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Accidental MMS Sending and How to Avoid it.

MI5
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Hopefully this guide will help with understanding why sometimes you may inadvertently send an MMS (chargeable) instead of an SMS (usually free from allowances).

 

First we need to understand the difference.

 

An SMS is a normal text only text message (short message service).

An MMS is an SMS that contains a picture, short video clip or any type of “media” (multi media service).

 

One standard SMS is 160 characters. Most phones have a character count (sometimes you need to go into settings and turn it on) that will display how many characters you have typed. 

It will be in the format “20/160”. If you go over  160 your phone will automatically add another blank SMS which doubles your character count to 320.

This will happen up to a maximum of 3 times meaning the maximum “single” SMS you can send contains 480 characters. However, it will take 3 SMS messages from your allowance, or charge you for 3 SMS messages.

If you go over 3 SMS (480 characters) your phone “might” auto convert to an MMS format which is because in MMS format, more data can be sent.

Again, on some phones, Samsung in particular, you can turn off the auto MMS conversion function if you don’t want it to happen. You can also set a “warning” that an SMS will be converted – watch for a pop up on screen when this happens.

 

Adding “Emoticons”

 

An emoticon is a smiley face, a thumbs up or any other tiny picture that many people like to add to their SMS messages.

THESE ARE THE BIGGEST SINGLE SOURCE OF ACCIDENTAL MMS SENDING.

Adding an emoticon by itself won’t, in many cases, force the message into MMS format, but, what it will do, is eat up your character count.

A simple smiley face or wink will use 90 characters.

With this in mind it is easy to see how just by adding 3 emoticons actually reduces your character count to only 210 letters (that’s not much!)

You can avoid this by inserting a smiley using keyboard characters rather than hitting the emoticon key and choosing a picture. A smile can be written as : ) or a wink as ; ) 

On some phones you will find 2 versions of emoticons (pretty ones and basic ones).

The basic ones will use less characters but you should always keep your eye on character count and auto MMS conversion.

 

Group Messages

Another popular way of sending an MMS unintentionally is by sending a group message.

O2 recommends that you send group texts in baches of five recipients to prevent this.

 

Turning Off

If you are not interested in sending (or receiving) MMS messages at all you can either turn off the option in settings (most phones provide this function) or disable the MMS apn.

 

Under your phones network settings you will see a section called “access point names” or “apn’s”. You will see either one or two apn’s listed. If you have two, the second one will be the MMS control. If you only have one the MMS control will be down the bottom of the apn settings. Just highlight the apn and choose “edit”.

 

Look for:

MMSC - http://mmsc.mms.o2.co.uk:8002
MMS Proxy - 
82.132.254.1
MMS Port – 
8080

 

and insert a * or # at the beginning of each line.

This will disable the apn completely but you will be able to easily edit it back again if needed at any time.

 

Alternatives

Other options are available these days and MMS is old clunky tech that can be avoided.

BBM, Whatsapp, Facebook, Viber email etc are all popular alternatives for sending pictures, video’s and large files that will use your data allowance and therefore will prevent the additional charges generated by an MMS message.

 

I’ve tried to cover as much as possible in this guide, but as always, I will have missed a scenario, so feel free to add any more tips or instances where you have found an MMS appearing where you were expecting an SMS.

Link to O2 offcial advice here

I have no affiliation whatsoever with O2 or any subsidiary companies. Comments posted are entirely of my own opinion. This is not Customer Service so we are unable to help with account specific issues.
Please select the post that helped you best and mark as the solution. This helps other members in resolving their issues faster. Thank you.
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MI5
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@Anonymous wrote:
But even with these revised settings sending MMS still works. 

 

Gerry


Did you save the revised apn and reboot the phone Gerry ?

I have no affiliation whatsoever with O2 or any subsidiary companies. Comments posted are entirely of my own opinion. This is not Customer Service so we are unable to help with account specific issues.
Please select the post that helped you best and mark as the solution. This helps other members in resolving their issues faster. Thank you.
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Anonymous
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Sorry for delay replying @MI5 All sorted now and many thanks.

 

Gerry

 

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Anonymous
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Depending on your handset, it may automatically convert any message with a graphical smiley in to an MMS message.

 

If it does, check the input mode or character set in the message settings is NOT set to 'GSM'.  Usually there is an 'automatic' setting which MAY allow them to be sent as normal SMS, (with a reduced size limit).

 

Behavior varies by handset, so test yours by sending just a couple of messages and checking that you are billed how you expect to be.

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pgn
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I discovered the hard way that pasting a web URL into a standard SMS can result in the message being sent as an MMS... So excellent tips here in how to paralyze your phone to prevent that happening. Thank you.
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pgn
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And it was a short URL, total text length of message would be less than 160 chars, sent to a single recipient.
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Cleoriff
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@MI5  wrote this guide. I will ask him to comment....

Veritas Numquam Perit

Girl in a jacket
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MI5
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You just need to check if the screen shows mms before sending.
I have no affiliation whatsoever with O2 or any subsidiary companies. Comments posted are entirely of my own opinion. This is not Customer Service so we are unable to help with account specific issues.
Please select the post that helped you best and mark as the solution. This helps other members in resolving their issues faster. Thank you.
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pgn
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In this case, the giveaway was the character count (x/160 chars) changed to a size (1kb/300kb) - and the message acquired a "Subject:" field, with the web page URL in the body (Android KitKat on an HTC one mini using default HTC Messages application). So easy to miss...
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MI5
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Yep, the entry in the subject line is also a giveaway.
I have no affiliation whatsoever with O2 or any subsidiary companies. Comments posted are entirely of my own opinion. This is not Customer Service so we are unable to help with account specific issues.
Please select the post that helped you best and mark as the solution. This helps other members in resolving their issues faster. Thank you.
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jonsie
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Strange that I sent a link to my son this morning and it didn't convedf to mms?

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