Monday 20th December 2010 |
Text too small? |
A proposed code for international mobile roaming services, which would hopefully avoid the problem of "bill shock" encountered by some customers, has been published for public consultation.
The Telecommunications Carriers' Forum said it was taking a lead role with the code in consultation with the industry, Ministry of Consumer Affairs and Ministry of Economic Development.
The telecommunications industry was looking to improve consumer confidence in international mobile roaming, particularly in relation to providing more transparency on pricing and how best to use services, the forum said today.
Measures in the code were aimed at ensuring that pricing was presented in a clear, consistent, timely and useful manner.
Forum chief executive David Stone said the industry's operators already provided detailed pricing information to their roaming customers, and had tried to reduce the complexity of their roaming plans.
"Despite these efforts, there's been a continuing industrywide awareness of customer concerns and 'bill shock' - particularly for those who've been using international roaming," Mr Stone said.
The proposed code would be self-regulating. It does not fall under the scheme of the Telecommunications Act, but would be binding on its signatories.
NZPA
No comments yet
EROAD strengthening focus on ANZ opportunities
Devon Funds Morning Note - 16 October 2025
October 17th Morning Report
PGG Wrightson - Governance Update
CDC confirms new AI data centre contract
MCY - Quarterly Operational Update
Devon Funds Morning Note - 14 October 2025
October 15th Morning Report
Scott Secures $44M Appliance Contracts Across Americas
October 14th Morning Report