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After the opening of telecommunications in Costa Rica when the monopoly of the ICE Group was dissolved, the government opened a tender for telecommunications companies wishing to enter Costa Rica. Superintendencia de Tele-Comunicaciones (SUTEL) of Costa Rica secured a license, and the company began offering lines on November 5, 2011 to users ...
Claro also roams on WOM using 3G and 4G technologies only. 4.78 (March 2024) ClaroVTR (50% América Móvil, 50% Liberty Latin America) [54] Mobile virtual network operators 5: VTR Móvil (using Claro) VTR Móvil roams on Claro using 2G, 3G, and 4G technologies only. It also roams on WOM using 3G and 4G technologies only. 0.322 (March 2024)
Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (English: Costa Rican Institute of Electricity) (ICE) is the Costa Rican government-run electricity and telecommunications services provider. Together with the Radiographic Costarricense SA (RACSA) and Compañía Nacional de Fuerza y Luz (CNFL), they form the ICE Group.
Chile (Claro) Colombia ; Costa Rica (Claro) Croatia (A1) Dominican Republic ; Ecuador (Claro) El Salvador (Claro) ... List of countries by number of Internet users;
There are no government restrictions on access to the Internet or credible reports that the government monitors e-mail or Internet chat rooms without judicial oversight. [10] The constitution provides for freedom of speech and press, and the government generally respects these rights in practice. An independent press, an effective judiciary ...
The company operates under its Claro subsidiaries in many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, these include the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay, Puerto Rico, Colombia and Ecuador. In Brazil it also operates Claro and other subsidiary Embratel.
This is a list of Internet exchange points ... Tigo Costa Rica, Amnet Cable Costa Rica ... Claro Puerto Rico [300] LAC-IX:
Before 1994, all phone numbers in Costa Rica were six digits long. The Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, which at that time had the monopoly on telecommunications, introduced a system in which the telephone numbers in every province were assigned a prefix to make them 7 digits long. This numbering system was effective for some time.