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Ofcom publishes broadband speeds report

By The Broadband Stakeholder Group (BSG) in Industry

Posted in Broadband speeds on January 9, 2009 at 10:30 am

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Ofcom yesterday published a report on broadband speeds in the UK.

The report is a first for Ofcom in that it is based on actual line testing, rather than consumer perception surveys, and builds on the work of the SamKnows team, who produced an earlier report last year.

Alongside the headline numbers, the report identifies the lack of understanding many consumers have about broadband, and particularly the factors that can impact the speeds they receive - an issue we have raised previously on this blog.

It will not be news to many that you are unlikely to receive the headline speed that you sign up for. However, speed can be impacted by a variety of factors, such as in-home wiring or your choice of router, which ISPs have little or no control over (and can be remedied by the consumer themselves).

This isn’t necessarily the fault of the consumer - they should not need to understand to a technical level the service they are buying. It can partly be attributed to the marketing focus on speed by ISPs, and we are beginning to see ISPs market their services on other attributes such as bit caps, which may help.

However, the crux of the issue is that broadband is a difficult service to accurately buy and sell. The actual service received is partly out of the control of the service provider, which creates difficulties and confusion for consumers.

If we are to have a proper public debate about the future of broadband (and now would be the time, given the interest being shown by our senior politicians) a more informed consumer is an important requirement.

The Caio Review recognised this, which is why one of its recommendations was for ISPs to make public their traffic management policies - consumers would then be given more information about their service, particularly how it is likely to operate at peak times.

This Ofcom report also seems to recognise this, laying bare as it does the capabilities and limitations of the network. We need to continue along the path of an increasingly informed public debate.

Peter Shearman, Policy Manager, BSG

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Comments

Comment by James - January 9, 2009 on 9:11 pm

Some very good points made here. Lack of knowledge about how their broadband works often leads them to blame the ISP where the ISP is not to blame. It’s very unfortunate that the lines the data passes down are usually owned by a company other than the broadband provider as this often lead to ‘problem tennis’ between the non technical customer and the two companies. The best defence seems to be education.

Pingback by IT PRO: Blogs: The Broadband Stakeholder Group (BSG): What is impacting on broadband speeds in the UK? - March 8, 2009 on 2:11 pm

[…] have commented before on this blog how difficult broadband is as a service to market, given the fact that the customer experience is […]

Pingback by What is impacting on broadband speeds in the UK? | Broadband Stakeholder Group - March 10, 2009 on 3:49 pm

[…] have commented before on this blog how difficult broadband is as a service to market, given the fact that the customer experience is […]

Comment by cartouches d encre - October 28, 2009 on 7:19 am

I’m confused here. By ‘download speed’ do they mean the speed of the connection to your ISP or the speed you can get real data off the web? My max speed on O2 LLU is around 1.2MB/s but when downloading from Microsoft I only get about 300kB/s because their servers throttle it. So which is my ‘download speed’?

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