Vietnamese
mobile carriers allow users to send photo online to complete account
registration
Users can either physically visit a store or do the
photo-taking via the Internet or mobile apps
A woman has her portrait
taken at a Viettel store in
Vietnam’s mobile carriers are
allowing subscribers to submit their portraits online to complete account
registration, as per a new regulation taking effect later this month, instead
of the widely condemned option of doing so by physically visiting a store.
Under
Government Decree 49, coming into effect on April 24, all mobile subscribers
in
While
users have long been required to register for a mobile account using their
real personal information, few have completed the photo requirement.
Subscribers
now have less than a fortnight to submit their portraits, or risk having
their accounts blocked from making phone calls or sending messages.
All
mobile carriers in the Southeast Asian country have previously been
criticized for insisting that users complete the photo-taking task at their
stores and offering no option to do it via the Internet.
Subscribers
have questioned regulators as to why mobile carriers still need that extra
photo when they have already submitted a scanned copy of their ID card, which
includes a photo, during registration.
People
have also whined that it is a waste of time for them to skip work to visit
transaction spots of the mobile companies to have their photos taken.
In the wake of such a groundswell of
criticism, leading carriers said on Monday that users can now do it online or
via their respective apps.
Vinaphone
said besides visiting its stores to complete registration, users can send
their photos via email, cskh@vnpt.vn, or using the company’s app,
MyVinaphone.
The
mobile carrier also said on its verified Facebook page that subscribers can
send all required information, including a scanned copy of their ID card and
portraits, via the social network’s messaging feature to complete
registration.
Similarly,
Mobifone subscribers can either visit the company's transaction spots
countrywide, or add their photos via its website, while Viettel asserted that
users can do so via its app, My Viettel.
The
military-run Viettel will put together mobile working teams to assist
customers, especially the elders who have difficulty visiting its stores.
Requiring users to register for a
mobile account with accurate personal information plus their portraits is
meant to help customers protect their mobile phone numbers and allow the
network carriers to better manage their data and fight against
improperly-registered SIM cards, according to regulators.
SIM
cards used to be as easy to buy as candy in
While
subscribers support the tightened rule on mobile account management, they
demand that mobile carriers find ways to make the registration as easy and
convenient as possible.
As
the April 24 deadline is drawing near, mobile carriers have been notifying
their users of the new rules and urging them to complete registration in
time.
A
Vinaphone call center employee told Tuoi
Tre News on Monday that only subscribers who receive a reminder
message should be worried about their account registration.
“If
you don’t receive this message, it means your account is adequately
registered and you don’t need to take any further step,” she said.
Asked
how Government Decree 49 will affect foreign subscribers who reside in
By Son Luong / Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 4, 2018
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