(Updates with context)
BERLIN, Sept 2 (Reuters) - All-you-can-watch video products
offered by Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom in
Germany violated regional rules on roaming and net neutrality,
the European Union's highest court ruled on Thursday.
The landmark ruling deals a blow to popular mobile products
such as Deutsche Telekom's StreamOn deal, which offers unlimited
data for watching video while customers are in Germany but slows
transmission speeds when they go abroad.
Germany's BNetzA network regulator ordered https://www.reuters.com/article/us-deutsche-telekom-regulator-idUKKBN1E91VM
Deutsche Telekom in 2018 to offer such products on the same
terms throughout the EU, triggering a court battle. Germany's
VZBV consumer association objected to a copycat product launched
by Vodafone.
Zero-tariff options "are contrary to the regulation on open
internet access," the European Court of Justice said in a
two-page ruling made after two German courts hearing the cases
against Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom https://www.reuters.com/article/deutsche-telekom-regulator-idCNL8N24G2WX
sought its opinion.
"It follows that limitations on bandwidth, tethering or on
use when roaming...are also incompatible with EU law."
EU rules require mobile operators to allow customers to
"roam like at home" and to pay the same tariffs regardless of
where they are located. Net neutrality bars the throttling of
data speeds depending on location.
Operators counter that such rules, if applied across the EU,
would encourage people from outside Germany to sign up as
customers there to take advantage of unlimited video products,
forcing up costs and straining networks.
Vodafone, Deutsche Telekom, BNetzA and the VZBV have yet to
respond to the court decision.
(Reporting by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Riham Alkousaa and
Mike Harrison)