Talk:Italy/@comment-24682153-20180529211953/@comment-3564598-20180621222848

To sum up what I think of the matter (as one opinion among many), I think whether it stays should depend on how easy it is for a first-time visitor to sign up and cancel with minimal knowledge of the local language, and whether it presents a significant price advantage over the other carriers in the market. In the case of Iliad here, I still see a significant price advantage (in the sense that if you want 30GB on a phone plan on any of the other carriers it will cost at least 2x-3x what Iliad charges), but I'd want to see someone new to Italy try to sign up and cancel to see how visitor-friendly it is. I would say the same of Folx in Poland and similar offers elsewhere- if no other provider can offer a similarly sized package for less than 30% more, and if someone new to the country can sign up and cancel without feeling frustrated or like they had been "caught out" by the terms of the contract, then I would be OK with including it.

For example, on my first visit to France I signed up on a rolling contract with SFR. It was so difficult to cancel (I had to call twice, receive a final paper bill to my US address, then pay that over the phone and the only non-EU credit cards they accept are American Express) that I would never recommend it even though my tablet plan was half the price of prepaid (5GB for 15 euro compared to 4GB for 30) and included EU roaming (at that time charged at 5 euro per 500MB per day).