Telecom regulatory authority of India has yesterday issued the 6th
amendment to the Telecommunication Mobile Number Portability Regulation
which was in place since 2009. The DOT had notified all telecom
operators on 3rd November 2014 to prepare their systems for the
implementation of full Pan India number portability to be in place in
six months from the date of issue of the notification which comes to 3rd
May 2015. This date has been made official by TRAI in the latest
amendment.
TRAI had also floated a consultation paper to the operators regarding the handling of issues pertaining to disconnection of postpaid numbers in case of the bill not being settled with the donor network before porting to the recipient network and regarding the lock-in period with the new operator before porting the number again. With the inputs received from the operators, TRAI has issued new guidelines with regards to these issues as well in the 6th amendment.
Let us know your views and opinions through your comments about the full Pan India Number Portability which is finally being implemented on 3rd May after such a long wait.
TRAI had also floated a consultation paper to the operators regarding the handling of issues pertaining to disconnection of postpaid numbers in case of the bill not being settled with the donor network before porting to the recipient network and regarding the lock-in period with the new operator before porting the number again. With the inputs received from the operators, TRAI has issued new guidelines with regards to these issues as well in the 6th amendment.
How revise regulation will help customers?
Under the revised regulations if a postpaid subscriber who is porting his number is a defaulter of the donor network and has not settled the final bill, the donor network has the right to give a disconnection notice to the subscriber through the recipient network in a span of 30 days from the due date of the final bill. If the subscriber settles the bill with the donor network within 15 days from the date of issuance of notice, his services with the recipient network will continue uninterrupted, but in the case of non-settlement of dues post the 15 day period will lead to disconnection of services with the recipient network. If the donor does not issue the disconnection notice within 60 days of the due date of the final bill, it is no longer entitled to do so. The lock-in period between two consecutive number porting requests which was initially 90 days has now been reduced to 60 days.Let us know your views and opinions through your comments about the full Pan India Number Portability which is finally being implemented on 3rd May after such a long wait.
No comments:
Post a Comment