Individual communication services and tariffs

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Individual communication services and tariffs is the regulatory protected ability for an identified user to obtain from a communication service provider, by a bilateral specific contract, a combination of the service and related content, at a specific price (called a tariff chosen by the user) corresponding to a user request specified with a service demand profile and some duration.

A service provider (SP) provides organizations with consulting, legal, real estate, communications, storage, processing. Although a service provider can be an organizational sub-unit, it is usually a third party or outsourced supplier, including telecommunications service providers (TSPs), application service providers (ASPs), storage service providers (SSPs), and internet service providers (ISPs). A more traditional term is service bureau.

A tariff is a tax on imports or exports between sovereign states. It is a form of regulation of foreign trade. It is a policy that taxes foreign products to encourage or protect domestic industry. The tariff is historically used to protect infant industries and to allow import substitution industrialization.

Individual service, is then the communication service supplied in the way stated above, with a request and specification by the user; Individual tariff, is then the price paid by the user for such an individual service. [1] [2]

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References

  1. Chen, H. and L.-F. Pau (2007). Individual Tariffs for Mobile Services: Analysis of Operator Business and Risk Consequences. Sixth International Conference on the Management of Mobile Business (ICMB’07), Toronto, Canada, IEEE Computer Society
  2. Chen, H. and L.-F. Pau (2006). Individual Tariffs for Mobile Services: Theoretical Framework and a Computational Case in Mobile Music. International Conference on Mobile Business (ICMB'06), Copenhagen, Denmark, IEEE Computer Society