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TXTPower welcomes zero texting charges, bats for refund

TXTPower welcomes the calls by the DOTC secretary and several members of Congress, for the removal of text messaging charges.

At the moment, we hope the DOTC secretary has ordered his staff to calculate how much the telcos owe consumers since they started charging for text messaging. All these illegal charges must be refunded. The refunds should also cover the VAT illegally levied on text messaging, not just the illegal telco charges.

The NTC and the BIR should work together to find out how much the telcos and the government owe the consumers and to find out the quickest and most fair way of undertaking a refund.

We have long argued that text messaging is a built-in service of the GSM standard used by telcos and should thus be provided for free but government refuses to listen. We are thus surprised by the sudden turn around of the DOTC secretary and members of Congress. We expect them to uphold the law regarding franchises and to correct their oversight that allowed the telcos to fleece consumers up to now.

We are prepared to face the telcos, the NTC and the BIR before any forum because we have long waited for this chance to expose the highway robbery on consumers: the mislabeling of text messaging as a value-added service, the NTC’s assent, the illegal charging and the illegal slapping of VAT and the long silence over these by the government.

We have friends who are experts in the fields of mobile telephony and electronics and communications engineering who back us up and would surely sound advice to the DOTC secretary and Congress on the technological basis for removing text messaging charges.

About Us

TXTPower is an organization of cellphone users that aims to empower Filipinos both as consumers and as citizens.

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Globe stops unlimited texting service anew; TXTPower readies new complaint

Here’s what I posted on tonyocruz.com this evening:

For the second time this year, Globe Telecom stopped its unlimited texting service without any public announcement.

At a time when we expect a deluge of Christmas greetings through text, subscribers are now forced to avail of a so-called Sulitxt15 service that gives 100 text messages for P15.

Of course, it sucks big time!

We in TXTPower will write the National Telecommunications Commission a letter-complaint this week, to inquire what has happened and why it allowed the removal of the service without Globe at the very least providing adequate information to subscribers.

Last February, TXTPower filed a similar letter-complaint to the NTC regarding the stoppage of the original Unlimixt service.

The TXTPower complaint was backed by two online petitions signed by combined 6,163 and 5,793 signatories.

Days after, the NTC surprisingly acted quickly and issued two orders ordering Globe to stop its new Unlitxt offer pending hearings on the TXTPower complaint.

Globe acted like a big bad wolf and sat on the NTC Commissioner’s face. It did not heed the two orders and insisted that it is the company’s right to do whatever it pleases. Meanwhile, the NTC did not budge, did not lift a finger and did not sanction on Globe for violating its two orders.

What the NTC will do to Globe this time is for everyone to guess.

Don’t you feel cheated by Globe and the NTC? I do. Many do.

New protest ringtone: AB-ZTE-FG!

You may download the ringtone by clicking here, here, here or here.


Mobile activist group TXTPower last night launched the AB-ZTE-FG protest ringtone, as it called on the public to remain vigilant over the US$329-million scam involving persons closely linked to President Arroyo.

TXTPower President Anthony Ian Cruz encouraged the public to download, use, re-post and forward the ringtone “as a sign of our collective anger over the latest scandal to hit the Arroyo administration and demand that the investigation result in the prosecution of bribers, bribetakers, fixers and influence-peddlers.”

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TXTPower: Estrada today, Arroyo tomorrow

TXTPower, a mobile phone users group whose members actively joined People Power 2, today welcomed the guilty verdict handed down by the Sandiganbayan saying “it is a warning to all, especially President Arroyo, that official wrongdoing will eventually catch up on them”.

“For veterans of People Power 2, Estrada’s conviction by the court is the logical consequence of the people’s uprising in 2001. The people already spoke clearly and decisively in 2001 and the court found the sovereign people’s will correct, albeit belatedly,” said TXTPower president Anthony Ian Cruz.

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