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Advertising The Internet Businesses Communications Network Networking Verizon

Comcast Should Stop Claiming It Has 'Fastest Internet,' Ad Board Rules (arstechnica.com) 36

The advertising industry's self-regulation body said Comcast should stop saying in advertisements that it "delivers the fastest internet in America" and the "fastest in-home Wi-Fi." The evidence Comcast uses to substantiate those claims is not sufficient, ruled the National Advertising Review Board (NARB). Ars Technica reports: Verizon had challenged Comcast's advertising claims, leading to today's ruling. Comcast said today that it disagreed with the findings but will comply with the decision. Comcast used crowdsourced speed test data from Ookla to make its claim about Xfinity Internet speeds. "Ookla's data showed only that Xfinity consumers who took advantage of the free tests offered on the Speedtest.net website subscribed to tiers of service with higher download speeds than Verizon FiOS consumers who took advantage of the tests," today's NARB announcement said. The Ookla data's accuracy wasn't questioned, but it was judged to be "not a good fit for an overall claim that an ISP delivers 'America's fastest Internet.'" The ad review board said Comcast's "America's Fastest Internet" claims gave the impression that Comcast offers "overall Internet speed superiority in all tiers of service that it provides." The Comcast ads also give the impression that Comcast "delivers the fastest download and upload speeds," whereas the Ookla data showed that the top 10 percent of Verizon FiOS customers had higher upload speeds than the top 10 percent of Comcast customers.
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Comcast Should Stop Claiming It Has 'Fastest Internet,' Ad Board Rules

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  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Wednesday February 08, 2017 @05:54PM (#53829327)
    That annoyed me, implying that the fastest wifi speed meant the fastest Internet speed. I hate deceptive advertising crap like that.
    • That annoyed me, implying that the fastest wifi speed meant the fastest Internet speed. I hate deceptive advertising crap like that.

      That pretty much means you hate every ISP, cell phone carrier, car maker, drug maker and computer hardware maker in the world.. (Oh, and EVERY politician known to man, past and future.)

      Man, you hate most of the world, but I can't disagree with you.

    • by David_Hart ( 1184661 ) on Wednesday February 08, 2017 @06:47PM (#53829585)

      That annoyed me, implying that the fastest wifi speed meant the fastest Internet speed. I hate deceptive advertising crap like that.

      What's more annoying is that Verizon stopped their roll-out of FIOS in the North East after they got what they wanted, to encourage Comcast to come to the table and sell the Wireless spectrum that Verizon wanted. Once the deal was done, no more FIOS for you...

      In fact, a Boston roll-out announced over the summer appears to be Verizon agreeing to a subsidized plan to expand FiOS to the home. However, investigations in to what exactly they are doing seem to indicate that the majority of the fiber being rolled out is specifically so that they can expand their wireless infrastructure. Their plan is to use 5G to connect homes instead of direct fiber to each house (less cost). The problem is that Wireless, as any WiFi expert can attest, sucks as far as reliability, interference from weather conditions and other sources, etc.

      https://arstechnica.com/inform... [arstechnica.com]

      • Sigh. The tale of FIOS in the NE and Mid-Atlantic is as complicated as it is sad. All I can say is, I have FIOS and it's great. Reliable speed, tests at a faster score than what I'm supposed to paying for, and except for that time when I cut through my poorly buried fiber while digging in my garden, no down time.

        But I had to MOVE here to get it. I'm minutes away from my old house, but within those city limits it's all Comcast. And even as their reliability improved with time (when I started with them upti

    • Also, I use Xfinity, but one thing that happens with Xfinity service is that it shuts itself down frequently. And services like Ookla don't measure uptime. Ookla only measures speed when Xfinity is actually working.

      Which means the only thing Xfinity has to do get good stats on Ookla is to shut down connections entirely when it knows it's not going to get good speeds.

  • Fastest? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Karlt1 ( 231423 ) on Wednesday February 08, 2017 @05:55PM (#53829335)

    Even if you are one of the "lucky" few to have Comcast Gigabit internet, you still have a limit of 35Mbps upload. That's nothing compared to the 400Mbps/400Mbps I get with the bog standard AT&T 802.11ac router that comes with their Gigabit internet. Wired I routinely get 900/900.

    AT&T's advertised rate is $70. The amount I pay every month is $70. No additional fees.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The Advertising Board did authorize Comcast to use the tagline "Worst Customer Support Of Any Currently Operating U.S. Business"

  • Now if we can just get them to stop treating last mile internet access like selling used cars. I swear it is more painful to buy internet through Comcast than to buy a car at a used lot, and I feel more dirty afterward.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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