No it hasn't. There wasn't a specific grevience listed so you really dont know if European regulations have solved it or not. I'm an American but have spent years living in Europe and dealing with carriers there has its own frustrations.
These sorts of comments are common but always strike me as having been made by someone with little to no real world experience on the specific issue being discussed.
> with little to no real world experience on the specific issue being discussed.
I lived in France and now I'm in Germany, still using my French sim card, for no additional cost. I can change carriers whenever I want with no delay and transfer my number to the new carrier, all of that for much cheaper than what was available in the US when I was living there.
No contract, no hidden fees, no loops to jump through to cancel a subscription, it just works. I really don't see what one more monopoly would solve.
Feel free to publish your list of grievances, I suspect they're extremely out of the ordinary
> you really dont know if European regulations have solved it or not
Ask anybody who has lived in the UK long enough about Vodafone.
The story normally goes something like this:
- 90s = Dogs bollocks, nobody came close
- 00s = Started to smell a bit, but still the most robust technical service
- early 10s = Really starting to rest on their laurels now
- late 10s – today = Shit, godawful shit.
These sorts of comments are common but always strike me as having been made by someone with little to no real world experience on the specific issue being discussed.