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The Internet United States Businesses Verizon

US Broadband Providers To Begin Providing New Comparison Labels (reuters.com) 19

Major U.S. broadband internet providers must start displaying information similar to nutrition labels on food products to help consumers shop for services starting on April 10, under new rules from the Federal Communications Commission. From a report: Verizon Communications said it will begin providing the labels on Wednesday. The FCC first moved to mandate the labels in 2022. Smaller providers will be required to provide labels starting in October. The rules require broadband providers to display, at the point of sale, labels that show prices, speeds, fees and data allowances for both wireless and wired products. Verizon Chief Customer Experience Officer Brian Higgins said in an interview the labels will help consumers make "an equal comparison" between product offerings, speeds and fees.

Higgins said standardized labels across the industry "make it easier for customers to do a comparison of which provider is going to be the best fit for their needs." He said customers will still need to research various bundling offers across carriers. The labels were first unveiled as a voluntary program in 2016. Congress ordered the FCC to mandate them under the 2021 infrastructure law. "Consumers will finally get information they can use to comparison shop, avoid junk fees, and make informed choices about which high-speed internet service is the best fit for their needs and budget," FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel said.

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US Broadband Providers To Begin Providing New Comparison Labels

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  • There was a time when 256k/128k was awesome https://arstechnica.com/civis/... [arstechnica.com]
  • If they're not comparing their speeds to the offerings in other first world countries, it's a waste of time. A $10 at the airport data-only SIM in Korea gote better LTE speeds up/down than my "5G" plan gets me in the USA today at $65/line/mo
    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      Comparing peak throughput is a poor measure anyway, and the scores on speedtest sites are easily manipulated by prioritising the traffic to those sites.

      What matters more is latency, peering, CGNAT, IPv6, equipment, technology (eg wifi/ethernet) etc. A lot of people just go for the largest numbers shown in advertising, but while the physical line from them to the ISP is capable of the headline figure the upstream transit might not be, or they might be using a lousy wireless access point which sits behind a t

      • Does anyone have a decent benchmark that simulates typical usage (and atypical usage)?

      • and while correlation isn't causation....anything provided by a US provider is *HIGHLY CORRELATED* with being far more expensive for far less service, peak or avg
  • How many servings needed to supply 100% of your daily requirements?

  • American broadband consumers have virtually no choice of provider. You have one landline provider or you can pick from Verizon or AT&T for mobile which gets very expensive for even moderate use.

  • by Scutter ( 18425 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @05:33PM (#64331863) Journal

    It will hardly matter when words have no meaning. When $ISP is selling "Truly Unlimited(tm)!" service that really means "It's Truly Unlimited for the first 5 minutes of the month and then throttled down to nothing because you've already exceeded your Truly Unlimited Bandwidth Cap", then all they'll do is bury the details with more meaningless buzzwords. That's before you even get to the virtual monopolies they have in most areas.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      It will hardly matter when words have no meaning. When $ISP is selling "Truly Unlimited(tm)!" service that really means "It's Truly Unlimited for the first 5 minutes of the month and then throttled down to nothing because you've already exceeded your Truly Unlimited Bandwidth Cap", then all they'll do is bury the details with more meaningless buzzwords. That's before you even get to the virtual monopolies they have in most areas.

      Sounds like you need to improve your false advertising laws.

      Years ago, most countries made it illegal to advertise anything limited as "unlimited".

  • As well as the upload and download speeds, they should display something like "Plan to be on the phone with us for up to six hours if you move from one state to another. Our back office systems can't cope."

    Comcast is great if you never, ever, ever want anything changed or moved.

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @06:08PM (#64331979)

    Major U.S. broadband internet providers must start displaying information similar to nutrition labels on food products ...

    A higher fiber content is probably better for you. With an ISP, I imagine you want the insoluble kind.

  • They gave me 50% more speed down and 100% more speed up than I was getting for "free." 575mbits down and about 23mbits up for $100/month.

    Not great, but not horrible either. A couple of years ago it was 100mbits down and maybe 6mbits up on a good day for the same fee. I live out in the countryside and am relatively "lucky" to have a cable provider. People not far away are stuck with satellite or DSL service.

    Best,

  • Crooks will be crooks. They will find other ways to deceive customers.

As long as we're going to reinvent the wheel again, we might as well try making it round this time. - Mike Dennison

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