SORACOM, Inc. (Headquarters: Minato-ku, Tokyo; President and CEO: Ken Tamagawa) today announced "SORACOM Connectivity Hypervisor," a function that enables remote management and switching of profiles from SORACOM and partner mobile network operators (MNOs) on a single SIM, and its automation. In addition, SORACOM IoT SIMs (*2) compatible with "SGP.32," the IoT eUICC remote provisioning standard established by GSMA (*1), will be commercially available starting July 7, 2026. These technologies will allow IoT devices to add and switch communication profiles as needed, even after shipment. This enables communication usage in various countries and regions while adapting to long-term changes such as differentiated use according to application or service requirements, communication redundancy, and compliance with communication regulations in each country. There is an increasing number of IoT products, including connected cars, industrial equipment, payment terminals, and consumer devices, that are shipped globally and have long product lifecycles. The communication operations for such products require adaptation to country-specific regulations and line conditions. Traditionally, procuring SIMs for each shipping destination and equipping multiple SIMs for redundancy involved significant effort and cost from manufacturing and logistics to operation. Furthermore, for devices with a lifespan of over 10 years, the communication configuration at the time of shipment is insufficient for long-term operation. A mechanism is needed that can adapt to future changes, such as changes in laws and regulations, the discontinuation of service for legacy networks, or changes in ownership (e.g., distribution of automobiles in the used car market), even after shipment. Against this backdrop, SGP.32 compatibility is becoming a mandatory requirement for procurement in the enterprise and automotive sectors for products that operate over the long term. SGP.32 is the next-generation eUICC remote pr