AT&T Drops Out of FCC Speed-Test Program So It Can Hide Bad Results 53
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: AT&T doesn't want its home Internet speeds to be measured by the Federal Communications Commission anymore, and it already convinced the FCC to exclude its worst speed-test results from an annual government report. "AT&T this year told the commission it will no longer cooperate with the FCC's SamKnows speed test," The Wall Street Journal wrote in an investigative report titled "Your Internet provider likely juiced its official speed scores." AT&T already convinced the FCC to exclude certain DSL test results from last year's Measuring Broadband America report. The reports are based on the SamKnows testing equipment installed in thousands of homes across the U.S.
"AT&T was dismayed at its report card from a government test measuring Internet speeds" and thus "pushed the Federal Communications Commission to omit unflattering data on its DSL Internet service from the report," the Journal wrote. "In the end, the DSL data was left out of the report released late last year, to the chagrin of some agency officials," the Journal wrote. "AT&T's remaining speed tiers notched high marks." "AT&T developed a best-in-class tool to measure its consumer broadband services," the company said in a statement provided to Ars. "This tool measures performance on all AT&T IP broadband technologies and is more accurate, versatile, and transparent. For these and other reasons, our tool provides better and more useful information to our customers."
"AT&T was dismayed at its report card from a government test measuring Internet speeds" and thus "pushed the Federal Communications Commission to omit unflattering data on its DSL Internet service from the report," the Journal wrote. "In the end, the DSL data was left out of the report released late last year, to the chagrin of some agency officials," the Journal wrote. "AT&T's remaining speed tiers notched high marks." "AT&T developed a best-in-class tool to measure its consumer broadband services," the company said in a statement provided to Ars. "This tool measures performance on all AT&T IP broadband technologies and is more accurate, versatile, and transparent. For these and other reasons, our tool provides better and more useful information to our customers."
I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Don't use any objective and unbiased tests of our performance! The test WE wrote with an obvious agenda is the only one you should trust!"
Yeah, right.
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Its tiny little twisted pair vs bulky coax vs fiber and obviously coax and fiber are both much better. Their significant DSL market drags their numbers down and the only solution for them is running more last mile fiber, which is expensive anywhere outside of urban and dense suburban. Sparse suburban and rural are just not financially viable.
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We've been allowing these companies to collect surcharges for decades to support ru
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Their significant DSL market drags their numbers down and the only solution for them is running more last mile fiber, which is expensive anywhere outside of urban and dense suburban
Huh? You would think if that is the problem that the Federal government would have stepped in and help defray some of the cost? I wonder why they haven't done that? Oh wait, the Government already did [huffpost.com] something like that and the ISPs just put it in their pocket instead of doing the thing they said they would.
AT&T's problem is still their widespread DSL
No AT&T's problem is AT&T.
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
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Twisted pair? Lucky. Everywhere I've had the displeasure of using AT&T DSL, it's been over conventional telephone lines that had been around for many decades.
Convention phone lines are twisted pair.
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
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And it works best the closer you are to the phone box. That's why they'll never tell you how good your service will be until you give them an address (which means you get on their marketing spam list).
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AT&T's problem is still their widespread DSL. Where I am, thats still the best they offer.
Its tiny little twisted pair vs bulky coax vs fiber and obviously coax and fiber are both much better. Their significant DSL market drags their numbers down and the only solution for them is running more last mile fiber, which is expensive anywhere outside of urban and dense suburban. Sparse suburban and rural are just not financially viable.
The last mile of coax just to be rid of the DSL is much cheaper than fiber. Fiber is delicate can only pull on it so hard, need to run out figure eights when the tension get too great. Needs to be lashed, needs to be spliced, etc etc. Coax is way better than DSL and much cheaper than fiber.
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Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:2)
Iâ(TM)m not talking about the drop to the house. Iâ(TM)m talking about running a line crew 2 decades ago. Itâ(TM)s still basically all the same. Still tolerance for the lbs of pressure you can put on the fiber when dragging it off the spool.
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
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Do you mean there is a limit for the tension you can apply to the line coming off the spool? It wouldn't be pressure (force over area) nor would it be tolerance (a plus minus value from nominal). Wtf are you talking about
Tension douche bag
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Do you mean there is a limit for the tension you can apply to the line coming off the spool? It wouldn't be pressure (force over area) nor would it be tolerance (a plus minus value from nominal). Wtf are you talking about
Tension douche bag
From my original post :
"...need to run out figure eights when the tension get too great"
go ahead read it back.
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AT&T's problem is still their widespread DSL. Where I am, thats still the best they offer.
Its tiny little twisted pair vs bulky coax vs fiber and obviously coax and fiber are both much better. Their significant DSL market drags their numbers down and the only solution for them is running more last mile fiber, which is expensive anywhere outside of urban and dense suburban. Sparse suburban and rural are just not financially viable.
The thing is, where I live, right on the bleeding edge of the urban growth boundry, sparse urban got fiber *first*, some years ago, and urban areas, several miles to the east of us, still only have DSL over twisted pair. The reason, we are continually told, is that it's too expensive to wire up urban areas. Especially older buildings where they may not even know where the existing cable runs are. This is why, (again, we are told,) that for downtown they were trying to do broadband over wireless a couple
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:2)
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
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And it's often all you can get. It's what my mother users because there isn't an alternative. It's not great but its sooo much better than the dialup she had before and the borrowing off of a neighbors spotty wifi (with permission). She doesn't have cable, and not the income to pay for cable internet offerings. DSL exists because the infrastructure is pre-existing. Even cable companies make do with cable that was laid decades ago, very few companies are laying out fiber to the neighborhood. They know t
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:2)
impressive going, jumping in to defend AT&Tâ(TM)s self-evident shit-baggery on the third post.
I canâ(TM)t imagine the motivation, but the speed of execution canâ(TM)t be quibbled with
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Owned by the same people who brought you the Volkswagen ...
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Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:1)
Re: I trust them as far as I can throw them. (Score:3)
Their best-in-class measuring. Software is the equivalent of changing the face of the spedometer in your car. Thats amazing! You went from 0 to 60 in just under 2 seconds!! And you managed to still be within legal limits driving through school zones at the same time!! Amazing! Just amazing!
They're speaking code (Score:3)
"This tool measures performance on all AT&T IP broadband technologies..."
That's AT&T speak for "Everything that's U-verse." I guess these days that means their higher-speed internet offerings since the U-verse brand kinda went away. If it's old school frame based DSL, it doesn't count.
(Source: I used to work for them.)
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"This tool measures performance on all AT&T IP broadband technologies..."
That's AT&T speak for "Everything that's U-verse." I guess these days that means their higher-speed internet offerings since the U-verse brand kinda went away. If it's old school frame based DSL, it doesn't count.
(Source: I used to work for them.)
Does AT&T even *have* what we would consider high speed internet offerings to homes? Everyone I know who is unlucky enough to have AT&T as their ISP is stuck with 1Mbps DSL. (And often measured at below 1Mbps in real throughput.)
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Their uVerse used vDSL which can be much faster. It's often fiber to the neighborhood which is generally good enough for high speed internet. They don't call it uVerse anymore, it's all just internet now on their site (or maybe high speed internet). Even back when I had generic ADSL from AT&T it was 3Mbps for me, because I was relatively close to the phone box.
The thing is, (Score:5, Interesting)
I know people who are unlucky enough to live in areas that only have AT&T u-verse DSL available. I've done independent speed tests in homes in the Sacramento area and the Livermore area, and the results are horrible. Where other services start in the tens of Mbps and go up from there, AT&T scores hover around 1 Mbps, sometimes barely over, but often a little under. (As in 760 -- 790 Kbps.) This seems primarily due to using existing, often outrageously elderly phone lines as their internet infrastructure.
As far as I have been able to measure, AT&T's internet service really is consistently horrible by today's standards. It's what you'd expect back in the 1990s, when early DSL, as poor as that might be, was still significantly faster than dialup, your only other choice at the time.
I can see why AT&T would not want those scores publicized. It's much cheaper to try to convince users that their 25-year-old throughput is a modern internet service, than it would be to lay new infrastructure, and, you know, actually PROVIDE a modern internet service.
I'm on record as saying I'd take any ISP over Comcast. There is, I'm pained to admit it, one exception -- I'd take Comcast over AT&T.
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Wow. All I can say is, I'm really sorry you had to endure such crap service for so long. I really REALLY don't understand AT&T's business model. They still act like they are the only service in town. Admittedly, in some areas they still are. And that's absolutely inexcusable in a first world country.
For a company to be substantially worse than Comcast is saying a lot.
I was getting solid, measurable 3 Mbps DSL from Speakeasy over Verizon's twisted pair back in 2001. Shortly after, cable modem becam
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I know people who are unlucky enough to live in areas that only have AT&T u-verse DSL available. I've done independent speed tests in homes in the Sacramento area and the Livermore area, and the results are horrible.
Pac bell was well known to never bother to replace copper, they'd just patch it forever. SBC continued the tradition, and so has ATT. That copper was garbage two telcos ago.
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Hiding the truth (Score:1, Informative)
How is knowing the speed over 'the last mile', less useful? It doesn't matter how beautiful your backbone is if the data 'pipe' connecting me, is the size of figurative spaghetti.
This is the US government protecting corporate propaganda: evil government indeed, and it's not the first time. There's the obvious global-warming denial, energy-sector shills; Bush junior and Trump. Plus, the government hiding the truth whenever the rich and powerful are caught in anti-working-class activities.
Something
Who does the FCC work for? (Score:2)
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at&t Fiber is an Exception (Score:1)
I've had at&t gigabit fiber for about 6 months now, and it is absolutely fantastic. Latency and jitter are just as good as the enterprise offerings, I haven't had any downtime in the past 6 months, and I get 500+ Mb/s speeds to most speedtest.com sites in California. But yes, the copper based U-verse really does suck, and customer support is terrible across the consumerland products. Though I did get lucky and got a really great installer.
Re: at&t Fiber is an Exception (Score:1)
AT&T owns CNN (Score:1)
AT&T (Score:2)
Speed goes with coverage (Score:1)
AT&T developed a best-in-class tool (Score:2)