About This Case

Closed

16 Oct 2007, 11:59PM PT

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Posted

1 Oct 2007, 12:00AM PT

Industries

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  • Consumer Services / Retail Industry
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  • Telecom / Broadband / Wireless

Do We Need A Bill Of Rights To Protect Us Against Our Cell Phone Service Providers?

 

Closed: 16 Oct 2007, 11:59PM PT

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LetsTalk's PhoneTalk blog wants to add new voices to its website, and they're posting regular issues here for the Techdirt Insight Community to add interesting new content to their site. The winning submissions for each challenge issue will be posted (perhaps with some editing) on the PhoneTalk blog -- with credits to the author. The following is LetsTalk's next assignment:

As mobile phone use in the US grows, so does consumer dissatisfaction with mobile operators and their business practices. Complaints about things like handset locking, long-term contracts with early termination fees (ETFs), poor customer service and billing practices abound. Some states have investigated trying to deal with this by enacting "Cell Phone User Bills of Rights" -- which attempt to enshrine certain consumer protections into law, while various pieces of federal legislation have also been proposed. Many of these proposals -- covering things like disclosing taxes and fees and listing clear contact information -- don't have a large overall impact on consumers, and the "Bills of Rights" are generally left looking like little more than attempts by politicians to curry favor with their constituents by appearing to tackle a problem, rather than making any meaningful changes. Meanwhile, other governmental actions -- such as the Librarian of Congress exempting handset unlocking from the DMCA, and the FCC's statement that it may re-investigate ETFs -- crack away at some of these practices.

Are these sorts of laws necessary, and why or why not? Are there more fundamental problems that these "Bills of Rights" don't, won't or can't address? What would be most beneficial for consumers here -- these sorts of laws, other rules from lawmakers and regulators, or some other type of action?

7 Insights

 

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