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iPhone Internet Use Abroad - £400 bill

Anonymous
Not applicable
I bought an iPhone on a £35/month contract, with o2, roughly three months ago, having been an o2 pay as you go customer for the past 7 or 8 years.

I've just returned from a holiday in Porto Santo (Portugal, EU), and have received a bill from o2 for approximately £400 (four hundred pounds) due to internet use abroad. I turned the data roaming function off the second day of my week-long trip, and instead connected to the internet through the hotel's free wi-fi connection (having been told the hotel provided free wi-fi internet access at the welcome meeting on day two). I probably accessed the internet for around an hour / 90 minutes per day, for checking work e-mails, flight times, and other general browsing. I did not download any songs or videos.

Is there anything I can do to query and reduce this cost? I am both astonished and gutted at having run up such a bill.

I received inadequate warning of the cost of browsing, and no warning of the charges I was incurring day by day. Obviously if I had known when I reached £20 or even £10 I would have stopped browsing the internet immediately and completely.

My girlfriend received a text message from vodaphone just before midnight one evening saying that if she remained connected to the internet beyond midnight UK time, she would be charged £4.99. I received no texts of the sort.

Are all mobile phone networks the same in terms of allowing users to run up such bills?

I have e-mailed o2 about this, but their response said that I was charged because the wi-fi network that I was using was chargeable, hence the bill of £400 for accessing the internet through wi-fi.

The bill is due on the 28th June, by direct debit. I am considering cancelling the direct debit until the issue is resolved. Is this wise?

Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

GHA
Message 1 of 24
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Anonymous
Not applicable
I don't understand this.... I've just spent 2 and a half weeks in the US, had Data roaming off, and used the hotel WiFi every day to browse, stream music and more - I got no data charges only text and calls.
Message 21 of 24
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Anonymous
Not applicable
I don't understand this.... I've just spent 2 and a half weeks in the US, had Data roaming off, and used the hotel WiFi every day to browse, stream music and more - I got no data charges only text and calls.


This is what happened to me, Singapore, data roaming off, wifi on, no data charges.
Maldives, data roaming off, wifi on, much data charges.

Why? Dunno, but O2 were more than happy to refund so I don't think they think it's customer error.
Message 22 of 24
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Anonymous
Not applicable
This all seems abit fishy to me. Having read this post I just checked my latest charges and noticed a £1.93 charge for data access whilst abroad from the Netherlands. Not a great deal of money (thankfully - and I'm really sorry to hear the horror story from the original poster - I hope O2 do the right thing by you and give you a refund).

Anyway, I had data roaming turned off (as always) and whilst in NL only accessed the internet once briefly from the Hotel Wifi. The hotel Wifi was provided by Swisscom, which I think is affiliated with either the Cloud or BT Openzone (can't remember which), so I was hopeful that I'd get free access given the deal you get whilst in the UK. On connecting, I got free access sufficient to download some emails and one or two web pages, but thereafter I got a Swisscom "enter credit card details, or arrange access through reception" page.

At this point I gave up and thought nothing further of it, assuming that the limited free access I'd been given was a taster to get me to sign up. That was until I saw the charge on my bill.

What I can't work out is whether this is Swisscom being cheeky and charging me by the back-door, an iPhone OS error or an O2/Service provider error. Whichever it is, it's close to fraudulent in my view, and should be looked at by OfCom.

I've been to France twice in the same month (for business) and on both occasions used the hotel wifi, which in this case is provided for free by the hotel. No charges on my bill in these cases, so I very much smell a rat.

Martin.
Message 23 of 24
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Anonymous
Not applicable
Just got back from a week in the USA. In the end, I couldn't afford to take the risk so I left my iPhone at home and took an iTouch which I used to access free wifi where ever I could find it. Poor state of affairs when you can't trust your service provider not to have you over.
Message 24 of 24
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