Thursday 16th January 2014 |
Text too small? |
Vodafone New Zealand, the country's biggest mobile phone operator, has paid $268,231 to customers as part of a settlement over its 'Broadband Lite' promotion between 2009 and 2011.
The Commerce Commission launched an investigation into the promotion after receiving complaints that some customers weren't adequately advised about the terms of the service, the antitrust regulator said in a statement. Its investigation found about 8,000 of the 146,000 who signed up to the promotion didn't received an opt-out reminder after the free three-month trial period ended.
The Auckland-based company launched its own inquiry after being contacted by the regulator, and took actions to rectify the issues, including a review and upgrade of its Fair Trading Act compliance training programme.
"In reaching the decision to settle, we took into account the fact that Vodafone put things right as soon as it became aware of the problems," Commerce Commission consumer manager Stuart Wallace said. "The case highlights the potential problems with 'opt-out' sales promotions."
The promotion gave Vodafone customers access to the internet for free over a three-month period, and customers would need to contact the phone company if they wanted to opt-out of the service.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
MPG - Recapitalisation Closes Oversubscribed, Raises $23.9m
IPL - Indicative Issue Margin Range for Notes Offer
TWG partners with Tata Consultancy Services
Spark announces leadership team changes
September 15h Morning Report
Tower updates FY25 guidance
September 12h Morning Report
Scott Unveils Strategy and Delivers FY25 Trading Update
September 11h Morning Report
Devon Funds Morning Note - 10 September 2025