U.K. cuts phone fees

Published: 29 September 1999 y., Wednesday
AOL Europe announced Monday it is cutting the phone fees charged to users of its premium Internet service, marking what it called a "major step" toward flat-rate pricing that has made the Internet a mass market phenomenon in the United States. Under the new price structure, subscribers who currently pay a monthly fee of 9.99 pounds ($16.40) for AOL_s premium Web-access service would be charged only 1 pence (1.6 cents) a minute, regardless of the time of day, for their phone calls. The phone fee cut represents a shot across the bow of AOL_s biggest British Internet rivals -- many of whom tout themselves as "free" Internet access providers while in fact charging phone call fees of up to 4 pence a minute. AOL believes this system inhibits wider Internet use in Britain by forcing Web surfers to restrict their online time to off-peak hours of the day, when telephone companies tend to charge lower phone fees. AOL said its British subscribers spend about 17 minutes a day online -- a quarter of the time its American users spend surfing the Web. The leading beneficiary of the free-access craze sweeping Britain -- Freeserve -- is also one of the biggest thorns in AOL_s side. Since its launch last September by electronics retailer Dixons, Freeserve has attracted nearly 1.4 million subscribers, overtaking AOL in the U.K. Internet market and touching off a copycat spree that has drawn football clubs, supermarkets, record stores and booksellers into the swelling ranks of British ISPs. Hundreds of free ISPs in Britain Today, there are an estimated 200 no-fee ISPs in Britain, which draw their revenue from a combination of advertising, e-commerce and phone call fees. But with phone prices bound to come down, analysts wonder how long many of these companies will remain viable. Relenting to the pressure, AOL Europe, a joint venture between America Online (AOL) and German publisher Bertelsmann, rolled out its own free-access service in August, called Netscape Online. Freeserve itself said Monday it was launching a plan that would allow users to earn up to 10 free hours of Internet calls a month. The numbers of free hours subscribers to the Freeserve Time service receive will be based on the amount spent monthly on phone calls. AOL said its pence-a-minute plan will enable its U.K. users -- estimated at 600,000 -- to freely choose when they go online.
Šaltinis: CNNfn
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Verisign Sells Domain Registration Biz

Verisign on Thursday announced the sale of its consumer-facing Network Solutions domain registration unit to Pivotal Private Equity in a deal valued at $100 million more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

A significant event

Kazakhstan as well as other CIS states takes the leading positions in the list of countries with high level of piracy in the sphere of informational technologies more »

Significant Growth

Number of Uzbek Internet users reaches 407,500 more »

AOL, Google Broaden Search Pact

America Online has announced it will expand its relationship with Google more »

Hollywood Hocks Net Flicks

The Movie Industry Tries to Shapes Its Online Future more »

Modern safes for security

Automatic safes and multi-safes for the banks, casino and various service providers more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Euronet's core technology

Croatia's Third Largest Bank Selects Euronet's Credit Card Software more »