The commercial introduction of Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) began in March 2002
images, audio files, video clips (up to 40 seconds), and animated GIFs Early Entertainment Usage: Media companies utilized the service to broadcast news updates and entertainment content , while retailers used it to send scannable coupon codes and product images First Camera Phones: The first camera phones hit the U.S. market in late FIRST TIME INDIAN SEX MMS FULL PORN VIDEO OF VI...
in India, which involved one of the first widely recorded instances of a mobile video clip being circulated via MMS. History.com of early MMS or its evolution into modern RCS messaging First SMS text message is sent | December 3, 1992 | HISTORY You could read a movie review, but you
SMS was a triumph of engineering, but it was text-only. You could read a movie review, but you couldn't see the movie poster. You could read a lyric, but you couldn't hear the chorus. The bill was $5,000
In 2005, a British teenager accidentally roamed onto a foreign network while downloading a 30-second SpongeBob SquarePants video via MMS. The bill was $5,000. It was the first recorded case of "bill shock" for streaming media—a horror story that eventually led to the EU's roaming regulations. SpongeBob, unwittingly, became a consumer rights champion.
But the first time entertainment truly entered the chat happened a few weeks later when a marketing executive at T-Mobile sent the first over MMS. The file was a 15-second, pixelated, 8-frame-per-second clip of a pop star (rumored to be a clip from Kylie Minogue’s "Can’t Get You Out of My Head," a fittingly sticky tune).