ANCOM agreed with the industry the conditions for the reduction of the porting term
Data: 4/4/2012
During today’s meeting of the Consultative Council, ANCOM has finalised the debate on the decision amending the technical and commercial conditions related to telephone number porting. Thus, according to the new decision, the ported number will become active in the new network in maximum one working day, in line with the European rules, and the maximum duration of the porting-related administrative procedures is reduced from 10 to 3 working days.
The decision reduces the timelines in which the providers have the obligation to carry out the specific activities associated to the various stages of the porting process. In this sense, the term in which the donor provider is to answer a porting request is reduced from 4 working days to one. This reduction will allow for the porting to be done more rapidly, including in cases where the donor provider identifies faults at the filling in of the request which trigger the need to submit the respective request again.
Once the porting request validated, the telephone number of the subscriber requesting the porting will be activated within one working day at a maximum.From the day this decision becomes effective, the potential maximum duration of service interruption in the course of the porting process will drop to 4 hours instead of 5 (in the case of the fixed telephone numbers) and 3 hours instead of 4 (in the case of the mobile telephone numbers). In practice, the service is interrupted for less time, the average of the last quarter being of approx. 90 minutes for fixed telephone numbers and 40 minutes for mobile telephone numbers.
At the same time, the ANCOM decision introduces a series of provisions referring to the porting by means of a temporary number. Thus, the decision envisages the subscribers’ practical possibility to be ported without the allocation by the acceptor provider of a temporary telephone number to be used until the porting is achieved. Moreover, where the subscribers decide to accept a temporary number, the ANCOM decision ensures those subscribers’ protection, by expressly stipulating the right to really choose between continuing or ending their contractual relation with the acceptor provider, in case the porting process is not duly finalised, and, respectively, to be informed accordingly on the consequences of their choice. As well, the decision imposes on the providers of electronic communications services additional obligations meant to prevent abusive porting and the obligation to make available to the users, including in printed form, information concerning the porting procedures, if they request it.
Furthermore, the ANCOM decision imposes the obligation of warning the end-users, by means of the distinctive tone, on the fact that they have called a ported number, in all cases when the tariff charged might exceed the tariff they would have legitimately expected. The scope of the cases when the distinctive tone will be ensured is thus extended, as currently the providers have the obligation to warn the users only on the fact that they called a number ported from their own electronic communications networks.
The provisions of this decision will enter into force within 4 months from its publication date in the Official Journal.
Current status of the ported numbers
745,662 numbers were ported until 31 March 2012 since the portability service was introduced at end-2008. Out of these, 507,867 were mobile telephone numbers, 224,600 were fixed telephone geographic numbers and 13,195 were location-independent numbers (for fixed telephony).
The largest amount of mobile telephone numbers were ported into the networks of the following mobile telephony providers: Vodafone (176,537), Cosmote (169,492), Orange (156,387), RCS&RDS (4,728) and Telemobil (719). As for the fixed telephony providers, most numbers were ported into the networks of UPC (67,555), RCS&RDS (61,257), Orange (45,501), Vodafone (40,862) and Romtelecom (11,614).
The average monthly amount of ported numbers rose from 7,833 in 2008 to 15,019 in 2009, 18,434 in 2010, and reached 21,688 in 2011. The largest amount of ported numbers in a month was registered in December 2011, i.e. 34,696.
In the case of mobile telephony, the statistical data also show that postpaid users port their numbers more frequently than the prepaid users. Thus, approx. 75% of the total mobile telephony users who ported their numbers in 2011 were postpaid users and about 25% were prepaid users.
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Do you wish to port your number? Here are 10 tips you must know:1. Find out about all the providers’ offers and choose the one that suits your best.2. Carefully read your contract with the current provider, looking for termination clauses or for special interruption provisions.3. If you use a prepaid card, the remaining credit cannot be transferred.4. Fill in the standard porting request, which is available either here, or at one of the acceptor provider’s offices.5. Fill in the porting request carefully. If you do not provide full and accurate details, the system will reject it.6. S...
1. Can I port my telephone number within the same network?
No. Portability enables you precisely to change the network, while sticking to your telephone number. Portability allows a number to “leave” the initial network and to be used by the same user in another network.
If you do not wish to change the network, but change the contractual clauses, you need to discuss it with your service provider and negotiate the terms that suit you best.
2. If I change the network, do I keep the current “prefix” of my telephone number?
When ported, the 10-digit telephone number remains unc...
The launch of number portability has made network identification based on the number format impossible. Therefore, to avoid situations in which the users could unawares pay a different tariff than the one they know, each call to a number that used to be in the origination network of that call, but was subsequently ported, is preceded by a beep sound.
This beep sound allows the caller to end the call, find to which network the number has been ported and whether the tariff of a call to that number is different from the known one.
Some users are not aware of this sound signal that mak...
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