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EU Mobile Roaming Charges Scrapped (bbc.com)

From now on, European Union holidaymakers should return home without that sense of high anxiety about their mobile phone bill: extra fees for using it abroad should have gone. From a report: The new rules mean that citizens travelling within the EU will be able to call, text and browse the internet on mobile devices at the same price they pay at home. The European Commission said the end of roaming charges was one of the greatest successes of the EU. But a UK consumer group warned phone users could face "unexpected charges." Until now roaming, or connection, charges have been added to the cost of calls, texts and internet browsing when consumers from one EU country travelled to another and connected to a mobile network there.

4 of 67 comments (clear)

  1. Re:User will still pay for roaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can always tell who is the American idiot kid posting; above is a perfect example. This is about the single market, which expands to the internet as well. There is no added cost for service as the legal regulations are exactly the same already. This simply ends the divisive practice of charging for cross-border usage in an otherwise economically unified territory. It cuts profits, and companies can't increase prices in competition without losing revenue.

  2. Re:"Greatest success"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The European Commission said the end of roaming charges was one of the greatest successes of the EU

    If that is one of their "greatest successes" then the EU is a good approximation of worthless. Sure roaming charges are an issue but are a very minor problem in the grand scheme of things.

    Pretty much like your opinion - very minor in the grand scheme of things. But since you've taken the time to help others understand that you're bored or incapable of posting something worth reading, why can't you talk about the good from this article where imaginary borders between 28 countries have just been dropped in a way that helps unite the people of Europe and reduce the overall individual's stress levels when dealing with technology and traveling? If anything, the rest of the world can follow suit and make this place more progressive with regards to technology...

  3. Re:"Greatest success"? by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure roaming charges are an issue but are a very minor problem in the grand scheme of things.

    You say that in the comfort of not knowing what it's like being able to walk across the border for lunch, or live in a house where depending on which direction the wind blows you get a message saying welcome to the Netherlands or welcome to Germany, or working in a different country from where you live, or those friends around the corner from you living in a different country.

    Roaming charges in a place where countries are so densely packed that you can walk from one side to the other without any great effort are a huge frigging problem.

    One thing that is very minor is your understanding of the rest of the world.

  4. Re:"Greatest success"? by peragrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually that is a great success. It means the government only interferes with business when business is hurting consumers.

    Unlike say pai who is actively trying to turn internet in the USA into cable interactive television.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.