ISPs rapped over 'misleading' 8Meg claims

PoloMint

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The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has slammed ADSL broadband suppliers for promoting their services as 'up to 8Mbps' because many customers suffer from significantly slower speeds.

ISPs have been advertising so-called 8Mbps broadband since the spring, when BT turned on its ADSL Max service. However, there has been widespread consumer dismay at connection speeds, with many people complaining on internet messageboards that actual speeds are little or no better than the previous 2Mbps service. Indeed, the 35% of the population that live more than 3.8km from their telephone exchange cannot possibly achieve speeds greater than 5Mbps.

The ruling comes following a complaint against Bulldog Communications, made by cable rival NTL. The ASA agreed that advertising services of up to 8Mbps was misleading because 'a significant proportion of consumers could not achieve speeds close to the headline speed.' The ASA has ruled that future adverts must indicate prominently that 'top speeds varied significantly, in particular because of a user's distance from their local exchange.'

An ASA spokesperson told PC Pro that it has written to all broadband suppliers to advise them of the changes and that they will have to amend their advertising accordingly. 'There can be such a discernible difference between 5Mbps and 8Mbps and it can limit what you can do on your PC. The [broadband] speeds you are getting are down to factors outside of your control. That needs to be made clear from the outset,' said the ASA spokesperson. Video streaming, file sharing and online gaming are among the activities that could be affected when speeds fell below the promised level, according to the ASA.

BT, however, claims that it is currently in the dark over the ruling. A company spokesperson told PC Pro that it wasn't aware of any communication from the ASA at the time of writing, but claimed: 'our view is the wording [of the adjudication] by the ASA could have implications, but it is too vague for us to comment.' A spokesperson for Pipex, which recently bought out the Bulldog, said: 'Pipex are fully compliant with ASA rulings across all of its brands.'


Barry Collins PC Pro
 

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Yeah, well, it's quite clear that max attainable speed depends on distance from phone exchange, which is always in the small print, and that limitation would apply to any broadband vendor.

It's interesting that this complaint didn't come from a customer, but one firm complaining about another! Yes, the broadband war is hotting up, as all these companies compete to get our cash.

More to the point, many ISPs have unadvertised speed limiting, on thier own delivery network, only sometimes stated under "fair usage", otherwise you have to consult user forums to discover what each one actually does.
 
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