the direction générale des Télécommunications, a division of the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. It became autonomous in 1990. This was in response to a European directive, aimed at making competition mandatory in public services from 1 January 1998. The 2 July 1990 Bill changed France Télécom into an operator of public law, with Marcel Roulet the first Chairman. Since then, the company has had a separate body corporate from the State and acquired financial autonomy. It was privatised by Lionel Jospin's Plural Left government starting on 1 January 1998. The French government, both directly and through its holding company ERAP, continues to hold a stake of almost 27% in the company. In addition, the government Conseil of Ministers names the CEO.[9] In September 1995, Michel Bon was appointed to run France Télécom Group.[10]

'Roaring Nineties' (1997–2000)

In 1997, the capital of the new public company was successfully floated whereas the dot-com bubble phenomenon made the stock exchanges bullish. A second share offering occurred in 1998. France Télécom got behind in the internationalization launched by its international competitors such as Vodafone, thus, it started looking for targets at the highest speculation rate of the dot-com bubble. Moreover, its alliance with Deutsche Telekom based on a reciprocal capital contribution of 2% broke off when Deutsche Telekom announced that they were planning to do business with Telecom Italia without letting the French know – even if this project ended up failing.

Acquisition of Orange and privatisation

In July 1991, Hutchison Telecom, a UK subsidiary of the Hong Kong-based conglomerate Hutchison Whampoa, acquired a controlling stake in Microtel Communications Ltd, who by then had acquired a licence to develop a mobile network in the United Kingdom.[11][12][13] Hutchison renamed Microtel to Orange Personal Communications Services Ltd, and on 28 April 1994 the Orange brand was launched in the UK mobile phone market. A holding company structure was adopted in 1995 with the establishment of Orange plc. In April 1996, Orange went public and floated on the London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ,[14] majority-owned by Hutchison (48.22%),[15][16] followed by BAe (21.1%).[14] In June 1996, it became the youngest company to enter the FTSE 100, valued at £2.4 billion.

In October 1999, the German conglomerate Mannesmann AG acquired Orange for a price equivalent to €7,900 per customer, i.e. US$33bn.[17][18][19] Mannesmann's acquisition of Orange triggered Vodafone to make a hostile takeover bid for Mannesmann. Shortly thereafter, in February 2000, Vodafone acquired Mannesmann for US$183 billion, and decided to divest Orange because the EU regulations wouldn't allow it to hold two mobile licences.[20]

In August 2000, France Télécom bought Orange plc from Vodafone for a total estimated cost of €39.7 bn.[21][22][23] At the time, France Télécom also bought stakes in several other international firms (GlobalOne, Equant, Internet Telecom, Freeserve, EresMas, NTL and Mobilcom), of which some have since been sold back. Through this process, France Télécom became the fourth biggest global operator. The mobile telephone operations of Orange plc were merged with the majority of the mobile operations of France Télécom, forming the new group Orange S.A.

On 13 February 2001, Orange S.A. was listed on the Euronext Paris stock exchange with an initial public offering of 95 Euros per share, with a secondary listing in London.[24] In May 2001, Orange S.A. was listed on the CAC 40,[25] the benchmark stock market index of the top 40 French companies in terms of market capitalisation.[26]

In June 2001, the France Telecom Mobile brands Itinéris, OLA, and Mobicarte were replaced by the Orange brand. On 21 November 2003, France Telecom withdrew the 13.7% of Orange's shares traded on the Paris stock exchange.[27]

On 2 October 2002, the CEO, Thierry Breton was given the task of turning the company around after the company became crippled by debt following the drop of the company's stock price. On 30 September 2002, the company's stock price was €6.94, down from €219 on 2 March 2000. France Télécom was the second most indebted company worldwide in terms of short-term liabilities. The company obtained 15bn of debt adjustment that needed to be borne by banks and investors, another 15bn as a capital increase from the French State since it was still the majority shareholder, and an additional 15bn in cash from internal savings. On 25 February 2005, Thierry Breton was appointed Minister of Finance and Industry and Didier Lombard, who had been head of the firm's new technologies division, replaced him as CEO.[28]

NeXT scheme and rebranding to Orange (2006–present)

 
Logo of France Télécom from 2006 until 2013.

The NeXT scheme was the recovery plan for France Télécom which aimed at, among other things, reducing costs, especially wage costs, carrying on a converging policy for its products and services, and grouping together all the brands under a single brand, except for the activities dealing with fixed-line telephone which would stay under the designation 'France Télécom'. Consequently, this led to the disappearance of a number of brands.

From 1 June 2006, France Télécom tried to commercialize all its products under a single worldwide brand, becoming the sole brand of the France Telecom group for Internet, television and mobile services in the majority of countries in which Orange operated. Orange Business Services became the brand for all its business services offerings worldwide, replacing the Equant brand. In June 2007, Orange and Mid Europa Partners acquired Austrian mobile network company One, re-branding it as Orange Austria. In 2012, it was sold to Hutchison 3G and the Orange Austria brand was terminated.[29]

In November 2008, Orange launched five Orange Cinema Series channels. To do so, Orange bought the exclusive rights from Warner Bros.[30] for first runs of all new films, previously held by TPS Star (a subsidiary of the Canal+ Group), as well as all films in its catalogue and rights to the film catalogues of Gaumont, HBO[31] and MGM.[32] Orange also secured exclusive rights to broadcast Saturday evening Ligue 1 football matches from the French Football Federation.[33] Free accused Orange of tied-selling as the Orange channels were only available to its subscribers.[34] In June 2008, the firm abandoned a €27 billion bid for Swedish operator TeliaSonera after the two companies failed to agree terms.[35]

In 2008, Orange was given permission from Apple to sell the iPhone in Austria, Belgium, the Dominican Republic, Egypt, Jordan, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Switzerland and Orange's African markets.[36] On 8 September 2009, Orange and T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom announced they were in advanced talks to merge their UK operations to create the largest mobile operator with 37% of the market. Both T-Mobile and Orange brands were kept due to differences in their targeted markets. T-Mobile remained the budget-conscious offering and Orange the premium one, although there was some overlap as of February 2011.[37]

On 5 April 2009, Orange won an Arbitration Court case against Orascom Telecom, forcing Orascom to transfer its stake in Mobinil to Orange at a price of LE 441,658 per Mobinil share.[38] On 28 October 2009, Orange changed the name of its Luxembourgish telecommunication company VOXMobile to Orange.[39] On 5 November 2009, Orange Armenia launched telecommunication services in Armenia.[40] On 11 December 2009, Egypt's regulator approved an offer from a unit of France Telecom (Orange) to buy Mobinil.[41] In 2010, Orange's CEO, Didier Lombard, was replaced by Stéphane Richard.[42] The company was also reorganised internally, most notably with the arrival of former Culture Minister Christine Albanel as head of communications for the group.[43] In mid-April 2010, Orange UK announced that it would outsource the management of its broadband network to BT. This announcement was greeted positively by broadband commentators, who felt that the move was likely to improve Orange's broadband quality and customer services.[44]

On 2 March 2012, Didier Lombard, who remained special advisor to Stéphane Richard, left the company.[45] His departure was shadowed by controversy over his stock options: he was suspected of having stayed with the company longer to wait for the France Telecom share to recover and then exercise his stock option. The share was trading at around €16, whereas his stock options were at €23.[46] On 3 February 2012, Hutchison Whampoa announced that it would buy Orange Austria for US$1.7 billion.[47] The deal closed on 3 January 2013,[48] and the Orange brand was phased out on 19 August 2013, when its operations were merged into 3.[49] In March 2012, France Télécom bought 93.9% of Mobinil, an Egyptian mobile operator, from Naguib Sawiris's Orascom Telecom Media and Technology (OTMT) in an effort to double its revenue in MENA by 2015.[50] On 28 May 2013 at the Annual Shareholders' Meeting, shareholders approved changing the name of the group to Orange S.A. This became effective on 1 July 2013.[6] In September 2014, Orange agreed a deal to acquire Spanish firm Jazztel for a fee of around €3.4 billion.[51]

As of October 2018, Orange has teamed up with Google in order to install a transatlantic undersea cable, Dunant, to share data between the United States and France at faster speeds. Planned to begin operation in 2020, the fiber-based cable has a design capacity of 250 terabits per second (Tbit/s) and will span approximately 6600 kilometers in length.[52]

in July 2020, Orange launched a satellite-based home broadband service utilising the Eutelsat Konnect satellite.[53]

Shareholders

The major shareholders of Orange as of 31 December 2015 are the state of France through Agence des participations de l'État[54] and Banque publique d'investissement (replacing Fonds stratégique d'investissement) for 23.04%.[55] As of mid-2013, Orange employees owned 4.81%, and the company itself owned 0.58%.[56]

Operations

Mobile

 
Orange world activities.
 
Mobile network locations in Europe.
  France, Moldova, Romania and Slovakia: leading mobile telephone business.
  Belgium, Poland: ranked 2nd in mobile telephony.
  Spain: ranked 3rd in mobile telephony.

Orange is the sole brand used in the marketing of the company's mobile offers; the Itineris, Ola and Mobicarte brands have been combined since 2001, and Mobicarte became a special prepaid calling offer. As of 31 December 2010, Orange has 150 million mobile customers worldwide, 17.9% of whom are in France. Orange France is the leading mobile telecommunications operator in France, with a market share of 45.38% as of 2 November 2009.[57]

Country Operator Website
  France(headquarters) Orange orange.fr
  Belgium Orange orange.be
  Botswana Orange orange.co.bw
  Burkina Faso Orange orange.bf
  Cameroon Orange orange.cm
  Central African Republic Orange orange.cf
  Democratic Republic of the Congo Orange orange.cd
  Egypt Orange orange.eg
  Guinea Orange (Group Sonatel) orange-guinee.com
  Guinea-Bissau Orange orange-bissau.com
  Ivory Coast Orange orange.ci
  Jordan Orange orange.jo
  Liberia Orange orange.com.lr
  Luxembourg Orange orange.lu
  Madagascar Orange orange.mg
  Mali Orange (Group Sonatel) orange.ml
  Moldova Orange orange.md
  Morocco Orange orange.ma
  Poland Orange orange.pl
  Réunion Orange orange.re
  Romania Orange orange.ro
  Saudi Arabia Orange orange.sa
  Senegal Orange (Group Sonatel) orange.sn
  Sierra Leone Orange (Group Sonatel) orange.sl
  Slovakia Orange orange.sk
  Spain Orange orange.es
  Tunisia Orange orange.tn

The Orange brand name was licensed to a number of operators which Orange S.A. did not own, these include:

Country Former operator Rebranding/ License cancellation Present operator Website
  India Orange January 2006 Vodafone Idea myvi.in
  United Kingdom Orange February 2015 EE ee.co.uk
  Liechtenstein Orange April 2015 Salt 7acht.li
  Switzerland Orange April 2015[58] Salt salt.ch
  Armenia Orange December 2015 Ucom ucom.am
  Israel Orange February 2016[59][60] Partner partner.co.il
  Mauritius Orange November 2017[61] My.T myt.mu
  Dominican Republic Orange November 2017 Altice altice.com.do
  Equatorial Guinea Orange October 2018[62] GETESA getesa.gq

Landline and Internet

Orange took over the landline and Internet businesses of France Telecom and Wanadoo in 2006. Since then, Orange is the sole brand of France Telecom for landline and Internet services worldwide, with a few exceptions, such as Mobistar in Belgium and TPSA in Poland. Orange's triple-play broadband Internet offers are supplied through the Livebox. As of 31 December 2010, Orange has 13.7 million broadband ADSL customers worldwide, 67% of whom are in France40.

The Livebox is the ADSL modem supplied to Orange's ADSL and FTTH customers in France, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Spain and Tunisia, and to WiMAX customers in Cameroon. It serves as a bridge between the Internet access and the home network through several communication interfaces (Bluetooth, Ethernet, Wi-Fi). The Livebox has evolved over time. The Livebox 1.0 was replaced by version 1.1, the Mini Livebox, followed by the Livebox 2.0. The newest version was scheduled to be rolled out 2012 41. The Livebox is offered on a monthly contract for €3 per month or for purchase for €59. Number of Liveboxes rented in 2008: 7.3 million, a 12.3% increase in one year.[63]

Broadcasting

Beginning in 2003, Orange's strategy has centred on the acquisition, creation and diffusion of content. This starts with the creation of MaLigne.tv in 2003, later renamed Orange TV, an ADSL television access service and a video on demand service. In 2004, Orange organises a television access service for mobile phones. In 2007, Orange creates Studio 37 [fr] and, in 2008, enters into a partnership with France Televisions to broadcast pre-recorded programming from the public national television and to roll out theme channels for sports, cinema and television series. Dubbed Content Everywhere in 2008, the content access strategy is announced simultaneously with the launch of the Orange cinema series television channels,[64] and aims to offer customers access to all of the company's content, anywhere and from any device.

OCS

Orange Cinema Series is launched 13 November 2008, along with Orange Sport; it comprises five channels devoted to movies (Orange Ciné Max, Ciné Happy, Ciné Choc, Ciné Novo, Ciné Géant). The channels primarily show films from the Warner Bros. and HBO catalogues. Orange installs additional VOD services on its channels, allowing viewers to watch programmes broadcast in the previous 30 days whenever they like, as well as supplementary programmes from the previous month.[citation needed]

Orange Sport

Orange Sport is launched 13 November 2008. Orange secures the broadcast rights for the Saturday evening lineup of Ligue 1 matches from season 2008/2009 to season 2011/2012, and the rights to home matches of eight Serie A clubs (Sampdoria, Atalanta, Chievo, Reggina, Siena, Palermo, Udinese and Napoli). The acquisition of these rights marks the start of competition for sports programs with the Canal+ group.

Video on demand

Orange offers services for video on demand access using the Orange decoder, a computer or a mobile phone. Orange offers free programming from the catalogues of available works of France Television,[65] M6 [66] and TF1 [67] for one week after their initial broadcast.

Online entertainment

In 1997, France Telecom created Goa, an online entertainment subsidiary. The site is launched as a platform for players of massively multiplayer online games. In 2002, Goa acquires the operating license for Dark Age of Camelot. In 2007 Goa ceases to be a subsidiary and is merged into Orange. In 2009 Orange refocuses Goa.com on online entertainment and gradually ceases to operate massively multiplayer online games. In August 2010, goa.com disappears to become the Orange Jeux portal.[68]

Music

Liveradio [fr]: Created by Orange in 2008, Liveradio is a free, live, on-demand IP radio streaming service. Users gain access through this service to more than 10,000 FM and web radio stations and 11,000 podcasts from 100 countries.

Subsidiaries, joint ventures and holdings

Orange is a communications access provider offering customers access through multiple platforms. The four key platforms Orange operates are:

  1. fixed line telephone, mainly in France and Poland.
  2. broadband access.
  3. mobile phone telephony.
  4. most recently, IPTV, though currently only in France, Spain, Poland and Slovakia, known as Orange TV.

France Télécom merged the different internal divisions managing each platform and now all operate under the Orange brand.[69]

Orange Business Services

Orange is present in the U.S. through its Orange Business Services division and its venture capital historical partner Innovacom as well as two R&D labs: one in Boston, Massachusetts and the other in South San Francisco, California.

 
As a result of deregulation, Orange operates phone booths in Wellington, New Zealand.

OpenTransit is Orange's backbone network. It covers Europe, the United States, Japan, Hong Kong, and loops back to Paris.

BT Group

Orange and Deutsche Telekom merged their UK businesses in 2010 to form a joint venture branded as EE.[70] In December 2014, Orange were in talks with BT Group regarding the acquisition of EE for an estimated £12.5bn.[71] On 5 February 2015, it was announced that BT would be acquiring EE in a £12.5bn deal, in which Orange S.A would take a 4% stake in the BT Group.[72] The acquisition of EE was completed 29 January 2016.

Globecast

Globecast is a provider of transmission of satellite and production services for professional broadcast, online content and enterprise multimedia. GlobeCast World TV is a division of Globecast. In 2012, Globecast also began launching a direct to home OTT IPTV service called MyGlobeTV in the United States using NetGem set top boxes.[73][74] The MyGlobeTV service was discontinued In December 2013.[75]

Viaccess Orca

Viaccess Orca is a provider of IPTV and OTT TV service platforms and security services. It is headquartered in Paris La Defense. Viaccess-orca acquired Squadeo company in 2017 and is able to supply video secured player. Viaccess Orca is also involved in content tracking over internet, providing anti-piracy services.

Orange Labs

Orange Labs (formerly France Télécom R&D) is the research and development division of Orange.[76][77] This division was derived from different previous entities, such as CNET (Centre national d'études des télécommunications) created in 1944, the CCETT created in 1972, as well as other entities.[78][79][80][81] In 2007, France Télécom R&D became known as Orange Labs, a global network of R&D entities.[82][83]

CCETT/France Télécom R&D contributed to various international standards, such as ISO/IEC MPEG[84] and JPEG standards or DAB and DVB standards.[85][86][87][88][89][90] CCETT, IRT and Philips developed a digital audio two-channel compression system known as Musicam or MPEG Audio Layer II (Emmy Award in Engineering 2000).[91][92][93]

In 2010, Orange devoted 1.9% of its revenue, or €845 million, to research and development. Since January 2007 Orange has unified its research laboratories and technocentres in the Orange Labs network. As of 31 December 2010 Orange held a portfolio of 7,892 patents, 327 which were filed in 2010.[94] Orange employs 3,700 people in research and development per year throughout the organisation,[95] including more than 200 doctoral candidates and post-doctorates.[96] Orange's research and development is based on partnerships with industry, suppliers and operators, universities and schools, academic institutes and research programs such as the following:

Partner Type
China Telecom Supplier and operator
Deutsche Telekom Supplier and operator
Bibliothèque nationale de France Academic institute
CNRS Academic institute
INRIA Academic institute
Supélec University/School
IMT Atlantique University/School
École Normale Supérieure University/School
ESSEC - Chaire Media & Entertainment University/School
École Normale Supérieure - chaire de cryptologie University/School
Paris Descartes University - chaire pluridisciplinaire University/School
École polytechnique - chaire Innovation et Régulation University/School
Massachusetts Institute of Technology University/School
Beijing University of Post and Telecom University/School
Imperial College London University/School
Agence Nationale de la Recherche Research program

Two types of infrastructure coexist in Orange's research and development: the research laboratories and the technocentres. The latter are responsible for Orange innovations[97] and consist of multidisciplinary teams of researchers, engineers, and marketing and sales personnel.

Type City Country
Technocentre Chatillon France
Technocentre London United Kingdom
Technocentre Warsaw Poland
Technocentre Amman Jordan
R&D - Spain
R&D San Francisco United States
R&D Beijing China
R&D Cairo Egypt
R&D Tokyo Japan
R&D Issy les Moulineaux France
R&D Caen France
R&D Grenoble France
R&D Rennes France
R&D Lannion France
R&D Sophia Antipolis France
R&D La Turbie France
R&D Belfort France

Cityvox

Cityvox is a network of websites with local content (restaurants, cultural happenings, etc.) created in 1999. Orange purchased the network site in 2008.[98]

Deezer

In late August 2010 Orange acquired an 11% share in the streaming site Deezer. With this acquisition, the operator offered its subscribers a new "Deezer Premium" option: paid streaming music service with no advertising and 7 million titles.[99]

Dailymotion

On 25 January 2011 Orange announced the acquisition of 49% of Dailymotion, a French online video platform, at a cost of €58.8 million. The group also secured an option to acquire all of the shares in the platform in 2013.[100] This is indicative of a new strategy by Orange, which seeks to offer a full range of multi-screen video to its subscribers.[100]

Studio 37

Created in 2007 Studio 37 [fr] co-produces and acquires films, unlike the Canal+ Group's StudioCanal. The producer Frédérique Dumas starts the studio, which has an initial budget of 30 million Euros. For its growth, Orange negotiates exclusivity agreements with Warner, HBO, Fidélité Films and Gaumont, ensuring a stream of films for its TV Orange Cinema Series package.[101] In 2011, Studio 37 co-produced The Artist which went on to win best picture and four further awards at the 84th Academy Awards. This makes it the first silent film to win an award since the original ceremony in 1929.

Cloudwatt

Cloudwatt is a cloud services provider set up in 2012 by Orange (44%), the French government through Caisse des Dépôts (33%) and Thales (22%). In March 2015, Orange acquired all remaining shares of Cloudwatt to strengthen its enterprise cloud services offering.[102]

Aire

In January 2019 Orange acquired a minority shareholding in Aire Labs, a credit data platform in the UK.[103]

SecureData

In February 2019 Orange acquired UK cybersecurity provider SecureData for an undisclosed sum, merging it with Orange Cyberdefense Division.[104]

SecureLink

Orange acquired SecureLink, a Netherlands-based cybersecurity company, in 2019 for 515 million.[105]

SUMA Movil

In November 2019 Orange España, a subsidiary of Orange, acquired SUMA Móvil Spain from Grupo-Ingenium for an undisclosed sum.[106]

Telekom Romania

In early August 2020 Orange reached an agreement with the Ministry of Communications and Information Society (MCSI) to purchase Telekom Romania and establish a new telecommunications entity. As part of this agreement, the Romanian government would own a 20% stake in the new entity, and Orange would take over fixed operations.[107] The MCSI had first entered talks to sell Telekom Romania in September 2019, when Deutsche Telekom announced that it was prepared to sell its stake in Telekom Romania to Orange.[108]

Future4care

In June 2021, Orange partners with Sanofi, Capgemini and Generali to launch Future4care.[109] This all-European start-up accelerator will help develop upcoming companies focused on digital health.[110]

Controversies

Staff suicides

Between the beginning of January 2008 and April 2011, more than 60 France Télécom employees committed suicide,[111] (in 2008 and the early part of 2009 there were 25 [112]) some leaving notes blaming stress and misery at work. In October 2009, the wave of suicides led former Deputy CEO Louis-Pierre Wenes to resign under trade union pressure, to be replaced by Stéphane Richard.[113][114] Faced with repeated suicides, the company promoted Stéphane Richard to chief executive officer on 1 February 2010, while Didier Lombard remained as chairman.[115]

The suicide rate among France Télécom's 102,000 domestic employees is 15.3 per year, compared with an average of 14.7 suicides per 100,000 in the French population as a whole.[116]

Following an investigation, the Inspection du travail (Labour Inspection) told the labour union Sud-PTT that the work organisation at France Télécom "was conducive to generating suffering at work" and "health risks" for employees.[117] An investigation was conducted by the audit firm Technologia at the request of France Télécom's management. Of the 102,843 employees in the group's parent company, 80,080 responded, i.e. a response rate of 77.9%. The fact-finding report revealed a "very poor general feeling", "strained physical and mental health", and a "tense and even violent working environment" for some categories of personnel. Working conditions were deemed difficult, mainly for personnel in charge of sales and "customer interventions". Given heavy media coverage, these findings were the source of major contention about working conditions.

On 20 December 2019, former CEO Didier Lombard and Orange were found guilty of moral harassment towards their employees.[118]

Access to some sites limited

In 2011, following complaints by Internet users, Megaupload accused Orange of not providing sufficient connectivity to its site, thus severely limiting throughput from France, an allegation Orange denied.[119]

Accusations of false advertising in France

In November 2009, three users lodged a complaint against Orange for false advertising concerning its "Unlimited 3G Key" service.[120] These customers criticised the operator for the misleading way in which this service is presented, since it isn't in fact unlimited. While it is true that there is no time limit, the user cannot download more than 1 gigabyte per month, thus limiting browsing. Unaware of this, the three plaintiffs browsed beyond plan limits and had to pay additional fees as a result.

Corruption in Tunisia

In March 2011, the information website OWNI uncovered a questionable financial deal that enabled the Orange group to acquire a 3G license.[121]

Anticompetitive practices in French overseas departments

On 28 July 2011, the Competition Authority fined France Télécom €27.6 million for having improperly impeded the development of new competing operators in the French overseas departments (primarily Réunion).[122]

France Télécom used its dominant position, resulting in particular from its former monopoly, to take unfair advantage of its competitors.

The practices identified by the Authority were:

  • excessive rate levels
  • as operators of the quasi-totality of the telecommunication infrastructure local loops, making use of the data which they have access to, France Télécom has targeted former subscribers who had switched to a competitor, in order to win them back, offering them specific deals.
  • margin squeeze on broadband Internet offers
  • maintaining call barring services inconsistent with the prior selection of an alternative operator

SMS and MMS propagation of 1 January 2011 in France

On 1 January 2011, Orange users' SMS and MMS were sent and billed multiple times. The operator agreed to reimburse the excess costs to consumers, explaining that the error came from a "third party operator"[123] (which turned out to be Bouygues Telecom),[124] said not to have sent acknowledgements, which caused the messages to be resent. A computer problem at the Bouygues platform was blamed.[125] During the night of 31 December 2010 to 1 January 2011, more than 930 million text messages were exchanged in France (for the three operators combined), setting a new record compared with the peaks of the previous years.[126]

Controversies in UK regarding the quality of service

On 21 March 2007 Watchdog, a television series by the BBC focusing on consumer protection, published the results from a broadband survey they held. According to the survey Orange is the worst ISP in the UK. 68% of Orange customers that took part in the survey said they were unsatisfied with Orange's customer service, it was voted as the most unreliable broadband provider, and it had the highest number of dissatisfied customers. Two thirds of Orange customers experienced problems cancelling their Orange broadband.[127]

In response to the problems with Orange UK broadband and 3G broadband during March 2009 and April 2009 the 3G data network has been upgraded to 3.5G and increased signal coverage. This new network can be seen in action on many mobile phones which display network for instance the Nokia N95, when the phone detects the higher speed. The Orange UK mobile broadband USB adapter works with the new network. The 3G networks for all telecommunication suppliers still struggle to get the throughput that was originally advertised when these networks were announced. The UK Telecoms Regulator[128] has reported on the challenges for all suppliers.

A consumer organisation forum web site known as OrangeProblems.co.uk focuses on the poor level of service provided by Orange Broadband in the UK. Initially set up as WanadooProblems.co.uk, the site focuses on the infamous Orange local loop unbundling and poor customer service but covers a wider range of Orange operations such as lost email, significantly delayed SMTP and outages, suspicions of eavesdropping, et al.

Orange Mobile has been criticised during a Channel 4 News investigation for a lack of security which potentially exposed customer records to fraud.[129]

In August 2007 Orange was criticised for summarily deleting email accounts tied to old Freeserve and Wanadoo 'pay as you go' dial-up accounts with no warning.[130]

In August 2008, after well publicised problems with iPhone 3G performances, customers compared their download speed and discovered that Orange in France was capping 3G download bandwidth. Orange admitted capping to 384kbit/s, well below the theoretical 7.2Mbit/s provided by the iPhone.[131][132] Orange uncapped 3G and 3G+ by mid-September 2008.[133]

Accusations of antisemitism and calls for boycott

The French chairman and CEO of the Orange telecommunications company, Stéphane Richard said in Cairo regarding his company operations in Israel, "Believe me, I would cancel the contract tomorrow if I could. We want to end this and to fix this; we don't want it."[134] Later, Orange announced its desire to discontinue use of its popular brand name by its Israeli operator Partner Communications Company.[135] The president of the State of Israel Reuven Rivlin said in response "Just yesterday Israel faced attacks from anti-Israel and anti-Semitic bodies, who have chosen to delegitimize the state of Israel, and to launch rockets at us from the Gaza Strip. We must face these challenges together, right and left," Rivlin said.[136][137]

Israeli culture minister Miri Regev said, "I call on Jews of France and the world to disconnect from Orange unless Stéphane Richard takes back his words. The time has come for them to understand that Jews in the world and sane voices that oppose anti-Semitism and racism also have power."[136][138] The statement on the company's website announced in response that "The Orange Group is a telecoms operator and as such its primary concern is to defend and promote the value of its brand in markets in which it is present," the statement began. "The Group does not engage in any kind of political debate under any circumstance."[134] Later, Richard visited Israel to clarify his remarks. He met Israeli PM Benyamin Netanyahu and former president, Shimon Peres. Richard told both Netanyahu and Peres that Orange has not and will not support anti-Israel boycott efforts, and insisted that its announced decision to abrogate its relationship with Partner was purely commercial and not political.[139]

On 30 June 2015, Orange and Partner announced a change to their 10-year licensing agreement. Orange paid Partner €40 million to add an opt out clause to the contract,[140] with which Partner conducted a market survey which is determine the best course of action moving forward.[141] In the first year only Partner can opt out, with either party being able to opt out in the second year.[142] Regardless of which party opts to exercise the out clause, Orange will pay Partner an additional €50 million to end the arrangement.[143] Orange stated that the money paid to Partner was purely for re-branding purposes and affirmed their previous statement that their wish to leave Israel is based on desire to discontinue license agreements and maintain only subsidiaries that they control, rather than a boycott.[144] Orange would make the relevant payments over the course of two years and charge it to their books as a mix of marketing, sales, customer services and related expenses.[145] As part of the agreement Orange's research and development activities within Israel would transition to the Orange name, but would be restricted from entering the telecommunications services market.[146]

In September 2015, Orange reaffirmed their commitment to Israel with an investment in Hola, a video distribution network.[147]

In February 2016, Orange and Partner decided to terminate their agreement.[148] As a result, rebranding has resulted in Orange Israel becoming part of Partner.

Governance

Overview of governance

Governance of the Orange group is centred in its board of directors, executive committee and three committees that steer Orange's strategy:[149]

  • Audit Committee: Created in 1997, the Audit Committee comprises three members appointed for indefinite terms by the board of directors on the recommendation of the Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Committee.
  • Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Committee: Created in 2010, it comprises at least three members appointed by the board of directors on the recommendation of its chairman. Its remit is to examine the main risks and opportunities in relation with the environment, Orange's policies concerning industrial, the publication of societal and environmental information, and the main orientations of its corporate social responsibility policy.
  • Strategy Committee: Created in 2003, the Strategy Committee comprises at least three members appointed by the board of directors on the recommendation of its chairman. The latter chairs the committee. It examines the group's international development strategic and the strategic mid-term guidelines.

Chairmen

Chief executive officers

The company is headed either by the chairman of the board of directors, whose title in that case is the chairman and chief executive officer, or by another person appointed by the board of directors and given the title of chief executive officer.

Board of directors

The Orange group is governed by a board of directors composed of a minimum of twelve members and a maximum of twenty-two members, divided as follows: three are appointed by the French State, three are elected by the employees, one is elected by the shareholders and represents employee shareholders, the fifteen other members are appointed by the shareholders. The board members serve for a term of four years. In 2011, the board of directors was composed of 15 members:[151]

Name Position
Christel Heydemann Chairman and chief executive officer
Luc Marino Director representing employee shareholders
Sébastien Crozier Director representing the employees
Fabrice Jolys Director representing the employees
René Ollier Director representing the employees
Alexandre Bompard Independent director
Christel Heydemann Independent director
Charles-Henri Filippi Independent director
Bernard Ramanantsoa Independent director
Helle Kristoffersen Independent director
Mouna Sepehri Independent director
Jean-Michel Severino Independent member
Lucie Muniesa Director representing the public sector (French State)
Anne Lange Director representing the public sector (French State)
Bpifrance Participations (representative) Director representing the public sector (French State)

Executive committee

The executive committee reports to the chairman and CEO. Its purpose is to coordinate the implementation of Orange's strategic orientations and to oversee the achievement of operational, social, technical and financial resource allocation objectives. It comprises fifteen members.

Name Title
Stéphane Richard Chairman and chief executive officer
Ramon Fernandez Delegate Chief Executive Officer, Finance, Performance and Europe
Gervais Pellissier Delegate Chief Executive Officer, Group Transformation and Chairman of Orange Business Services
Fabienne Dulac Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Chief Executive Director of Orange France
Mari-Noëlle Jégo-Laveissière Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer
Laurent Paillassot Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Chief Executive Officer of Orange Spain
Christine Albanel Senior Executive Vice-President of CSR, Diversity, Partnerships and Philanthropy, Deputy Chair of the Orange Foundation
Jérôme Barré Chief Executive Officer of Wholesale and International Networks
Hugues Foulon Executive Director of Strategy and Cybersecurity activities
Nicolas Guérin Secretary General, Secretary of the Board of Directors
Valérie Le Boulanger Executive Director in charge of Human Resources
Béatrice Mandine Executive Director Communications and Brand
Alioune Ndiaye Chief Executive Officer of Orange Middle East and Africa
Helmut Reisinger Chief Executive Officer of Orange Business Services
Paul de Leusse Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Orange for mobile financial services, and Chief Executive Officer of Orange Bank

Head office

 
Orange's former head office in Paris at 6, Place d'Alleray.

Orange's head office, since 2012, is based at 78, Rue Olivier de Serres in the 15th arrondissement of Paris.[152]

The company's former head office was based at 6, Place d'Alleray in the 15th arrondissement of Paris.[153] The building was the head office from 1998 until 2012. Eight hundred employees worked at the site.[154]

Orange Foundation

In 1987 France Telecom established the France Telecom Foundation. On 16 January 2007, the foundation changed its name to Orange Foundation. In 1990 France Telecom Foundation received the top award for corporate philanthropy from ADMICAL.[155] In 1995 France Telecom Foundation received the top award for solidarity from ADMICAL.[155] The board of directors of Orange Foundation consists of representatives of Orange, independent personalities and employee representatives. Its purpose is to support projects related to health, particularly autism; education, particularly schooling for girls in developing countries; and culture, particularly group vocal music. Projects supported by Orange Foundation are chosen by committees of experts devoted to each major theme. The Foundation has been involved in 300 to 400 projects per year since 1987.[156] The Foundation works with international NGOs and local associations involved in long-term projects in countries in which Orange is based for better follow-up of these projects.

Sponsorship

From 2000 to 2002, Orange was a major sponsor of British Formula One team Arrows.[157]

Orange was the sponsor for UEFA Euro 2012 and UEFA Euro 2016.[158][159]

The company was the official jersey sponsor of the national basketball teams of the Central African Republic and Senegal at the 2015 FIBA Africa Championship.[160]

Orange was the kit sponsor of the French association football club Olympique de Marseille for the 2017/18 and 2018/19 seasons.[161]

The company became a sponsor of esports organization Team Vitality in 2018.[162]

See also

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External links

  • Official website
  • Business data for Orange S.A.:
    • Bloomberg
    • Google
    • Reuters
    • SEC filings
    • Yahoo!
  • Company information

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This article is about the corporation formerly known as France Telecom For the former UK mobile phone operator see Orange UK This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Orange S A French pronunciation ɔʁɑ ʒ ɛs ɑ formerly France Telecom S A stylized as france telecom is a French multinational telecommunications corporation It has 266 million customers worldwide and employs 89 000 people in France and 59 000 elsewhere 4 In 2015 the group had revenue of 40 billion 5 The company s head office is located in the 15th arrondissement of Paris Orange S A FormerlyFrance Telecom S A TypePublic Societe Anonyme Traded asEuronext Paris ORANYSE ORANBIT ORACAC 40 ComponentIndustryTelecommunicationsFounded1 January 1988 35 years ago 1988 01 01 as France Telecom 1 July 2013 9 years ago 2013 07 01 as Orange HeadquartersIssy les Moulineaux FranceArea servedWorldwideKey peopleChristel Heydemann CEO Stephane Richard Chairman 1 ProductsFixed line telephoneMobile phoneBroadbandIPTVInternetBankRevenue 42 52 billion 2021 2 Operating income 2 52 billion 2021 2 Net income 778 million 2021 2 Total assets 108 07 billion 2021 2 Total equity 35 36 billion 2021 2 OwnersFrench State 23 Public float 77 3 Number of employees132 002 2021 2 SubsidiariesOrange MarineOrange Business ServicesPartner Communications CompanyWanadooDeezerOrange LabsDailymotionTelkom KenyaOrange UKOrange EgyptSonatelJazztelGlobecastCloudwattOrange RomaniaWebsitewww wbr orange wbr com group www wbr orange wbr frOrange has been the company s main brand for mobile landline internet and Internet Protocol television IPTV services since 2006 The Orange brand originated in the United Kingdom in 1994 after Hutchison Whampoa acquired a controlling stake in Microtel Communications that company became a subsidiary of Mannesmann in 1999 and then was acquired by France Telecom in 2000 The France Telecom company was rebranded to Orange on 1 July 2013 6 The company has faced criticism due to the Orange S A suicides Contents 1 History 1 1 Nationalised service 1878 1980s 1 2 Creation of France Telecom 1988 1997 1 3 Roaring Nineties 1997 2000 1 4 Acquisition of Orange and privatisation 1 5 NeXT scheme and rebranding to Orange 2006 present 2 Shareholders 3 Operations 3 1 Mobile 3 2 Landline and Internet 3 3 Broadcasting 3 3 1 OCS 3 3 2 Orange Sport 3 3 3 Video on demand 3 3 4 Online entertainment 3 4 Music 4 Subsidiaries joint ventures and holdings 4 1 Orange Business Services 4 2 BT Group 4 3 Globecast 4 4 Viaccess Orca 4 5 Orange Labs 4 6 Cityvox 4 7 Deezer 4 8 Dailymotion 4 9 Studio 37 4 10 Cloudwatt 4 11 Aire 4 12 SecureData 4 13 SecureLink 4 14 SUMA Movil 4 15 Telekom Romania 4 16 Future4care 5 Controversies 5 1 Staff suicides 5 2 Access to some sites limited 5 3 Accusations of false advertising in France 5 4 Corruption in Tunisia 5 5 Anticompetitive practices in French overseas departments 5 6 SMS and MMS propagation of 1 January 2011 in France 5 7 Controversies in UK regarding the quality of service 5 8 Accusations of antisemitism and calls for boycott 6 Governance 6 1 Overview of governance 6 2 Chairmen 6 3 Chief executive officers 6 4 Board of directors 6 5 Executive committee 6 6 Head office 7 Orange Foundation 8 Sponsorship 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditNationalised service 1878 1980s Edit In 1792 under the French Revolution the first communication network was developed to enable the rapid transmission of information in a warring and unsafe country That was the optical telegraphy network of Claude Chappe 7 In 1878 after the invention of the electrical telegraph and then the invention of the telephone the French State created a Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs Telephone Services were added to the ministry when they were nationalised in 1889 However it was not until 1923 that the second T for telephones appeared and the department of P amp T became PTT In 1941 a General Direction of Telecommunications was created within this ministry Then in 1944 the National Centre of Telecommunications Studies CNET was created to develop the telecommunications industry in France citation needed In the 1970s France attempted to make up for its delay in developing communications infrastructure compared to other countries by launching the programme Delta LP increasing the main lines citation needed It was at the time when the majority of the local loop was built that is all the cables linking the users to the operator Moreover with the help of French manufacturers digital switching the Minitel and the GSM standard were invented by engineers and CNET researchers In 1982 Telecom introduced Minitel online ordering for its customers 8 Creation of France Telecom 1988 1997 Edit Until 1988 France Telecom was known as the direction generale des Telecommunications a division of the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications It became autonomous in 1990 This was in response to a European directive aimed at making competition mandatory in public services from 1 January 1998 The 2 July 1990 Bill changed France Telecom into an operator of public law with Marcel Roulet the first Chairman Since then the company has had a separate body corporate from the State and acquired financial autonomy It was privatised by Lionel Jospin s Plural Left government starting on 1 January 1998 The French government both directly and through its holding company ERAP continues to hold a stake of almost 27 in the company In addition the government Conseil of Ministers names the CEO 9 In September 1995 Michel Bon was appointed to run France Telecom Group 10 Roaring Nineties 1997 2000 Edit In 1997 the capital of the new public company was successfully floated whereas the dot com bubble phenomenon made the stock exchanges bullish A second share offering occurred in 1998 France Telecom got behind in the internationalization launched by its international competitors such as Vodafone thus it started looking for targets at the highest speculation rate of the dot com bubble Moreover its alliance with Deutsche Telekom based on a reciprocal capital contribution of 2 broke off when Deutsche Telekom announced that they were planning to do business with Telecom Italia without letting the French know even if this project ended up failing Acquisition of Orange and privatisation Edit See also Orange UK History In July 1991 Hutchison Telecom a UK subsidiary of the Hong Kong based conglomerate Hutchison Whampoa acquired a controlling stake in Microtel Communications Ltd who by then had acquired a licence to develop a mobile network in the United Kingdom 11 12 13 Hutchison renamed Microtel to Orange Personal Communications Services Ltd and on 28 April 1994 the Orange brand was launched in the UK mobile phone market A holding company structure was adopted in 1995 with the establishment of Orange plc In April 1996 Orange went public and floated on the London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ 14 majority owned by Hutchison 48 22 15 16 followed by BAe 21 1 14 In June 1996 it became the youngest company to enter the FTSE 100 valued at 2 4 billion In October 1999 the German conglomerate Mannesmann AG acquired Orange for a price equivalent to 7 900 per customer i e US 33bn 17 18 19 Mannesmann s acquisition of Orange triggered Vodafone to make a hostile takeover bid for Mannesmann Shortly thereafter in February 2000 Vodafone acquired Mannesmann for US 183 billion and decided to divest Orange because the EU regulations wouldn t allow it to hold two mobile licences 20 In August 2000 France Telecom bought Orange plc from Vodafone for a total estimated cost of 39 7 bn 21 22 23 At the time France Telecom also bought stakes in several other international firms GlobalOne Equant Internet Telecom Freeserve EresMas NTL and Mobilcom of which some have since been sold back Through this process France Telecom became the fourth biggest global operator The mobile telephone operations of Orange plc were merged with the majority of the mobile operations of France Telecom forming the new group Orange S A On 13 February 2001 Orange S A was listed on the Euronext Paris stock exchange with an initial public offering of 95 Euros per share with a secondary listing in London 24 In May 2001 Orange S A was listed on the CAC 40 25 the benchmark stock market index of the top 40 French companies in terms of market capitalisation 26 In June 2001 the France Telecom Mobile brands Itineris OLA and Mobicarte were replaced by the Orange brand On 21 November 2003 France Telecom withdrew the 13 7 of Orange s shares traded on the Paris stock exchange 27 On 2 October 2002 the CEO Thierry Breton was given the task of turning the company around after the company became crippled by debt following the drop of the company s stock price On 30 September 2002 the company s stock price was 6 94 down from 219 on 2 March 2000 France Telecom was the second most indebted company worldwide in terms of short term liabilities The company obtained 15bn of debt adjustment that needed to be borne by banks and investors another 15bn as a capital increase from the French State since it was still the majority shareholder and an additional 15bn in cash from internal savings On 25 February 2005 Thierry Breton was appointed Minister of Finance and Industry and Didier Lombard who had been head of the firm s new technologies division replaced him as CEO 28 NeXT scheme and rebranding to Orange 2006 present Edit Logo of France Telecom from 2006 until 2013 The NeXT scheme was the recovery plan for France Telecom which aimed at among other things reducing costs especially wage costs carrying on a converging policy for its products and services and grouping together all the brands under a single brand except for the activities dealing with fixed line telephone which would stay under the designation France Telecom Consequently this led to the disappearance of a number of brands From 1 June 2006 France Telecom tried to commercialize all its products under a single worldwide brand becoming the sole brand of the France Telecom group for Internet television and mobile services in the majority of countries in which Orange operated Orange Business Services became the brand for all its business services offerings worldwide replacing the Equant brand In June 2007 Orange and Mid Europa Partners acquired Austrian mobile network company One re branding it as Orange Austria In 2012 it was sold to Hutchison 3G and the Orange Austria brand was terminated 29 In November 2008 Orange launched five Orange Cinema Series channels To do so Orange bought the exclusive rights from Warner Bros 30 for first runs of all new films previously held by TPS Star a subsidiary of the Canal Group as well as all films in its catalogue and rights to the film catalogues of Gaumont HBO 31 and MGM 32 Orange also secured exclusive rights to broadcast Saturday evening Ligue 1 football matches from the French Football Federation 33 Free accused Orange of tied selling as the Orange channels were only available to its subscribers 34 In June 2008 the firm abandoned a 27 billion bid for Swedish operator TeliaSonera after the two companies failed to agree terms 35 In 2008 Orange was given permission from Apple to sell the iPhone in Austria Belgium the Dominican Republic Egypt Jordan Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Switzerland and Orange s African markets 36 On 8 September 2009 Orange and T Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom announced they were in advanced talks to merge their UK operations to create the largest mobile operator with 37 of the market Both T Mobile and Orange brands were kept due to differences in their targeted markets T Mobile remained the budget conscious offering and Orange the premium one although there was some overlap as of February 2011 37 On 5 April 2009 Orange won an Arbitration Court case against Orascom Telecom forcing Orascom to transfer its stake in Mobinil to Orange at a price of LE 441 658 per Mobinil share 38 On 28 October 2009 Orange changed the name of its Luxembourgish telecommunication company VOXMobile to Orange 39 On 5 November 2009 Orange Armenia launched telecommunication services in Armenia 40 On 11 December 2009 Egypt s regulator approved an offer from a unit of France Telecom Orange to buy Mobinil 41 In 2010 Orange s CEO Didier Lombard was replaced by Stephane Richard 42 The company was also reorganised internally most notably with the arrival of former Culture Minister Christine Albanel as head of communications for the group 43 In mid April 2010 Orange UK announced that it would outsource the management of its broadband network to BT This announcement was greeted positively by broadband commentators who felt that the move was likely to improve Orange s broadband quality and customer services 44 On 2 March 2012 Didier Lombard who remained special advisor to Stephane Richard left the company 45 His departure was shadowed by controversy over his stock options he was suspected of having stayed with the company longer to wait for the France Telecom share to recover and then exercise his stock option The share was trading at around 16 whereas his stock options were at 23 46 On 3 February 2012 Hutchison Whampoa announced that it would buy Orange Austria for US 1 7 billion 47 The deal closed on 3 January 2013 48 and the Orange brand was phased out on 19 August 2013 when its operations were merged into 3 49 In March 2012 France Telecom bought 93 9 of Mobinil an Egyptian mobile operator from Naguib Sawiris s Orascom Telecom Media and Technology OTMT in an effort to double its revenue in MENA by 2015 50 On 28 May 2013 at the Annual Shareholders Meeting shareholders approved changing the name of the group to Orange S A This became effective on 1 July 2013 6 In September 2014 Orange agreed a deal to acquire Spanish firm Jazztel for a fee of around 3 4 billion 51 As of October 2018 Orange has teamed up with Google in order to install a transatlantic undersea cable Dunant to share data between the United States and France at faster speeds Planned to begin operation in 2020 the fiber based cable has a design capacity of 250 terabits per second Tbit s and will span approximately 6600 kilometers in length 52 in July 2020 Orange launched a satellite based home broadband service utilising the Eutelsat Konnect satellite 53 Shareholders EditThe major shareholders of Orange as of 31 December 2015 are the state of France through Agence des participations de l Etat 54 and Banque publique d investissement replacing Fonds strategique d investissement for 23 04 55 As of mid 2013 Orange employees owned 4 81 and the company itself owned 0 58 56 Operations EditMobile Edit Orange world activities Mobile network locations in Europe France Moldova Romania and Slovakia leading mobile telephone business Belgium Poland ranked 2nd in mobile telephony Spain ranked 3rd in mobile telephony Orange is the sole brand used in the marketing of the company s mobile offers the Itineris Ola and Mobicarte brands have been combined since 2001 and Mobicarte became a special prepaid calling offer As of 31 December 2010 Orange has 150 million mobile customers worldwide 17 9 of whom are in France Orange France is the leading mobile telecommunications operator in France with a market share of 45 38 as of 2 November 2009 57 Country Operator Website France headquarters Orange orange fr Belgium Orange orange be Botswana Orange orange co bw Burkina Faso Orange orange bf Cameroon Orange orange cm Central African Republic Orange orange cf Democratic Republic of the Congo Orange orange cd Egypt Orange orange eg Guinea Orange Group Sonatel orange guinee com Guinea Bissau Orange orange bissau com Ivory Coast Orange orange ci Jordan Orange orange jo Liberia Orange orange com lr Luxembourg Orange orange lu Madagascar Orange orange mg Mali Orange Group Sonatel orange ml Moldova Orange orange md Morocco Orange orange ma Poland Orange orange pl Reunion Orange orange re Romania Orange orange ro Saudi Arabia Orange orange sa Senegal Orange Group Sonatel orange sn Sierra Leone Orange Group Sonatel orange sl Slovakia Orange orange sk Spain Orange orange es Tunisia Orange orange tnThe Orange brand name was licensed to a number of operators which Orange S A did not own these include Country Former operator Rebranding License cancellation Present operator Website India Orange January 2006 Vodafone Idea myvi in United Kingdom Orange February 2015 EE ee co uk Liechtenstein Orange April 2015 Salt 7acht li Switzerland Orange April 2015 58 Salt salt ch Armenia Orange December 2015 Ucom ucom am Israel Orange February 2016 59 60 Partner partner co il Mauritius Orange November 2017 61 My T myt mu Dominican Republic Orange November 2017 Altice altice com do Equatorial Guinea Orange October 2018 62 GETESA getesa gqLandline and Internet Edit See also Livebox Orange took over the landline and Internet businesses of France Telecom and Wanadoo in 2006 Since then Orange is the sole brand of France Telecom for landline and Internet services worldwide with a few exceptions such as Mobistar in Belgium and TPSA in Poland Orange s triple play broadband Internet offers are supplied through the Livebox As of 31 December 2010 Orange has 13 7 million broadband ADSL customers worldwide 67 of whom are in France40 The Livebox is the ADSL modem supplied to Orange s ADSL and FTTH customers in France the United Kingdom the Netherlands Switzerland Spain and Tunisia and to WiMAX customers in Cameroon It serves as a bridge between the Internet access and the home network through several communication interfaces Bluetooth Ethernet Wi Fi The Livebox has evolved over time The Livebox 1 0 was replaced by version 1 1 the Mini Livebox followed by the Livebox 2 0 The newest version was scheduled to be rolled out 2012 41 The Livebox is offered on a monthly contract for 3 per month or for purchase for 59 Number of Liveboxes rented in 2008 7 3 million a 12 3 increase in one year 63 Broadcasting Edit Beginning in 2003 Orange s strategy has centred on the acquisition creation and diffusion of content This starts with the creation of MaLigne tv in 2003 later renamed Orange TV an ADSL television access service and a video on demand service In 2004 Orange organises a television access service for mobile phones In 2007 Orange creates Studio 37 fr and in 2008 enters into a partnership with France Televisions to broadcast pre recorded programming from the public national television and to roll out theme channels for sports cinema and television series Dubbed Content Everywhere in 2008 the content access strategy is announced simultaneously with the launch of the Orange cinema series television channels 64 and aims to offer customers access to all of the company s content anywhere and from any device OCS Edit Main article OCS TV channel Orange Cinema Series is launched 13 November 2008 along with Orange Sport it comprises five channels devoted to movies Orange Cine Max Cine Happy Cine Choc Cine Novo Cine Geant The channels primarily show films from the Warner Bros and HBO catalogues Orange installs additional VOD services on its channels allowing viewers to watch programmes broadcast in the previous 30 days whenever they like as well as supplementary programmes from the previous month citation needed Orange Sport Edit Orange Sport is launched 13 November 2008 Orange secures the broadcast rights for the Saturday evening lineup of Ligue 1 matches from season 2008 2009 to season 2011 2012 and the rights to home matches of eight Serie A clubs Sampdoria Atalanta Chievo Reggina Siena Palermo Udinese and Napoli The acquisition of these rights marks the start of competition for sports programs with the Canal group Video on demand Edit Main article Video on demand Orange offers services for video on demand access using the Orange decoder a computer or a mobile phone Orange offers free programming from the catalogues of available works of France Television 65 M6 66 and TF1 67 for one week after their initial broadcast Online entertainment Edit In 1997 France Telecom created Goa an online entertainment subsidiary The site is launched as a platform for players of massively multiplayer online games In 2002 Goa acquires the operating license for Dark Age of Camelot In 2007 Goa ceases to be a subsidiary and is merged into Orange In 2009 Orange refocuses Goa com on online entertainment and gradually ceases to operate massively multiplayer online games In August 2010 goa com disappears to become the Orange Jeux portal 68 Music Edit Liveradio fr Created by Orange in 2008 Liveradio is a free live on demand IP radio streaming service Users gain access through this service to more than 10 000 FM and web radio stations and 11 000 podcasts from 100 countries Subsidiaries joint ventures and holdings Edit Orange Marine operates cable laying ships Orange is a communications access provider offering customers access through multiple platforms The four key platforms Orange operates are fixed line telephone mainly in France and Poland broadband access mobile phone telephony most recently IPTV though currently only in France Spain Poland and Slovakia known as Orange TV France Telecom merged the different internal divisions managing each platform and now all operate under the Orange brand 69 Orange Business Services Edit Main article Orange Business Services Orange is present in the U S through its Orange Business Services division and its venture capital historical partner Innovacom as well as two R amp D labs one in Boston Massachusetts and the other in South San Francisco California As a result of deregulation Orange operates phone booths in Wellington New Zealand OpenTransit is Orange s backbone network It covers Europe the United States Japan Hong Kong and loops back to Paris BT Group Edit Main article BT Group Orange and Deutsche Telekom merged their UK businesses in 2010 to form a joint venture branded as EE 70 In December 2014 Orange were in talks with BT Group regarding the acquisition of EE for an estimated 12 5bn 71 On 5 February 2015 it was announced that BT would be acquiring EE in a 12 5bn deal in which Orange S A would take a 4 stake in the BT Group 72 The acquisition of EE was completed 29 January 2016 Globecast Edit Globecast is a provider of transmission of satellite and production services for professional broadcast online content and enterprise multimedia GlobeCast World TV is a division of Globecast In 2012 Globecast also began launching a direct to home OTT IPTV service called MyGlobeTV in the United States using NetGem set top boxes 73 74 The MyGlobeTV service was discontinued In December 2013 75 Viaccess Orca Edit Viaccess Orca is a provider of IPTV and OTT TV service platforms and security services It is headquartered in Paris La Defense Viaccess orca acquired Squadeo company in 2017 and is able to supply video secured player Viaccess Orca is also involved in content tracking over internet providing anti piracy services Orange Labs Edit Orange Labs formerly France Telecom R amp D is the research and development division of Orange 76 77 This division was derived from different previous entities such as CNET Centre national d etudes des telecommunications created in 1944 the CCETT created in 1972 as well as other entities 78 79 80 81 In 2007 France Telecom R amp D became known as Orange Labs a global network of R amp D entities 82 83 CCETT France Telecom R amp D contributed to various international standards such as ISO IEC MPEG 84 and JPEG standards or DAB and DVB standards 85 86 87 88 89 90 CCETT IRT and Philips developed a digital audio two channel compression system known as Musicam or MPEG Audio Layer II Emmy Award in Engineering 2000 91 92 93 In 2010 Orange devoted 1 9 of its revenue or 845 million to research and development Since January 2007 Orange has unified its research laboratories and technocentres in the Orange Labs network As of 31 December 2010 Orange held a portfolio of 7 892 patents 327 which were filed in 2010 94 Orange employs 3 700 people in research and development per year throughout the organisation 95 including more than 200 doctoral candidates and post doctorates 96 Orange s research and development is based on partnerships with industry suppliers and operators universities and schools academic institutes and research programs such as the following Partner TypeChina Telecom Supplier and operatorDeutsche Telekom Supplier and operatorBibliotheque nationale de France Academic instituteCNRS Academic instituteINRIA Academic instituteSupelec University SchoolIMT Atlantique University SchoolEcole Normale Superieure University SchoolESSEC Chaire Media amp Entertainment University SchoolEcole Normale Superieure chaire de cryptologie University SchoolParis Descartes University chaire pluridisciplinaire University SchoolEcole polytechnique chaire Innovation et Regulation University SchoolMassachusetts Institute of Technology University SchoolBeijing University of Post and Telecom University SchoolImperial College London University SchoolAgence Nationale de la Recherche Research programTwo types of infrastructure coexist in Orange s research and development the research laboratories and the technocentres The latter are responsible for Orange innovations 97 and consist of multidisciplinary teams of researchers engineers and marketing and sales personnel Type City CountryTechnocentre Chatillon FranceTechnocentre London United KingdomTechnocentre Warsaw PolandTechnocentre Amman JordanR amp D SpainR amp D San Francisco United StatesR amp D Beijing ChinaR amp D Cairo EgyptR amp D Tokyo JapanR amp D Issy les Moulineaux FranceR amp D Caen FranceR amp D Grenoble FranceR amp D Rennes FranceR amp D Lannion FranceR amp D Sophia Antipolis FranceR amp D La Turbie FranceR amp D Belfort FranceCityvox Edit Cityvox is a network of websites with local content restaurants cultural happenings etc created in 1999 Orange purchased the network site in 2008 98 Deezer Edit Main article Deezer In late August 2010 Orange acquired an 11 share in the streaming site Deezer With this acquisition the operator offered its subscribers a new Deezer Premium option paid streaming music service with no advertising and 7 million titles 99 Dailymotion Edit Main article Dailymotion On 25 January 2011 Orange announced the acquisition of 49 of Dailymotion a French online video platform at a cost of 58 8 million The group also secured an option to acquire all of the shares in the platform in 2013 100 This is indicative of a new strategy by Orange which seeks to offer a full range of multi screen video to its subscribers 100 Studio 37 Edit Created in 2007 Studio 37 fr co produces and acquires films unlike the Canal Group s StudioCanal The producer Frederique Dumas starts the studio which has an initial budget of 30 million Euros For its growth Orange negotiates exclusivity agreements with Warner HBO Fidelite Films and Gaumont ensuring a stream of films for its TV Orange Cinema Series package 101 In 2011 Studio 37 co produced The Artist which went on to win best picture and four further awards at the 84th Academy Awards This makes it the first silent film to win an award since the original ceremony in 1929 Cloudwatt Edit Cloudwatt is a cloud services provider set up in 2012 by Orange 44 the French government through Caisse des Depots 33 and Thales 22 In March 2015 Orange acquired all remaining shares of Cloudwatt to strengthen its enterprise cloud services offering 102 Aire Edit In January 2019 Orange acquired a minority shareholding in Aire Labs a credit data platform in the UK 103 SecureData Edit In February 2019 Orange acquired UK cybersecurity provider SecureData for an undisclosed sum merging it with Orange Cyberdefense Division 104 SecureLink Edit Orange acquired SecureLink a Netherlands based cybersecurity company in 2019 for 515 million 105 SUMA Movil Edit In November 2019 Orange Espana a subsidiary of Orange acquired SUMA Movil Spain from Grupo Ingenium for an undisclosed sum 106 Telekom Romania Edit In early August 2020 Orange reached an agreement with the Ministry of Communications and Information Society MCSI to purchase Telekom Romania and establish a new telecommunications entity As part of this agreement the Romanian government would own a 20 stake in the new entity and Orange would take over fixed operations 107 The MCSI had first entered talks to sell Telekom Romania in September 2019 when Deutsche Telekom announced that it was prepared to sell its stake in Telekom Romania to Orange 108 Future4care Edit In June 2021 Orange partners with Sanofi Capgemini and Generali to launch Future4care 109 This all European start up accelerator will help develop upcoming companies focused on digital health 110 Controversies EditThis article s Criticism or Controversy section may compromise the article s neutrality by separating out potentially negative information Please integrate the section s contents into the article as a whole or rewrite the material October 2022 Staff suicides Edit See also Orange S A suicides Between the beginning of January 2008 and April 2011 more than 60 France Telecom employees committed suicide 111 in 2008 and the early part of 2009 there were 25 112 some leaving notes blaming stress and misery at work In October 2009 the wave of suicides led former Deputy CEO Louis Pierre Wenes to resign under trade union pressure to be replaced by Stephane Richard 113 114 Faced with repeated suicides the company promoted Stephane Richard to chief executive officer on 1 February 2010 while Didier Lombard remained as chairman 115 The suicide rate among France Telecom s 102 000 domestic employees is 15 3 per year compared with an average of 14 7 suicides per 100 000 in the French population as a whole 116 Following an investigation the Inspection du travail Labour Inspection told the labour union Sud PTT that the work organisation at France Telecom was conducive to generating suffering at work and health risks for employees 117 An investigation was conducted by the audit firm Technologia at the request of France Telecom s management Of the 102 843 employees in the group s parent company 80 080 responded i e a response rate of 77 9 The fact finding report revealed a very poor general feeling strained physical and mental health and a tense and even violent working environment for some categories of personnel Working conditions were deemed difficult mainly for personnel in charge of sales and customer interventions Given heavy media coverage these findings were the source of major contention about working conditions On 20 December 2019 former CEO Didier Lombard and Orange were found guilty of moral harassment towards their employees 118 Access to some sites limited Edit In 2011 following complaints by Internet users Megaupload accused Orange of not providing sufficient connectivity to its site thus severely limiting throughput from France an allegation Orange denied 119 Accusations of false advertising in France Edit In November 2009 three users lodged a complaint against Orange for false advertising concerning its Unlimited 3G Key service 120 These customers criticised the operator for the misleading way in which this service is presented since it isn t in fact unlimited While it is true that there is no time limit the user cannot download more than 1 gigabyte per month thus limiting browsing Unaware of this the three plaintiffs browsed beyond plan limits and had to pay additional fees as a result Corruption in Tunisia Edit In March 2011 the information website OWNI uncovered a questionable financial deal that enabled the Orange group to acquire a 3G license 121 Anticompetitive practices in French overseas departments Edit On 28 July 2011 the Competition Authority fined France Telecom 27 6 million for having improperly impeded the development of new competing operators in the French overseas departments primarily Reunion 122 France Telecom used its dominant position resulting in particular from its former monopoly to take unfair advantage of its competitors The practices identified by the Authority were excessive rate levels as operators of the quasi totality of the telecommunication infrastructure local loops making use of the data which they have access to France Telecom has targeted former subscribers who had switched to a competitor in order to win them back offering them specific deals margin squeeze on broadband Internet offers maintaining call barring services inconsistent with the prior selection of an alternative operatorSMS and MMS propagation of 1 January 2011 in France Edit On 1 January 2011 Orange users SMS and MMS were sent and billed multiple times The operator agreed to reimburse the excess costs to consumers explaining that the error came from a third party operator 123 which turned out to be Bouygues Telecom 124 said not to have sent acknowledgements which caused the messages to be resent A computer problem at the Bouygues platform was blamed 125 During the night of 31 December 2010 to 1 January 2011 more than 930 million text messages were exchanged in France for the three operators combined setting a new record compared with the peaks of the previous years 126 Controversies in UK regarding the quality of service Edit On 21 March 2007 Watchdog a television series by the BBC focusing on consumer protection published the results from a broadband survey they held According to the survey Orange is the worst ISP in the UK 68 of Orange customers that took part in the survey said they were unsatisfied with Orange s customer service it was voted as the most unreliable broadband provider and it had the highest number of dissatisfied customers Two thirds of Orange customers experienced problems cancelling their Orange broadband 127 In response to the problems with Orange UK broadband and 3G broadband during March 2009 and April 2009 the 3G data network has been upgraded to 3 5G and increased signal coverage This new network can be seen in action on many mobile phones which display network for instance the Nokia N95 when the phone detects the higher speed The Orange UK mobile broadband USB adapter works with the new network The 3G networks for all telecommunication suppliers still struggle to get the throughput that was originally advertised when these networks were announced The UK Telecoms Regulator 128 has reported on the challenges for all suppliers A consumer organisation forum web site known as OrangeProblems co uk focuses on the poor level of service provided by Orange Broadband in the UK Initially set up as WanadooProblems co uk the site focuses on the infamous Orange local loop unbundling and poor customer service but covers a wider range of Orange operations such as lost email significantly delayed SMTP and outages suspicions of eavesdropping et al Orange Mobile has been criticised during a Channel 4 News investigation for a lack of security which potentially exposed customer records to fraud 129 In August 2007 Orange was criticised for summarily deleting email accounts tied to old Freeserve and Wanadoo pay as you go dial up accounts with no warning 130 In August 2008 after well publicised problems with iPhone 3G performances customers compared their download speed and discovered that Orange in France was capping 3G download bandwidth Orange admitted capping to 384kbit s well below the theoretical 7 2Mbit s provided by the iPhone 131 132 Orange uncapped 3G and 3G by mid September 2008 133 Accusations of antisemitism and calls for boycott Edit The French chairman and CEO of the Orange telecommunications company Stephane Richard said in Cairo regarding his company operations in Israel Believe me I would cancel the contract tomorrow if I could We want to end this and to fix this we don t want it 134 Later Orange announced its desire to discontinue use of its popular brand name by its Israeli operator Partner Communications Company 135 The president of the State of Israel Reuven Rivlin said in response Just yesterday Israel faced attacks from anti Israel and anti Semitic bodies who have chosen to delegitimize the state of Israel and to launch rockets at us from the Gaza Strip We must face these challenges together right and left Rivlin said 136 137 Israeli culture minister Miri Regev said I call on Jews of France and the world to disconnect from Orange unless Stephane Richard takes back his words The time has come for them to understand that Jews in the world and sane voices that oppose anti Semitism and racism also have power 136 138 The statement on the company s website announced in response that The Orange Group is a telecoms operator and as such its primary concern is to defend and promote the value of its brand in markets in which it is present the statement began The Group does not engage in any kind of political debate under any circumstance 134 Later Richard visited Israel to clarify his remarks He met Israeli PM Benyamin Netanyahu and former president Shimon Peres Richard told both Netanyahu and Peres that Orange has not and will not support anti Israel boycott efforts and insisted that its announced decision to abrogate its relationship with Partner was purely commercial and not political 139 On 30 June 2015 Orange and Partner announced a change to their 10 year licensing agreement Orange paid Partner 40 million to add an opt out clause to the contract 140 with which Partner conducted a market survey which is determine the best course of action moving forward 141 In the first year only Partner can opt out with either party being able to opt out in the second year 142 Regardless of which party opts to exercise the out clause Orange will pay Partner an additional 50 million to end the arrangement 143 Orange stated that the money paid to Partner was purely for re branding purposes and affirmed their previous statement that their wish to leave Israel is based on desire to discontinue license agreements and maintain only subsidiaries that they control rather than a boycott 144 Orange would make the relevant payments over the course of two years and charge it to their books as a mix of marketing sales customer services and related expenses 145 As part of the agreement Orange s research and development activities within Israel would transition to the Orange name but would be restricted from entering the telecommunications services market 146 In September 2015 Orange reaffirmed their commitment to Israel with an investment in Hola a video distribution network 147 In February 2016 Orange and Partner decided to terminate their agreement 148 As a result rebranding has resulted in Orange Israel becoming part of Partner Governance EditOverview of governance Edit Governance of the Orange group is centred in its board of directors executive committee and three committees that steer Orange s strategy 149 Audit Committee Created in 1997 the Audit Committee comprises three members appointed for indefinite terms by the board of directors on the recommendation of the Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Committee Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility Committee Created in 2010 it comprises at least three members appointed by the board of directors on the recommendation of its chairman Its remit is to examine the main risks and opportunities in relation with the environment Orange s policies concerning industrial the publication of societal and environmental information and the main orientations of its corporate social responsibility policy Strategy Committee Created in 2003 the Strategy Committee comprises at least three members appointed by the board of directors on the recommendation of its chairman The latter chairs the committee It examines the group s international development strategic and the strategic mid term guidelines Chairmen Edit 2005 Didier Lombard 2010 2021 Stephane Richard 150 Chief executive officers Edit The company is headed either by the chairman of the board of directors whose title in that case is the chairman and chief executive officer or by another person appointed by the board of directors and given the title of chief executive officer Board of directors Edit The Orange group is governed by a board of directors composed of a minimum of twelve members and a maximum of twenty two members divided as follows three are appointed by the French State three are elected by the employees one is elected by the shareholders and represents employee shareholders the fifteen other members are appointed by the shareholders The board members serve for a term of four years In 2011 the board of directors was composed of 15 members 151 Name PositionChristel Heydemann Chairman and chief executive officerLuc Marino Director representing employee shareholdersSebastien Crozier Director representing the employeesFabrice Jolys Director representing the employeesRene Ollier Director representing the employeesAlexandre Bompard Independent directorChristel Heydemann Independent directorCharles Henri Filippi Independent directorBernard Ramanantsoa Independent directorHelle Kristoffersen Independent directorMouna Sepehri Independent directorJean Michel Severino Independent memberLucie Muniesa Director representing the public sector French State Anne Lange Director representing the public sector French State Bpifrance Participations representative Director representing the public sector French State Executive committee Edit The executive committee reports to the chairman and CEO Its purpose is to coordinate the implementation of Orange s strategic orientations and to oversee the achievement of operational social technical and financial resource allocation objectives It comprises fifteen members Name TitleStephane Richard Chairman and chief executive officerRamon Fernandez Delegate Chief Executive Officer Finance Performance and EuropeGervais Pellissier Delegate Chief Executive Officer Group Transformation and Chairman of Orange Business ServicesFabienne Dulac Deputy Chief Executive Officer Chief Executive Director of Orange FranceMari Noelle Jego Laveissiere Deputy Chief Executive Officer Chief Technology and Innovation OfficerLaurent Paillassot Deputy Chief Executive Officer Chief Executive Officer of Orange SpainChristine Albanel Senior Executive Vice President of CSR Diversity Partnerships and Philanthropy Deputy Chair of the Orange FoundationJerome Barre Chief Executive Officer of Wholesale and International NetworksHugues Foulon Executive Director of Strategy and Cybersecurity activitiesNicolas Guerin Secretary General Secretary of the Board of DirectorsValerie Le Boulanger Executive Director in charge of Human ResourcesBeatrice Mandine Executive Director Communications and BrandAlioune Ndiaye Chief Executive Officer of Orange Middle East and AfricaHelmut Reisinger Chief Executive Officer of Orange Business ServicesPaul de Leusse Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Orange for mobile financial services and Chief Executive Officer of Orange BankHead office Edit Orange s former head office in Paris at 6 Place d Alleray Orange s head office since 2012 is based at 78 Rue Olivier de Serres in the 15th arrondissement of Paris 152 The company s former head office was based at 6 Place d Alleray in the 15th arrondissement of Paris 153 The building was the head office from 1998 until 2012 Eight hundred employees worked at the site 154 Orange Foundation EditIn 1987 France Telecom established the France Telecom Foundation On 16 January 2007 the foundation changed its name to Orange Foundation In 1990 France Telecom Foundation received the top award for corporate philanthropy from ADMICAL 155 In 1995 France Telecom Foundation received the top award for solidarity from ADMICAL 155 The board of directors of Orange Foundation consists of representatives of Orange independent personalities and employee representatives Its purpose is to support projects related to health particularly autism education particularly schooling for girls in developing countries and culture particularly group vocal music Projects supported by Orange Foundation are chosen by committees of experts devoted to each major theme The Foundation has been involved in 300 to 400 projects per year since 1987 156 The Foundation works with international NGOs and local associations involved in long term projects in countries in which Orange is based for better follow up of these projects Sponsorship EditFrom 2000 to 2002 Orange was a major sponsor of British Formula One team Arrows 157 Orange was the sponsor for UEFA Euro 2012 and UEFA Euro 2016 158 159 The company was the official jersey sponsor of the national basketball teams of the Central African Republic and Senegal at the 2015 FIBA Africa Championship 160 Orange was the kit sponsor of the French association football club Olympique de Marseille for the 2017 18 and 2018 19 seasons 161 The company became a sponsor of esports organization Team Vitality in 2018 162 See also Edit France portal Companies portalCentre commun d etudes de television et telecommunications CCETT now part of Orange Labs Dirigisme Karoshi The Orange S A suicides List of French companies MinitelReferences Edit Berthelot Benoit 24 November 2021 France s Orange Hunts for New Leader After CEO s Conviction Bloomberg Retrieved 16 March 2022 a b c d e f Orange S A Consolidated financial statements 2021 PDF 13 February 2022 4 traders ORANGE SA company Shareholders managers and business summary Get to know us better Orange Jobs Archived from the original on 23 December 2016 Retrieved 15 December 2019 Annual Results 2012 PDF France Telecom 20 February 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2013 a b France Telecom to become Orange on 1 July 2013 Orange 28 May 2013 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 14 July 2013 https mathcs holycross edu csci356 Dilhac pdf bare URL PDF Chrisafis Angelique 28 June 2012 France says farewell to the Minitel the little box that connected a country The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 11 January 2018 Shareholding structure France Telecom Archived from the original on 1 February 2013 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Esmertec Welcomes Michel Bon Former CEO and Chairman of France Telecom to its Board Retrieved 11 January 2018 History of Cellular services licensing ofcom org uk Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2012 The Facts 2004 PDF na baesystems com p 107 Archived from the original PDF on 25 January 2007 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Vodafonews est un site non officiel de Vodafone Vodafonews com Archived from the original on 24 May 2013 Retrieved 29 April 2013 a b BAe s record breaking sterling Eurobond issue PDF 22 June 1999 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Hutchison Whampoa Releases Annual Results 1996 26 March 1996 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Telecommunications Hutchison Whampoa 1996 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Mannesmann to buy UK cellular firm Vodafone Hutchinson likely to react CNN 21 October 1999 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Mannesman to buy Orange for 33bn The New York Times 21 October 1999 Retrieved 26 December 2008 36B Orange consumed CNN 21 October 1999 Vodafone seals Mannesmann merger BBC 11 February 2000 Retrieved 26 December 2008 France Telecom buys Orange for 37 bn The Financial Express 30 May 2000 Archived from the original on 22 May 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2012 France Telecom clinches Orange deal BBC 30 May 2000 Retrieved 9 June 2012 TELECOMS France Telecom boucle le rachat d Orange LExpansion com Lexpansion lexpress fr 22 August 2000 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Video Introduction Orange en bourse notice archives video in French Ina fr Retrieved 29 April 2013 OPA sur Orange et Wanadoo les petits porteurs sont en colere Silicon fr 24 February 2004 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange IPO on Euronext PDF Orange l ADAM gagne un sursis jusqu a l examen de ses recours Boursier com in French Retrieved 1 January 2023 Ruitenberg Rudy 27 February 2005 France Telecom Names Lombard Chief Executive Replacing Breton Bloomberg Retrieved 6 April 2009 Mid Europa Announces Agreement for The Sale of Orange Austria to Hutchison 3G Austria 3 February 2012 Retrieved 7 August 2013 Le torchon brule entre Orange et Canal Orange FAI Echos du Net Archived from the original on 28 May 2013 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Babamanga Les futures series de HBO sur Orange TV Chronik Retrieved 29 April 2013 ARIASE VoD Orange et MGM signent un accord Ariase com Retrieved 29 April 2013 Football MAXIFOOT Droits TV Orange remporte la seconde manche Maxifoot fr 16 May 2009 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange suspend la commercialisation d Orange Sport in French Capital fr 25 April 2013 Archived from the original on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Gow David 1 July 2008 TeliaSonera France Telecom hangs up on Swedish operator The Guardian Retrieved 9 April 2009 Orange brings iPhone to customers in Europe Africa and the Middle East Orange 16 May 2008 Retrieved 20 May 2006 T Mobile and Orange in UK merger BBC News 8 September 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Orange com Archived from the original on 10 July 2017 Retrieved 6 December 2014 De Tijd 20 October 2009 Orange Armenia Official Website Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2014 UPDATE 1 Egypt regulator OKs France Tel bid for Mobinil Reuters 10 December 2009 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Le president de France Telecom tire sa reverence Lefigaro fr 20 January 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Christine Albanel rejoint France Telecom Lefigaro fr 19 February 2010 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange s successful broadband outsourcing Choose co uk 21 October 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Didier Lombard quitte definitivement France Telecom TELECOMMUNICATIONS FRANCE 24 2 March 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Polemique autour du placard dore de Didier Lombard LExpansion com Lexpansion lexpress fr 24 February 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Hutchison to buy Orange Austria as it seeks expansion BBC News 2 March 2012 Retrieved 31 August 2013 Shields Michael 3 January 2013 Hutchison Whampoa closes acquisition of Orange Austria Reuters Retrieved 31 August 2013 Prodhan Georgina 19 August 2013 Hutchison keeps rock bottom tariff after Orange Austria buy Reuters Retrieved 31 August 2013 France Telecom Buys Egypt s Mobinil Nuqudy 29 May 2012 Archived from the original on 14 November 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2013 Orange strikes 3 4 billion euro deal to buy Spain s Jazztel Reuters Press release 15 September 2014 Google and Orange building cable between US and France TheGuardian com 15 October 2018 Orange partners with Eutelsat to provide broadband via satellite throughout France orange com Retrieved 18 March 2021 Les participations publiques in French Agence des participations de l Etat 30 April 2015 Retrieved 21 February 2016 2015 Consolidated financial statements PDF Orange S A 16 February 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2016 Orange NYSE Euronext Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 21 June 2013 Parts de marche operateurs de telephone mobiles en France iPhone Killer 2 November 2009 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Salt Mobile We used to be Orange We are now called Salt Salt ch Retrieved 15 January 2016 Orange to pay Partner up to 90m Globes en globes co il 30 June 2015 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Libeskind Kalman 2 January 2016 תום העידן הכתום פרטנר תיפרד מהמותג אורנג כבר בפברואר End of the Orange Era Partner to Part With the Orange Brand TheMarker in Hebrew Telephonie Orange Maurice devient MyT Mobile lexpress mu in French 9 November 2017 Equatorial Guinea makes final payment to remove Orange from Getesa ownership Telegeography com Retrieved 12 September 2019 Parc Livebox 2008 PDF p 50 Strategie Content Everywhere d Orange Cinema sur les trois ecrans Servicesmobiles fr 10 October 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange programmes de France Television en VOD Clubic com 2 July 2007 Retrieved 29 April 2013 M6 Replay accessible sur la TV d Orange 01net com 1 January 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2013 MyTF1 arrive chez Orange le 7 Juin ADSL et Sat Orange Info Orangeinfo fr 3 May 2010 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Document de Reference 2010 PDF p 155 Wanadoo is to make way for Orange BBC News 29 June 2005 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Clark Nick 12 May 2010 Mobile giants promise Everything Everywhere The Independent London Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Simon Goodley and Juliette Garside BT in talks to buy mobile phone operator EE for 12 5bn The Guardian London Retrieved 15 January 2016 Neville Simon 5 February 2015 BT returns to mobile phones with 12 5bn takeover of EE The Independent London Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 GlobeCast Announces Commercial Launch of MyGlobeTV GlobeCast 1 July 2012 Archived from the original on 11 March 2013 Retrieved 21 June 2013 Hunter Philip 9 July 2012 MyGlobeTV closed OTT service launches in U S Broadcast Engineering Retrieved 21 June 2013 GlobeCast to pull plug on MyGlobeTV IPTV service Rapid TV News Retrieved 15 January 2016 Bienvenue au CNET centre de R amp D de France Telecom archived website 1996 Archived from the original on 22 December 1996 Retrieved 3 August 2010 C Schwartz D Frossard 1997 R amp D management TDF Customer and product oriented expertise PDF retrieved 1 August 2010 CNET a half century of innovation archived website 2008 Archived from the original on 12 June 2008 Retrieved 3 August 2010 Expanding the offer of France Telecom and TDF archived website 20 April 2001 Archived from the original on 20 April 2001 Retrieved 1 August 2010 CCETT Joint Research Center for Broadcast and Telecommunications archived website 1997 Archived from the original on 3 July 1997 Retrieved 1 August 2010 EBU Technical Review Digital Audio Broadcasting DAB 2001 Archived from the original on 20 January 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2010 SVC a highly scalable version of H 264 AVC PDF 2008 archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2012 retrieved 1 August 2010 Olivier Corredo 19 January 2007 France Telecom R amp D devient Orange Labs Retrieved 1 August 2010 CCETT Welcome to the CCETT s MPEG Audio Web Site archived website 1997 Archived from the original on 14 April 1997 Retrieved 1 August 2010 Des elaborations collectives Le pole de competitivite Images amp Reseaux PDF 2006 retrieved 1 August 2010 Leonardo Chiariglione 6 September 2009 Riding the Media Bits MPEG s third steps Archived from the original on 22 January 2011 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Leonardo Chiariglione 17 March 2005 VADIS FINAL PROJECT REPORT Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Wolfgang Hoeg Thomas Lauterbach 3 June 2009 Digital audio broadcasting principles and applications of DAB DAB and DMB ISBN 9780470746196 retrieved 1 August 2010 STERNE the CCETT proposal for digital television broadcasting 1992 Retrieved 1 August 2010 DVB Project List of Members TDF Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2010 National Academey of Television Arts and Sciences Outstanding Achievement in Technical Engineering Development Awards PDF archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2010 retrieved 1 August 2010 Monitoring research 11 September 97 Analysis What s new on the DAB front BBC Monitoring 11 September 1997 experiments aimed at mobile receivers were first carried out by France s Centre Commun d Etudes de Telediffusion et Telecommunications CCETT in 1984 CCETT DAB Digital Audio Broadcasting archived website 11 February 2001 Archived from the original on 11 February 2001 Retrieved 1 August 2010 Document de Reference 2010 p 286 PDF France Telecom Archived from the original PDF on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2013 La force de la recherche et du developpement in French Orange Archived from the original on 28 March 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Une etroite collaboration avec le monde academique in French Orange Archived from the original on 28 March 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Laurent Barbotin France Telecom Le dinosaure se reveille L Expansion January 2007 n 715 p84 France TĂSlĂScom s offre Cityvox Le Nouvel Observateur Tempsreel nouvelobs com 23 June 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange prend 11 du capital de Deezer LExpansion com Lexpansion lexpress fr 27 August 2010 Retrieved 29 April 2013 a b Orange prend 49 de Dailymotion lemonde fr 25 January 2011 Cinema L appetit d Orange L EXPRESS Lexpress fr 22 May 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange acquires the totality of Cloudwatt Press release Paris Orange 20 March 2015 Archived from the original on 26 March 2015 Retrieved 24 March 2015 Orange invests in Aire an innovative fintech company Press release Paris Orange 8 February 2019 Retrieved 8 February 2019 Orange acquires UK s SecureData ComputerWeekly com Retrieved 29 August 2020 Osborne Charlie Orange acquires SecureLink in European enterprise security push ZDNet Retrieved 29 August 2020 Orange Espana acquires Spanish unit of SUMA Mobile www capacitymedia com 21 November 2019 Retrieved 29 August 2020 Orange reaches agreement to take over Deutsche Telekom s fixed operations in Romania Romania Insider 17 August 2020 Retrieved 29 August 2020 Orange poised to acquire Telekom Romania stake from OTE www capacitymedia com 26 September 2019 Retrieved 29 August 2020 Tazrout Zacharie Orange Generali Sanofi and Capgemini launch Future4care a start up accelerator Actu IA in French Retrieved 7 July 2021 Schenker Jennifer L 11 June 2021 Future4Care Four Corporates Team To Make Europe A Global Leader In E Health The Innovator Retrieved 7 July 2021 Selbstmordserie France Telecom Mitarbeiter verbrennt sich Der Spiegel 27 April 2011 Drummond Norman 2010 The Power of Three Discovering what really matters in life London Hachette Hodder amp Stoughton p 13 ISBN 9780340979914 France Telecom talks with unions on suicide spate Reuters 7 October 2009 Chrisafis Angelique 9 September 2009 Wave of staff suicides at France Telecom The Guardian London Retrieved 2 May 2010 Campbell Matthew 1 February 2010 France Telecom Names Richard CEO Lombard to Remain Chairman Business Week Archived from the original on 5 February 2010 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Sage Adam 23 September 2009 Why are France Telecom employees committing suicide The Times UK Retrieved 6 October 2009 France Telecom la souffrance au travail est etablie L Obs in French 10 December 2009 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange Found Guilty cbc ca news 20 December 2019 Orange dement brider l acces au site Megaupload Archived from the original on 22 July 2015 Retrieved 9 August 2013 Orange vise par une plainte pour publicite mensongere O in French 22 December 2009 Archived from the original on 18 August 2020 Retrieved 18 August 2020 Ben Ali les compromissions d Orange en Tunisie Owni fr Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Liste des avis et decisions Autorite de la concurrence www autoritedelaconcurrence fr Retrieved 1 January 2023 les SMS ou MMS envoyes la nuit de la Saint Sylvestre Assistance Orange web archive org 6 January 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Bug des SMS du Nouvel An Orange met Bouygues Telecom en cause 01net com 1 January 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Article Comment les operateurs expliquent le begaiement de textos paru le 3 January 2011 sur le site Internet du quotidien Liberation Article Plus de 930 millions de SMS envoyes pour le Nouvel An paru le 3 January 2011 sur le site Internet du quotidien Liberation BBC Watchdog Broadband Survey Archived from the original on 27 March 2007 Retrieved 21 March 2007 Ofcom Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved 10 September 2009 Channel 4 News Concern over mobile security web archive org 15 October 2007 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Williams Christopher Orange mounts sneaky Freeserve accounts purge www theregister com Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange admits to capping 3G speeds in France AppleInsider Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange admits to 3G speed caps vnunet com web archive org 30 August 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Champeau Guillaume 3 September 2008 3G Orange l operateur debride totalement les debits Numerama in French Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b Orange Exec Pleads for BDS Pity Hopes to Cut Ties with Israel The Jewish Press Retrieved 15 January 2016 Orange confirms it plans to cut ties with Israeli firm but says move not political Jerusalem Post Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b Netanyahu French Govt Partially Owns Orange Israelnationalnews com 4 June 2015 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Keinon Herb Benjamin Netanyahu to France Renounce the miserable actions of Orange Jerusalem Post Retrieved 15 January 2016 Netanyahu calls on French govt to publicly denounce Orange s pullout from Israel I24news tv 4 June 2015 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Surkes Sue Orange CEO sows confusion on Israel trip aimed to resolve dispute The Times of Israel Retrieved 15 January 2016 Dvorin Tova 30 June 2015 Israeli Co to Be Paid Millions After Orange Snafu Israel National News Retrieved 1 January 2023 Oster Marcy 30 June 2015 Israeli affiliate to stop using Orange name in 24 months Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange Group and Partner Communications outline new relationship framework agreement telegeography com Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange Partner pave way for cutting ties following BDS controversy The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 1 January 2023 staff T O I Telecom giant Orange to end Israel presence within 2 years www timesofisrael com Retrieved 1 January 2023 Goldberg Niva Orange Redoes Brand Licensing Agreement With Partner Costs Up To 100 Million If it Leaves Israel Retrieved 1 January 2023 Orange strikes new deal with Partner Communications French telecom firm Orange invests in Israeli start up The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 1 January 2023 Reuters 17 February 2016 Israel s Partner Rebrands Cuts Final Ties With Orange Haaretz Retrieved 2 July 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help Document de Reference 2010 PDF pp 307 et 308 Orange to replace CEO Richard by Jan 31 Corporate Website of France Telecom Orange Orange com 24 April 2013 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Legal matters Orange Archived from the original on 9 September 2013 Retrieved 7 August 2013 Legal matters France Telecom Archived from the original on 29 May 2012 Retrieved 7 August 2013 France Telecom un legs de l administration in French Le Journal du Net 27 June 2007 Retrieved 8 July 2010 a b Carrefour du Mecenat d entreprise Admical Retrieved 29 April 2013 Naissance de la Fondation Orange Generation nt com Retrieved 29 April 2013 Orange end sponsorship agreement with Arrows Crash 11 October 2002 Retrieved 2 September 2020 Orange becomes UEFA EURO 2012 Official Sponsor UEFA com 19 January 2011 Retrieved 2 September 2020 Orange joins UEFA EURO 2016 as Global Sponsor and Official Telecommunications Service Provider UEFA com 28 October 2015 Retrieved 2 September 2020 2015 FIBA Africa Championship Senegal FIBA com Retrieved 11 May 2016 Orange devient le partenaire majeur de l Olympique de Marseille Retrieved 14 October 2017 Mitrevski Lydia 13 September 2018 Team Vitality nab major sponsorship from Orange Esports Insider Retrieved 2 September 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orange telecommunications Official website Business data for Orange S A BloombergGoogleReutersSEC filingsYahoo Company information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orange S A amp oldid 1131112302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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