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#151
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On Sat, 20 Jul 2019 14:35:54 +0100, MissRiaElaine
wrote: On 20/07/2019 14:19, Clank wrote: MissRiaElaine Wrote in message: Now that *is* semantics. In all but name, it's a contract. Or equivalent to one, which amounts to the same thing. As far as I'm concerned, PAYG is just that. Paying per month is not paying as you go, it's paying regularly, which is to me a contract. Well, it might be to you, but it isn't to anyone else. Redefining the meaning of words may make you think you're winning an argument in your own head, but you really ain't. If you are "paying as you go", in advance, and with no outstanding commitment whatsoever should you choose to stop paying at any time, then you do not have a contract. You just have a regular spending habit. As I said, semantics. I won't argue with you any more, you're entitled to your view, but please allow me to have mine. Anything involving someone agreeing to supply goods or services in return for you supplying some kind of consideration (usually money) is a "contract". It is just easier for their lazy advertising/publicity wonks to claim there is no contract rather than get into a more involved description of a contract which tends to die at the end of (usually) a month's service. At worst it leads to disputes where the seller claims there is no contract when there still is. |
#152
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Clank wrote:
MissRiaElaine Wrote in message: You can have one-month rolling contracts, say £10 a month. Some operators may call it PAYG but it's still a contract as far as I'm concerned and I wouldn't touch one with a very long pole. The difference between 30-day contract, and pay as you go, is very simple - with PAYG you pay in advance, with the contract you pay in arrears. (For the calls at least, if not the standing charge - although these days most calls are covered by the standing charge anyway so it does become slightly harder to discern the difference.) Contract takes its monthly payment automatically until you tell them otherwise, PAYG requires you to specifically make the payment, surely? (I’ve never had a payg phone so I can’t be sure) Anna Noyd-Dryver |
#153
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In message , at 19:09:38 on Sat, 20 Jul
2019, Anna Noyd-Dryver remarked: You can have one-month rolling contracts, say £10 a month. Some operators may call it PAYG but it's still a contract as far as I'm concerned and I wouldn't touch one with a very long pole. The difference between 30-day contract, and pay as you go, is very simple - with PAYG you pay in advance, with the contract you pay in arrears. (For the calls at least, if not the standing charge - although these days most calls are covered by the standing charge anyway so it does become slightly harder to discern the difference.) Contract takes its monthly payment automatically until you tell them otherwise, PAYG requires you to specifically make the payment, surely? (I’ve never had a payg phone so I can’t be sure) Apart, of course, from auto-topup PAYG schemes. But I don't count those as separate class of subscription, any more than an auto-topup Oyster is a season ticket. -- Roland Perry |
#154
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In message , at 20:25:14 on Sat, 20 Jul
2019, Clank remarked: Roland Perry Wrote in message: There is no "contract" in the mobile phone sense. I admit it's a long time since I studied contract law, but I don't remember "a mobile phone sense" being one of the criteria the law uses to determine if a contract exists. They were all boring things like offer, acceptance, intent to deal and other such boring stuff. A contract either is or it isn't. I have two SIMs in my phone right now - one is PAYG, one is a contract. The latter is an automatically renewing 30-day contract, but that doesn't make it any less of a contract. What we are actually trying to do is find non-confusing names for post-pay PAYG subscriptions. Even a pre-pay PAYG is a contract (in the legal sense) because you pay them (say) £10 and they are contractually bound to provide you with certain telecoms services (be that until the balance expires at the end of the month, or until it's all used up, or whatever the T&C say) To complicate things further, the first mobile contract I had was paid monthly in advance for the "rental and bundle" with "out of bundle" calls paid monthly in arrears. That is literally exactly what I said. You introduced yet another bit of non-standard terminology: "standing charge". -- Roland Perry |
#155
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On Sat, 20 Jul 2019 19:09:38 -0000 (UTC)
Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Clank wrote: MissRiaElaine Wrote in message: You can have one-month rolling contracts, say £10 a month. Some operators may call it PAYG but it's still a contract as far as I'm concerned and I wouldn't touch one with a very long pole. The difference between 30-day contract, and pay as you go, is very simple - with PAYG you pay in advance, with the contract you pay in arrears. (For the calls at least, if not the standing charge - although these days most calls are covered by the standing charge anyway so it does become slightly harder to discern the difference.) Contract takes its monthly payment automatically until you tell them otherwise, PAYG requires you to specifically make the payment, surely? (I’ve never had a payg phone so I can’t be sure) I think there's some confusion between a phone contract with a legal contract. PAYG is not a phone contract but is a legal contract for the phone company to provide you with a service while you still have money on account. |
#156
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Roland Perry Wrote in message:
A contract either is or it isn't. I have two SIMs in my phone right now - one is PAYG, one is a contract. The latter is an automatically renewing 30-day contract, but that doesn't make it any less of a contract. What we are actually trying to do is find non-confusing names for post-pay PAYG subscriptions. But there already is an industry standard (since you love that so much) name for them: "SIM Only Contract". Which typically come in varieties such as "30 Day SIM-Only Contract", "12 Month SIM-Only Contract", etc. (Albeit in this case there is little value to the longer-than-30day variants.) Even a pre-pay PAYG is a contract (in the legal sense) because you pay them (say) £10 and they are contractually bound to provide you with certain telecoms services (be that until the balance expires at the end of the month, or until it's all used up, or whatever the T&C say) Actually, that's debatable. It may be that the contract of sale is exhausted at the moment they credit your account... If the credits you bought then weren't fit for purpose (because they stopped accepting then for making calls) or if they just disappeared with them, other consumer law may apply... But that's a diversion. That is literally exactly what I said. You introduced yet another bit of non-standard terminology: "standing charge" So non-standard you didn't understand what it meant? (Actually I'm fairly sure that's what we called it 25 years ago when I developed a telco's billing system - but if I'm honest I've mostly tried to block that from my memory. Processing CDRs to try and calculate whatever the latest impenetrable discount scheme they've come up with can do bad things to a man.) -- |
#157
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#159
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On 20/07/2019 12:06, wrote:
On Fri, 19 Jul 2019 06:54:13 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:43:43 on Thu, 18 Jul 2019, remarked: Ones where the credit rolls over and you don't have to make a regular calls to keep them alive, aren't quite as common as you claim. The networks hate them because they tend to get used in "glovebox" phones were they have all the costs of maintaining the number and the billing records, for virtually no revenue. Oh come on, its costs them precisely £0.00 to maintain a number, its simply data in a database. Ah, the marginal costs fallacy rears its ugly head. The only cost involved in an unused number is the cost to the user when the phone company disconnects the SIM. The rest of it costs nothing because the infrastructure would be needed regardless and linking a phone number to a SIM id is probably a few hundred bytes or less in a DB. You could store the entire UK phone book and every cellphone IMEI number on a USB stick with room to spare never mind a fully fledged datacentre. Let me know when you need a new spade, if that one wears out. Ok Mr Telecoms Expert, exactly how much disk space does all the relevant information about a single cellular phone number take up then? Obviously you have the figures to hand so please share them. Nah - whilst I do know the exact figure (or more to the point I could look it up), it's getting more and more amusing to see you getting irate when you seem to truly believe that the only cost is the disk space - something that if it makes up 0.01% of the cost would surprise me. |
#160
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On Sun, 21 Jul 2019 19:55:40 +0100
Someone Somewhere wrote: On 20/07/2019 12:06, wrote: On Fri, 19 Jul 2019 06:54:13 +0100 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:43:43 on Thu, 18 Jul 2019, remarked: Ones where the credit rolls over and you don't have to make a regular calls to keep them alive, aren't quite as common as you claim. The networks hate them because they tend to get used in "glovebox" phones were they have all the costs of maintaining the number and the billing records, for virtually no revenue. Oh come on, its costs them precisely £0.00 to maintain a number, its simply data in a database. Ah, the marginal costs fallacy rears its ugly head. The only cost involved in an unused number is the cost to the user when the phone company disconnects the SIM. The rest of it costs nothing because the infrastructure would be needed regardless and linking a phone number to a SIM id is probably a few hundred bytes or less in a DB. You could store the entire UK phone book and every cellphone IMEI number on a USB stick with room to spare never mind a fully fledged datacentre. Let me know when you need a new spade, if that one wears out. Ok Mr Telecoms Expert, exactly how much disk space does all the relevant information about a single cellular phone number take up then? Obviously you have the figures to hand so please share them. Nah - whilst I do know the exact figure (or more to the point I could look it up), it's getting more and more amusing to see you getting irate when you seem to truly believe that the only cost is the disk space - something that if it makes up 0.01% of the cost would surprise me. If the number belongs to a real network not a virtual one, what are the other costs then? Unless its used up its entire allocation of numbers it won't be losing any money so tell me what I've missed. You and Perry are very good at being supercilious, a bit less hot on supplying actual information. |
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