Published: July 07, 2011
Take YouTube on Your Dream Holiday - for £1,000 per Hour
CAMBRIDGE, England, July 7, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --
Despite EC law forcing UK mobile operators to cap data roaming bills at
50 euros (GBP45), holidaymakers travelling outside the EU are still in
danger of running up massive charges reaching to thousands of pounds, warns
Broadbandgenie.co.uk [http://www.broadbandgenie.co.uk ].
Mobile broadband roaming prices in the EU can still be very high, at
anything up to GBP3 per MB, but the cap stops things getting out of control.
Outside the EU, prices can go as high as GBP7.50 (T-Mobile) or GBP8 (Orange)
per MB. As streaming YouTube videos is estimated to use around 130Mb per
hour, that could be more than GBP1,000 per hour!
Popular destinations such as the Caribbean, New Zealand, Turkey,
Australia and India often into the most expensive zones for data, depending
on which mobile operator you are with.
Broadband Genie editor Chris Marling said: "While their websites
proclaim the EU cap as 'great news for travellers', many UK operators only
impose it where they are forced to - in EU countries. Anyone travelling
outside, even in the rest of Europe, needs to make themselves and their
families aware of the very real possibility of bill shock.
"Internet use in the UK is taken for granted by many, especially as we
have some very generous - even unlimited - data deals available, both on
mobile and home broadband. It's hardly surprising that some travellers don't
consider the consequences of using the service abroad.
"We say it to our site visitors every year, but we really wish we didn't
have to - we see no reason why all the UK's mobile operators haven't done
the honourable thing and applied the data roaming cap across all of their
data roaming charges. If they don't do it voluntarily, maybe it is time for
Ofcom to step in."
NOTES TO EDITORS
1. Broadband Genie is the UK's leading independent broadband, mobile
broadband and smartphone comparison website, providing consumers with an
unbiased source of information on prices and contracts and allowing them to
compare providers in an independent environment. Broadband Genie was
launched in March 2004 as the first dedicated consumer comparison site for
broadband, while Mobile Broadband Genie was the first independent mobile
broadband comparison site, launched in October 2007. The sites were combined
in 2010, with the addition of smartphone comparison. The site is one of the
most popular in its field, regularly featuring in the national press.
http://www.broadbandgenie.co.uk
2. All queries and interview requests should be directed to Chris
Marling at Broadband Genie: chris.marling@genieventures.co.uk
SOURCE Broadband Genie
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