Simple clear advice in plain English

Phonepayplus issues new premium rate rules

Regulator responds to increased customer complaints about subscription services

Phone
computeractive/video/triedandtested/samsung-armani-phone

Increased consumer complaints have led Phonepayplus to issue new rules on premium rate subscription services.

The premium rate regulator said that while most companies operate without causing concern, others have adopted practices that are detrimental to consumers.

Anecdotal evidence given to the organisation found that consumers, including young people, were in some cases being charged several thousand pounds as a result of bad practice by content and service providers.

From now on Phonepayplus said that providers must apply to it for permission to operate if they sell mobile subscription services costing more than £4.50 in any given week or if they are applying pay-per-page charges on the mobile internet.

In addition, the provider must get active confirmation from the subscriber before charging for a service. In order to get prior permission, the consumer must receive a free confirmation text message detailing the cost and conditions of the service. Until the consumer has confirmed their subscription by replying to that text no charges can be made.

Consumers must also not be misled. For example, any text-based chat services must not imply that users are exchanging messages with other individuals, or that customers will be able to meet people by using the service, unless this is the case.

Paul Whiteing, acting CEO of Phonepayplus, said: “There are many innovative, useful and fun services available to consumers via their mobiles.

"These new measures are targeted at a small number of providers who do not offer services to customers in a fair and straightforward way. Consumers should not need to work hard to understand the full price of any service."

Phonepayplus has also issued a 'statement of expectation' that summarises the changes and actions needed for operators to remain compliant.

The regulator also reiterated that price information must be clearly displayed and that any free promotional messages must inform recipients that the message is free and make clear how to opt out of receiving similar messages in the future.

Lastly, it said failure to implement the STOP command, which allows consumers to opt out of a service, must be complied with. Failure to do so will result in the service being shut down immediately while Phonepayplus investigates any complaint.

Companies that sell or trade third-party marketing lists must also be able to prove evidence on request to Phonepayplus that recipients have agreed to receive promotional text messages for particular types of services.

Phonepayplus said it expects the guidelines to result in fewer complaints and greater confidence in the market.

Article tags

Reader Comments

   

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Related articles

EU to clamp down on websites offering mobile phone services

EU investigation finds eight in 10 websites are breaking the law

OFT texts teens to warn of scams

No prize for guessing it's a scam

Closure threat for rogue mobile phone companies

Phonepayplus ringing the right changes for mobile phone users

Question & Answer

Q.Why are some of the keys on my keyboard doing strange...

> Read the answer

Q.Is my phone’s Bluetooth any use?

> Read the answer

Q.Can I switch boot drives so that I can work on older...

> Read the answer

Best deals on the web

img

Apple iMac 21.5" (MC309)

£926.40- Buy it now

img

Dell Inspiron 620 ST Intel Core i3-2100 3.10GHz / 3GB / 500GB / DVDRW / Win 7 Home Premium

£329.00- Buy it now

img

ZooStorm 7877-1023

£386.38- Buy it now

Latest issue & subscription deals

Poll

Are you concerned about viruses that target mobile phones?

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

Restore point

A Windows backup of system files and settings.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive