CRC publishes guidelines for communications service contracts

Colombia's Comisión de Regulación de Comunicaciones (CRC) has adjusted rules for mobile telephony contracts, easing plan cancellations and curbing abusive clauses. Operators must provide dedicated digital channels for terminations and plan changes at no extra cost. The changes aim to safeguard user rights and boost service transparency.

Colombia's CRC has issued a resolution updating contract terms for mobile telephony services. Key changes include requiring operators to offer a dedicated digital channel for contract termination requests, with immediate automated responses if submitted at least three business days before the billing cutoff. Validation can use one-time codes to minimize user hurdles.

Contracts may not include clauses limiting user rights, restricting choices of operator, plan, service, or equipment, or permitting unilateral terminations outside specific causes such as breaches, expirations, or proven technical impossibilities. Violating clauses will be deemed wholly ineffective.

Users can switch plans or remove services from bundles anytime without fees, with changes effective in the next billing cycle if requested timely. Operators must enable downgrades via digital channels like mobile apps with equal ease to upgrades.

Bundled packages combining mobile with fixed internet or other services require itemized pricing in bills, marketing materials, and comparison tools. Promotions must clearly state conditions and restrictions, retaining records for six months to support user claims.

関連記事

Crowded Mexican telecom office scene showing people registering phones with stats on 48 million registered lines before June 30 deadline.
AIによって生成された画像

Mexico records surge in registered mobile lines with no extension past June 30

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

The Comisión Reguladora de Telecomunicaciones reported that 18 million lines were added to the registry in just 24 days, reaching 48 million registered. The June 30 deadline remains firm with no extension planned even though 112.7 million lines are still pending. Industry experts question the costs and effectiveness of the scheme.

Colombia's Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio (SIC) has launched a formal investigation into Comcel S.A., operating as Claro, for alleged violations of consumer rights in the sale of technological products and financing offers via its e-commerce channel. The regulator issued charges after reviewing information requests, financing contracts, advertisements, and Claro's website.

AIによるレポート

The Communications Authority of Kenya has ordered a reduction in mobile termination rates from 41 cents per minute to 30 cents over the next four years. The measure aims to foster price competition among telecom operators and could lead to more affordable call charges for millions of Kenyans. It follows a 2022 study showing current rates exceed the actual cost of service delivery.

In Colombia, where cash still dominates transactions, instant payments and digital wallets are changing how people pay and businesses collect. Sumia Solutions emphasizes the role of regulation and widespread smartphone adoption in building a digital standard to ease transactions. The Bre-B scheme from the Banco de la República, along with platforms like Sumia, is speeding up this shift to faster and safer payments.

AIによるレポート

Chile's Chamber of Deputies approved a bill on Tuesday banning the outsourcing of call center services abroad, with 76 votes in favor and 68 against. The measure, now sent to the Senate, imposes fines of up to 1,000 UF on violating companies. The aim is to prevent international phone scams and boost local jobs.

Amid Cuba's deepening energy crisis, including the March 4 national power collapse, Etecsa has rationed internet and phone services with time slots due to outages and fuel shortages. Reports from multiple provinces highlight widespread disruptions and limited restorations.

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否