European Parliament Votes For Net Neutrality, Forbids Mobile Roaming Costs 148
First time accepted submitter TBerben (1061176) writes "The European Parliament has voted to accept the telecommunications reform bill. This bill simultaneously forbids mobile providers from charging roaming costs as of December 15, 2015 and guarantees net neutrality. Previous versions of the bill contained a much weaker definition of net neutrality, offering exemptions for 'specialized services,' but this was superseded in an amendment (original link, in Dutch) submitted by Dutch MEP Marietje Schaake (liberal fraction). Note that the legislation is not yet definitive: the Council of Ministers still has the deciding vote, but they are expected to follow the EP's vote."
Good, I guess (Score:4, Interesting)
Riddle me this. If Netflix pays and ISP for delivering its content with quality...should not all subscribers to that ISP, regardless of what plan they signed up for, get Netflix at the highest possible bandwidth?
This issue can't be piecemeal-ed.
Re:Good, I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
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Then think about it reverse situation. I'm Amazon. We've been having a hard time getting traction for our streaming service; that lousy Netflix has the market locked up. We have all the bandwidth we need, so paying the ISP for more won't help. I know! We'll pay them to throttle Netflix's bandwidth!
Or, I'm Comcast. We own NBC, and their ratings suck rocks. So we'll give preferential treatment for subscribers who stream our properties, and throttle the speed of properties we don't own. And if people really
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If Netflix gets its own servers installed at the ISP, that's an improved service, but my understanding is that operators want to do things like prioritise traffic to/from their favoured clients when the network is oversubscribed, which is double-dipping.
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I don't think it's likely to be 'in addition to'. 'In addition to' requires building of infrastructure. Taking away from everyone else just requires a software tweak in the routers.
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That's actually the crux of the matter. It's very difficult (if not impossible) to tell whether the ISP is using the money Netflix pays to buy extra bandwidth used for Netflix, or is
Re:Good, I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm big on NN, but I do admit there are good points made for market driven forces to allow buildup of delivery services.
When each ISP is a local monopoly, then there is no market. If every home had a choice of a dozen ISPs, there would be no need for NN. NN is needed to prevent ISPs from abusing their monopoly power.
Re:Good, I guess (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Good, I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
Where I live in the U.S., I have two choices: Comcast or Verizon.
Both charge $75/month for 15/5 which is the package available.
You will this situation in many parts of the country where competition is defined as two companies charging the same high price for the same slow speeds.
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It actually used to be the law of the land. During that period (around 2000) there was an incredibly vibrant broadband ISP scene. Unfortunately the FCC changed its mind (and no doubt a few briefcases full of cash changed hands) and now the situation has reverted to the anti-consumer oligopoly you see today.
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Correct. The exchanges are legally required to provide collocation services to other providers (I can't remember if "fair" fees are also regulated - I wouldn't be surprised), those companies then resell exchange access to third party ISPs (basically any ISP outside the "Big 6").
In all, it basically goes: BT manages the copper -> B2B ISP manages the PoP at the exchange -> Consumer ISP terminates the connection.
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Roughly yes. There are two companies in the "BT Group" formed from the old British Telecom which are forbidden (according to the law at least, and there are people watching to some extent) from cross-subsidising. "BT Openreach" is a last-mile monopoly telephony company of the sort found in most of the Industrialised North. The law obliges it to sell any services it offers to resellers at regulated prices and it isn't allowed to deal with retail consumers directly. Then there's "BT Retail" which trades under
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Depends where you are. (Score:1)
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Less efficient for theconsumer.
But more profitable for the Corporations that SCOTUS and Congress work for.
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Whoa there. Important nuance you're missing.
The internet is, was, and hopefully will operate with network neutrality in place. The networks interacted in a (mostly) neutral way when it came to exchanging data.
What you're talking about is legislature, rules, or regulation enforcing network neutrality.
It's far more accurate to say that if every home had a choice of a dozen ISPs, there would be no ISP that didn't operate under NN principles or else they would simply go out of business.
There have been a few exa
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ISPs advertise, amd charge more for, higher speeds to your house.
It's fraud to deliberately degrade Netflix to attempt to extort from them a portion of what I pay Netflix.
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It's not just lack of competition at the ISP level. Poorly thought out government-imposed standards can have the same effect too. When digital cell phone service rolled out, Europe mandated all carriers use GSM. GSM uses TDMA - it allocates a fixed timeslice to each user. During
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Interesting, thanks. However, I believe it is possible to do TDMA without dedicating particular frames to particular users.
Instead of a tower assigning a frame to a phone, the phone could randomly pick one. Some packets will get lost due to collisions. This is how ADS-B works.
However, it probably wouldn't scale nearly as well as CDMA, unless the frames are REALLY short so that there can be many of them (in which case overhead becomes a problem). If there are only 10 frames on a channel, then even a few
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So CDMA scales beautifully with number of phones, while GSM does not scale at all. Consequently the CDMA carriers were the first to roll out 2g service. There was no way to fix GSM for data. They had to add on a different standard for data, which most carriers implemented with CDMA or wideband CDMA. That's right, the HSDPA data service on most 3g GSM phones was actually CDMA. That's why you could browse the web and talk on a GSM phone at the same time - it had one TDMA radio for voice, and a second CDMA radio for data. CDMA phones couldn't do that (unless they supported voice over IP) because they only had one CDMA radio for both.
As someone who developed GPRS for Ericsson back in the day, I don't even know where to start...
There were a number of different competing standards, in different parts of the world. That CDMA wasn't mandated in the US was not for lack of trying by the US manufacturers.
And, no, if we're talking about true packet data, i.e. not "phone modems", GSM/GPRS did emphatically not use a dedicated slot per user for data communication. Instead all the available "data" slots (and there can be many) were/are shared dynam
Cynicism (Score:2, Interesting)
Option A : Mobile providers make less money next year.
Option B : Mobile providers raise the standard charges the exact necessary amount to avoid having losses due to this law.
Option C : Mobile providers raise the standard charges more than necessary and justify the raise saying ordinary people need to pay for the yuppies who roam Europe in their sports cars while chatting on their phones.
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The mobile provides in much of Europe are in the mid of a race to the bottom for years, whoever raises charges will go bankrupt because everyone will just move to another carrier.
Re:Cynicism (Score:5, Insightful)
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Roaming charges are not what you think they are then.
Roaming is the most highly profitable part of a mobile carrier's income, because not every carrier can cover every square kilometer with service. The difference with the EU, unlike the US, is that one carrier often can cover the entire country, but not the entire EU. Euro's are accustomed to owning multiple SIM cards in unlocked phones. In the US the only roaming that happens is between the US and Canada or the US and the Caribbean. While certainly some r
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this is wishful thinking in the dark, but i pray what's happening with this EU no roaming thingy ties with what's about to happen here in the US -
http://www.cnet.com/news/sprint-to-join-rural-operators-in-nationwide-roaming-hub/
if sprint & softbank can push the envelope on this thing, & offer more dual mode handsets, (with sprint lightening up on their unlocking policy on the gsm sim side of those hansets) just
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The cost of mobile tariffs in the UK is considerably less than in France but if I used a UK SIM card in France it would cost me more than having a French SIM.
If the UK operators had to charge me the same price to use my UK SIM card in France then I'd just get a UK SIM card and save money.
BTW, I'm not talking about international calls, I'm aware that these would still be expensive.
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They should have a +0: Wishful thinking moderation.
If this were true, operators would have already stopped roaming charges because it's probably moderately expensive to track, bill, and maintain the infrastructure/software for it.
I love it when people try to pretend "government knows best, it will help businesses!". Of course this will cost them money, don't be silly. They'll have to make it up somewhere else.
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The only way they could find out if this was true would be by taking the risk. Why would they do that if they are profitable? Executives in big companies are quite risk averse.
It may well do so. My suggestion was speculation. But how wi
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Re:Cynicism (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's say the carrier currently charges EUR 1/MB for a service that costs them EUR 0.02/MB to provide, and customers use 1 million megabytes. That's EUR 20,000 in costs and EUR 980,000 in profit.
Then they are forced to charge their domestic rate of EUR 0.10/MB for roaming data, and customers stop being stingy and use 20 million megabytes. That's EUR 400,000 in costs and EUR 1,600,000 in profit.
Obviously these numbers are plucked straight from my ass but surely you can see how it's possible. Roaming charges are almost pure profit as it is, and that's only possible because we're a captive market.
P.S. What is up with Slashdot still not being able to display the Euro symbol (â)? This is 2014, isn't it?
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Apparently it doesn't work that way or we would not have had roaming charges and the EU would not have to force them upon the providers.
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You crack me up.
But you're right - the people who run these providers are _dumbasses_. They never thought of ending roaming charges as a way to _make_ money.
Lolzers.
Re:Cynicism (Score:4, Interesting)
Except for Three UK [three.co.uk] who have already ended call roaming charges in eleven foreign countries - including the USA.
And for certain packages they've removed data roaming charges too (subject to limits.)
Incidentally 97 percent [fiercewireless.com] of their network traffic is data.
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Ah, I see, you have to use the HTML entity rather than typing the character directly: €
That seems odd for a page that was sent with a UTF-8 character set indication in the headers. If you send the â character in the form it gets mangled, which is something I would have expected to happen on a site last updated in 1998, before anyone thought about encodings.
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Dude, increased usage means more cost for the provider. How does that offset the income loss? Unless, of course, a subscriber goes over whatever BS limits the carrier has imposed?
Not really. It all evens out. If I'm abroad then I'm not connected to a cell tower in my home country.
Re:Cynicism (Score:5, Interesting)
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They started out by offering free roaming onto the other "3" subsidiaries in other countries (which are actually different companies in the same parent group). I guess they noticed how this encouraged people to actually spend money while roaming.
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My mobile provider (3, in the UK) has started rolling out a thing that lets you use your inclusive minutes and data allowance in other countries without any extra charge (the costs if you go over those limits are pretty dire). It was actually cheaper for me to use data on my mobile when I visit the US than it was for the people I was visiting, on my last trip. I think they've seen the writing on the wall and started making these agreements long before they were needed. They're able to do this and charge 3p/minute for calls, 2p/text and 1p/MB for data (pre-pay - if you get a bundle and buy in bulk then things are cheaper, but the bundles are time limited).
Just got back from a trip out of the US. With T-mobile I had free text and data in three different countries but the cost for a voice call was $0.20 a minute. Of course, with free data, I could use my voip service to make calls at $0.01 per minute.
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Even roaming charges in countries not covered by that scheme are better. I maintain a 3 phone on a UK number even though I live in the US, partly because it's a way to keep the number I've had for 15 years, and partly because it is just cheaper to use in all countries other than the US. At the moment it's even cheaper to use IN the US if calling the UK, as you point out.
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Roaming causes no extra costs to the mobile providers (in europe) it only gives them unjustified extra money.
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The accounting expenses will be exactly the same like they are right now.
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"would the use of an Orange network in country A by a customer from country B not result in at least some added accounting expense..."
About the same as a network in country B by a customer from country A.
The costs cancel each other out.
When they don't have to meter and bill the customers they'll have a net plus.
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Re:Cynicism (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, but that's the internal business of orange or Vodafone.
There WAS a reason, back when phone companies were indeed seperate companies, so the roaming costs were justified for those additional costs for both inter-company and inter-country accounting and banking.
But the EU did as much as they could to get rid of those additional costs for international business. A company (in ANY business down to a family plumbing business!) can now serve the whole of europe without worrying about different tax, costumer protection, safety, or pipe-gauge regulations. The even invented a whole new currency for a bunch of countries, just to make business easier.
At the same time, a wave of mergers hit the cellphone market with a few big players being active in every european country. ALSO to save money and getting rid of that internal accounting.
If they're still loosing money for "coordinating internal records", it's their own fault and nothing that would justify roaming charges.
Re:Cynicism (Score:5, Insightful)
Option B : Mobile providers raise the standard charges the exact necessary amount to avoid having losses due to this law.
Option C : Mobile providers raise the standard charges more than necessary and justify the raise saying ordinary people need to pay for the yuppies who roam Europe in their sports cars while chatting on their phones.
The rates are largely set by the market - if they could get away with raising their standard rates, don't you think they would have already done so?
Also, you're ignoring a 4th option: they might actually make more money by having reasonable roaming charges. As an example, on my PAYG contract I pay £0.01/MB while at home, but while on a trip to Canada earlier in the year it would've been £6/MB - *600 times the domestic charge*. The upshot was that I simply turned off 3G on my phone and didn't use it at all - zero profit for the MNO. If the charges had been more reasonable then I probably would've left it turned on and they would've made some money. Same goes for voice calls too. (FWIW, roaming charges within the EU have been regulated for some time and are much much lower anyway)
This is basically the EU saying "you've shown you can't be trusted to not take the piss, so we're taking our ball and going home".
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It is a very good option, but she has no place in current sociopathic way of thinking of corporations. Currently they only use the option that brings maximum profit in minimum time, no matter the consequences.
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Also, you're ignoring a 4th option: they might actually make more money by having reasonable roaming charges.
This bill is about not having *any* roaming charges. You pay the same abroad as you do at home.
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Also, you're ignoring a 4th option: they might actually make more money by having reasonable roaming charges.
This bill is about not having *any* roaming charges. You pay the same abroad as you do at home.
Yes, so they will make some money from me when I'm abroad, just as they do when I'm at home. Compared to, at the moment, them making nothing from me while I'm abroad.
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But they'll make a lot less from the people who travel with company phones and don't give a damn about the phone bill.
Actually (Score:2)
FTFY
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I'm not trying to be funny. It's very easy to switch mobile operators, and there are a lot of mobile operators, which makes it very unlikely that they can collude on high prices. Most likely there will be an shift
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The companies are run by a bunch of doped sloths who do not want to get their act together, even if it would benefit the shareholders as much as the customers, bec
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Option C : Mobile providers raise the standard charges more than necessary and justify the raise saying ordinary people need to pay for the yuppies who roam Europe in their sports cars while chatting on their phones
Or low paid workers going abroad to find work can afford to phone home. Or workers who commute across borders don't have to turn their phones off.
Where roaming fees come from (Score:3)
There's little actual cost involved in facilitating roaming. What happens is that every network charges the others high roaming charges, and nobody has any incentive to be the first one to drop and therefore lose the money.
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No more roaming charges ? Thats great !! (Score:1)
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Only a handful? There are 12 operators in India. Not MVNOs (which are technically illegal, although some are little more than additional brands established through Joint-Ventures with the bigger players, especially Tata) but operators with their own towers and licenses and all.
There used to be 14 before Etisalat and that other one (Spice?) shut up shop... and with Loop now having been acquired that'll bring it down to 11... but compare that to say, China (3) or Russia (4) or even the US (effectively 5 if we
Well, that does it (Score:2)
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A) Good thing
B) How does that even matter when someone would like to move to the EU?
C) So the Commissions proposed a law, and the Parliament made changes to that law to make things better for the EU-population. Seems to work great I'd say.
D) Greece, Spain, Portugal & Ireland went bankrupt because their national governments fucked things up. If the EU, ECB & IMF would not have gotten involved the economies of those countries would have been destroyed by speculants. The problem there was not enough co
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Hello from Finland. The Perussuomalaiset (True Finns) are mainly an anti-brown-people-immigration party. They have never formulated a coherent policy on the EU in general, and support among the Finnish population for doing away with the euro, Erasmus, Schengen, labour mobility, etc. is extremely low even among True Finns voters (many of whom do not care for the party but want to send a message to the major parties which, they feel, have got too comfortable with the status quo).
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The most stable currency on the planet is the swiss franc
Shows what you know - the Swiss National Bank has maintained for the last few years an official 1.20 peg on EURCHF, by not letting the CHF appreciate more than that wrt EUR. Quite a remarkable thing, considering all the speculator howling at the time the peg was announced, basically everyone and their dog predicting a broken peg in a matter of months.
Regardless, that makes the CHF pretty much as stable as the EUR, so maybe you should reconsider looking down your nose on the economic knowledge of McD assista
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It's certainly better than the alternative.
"What would have happened to the american economy without the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing?"
A market correction, liquidation of bad investments, and restructuring allowing for the economy to really grow again.
Unfortunately the EU equivalent is much more like the Fed
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That's just over-exaggerated. Having just come back from a week's holiday to Portgual and Spain (from the UK), their standard of living doesn't seem anywhere near a third-world country. The supermarkets stock exactly the same type of things as they do in Fr
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> D) Greece has been reduced to a third-world country because of EU's, ECB's and IMF's decisions. Even free vaccines have been cut. Spain, Portugal and Ireland are sharing a similar fate. Italy has also experienced a huge recession because of EU's policies.
Greece did this to them self. I also want to point out that health care related matters are not subject to EU rules or laws. Expect when it comes to travellers and tourists getting health care if they need to via the EU blue health card. As for Spain,
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You do not know your history. Go look it up. EU has an history for almost 60 years as it currently stands (predecessor did go under other names).
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Greece did it to themselves, but the EU in its breathless rush to get the Euro under way also decided to ignore the fact that Greece didn't qualify for the Euro under their own rules and let them in anyway. Greece being allowed into the Euro has caused Greece a lot of pain (and caused the eurozone plenty of problems).
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Re:Well, that does it (Score:4, Insightful)
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The Greek government scammed Greece into the EMU with the assistance of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and numerous other banks. Financial products were developed which enabled the government of Greece to hide their borrowing.
Greek government-debt crisis [wikipedia.org]
Greece was a third world country that posed as a first world one and got itself into all this trouble.
If the Greek government hadn't scammed Greece into the EMU it would have had its own currency and could have default on its debts.
Re:Well, that does it (Score:5, Insightful)
Only if it was forbidden before, the government actually can allow something.
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You must drive a Lada.
owning a truphone sim (Score:2)
http://www.bizjournals.com/triad/prnewswire/press_releases/North_Carolina/2014/04/02/LA96177
Cool for those that frequent travel over the pond often, but, for the carribeans, south, central americas, no love -
$1.71per min outgoing calls
$1.13per min incoming calls
$0.51per SMS
$8.57per MB
If you're one who vacation frequently in these spots, & may have to overcome the language & time barriers upon stepping off the plan
Also Ban Mandatory TV Licensing (Score:1)
Re:Touristy places will be in for a surprise.. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Tourists either switch off their phones, or put them in flight mode, because of the exorbitant roaming charges they would otherwise make. I doubt they make up a significant portion of the operators' income. Your argument is easily reversed: the operators might experience an increase in revenue, once tourists actually start using their phones abroad.
Yep.
This is karma for all the years they've been price-gouging people just because they cross a border for a few days.
And it serves them right.
A lot of them have been charging ridiculous amounts of money. Some of them even charge the recipient of the call as well as the caller - i.e. somebody calls you from a company account they don't pay the bill for and it costs you money to listen to them yakking for half an hour.
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I wouldn't be after one of our managers managed to run up (without realising) a bill of nearly 2 grand's worth of roaming charges when they went to the UK. That was just their phone polling for email.
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Re:Touristy places will be in for a surprise.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Would you go to a tourist place where your internet that you intend to use to keep in touch with home sucks? Maybe you will, but how many like you?
Yes, I would. Because oddly, when I'm on holiday I'm actually more interested in doing holiday type stuff than spending my time using the internet. Its useful *occasionally* (getting weather forecasts, etc.) but it's not a huge loss to not have it. Which is why I turn roaming data off on my phone when I go abroad and just use wifi hotspots in cafes, etc. on the occasions I want to use the internet.
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While I largely agree, Google maps and translate can be pretty useful. And to a lesser degree, posting photos on social networks is nice, if not all that important.
I've found that preloading your tablet / phone with openstreetmap maps works extremely well - I spent 2 weeks navigating around the Canadian rockies with Osmand running on a tablet and had no problems. Posting photos on social networks can probably wait until you're within range of a wifi hotspot.
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Yes, I would. Because oddly, when I'm on holiday I'm actually more interested in doing holiday type stuff than spending my time using the internet.
I find I use the internet a lot more when I'm visiting some place than when I'm out and about in my own city - when I manage to find a convenient way to go online, which is rare.
This is because in my home city I don't need to check my maps to know where I'm going, I don't care as much about the weather since if the weather turns I can always find something else to do, I don't need translation services nor do I need to look for a decent restaurant as often, and I don't need to be checking for hotels since I
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Would you go to a tourist place where your internet that you intend to use to keep in touch with home sucks? Maybe you will, but how many like you?
I know this is /. but do you choose your holiday destination on the connectivity?
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Would you go to a tourist place where your internet that you intend to use to keep in touch with home sucks? Maybe you will, but how many like you?
This bill covers the European Union, a bunch of geographically-close first world countries.
Internet coverage is usually better here than in the USA.
Re:Touristy places will be in for a surprise.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I'll be interested in seeing what coverage tourist hotspots will have in the future.. The incumbent operators will have little or no incetive to build out their network capacity/coverage, since the need to upgrade capacity is mainly driven by tourists. Which they will not make much money off anymore.
Tell me something, are americans subject to roaming charges when going from California to Nevada ? Or Utah ? Or Arizona ? Or Florida ?
For the EU it's the same thing. Although we are not a federation, and telco companies still think in terms of nation states, one reason for the being of the EU was a common market. And in a common market you cannot have roaming charges just because you happen to go from France to Italy or Germany for example.
Re:Touristy places will be in for a surprise.. (Score:4, Insightful)
*Latest naff ringtone*
"Hello...?"
*pause*
"Yes, I'm climbing Mount Everest!"
It kind of ruins the moment, you know?
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Everest Base Camp i not a "pretty out of the way place", IMHO.
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Or even worse when you do not even leave your home country but your phone happens to connect to a mast in a neighbouring country.
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It does happen and sometimes the costs can be severe.
There is a small costal village in Kent that for a while had no UK mobile coverage. Instead they were connected to a French Carrier 22+ miles away. The uproar foced at least one UK carrier to put a basestation in the village. This ruling will eliminate the charges if you happen to connect to the french carrier
I've been in Basel on the Swiss side yet my mobile insists on connecting to one of the French networks. This ruling won't stop roaming charges if y
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What are you talking about? There is almost no place on earth where the majority of phone traffic comes from tourists. Maybe airports.