New
York probes broadband speeds
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[October 26, 2015]
By Sarah N. Lynch
(Reuters) - The New York attorney general
is probing whether three major Internet providers could be
short-changing consumers by charging them for faster broadband speeds
and failing to deliver the speeds being advertised, according to
documents seen by Reuters.
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The letters, which were sent on Friday to executives at Verizon
Communications Inc, Cablevision Systems Corp and Time Warner Cable
Inc, ask each company to provide copies of all the disclosures they
have made to customers, as well as copies of any testing they may
have done to study their Internet speeds.
"New Yorkers deserve the Internet speeds they pay for. But, it turns
out, many of us may be paying for one thing, and getting another,"
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said in a statement.
Time Warner Cable spokesman Bobby Amirshahi said in a statement:
“We’re confident that we provide our customers the speeds and
services we promise them and look forward to working with the AG to
resolve this matter.”
Cablevision spokesman Charlie Schueler said the company's Optimum
Online service "consistently surpasses advertised broadband speeds,
including in FCC and internal tests. We are happy to provide any
necessary performance information to the Attorney General as we do
to our customers.”
Verizon declined comment, saying it had not yet seen the letter.
The probe by the attorney general is particularly focused on
so-called interconnection arrangements, or contractual deals that
Internet service providers strike with other networks for the mutual
exchange of data.
In the letters, the office says it is concerned that customers
paying a premium for higher speeds may be experiencing a disruption
in their service thanks to technical problems and business disputes
over the interconnection agreements.
A 2014 study by the Measurement Lab Consortium, or M-Lab, found that
customers' Internet service tended to suffer at points where their
broadband providers connected with long haul Internet traffic
carriers including Cogent Communications Group Inc.
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"Internet service provider interconnection has a substantial impact
on consumer Internet performance - sometimes a severely
negative impact," the study said, adding that business relationships
rather than technical issues were often at the root of the problem.
A spokesman for the attorney general's office said the findings in
the 2014 study, coupled with consumer complaints and internal
analysis, prompted the inquiry into the Internet speeds.
Some of the letters also raise questions about speeds delivered by
Time Warner Cable and Cablevision to consumers over "the last mile,"
a term that refers to the point where a telecommunication chain
reaches a retail consumer's devices.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Peter Cooney and Christian
Plumb)
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