Topic: California judge ruled that Sprint/Nextel's early terminatio
MissouriGothGirl's photo
Thu 07/31/08 03:42 PM
In one of the most significant legal rulings in the tech industry this year, a Superior Court judge in California has ruled that the practice of charging consumers a fee for ending their cell phone contract early is illegal and violates state law.
The preliminary, tentative judgment orders Sprint Nextel to pay customers $18.2 million in reimbursements and, more importantly, orders Sprint to stop trying to collect another $54.7 million from California customers (some 2 million customers total) who have canceled their contracts but refused or failed to pay the termination fee.
While an appeal is inevitable, the ruling could have massive fallout throughout the industry. Without the threat of levying early termination fees, the cellular carriers lose the power that's enabled them to lock customers into contracts for multiple years at a time. And while those contracts can be heinously long, they also let the carriers offer cell phone hardware at reduced (subsidized) prices. AT&T's two-year contract is the only reason the iPhone 3G costs $199. If subsidies vanish, what happens to hardware lock-in? Could an era of expensive, but unlocked, hardware be just around the corner? It's highly probable.
Of course, the carriers aren't going to take this lying down. Early termination fees are seen as critical to business, so carriers are expected to look for ways to reclassify the fees (such as by calling them "rates," part of the arcane set of laws that covers the telecommunications industry). The industry is also pushing for the federal government to step in and claim oversight over the early termination fee issue, which would invalidate any state ruling. The FCC is generally more tolerant of such fees, though Chairman Kevin Martin has proposed a plan whereby the fees are decreased the closer you are to the end of your contract.
The FCC may also buy the argument that, since carriers are nationally based (and consumers can use their phones anywhere in the country), that a single policy should apply across the nation, rather than creating a patchwork of legislation that could lead to confusion and chaos caused by having 50 different policies.
Is the early termination fee dead? Not yet, but it's looking a little haggard.

no photo
Thu 07/31/08 03:45 PM
Go, Judge!!:wink: :smile: :wink:

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Thu 07/31/08 03:48 PM
I actually watched the Congressional Hearings on this a while back and REGULATION will be coming. They really had the CEO of Verizon and other squirmiing all over in the hearings.

Contracts will be going away, maybe not tomorrow, but soon.drinker

MirrorMirror's photo
Thu 07/31/08 03:50 PM
drinker I can now sleep better at nightdrinker

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Thu 07/31/08 03:50 PM
One of the best stories I heard in the hearing was of the National Guard Soldier who got delpoyed to Iraq and could not get out of his Cell Phone contract. He had to call his Congressman to intervene. devil

MissouriGothGirl's photo
Thu 07/31/08 04:05 PM
T-mobile is sorta like that in a way so I think personally all cellphone companies should have that done to them.