On 2017-11-21 23:12, Zyza wrote: > Į temą: > > Last night, #EU negotiators agreed to end unjustified #geoblocking for > consumers wishing to buy products or services online within the EU. > > The new rules will boost ecommerce for the benefit of consumers and > businesses who take advantage of the growing European online market. Kol kas tai tik dalinis sprendimas ir apima tik tris situacijas: 1. iPrekyba prekėmis be fizinio jų pristatymo pirkėjui; 2. iPrekyba paslaugomis, teikiamomis elektroniniu būdu; 3. iPrekyba įprastoms paslaugomis, kurioms taikyti regioniniai ribojimai. Bet kuriuo atveju tai žingsnis teisinga linkme. The new rules define three specific situations where no justification and no objective criteria for a different treatment between customers from different EU Member States are conceivable from the outset. These are: · The sale of goods without physical delivery. Example: A Belgian customer wishes to buy a refrigerator and finds the best deal on a German website. The customer will be entitled to order the product and collect it at the trader's premises or organise delivery himself to his home. · The sale of electronically supplied services. Example: A Bulgarian consumer wishes to buy hosting services for her website from a Spanish company. She will now have access to the service, can register and buy this service without having to pay additional fees compared to a Spanish consumer. · The sale of services provided in a specific physical location. Example: An Italian family can buy a trip directly to an amusement park in France without being redirected to an Italian website. The Regulation does not impose an obligation to sell and does not harmonise prices. It does however address discrimination in access to goods and services in cases where it cannot be objectively justified (e.g. by VAT obligations or different legal requirements). The new rules will come directly into force after nine months from the publication in the EU Official Journal, to allow in particular small traders to adapt.