Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses United States Communications The Internet

A Community-Run ISP Is the Highest Rated Broadband Company In America (vice.com) 102

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: A new survey by Consumer Reports once again highlights how consumers are responding positively to [community-run broadband networks]. The organization surveyed 176,000 Consumer Reports readers on their experience with their pay TV and broadband providers, and found that the lion's share of Americans remain completely disgusted with most large, incumbent operators. The full ratings are paywalled but available here to those with a Consumer Reports subscription. All the usual suspects including Comcast, Charter (Spectrum), AT&T, Verizon, and Optimum once again fell toward the bottom of the barrel in terms of overall satisfaction, reliability, and value, largely mirroring similar studies from the American Customer Satisfaction Index.

One of the lone bright spots for broadband providers was Chattanooga's EPB, a city-owned and utility operated broadband provider we profiled several years back as an example of community broadband done well. The outfit, which Comcast attempted unsuccessfully to sue into oblivion, was the only ISP included in the study that received positive ratings for value. "EPB was the top internet service provider in our telecom ratings two times in the past three years," Christopher Raymond, electronics editor at Consumer Reports told Motherboard. "Consumer Reports members have given it high marks for not only reliability and speed, but also overall value -- and that's a rare distinction in an arena dominated by the major cable companies," he said.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

A Community-Run ISP Is the Highest Rated Broadband Company In America

Comments Filter:
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:13PM (#57127350)
    Can't have communities in charge of stuff. That's communism, that is. And the community making people who use the community's resources pay their part of it is violence, I tell ya. Violence. How dare communities not provide things for free(loaders)?
    • I'm sure cayenne8 will be along shortly to explain how this is the result of commie indoctrination of the young.

  • Gee, no kidding? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by p51d007 ( 656414 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:25PM (#57127390)
    A LOCALLY run, COMMUNITY based ISP, where those that run it, LIVE in the community, are ACCOUNTABLE to the community, actually runs it correctly? Shiver-me-timbers! Wish more cities would do this and kick out the mega-corp-don't-care ISP's.
    • Re:Gee, no kidding? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:53PM (#57127562)

      I'm the owner and creator of ViXiV Technologies in Chattanooga and am using EPB Fiber now... The minimum speed they offer is 100Mbit at $58/Month. It is extremely reliable, but it does occasionally suffers from some DHCPd issues and every now and then the Optical Termination Panel outside freezes. I've only experienced this around 5 times in around 6 years. The service is extremely reliable other than that and they solved the majority of bugs in the first year with the help of community feedback (some provided by myself). I'm extremely happy with the service although I wish it was a little less expensive per month for the 100Mbit. I really have no room to complain... It is a full dedicated 100Mbit, whereas cable services are limited to a shared pool of bandwidth between nodes of sometimes thousands of subscribers due to the design of DOCSIS networks. With EPB, most commercial routers can't even push the full 100Mbit, even the routers they provide can't push it to a full 100. A custom pfSense router on the other hand can push a 100Mbit connection to a max of 115-120Mbit Up/Down. EPB also offers Gigabit and 10-Gigabit Fiber Internet Connections, but you'll need some better hardware to fully benefit from these speeds, especially the 10-Gig. Gig is only $69.99 a Month, but the 10-Gigabit connections will cost you $300 a month, which in reality is insanely cheap and makes all other local ISP's inferior.

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Kind of a shame they don't have a lower priced tier for the less affluent. $58 isn't a bad price for what you're getting but for some people that's a lot of money. I know Comcast in my area has internet service plans for cheaper then that. The service sucks of course but it does reliably get you onto the internet every day,

  • by Lothsahn ( 221388 ) <Lothsahn@@@SPAM_ ... tardsgooglmailcm> on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:06PM (#57127636)
    Google Fiber was actually ranked second. I'm not surprised by that at all. Their customer service has been fantastic, as has the internet and TV. The two times I've had an issue, they had metrics to show exactly what was wrong from their end and their support rep understood the problem and could interact directly with the engineers.

    On the other hand, Comcast required more than 3 calls to bury the outside cable line after it was replaced (it was supposed to be buried automatically with a second crew after the tech left, but he didn't file the right paperwork), and when I called customer service, one representative told me he was going to "reset my modem to resolve the issue". Yeah, apparently resetting modems can bury cable lines underground now, folks...
  • The huge gap between what we get here in Australia, to what Chattanooga has rolled out, is amazing.

    Chattanooga is offering 1Gbps for $70/mo (I don't see a data cap!) or you can go nuts and get 10Gbp for $300/mo.

    Here in Australia, if your area is lucky enough to have workable "high-speed" broadband, it'll cost you $70AUD/mo for 50Mbps (asymm) and that's likely to have a data cap, possibly metered in both directions. A 100Mbps connection will be around $100AUD/mo and depending on the technology behind it, y

    • Appalachia - $82/mo for 4 megabits down and one up. And almost the best I can buy - the best is 6/1.5 and $30/mo more.
    • by jonwil ( 467024 )

      Many Australia ISPs offer plans on the NBN at the 50Mbps or 100Mbps speed tiers with genuinely unlimited data. TPG (just as one example) will give you unlimited data on the 50Mbps speed tier for AU$70/month or on the 100Mbps speed tier for AU$90/moth.

      IINet, iPrimus, Optus, Belong, Dodo, Telstra and others all offer NBN plans with unlimited data on the 50Mbps speed tier, the 100Mbps speed tier or both.

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      I have 101/40 MBps real-world speed on TPG fibre in Melbourne for $70/month. It just sucks that they cherry-pick buildings, and there's no choice of provider. It's TPG fibre, or shitty ADSL that barely gets 1Mbps down because the copper going up the hill is in terrible condition. And no NBN available.

  • by dht10 ( 5082097 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @01:36AM (#57128700)

    Well, imagine that. Apparently when you are beholden to your customers rather than your shareholders, your customers think you do a better job at it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I am in the EPB's service area, and I have their 1 Gbps service. It's almost never down. That's a major improvement over my last provider (Comcast). There's really nothing more to say than that. 100% customer satisfaction here.

    I am disappointed that it took our local power company to do this. AT&T and Comcast had the rights-of-way and the technical know-how to roll out fibre and make a profit doing so (the EPB is making a profit, after all). They are constantly being subsidized by state government

"Here's something to think about: How come you never see a headline like `Psychic Wins Lottery.'" -- Comedian Jay Leno

Working...