How About We Pay Some Amount 'Up To' What Your Invoice Says?
from the fair's-fair dept
For many years, mobile operators would try to hide the fact that their mobile data services really sucked by promising speeds "up to" some amount that was much higher than you were ever going to see in real life. It appears that cable and DSL providers have learned the same trick. The NY Times notes that it's not often that you get the actual speed your broadband provider advertises -- and the providers get away with it by only promising "up to" a maximum speed. The providers, of course, claim it's no big deal and it's true that you could, in some circumstances, get the promised speeds. Services like Broadband Reports help keep the companies at least somewhat honest with their speed tester tools that allow a small, but vocal, group of users to complain loudly if the speeds they get never get anywhere near what's being paid for. Meanwhile, there are those who claim that the speed is meaningless, since consumers don't really need those high speeds. Of course, that may be true, but if those are the speeds they're being promised, isn't it what the companies should deliver?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Throttled?
And if they are significant factors, how could a provider ever guarantee you'd always get the maximum rate?
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Re: Throttled?
Providers should be forced to charge based on the bandwidth they actually deliver.
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Bell South plays this game well
Not knowing this, I took the bait and signed up for their DSL. IT WAS SLOWER THAN DIAL UP! My son couldn't use the connection to game online.... file uploads would take hours instead of minutes.
When I called to cancel my service (and was passed through 6 different people during the process) I was finally told that I was on the lowest level plan. Would I like to upgrade so I could see the incredibly fast download speeds?
My response: "Your sales person lied to me to get me to buy this and now you want me to give you another chance? "
To the guy's credit, he sheepishly agreed and cancelled my account without passing me on to yet another flunkie.
I wish I'd thought of paying "up to" the amount I owed for the service. In that case, I'd have paid $6.95 instead of $24.95.
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Time Warner in NYC good in spots, sucks in others
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Mediacom does this too....
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Law Suit
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Internet speeds
They have the bandwidth infrustructure in place for all their customers like me as well as for their heavy clients such as rising sun who do a lot of movie production and animation.
Normally I would agree with most of the comments about ISP's, but they are not all tarred with the same brush.
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TalkTalk
I'm about to take them to court over another matter, and so I used a Data Protection Act information request (equivalent to the US FoI Act) to get all my records from them, and it amused me to note that every one of their records refers to my service as "Domestic 2Mb". They've never even attempted to give me an 8Mb service.
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Cogeco
They upgraded the speed from 2.5m to around 10, without raising the price. I had problems for a while with the upgrade, it actually went into the toilet. After a couple of months, someone figured it out. a
DSL-reports is a great way to find out if something is wrong or not.
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Cable is the same
It was kind of funny, but Cablevision rolled out the higher speed to different communities at different times, I would put in my zip code in every once in a while to see if my area had been upgraded, I never saw any difference once they had upgraded my area.
I will switch to Fios once its available here. They will lose both my video and my data.
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Up Speed!
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Re: Up Speed!
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Re: Re: Up Speed!
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Re: Re: Up Speed!
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Speed in Florida
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Verizon "mostly" delivers the speed
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It also has to do with the distance limitations for broadband. There are people here in my town that cannot get decent DSL service from us since they're out at the far end of one of the loops where the DSL signal just plain quits. We are continuously working to resolve problems like that and expand our coverage, but it's simply impossible to offer the top-advertised speeds to all people all the time.
Unfortunately, there are those companies who are crooked and limit speed on purpose. My company is not one of those. We advertise "up to" certain speeds because that prevents crooked people from ripping us off for not delivering the advertised service, which we are doing our best to do. In fact, we inform people which speeds are available in the area they live in, and we would not charge anybody for our top speed (currently 6 Mbps) if we're only capable of delivering, say, 2 Mbps to their location. Please don't lump all providers into the same bunch, because we are not all the same.
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Re:
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The speed (or lack of ) of the Broadband industry
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Re: The speed (or lack of ) of the Broadband indus
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/moyersonamerica/net/index.html
(if you have the bandwidth, of course.)
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Comcast is the worst
My brother has Comcast now in Miami, it sucks we can't have a choice in our cable provider and it is a sad lack of competition why we pay the prices we do.
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why make a big deal of this so late in the game?
On cable it's ALWAYS been known that if you were the only person on your node you could get the full bandwidth but if there were others on at the same time you'd have much less. Did you guys miss this aspect at some point in time?
Let's make this easy to understand for some of you: When you pay for bandwidth as an ISP, you can't buy it as to how much you USE, you get a certain amount and you either use it or you don't; you can get 10mbit or 100mbit but not "58.235mb between 8am and 6pm". Let's use an analogy of a swimming pool(because they call the bandwidth for DSL/Cable customers a "pool" or "cloud"). You can only buy certain sizes for your pool, 10 person, 100 person, 1,000 person. If I buy a 10 person pool, 10 people can use it comfortably but if I add an 11th person, it gets a little tight if all 11 are in there at the same time. But if they swap out where 1 person waits for an hour then everyone gets to use it comfortably while it's still only a 10 person pool. Now at 3am, it's likely that nobody will be using the pool so the money spent on this pool is basically being wasted away but you find out that your neighbor would like to use it then and he's got 10 people for it. Well say that some of those people switch shifts at their job or whatever and they want to use it during the day, the pool gets crowded again. Now you can buy another pool, a bigger pool, OR let everyone deal with the situation till you can really afford another pool. That's the basics of what's happening including the financing side of it. I'm not saying that all ISP's will buy a new pool(I've worked with cable operators that think a T1 should be plenty for 100 subscribers and at the 150 mark they're still not considering upgrading) but most do and operate accordingly.
Again though, why haven't any of you read your contracts? The terms will be clearly stated there just so they can't get in trouble for false advertising if nothing else.
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Re: why make a big deal of this so late in the gam
Terms that, for most people, are non-negotiable from a monopoly provider.
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They should advertise "As Slow As..."
Lawmakers need to force these broadband providers to sync the commercials up with the language in the contracts. THAT would be entertainment.
You must live in an area where you have a choice of broadband providers. Good for you. It just so happens that I, along with about 100,000 people in my area don't have options.
There are 19 Comcast nodes in my area. There are actually 20, but one is called 19a. The techs that come to service my connection told me everyone on my node should be getting fast speeds above 3mbps download. Even if we become saturated all they have to do it tie in another node and they'd do it.
I've been having severe problems with fluctuation on my 8mbps / 768kbps Comcast account. I'm up at 1 and 2am and I do speedchecks when I think about it just so I have some form of evidence when I ask for credit on my billing.
I can tell you that at 2am I was at 264kbps down, 14kbps up. At 4am it wasn't much better the other night. I've had problems since September. I call phone support and they say, "yeah, we're seeing some problems with your line." A tech comes out, everything checks out perfect...except for 400ms pings. They bring their own modems in and try their own laptops and they get the same crap I get. They've dropped new lines to the house, given me a dedicated cable connection to my modem, etc. Still 300kbps down / 300-600kbps up.
I don't have a choice.
Yeah. I read the contracts just like we read the one before we go into a mandatory operation stating I can't sue the doctor when he f**ks up. J
Just like the one from credit card companies altering terms of use.
If you don't like it, screw you, we'll leave you out in the cold.
Is it better than nothing? In my case, barely.
Is it work $60 per month? Absolutely not.
I'm beginning to place blame on AT&T since Comcast competes with them at the broadband level. I don't trust AT&T. Comcast keeps telling me there is a problem between a city near me and Atlanta.
I hate corporations.
They're faceless, untouchable bastards with no decency.
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i can understand the whole "up to" portion. it's very hard to maintain a large network bandwith. so, yeah, depending on who's on, the equipment status, and other factors line speeds can vary.
so, that's why the up to is there. however if they activly decive the end user/customer, that's wrong/illegal.
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I get my advertised rates....
I can consistently use all that bandwidth, and I do use it playing with bittorrent stuff overnights.. Since I've got my client set to use 90% of the upload bandwidth, and up to 100% of the download bandwidth, and I graph the usage with MRTG I know that it's actually getting the bandwidth that I pay for.
I've wondered what would happen if I was on cable modem or WiMaxx. (comcast or clearwire)
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Technical problems aside, some companies are better than others, and even within companies, some areas are better than others. Time Warner in Texas may have lousy broadband service, but Time Warner in New York may have first rate service. (I have no experience with either, but the point remains).
The point of the article is taken however. Broadband in the US is lousy. When do I get symmetrical 100 megabit service? In 20 years? Jeez.
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Id love to
www.thatpoliticalblog.com
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however it is more difficult to track if 10% of broadband users get the "full" speed.
as it's been said, if the broadbands activly decieve you, that's worng. if they can't help the network activity, not much more they can do.
just like cars and their estimated mpg. you have highway and city. both never equal the printed ammount.
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Re: Verizon "mostly" delivers the speed
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