T-Mobile Told To Route TruPhone Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Wednesday, 18 July 2007
A judge hearing a case between mobnile VoIP provider TruPhone and wireless network operator T-Mobile has issued an interim injunction instructing the carrier thatit must connect TruPhone calls.

The decision is a major win for TruPhone which has been battling incumbent telcos in the United Kingdom. This latest hurdle came about when T-Mobile refused to interconnect calls to or from the start-up VoIP provider.

The crux of T-Mobile's argument before the court was that it was not unwilling to connect TruPhone, but was unable to reach a contractual agreement on the price for the interconnect.

However TruPhone argued the refusal was a pretty clear breach of competition law under which the mobile carrier is required to 'make calls or otherwise transmit electronic communications to every normal telephone number'.

By the time the mater came before a Judge, TruPhone had agreed to pay the (loss-making) rates demanded by T-Mobile until the British telco regulator OfCom could settle the price dispute.

The other four UK major mobile network operators - 3, O2, Orange and Vodafone - all agreed to interconnect with Truphone. The start-up VoIP service which is still in Beta testing phase offers a range of mobile services such as SMS-over-IP, ‘presence' capabilities and VoIP over 3G connections.

In the pre-trial hearing, the Judge ruled that T-Mobile must interconnect with Truphone by Monday 23rd July.

James Tagg, Truphone's chief executive officer, said: "The injunction is good news not only for Truphone but for every company trying to develop internet-era services and for every consumer wanting freedom of choice and lower prices. We are determined to bring better-value mobile calls, text messages and other innovative services to mobile phone users, and it's right that we should not be prevented from doing so."

T-Mobile is not the only netowrk operator that's been causing problems for the VoIP start-up. Vodafone and Orange caused something of an uproar when their Nokia N95 handsets turned out to have had their VoIP capabilities disabled and TruPhone claims new data tariffs published by Vodafone mean customers using VoIP will be charged more than for web browsing or email.

"T-Mobile's move is the most aggresive act," claims Tagg, "but it isn't alone in trying to find ways to slow down mobile VoIP. Vodafone and Orange tested one way by removing internet telephony from their branded Nokia N95 handsets without telling their customers, and Vodafone is planning to charge more for VoIP traffic than for web traffic on its new mobile web service."

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