BT blasts Virgin 'broadband con' campaign
By Tom Brewster,
BT has slammed Virgin Media’s campaign against misleading broadband advertising, intimating the initiative is somewhat hypocritical.
Virgin launched the Stopthebroadbandcon.org initiative yesterday, voicing concerns about ISPs offering “up to” 20Mbps or 24Mbps but delivering significantly lower average speeds.
BT has subsequently criticised Virgin, claiming its rival is organising a campaign against an activity it is guilty of.
“Virgin has pitched to customers: 'You're 'not getting the broadband you are paying for.' However, it is the only ISP that charges based on speed, e.g. up to 10Mbps, 20Mbps, 50Mbps,” a BT spokesperson told IT PRO.
“In fact, in some areas of the site broadband is described simply as '10Mbps' or '20Mbps'.”
BT also took the opportunity to pick holes in the spread of Virgin’s broadband services, suggesting the latter had decided to focus predominantly on highly-populated areas.
“BT's broadband service goes just about everywhere: we supply the parts that others simply cannot, or do not want to reach,” the spokesperson added.
“As a consequence of this and the laws of physics, our average speed across the UK looks lower because we are supplying broadband to customers that Virgin doesn't want, over very long lines, which causes loss of speed.”
If rural broadband was left in the hands of other providers, more secluded areas would not have any connectivity whatsoever, BT claimed.
The British communications giant also defended the advertising of "up to" speeds. Earlier this year, a BT fibre broadband advert was banned after the Advertising Standards Authority deemed the "instant" claim was misleading.
“In ads for broadband of 'up to 20Mbps', the 'up to' speed is a technical capability. It's a product description. It doesn't describe the actual speed every customer will get and most people understand what 'up to' means whether or not they understand the technicalities of broadband,” the spokesperson added.
“It means that 'up to 20Mbps is possible with this product. In fact, up to 24Mbps is possible but we don't say that as so few people could get it in reality.”
The firm called on advertisers to use the same terminology, as national average speed descriptions are “meaningless for BT customers,” the spokesperson added.
In response to BT’s criticisms, a Virgin Media spokesperson told IT PRO: “We believe all ISPs should be much more transparent about the broadband speeds their customers can expect to receive. We're publishing the typical real world speeds our customers receive each month and look forward to BT and others doing the same.”
Virgin was keen to point out it consistently delivered the speeds it advertised to customers and pointed to Ofcom’s 2010 speeds report.
The regulator’s research found Virgin delivered an average of 16.5Mbps on its 20Mbps package, compared to around 8Mbps from BT on the firm's 20Mbps offering.
Virgin said customers could look at its typical speeds, defined as the average speed at least 66 per cent of its customers received over a 24 hour period.
With regards to BT’s criticisms over rural broadband, Virgin noted it was looking at expanding its network and was trialling the delivery of superfast broadband in the Berkshire village of Woolhampton and Crumlin in Caerphilly.
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Pot Kettle Black
This is rich from BT where I could not run a company from a site 7 miles out of a town, along a main road, not in the middle of no-where in Scotland (Nairn) because the phone line was so bad that I could hardly hear it let alone being able to get broadband access. Its taken 3 years to hear the phone but still no impressionable broadband
By Andy_macL on Tuesday Nov 23
Black Bess
What's this about BT taking care of the rural market? I've heard this and that system rolling out to improve speeds but all I've seen is the years roll by where my extended reach speed maxes at 1Mb/s that halves for several days when I turn the power off to decorate or other house maintenance, or when is rains hard etc. 1Mb/s barely allow youtube to stream! Yet I pay full whack (that about £25 with loyalty discount) for this stone-age service. Britain is full of companies making excuses for substandard facilities and they hate competition. I keep telling my children to emigrate. Britain is a deal loss. BT is the bottom of the pile and can't get rid of its state owned mentality.
By HeyHey on Tuesday Nov 23
Broadband 'Speeds'
All ISPs are ignorant in talking about broadband speeds [sic]. All broadband signals travel at virtually the same speed ie. at or near to the speed of light. What ISPs should be referring to is the Data Transfer Rate (Rate for short) of their services.
By viclud on Friday Jan 14