24 Mar 2006
Mobile firm O2 has lost its fourth and final court case against rival operator 3 over an advertisement that pointed out the high price of O2's pay-as-you-go service.
The case began in November 2004 when O2 attempted to get an injunction against 3 preventing it from broadcasting the advert.
The promotion highlighted how a three-minute pay as you go call cost O2 customers 75p and 3 customers only 15p. O2 also tried to stop 3 using its logo in the advert.
O2 failed to get an injunction to stop the advert being broadcast and in February its application to take the case to the European Court of Human Rights was also turned down.
A third hearing was convened in February last year at which O2 tried and failed to introduce new evidence.
In the fourth hearing the High Court ruled that 3 could use O2's trademarks to identify O2 in order to make a fair and accurate comparison between the operators' prices.
The ruling confirmed that 3 had complied with all applicable comparative advertising rules and therefore rejected O2's claim that the advertisement infringed its trademarks.
"O2 has tried to stop 3 using effective comparative advertising, but fortunately for the UK consumer it has completely failed in its aims," said Graeme Oxby, marketing director at 3 UK.
"Our advert was a legitimate way for us to highlight the great value we offered in comparison to O2. More importantly it was a fair and accurate comparison.
"We believe that customers have the right to see our comparative advertising, and the judge agreed."
O2, which was recently bought by Spain's Telefónica for £17.7bn, said that it may fight the ruling. "We are considering an appeal," a spokesman told Reuters.
Latest stories from Communications
Related videos
Related articles
Related jobs
Poll
Are you confident that the UK's IT infrastructure is secure from attack in the wake of the Flame malware revelations?
V3 examines the key strengths and weaknesses of Samsung's latest iPhone killer
Connect with V3.co.uk
Social networking is almost ubiquitous. This white paper examines the benefits and risks and it looks at the different ways companies can reconcile them
The importance of understanding your infrastructure
Android Developer (Android and .NET) - West Midlands...
Responsibilities: - Delivering End-to-End solutions...
SQL, Marketing Data Manager, West London - to £45K...
One of Aston Carters longest standing clients has an...
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies. IThound.com brings you over 2,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.
Do you agree?