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In September 2015, Vodafone Portugal becomes the first TV operator in the world to launch a service for smart watches. Customers of Vodafone's TV service are now able to watch TV channels live on their wrists. [5] Vodafone Portugal starts offering VoLTE and is the first operator in Portugal to offer VoLTE, the most advanced 4G voice technology. [6]
This network also provides wireless mobile Internet connections as well, and covers the entire territory. As of 2023, 94% of households had high-speed Internet services [1] and 97% of companies had Internet access. [2] Most Portuguese watch television through fibre-optic (2023: 66.2% of households). [1]
Banco Comercial Português (BCP, lit. ' Portuguese Commercial Bank ') is a Portuguese bank that was founded in 1985 and is the largest private bank in the country. BCP is a member of the Euronext 100 stock index and its current chief executive officer is Miguel Maya Dias Pinheiro.
Mobiles similarly changed, with the digits 9T replacing the prefix 093T, where T is a digit specific to a mobile operator, that can be 1 (Telecel, now Vodafone Portugal), 0, 2 or 6 (TMN/MEO) or 3 (Optimus/NOS):
Multibanco is a Portuguese interbank network.It is the largest interbank network in Portugal owned and operated by SIBS (Sociedade Interbancária de Serviços S.A.), that links the ATMs of 27 banks in Portugal, totaling 12,700 machines as of December 2014. [1]
The Espírito Santo Financial Group (ESFG) was a Portuguese holding company with headquarters in Luxembourg, founded in 1984.The group represents the interests of the Portuguese Espirito Santo Group, which has major investments in Portugal and Europe, Americas, Africa and Asia.
Article 97(1) of the directive requires that payment service providers use strong customer authentication where a payer: [7] (a) accesses its payment account online; (b) initiates an electronic payment transaction; (c) carries out any action through a remote channel which may imply a risk of payment fraud or other abuses.
A major cause of dissent was a contract that female telephone operators were required to sign, stating that "in case of contracting marriage [the operator] will undertake to immediately leave the service of the Company". This rule, which Portugal also applied to nurses, was introduced in the 1920s and was not ended until October 1940. [3] [7]