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Asavin Wattanajantra's Blog

Cynical? Nobody gives something for nothing TalkTalk

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in TalkTalk, ISP, internet on January 28, 2009 at 4:44 pm

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So ISP company TalkTalk are planning to waive the phone and broadband charges of customers having problems in the credit crisis.

Forgive me for being a little cynical, but it’s great publicity isn’t it -an ISP with a heart, thinking about all those poor, starving unemployed people.

If I’ve got this straight- the company is going to forego a £6.49 monthly tarriff for six months. Fantastic. Apart from the £10.50 a month line rental you’ll still need to pay.

And the fact TalkTalk are going to drop you to half the original speed.

Don’t know about you, but do the words “good publicity for doing very little” make sense right about now?

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Most users don’t have ‘Unlimited Broadband’

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in ISP, uSwitch, broadband, internet on October 23, 2008 at 3:20 pm

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Around nine out of ten (86 per cent) of broadband users do not understand the limit of their services, according to uSwitch.com.

There are a total of 13.7 million customers who either wrongly believe that they have an unlimited broadband service or do not know what their limit is. In the last year one million consumers nearly reached or exceeded their usgae limits in the last year alone.

The only provider that has launched an unlimited service is Sky which has removed a fair usgae policy, but more than half (56 per cent) or broadband providers are using unlimited in their promotion yet still enforcing limits.

Broadband usage is growing in this country. Applications such as the BBC iPlayer and Channel’s 4oD is gobbling up bandwidth. However users still run the risk of having their services limited, suspended or terminated if they go over usage limits.

Tim Wolfenden said that suppliers shouldn’t class their packages as unlimited if they were not. He said: “With so much reliance on broadband, having the service disconnected could feel to someone as serious as having their electricity cut off.

He added: “As providers aren’t choosing to be fully transparent about this ussue, people need to be savvy when choosing their broadband packages and pay close attention to the small print.”

Strangely the Advertising Standards Authority allows providers to describe services as unlimited even if there is a fair usage cap, as long as it is in the small print. Most consumers aren’t going to do this though.

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