One Million Ported Numbers
Data: 4/4/2013
At the
beginning of April 2013, Romania reached the threshold of one million ported
numbers. Since the introduction of the service allowing the users to keep their
telephone number when changing their provider, i.e. on 21 October 2008, the
amount of ported numbers has risen every year. 671,095 of the 1,001,364 of
numbers ported as of 1 April 2013 were mobile telephone numbers and 330,269
fixed telephone numbers.
The
evolution of the amount of ported numbers did not see spectacular shifts over
time, but it is obvious that the Romanian users have benefitted from the fact
that portability has enhanced their freedom of choice and power of negotiation
in the relationship with the providers. 15,681 numbers were ported in the last
three months of 2008, 180,239 numbers were ported in 2009, another 221,219
numbers were ported in 2010, up by 23% as compared to 2009, and this trend was
maintained in 2011, when the amount of ported numbers grew by 18%, up to 260,256.
An amount of 255,893 numbers were ported in 2012, out of which 166,371 (65%)
mobile telephone numbers and 89,522 (35%) fixed telephone numbers.
The
statistical data show that post-paid users are keener to port their numbers
(75%) as opposed to prepaid users. In the mobile telephony segment, the
operators involved in the porting process share the mobile numbers ported so
far as follows: Cosmote accepted 223,450 numbers, Vodafone 220,051, Orange
219,986, RCS & RDS 6,889, and Telemobil 719. As for fixed telephony, 34
providers share between them the numbers ported until now. Out of these, most
numbers were ported into the networks of RCS & RDS – 91,936, UPC Romania –
84,274, Orange – 66,200, Vodafone – 59,572 and Romtelecom – 13,291. Most
requests for the porting of geographic numbers were registered in Bucharest
(102,123 ported numbers), followed by the counties of Cluj (23,425), Timis
(17,110), Prahova (16,839) and Galati (14,327).
In
order to obtain comprehensive information on the portability process, the
telephony users have at their disposal the www.portabilitate.ro
website, a portal accessed on average by approx. 11,000 single users per month
in the last year. The website provides details with regard to the steps to be
taken in order to benefit from this service, answers to the most frequent
questions concerning the porting, as well as a few pieces of advice meant to
help avoiding all sorts of problems which might occur during the porting
process.
The
most frequent aspects the users signalled to the Authority in relation to
portability concerned the failure of the providers to offer full and adequate
information to their customers on the porting process, as well as delayed
achievement of porting as compared to the date agreed for its completion. The
number of complaints declined substantially over these 4 years, from 196 in
2009 to 112 in 2012.
“Portability
is evolving very well: the length of the porting process was reduced to three
days, the number of complaints keeps decreasing, while the amount of ported
numbers is growing, but most importantly of all the users’ freedom to keep
their number when changing their provider fosters competition, and we witness
this every day – the offers are more diversified and more attractive, while the
operators continue the investments in new networks and technologies”, Mr.
Cătălin Marinescu, the president of ANCOM, said.
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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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