AT&T U-verse Relaunches Video Site Filled With Shows You Can Already See Elsewhere Online

Phillip Dampier May 5, 2010 AT&T, Online Video, Video 3 Comments

Another day, another re-purposed video portal.  Last September, AT&T launched AT&T Entertainment, little more than a site filled with embedded TV shows from Hulu you could already watch… on Hulu.  Today, AT&T launched the same concept under the rebranded “AT&T U-verse Online.”

“The benefits of multi-screen convergence are coming to life for AT&T U-verse customers,” said Dan York, president of content, AT&T. “With AT&T U-verse, you can enjoy your favorite content on U-verse TV, U-verse Online, and soon, your mobile device with U-verse Mobile. We have an unmatched ability to deliver on the multi-screen vision, and working with leading programmers, we’re providing entertainment to consumers in new and integrated ways not yet offered by our competitors.”

“U-verse Online features tens of thousands of hours of entertainment, and since its initial launch in September 2009, has continued to add content from additional networks and studios,” says a statement from the company.

But in reality, U-verse Online remains almost entirely a Hulu affair, with the majority of its video content coming from the popular video site.  Only the name of the site is changed to give customers the perception of value from something anyone could build themselves.

Watch how easy it is for Stop the Cap! to launch its own amazing video portal, Stop the Capped Video Online!:

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The Abbott & Costello Show, one of the featured titles on AT&T’s U-verse Online (and also on Stop the Capped Video Online!)

Stop the Cap! reader Michael, who sent along the tip, wonders if this is AT&T’s version of TV Everywhere.  If it is, AT&T’s shows are already available everywhere without the phone company’s help.  Just like AT&T Entertainment, AT&T U-verse Online is little more than a tool to give customers perceived value for money, even if the only cost to AT&T came from hiring some web designers to clip and paste embedded video codes from Hulu’s website.

Liberals Promise Universal Broadband Across Rural Canada – Join Today’s Online Town Hall at 3:30pm EDT

Phillip Dampier May 5, 2010 Broadband Speed, Canada, Data Caps, Editorial & Site News, Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, Rural Broadband Comments Off on Liberals Promise Universal Broadband Across Rural Canada – Join Today’s Online Town Hall at 3:30pm EDT

(The Liberal Party is sponsoring an online town hall meeting this afternoon at 3:30PM EDT on the issue of expanding broadband in rural Canada.  Why not join in and demand that Michael Ignatieff commit to reforming the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, which has landed Canada in a real broadband mess filled with Net Neutrality violations and Internet Overcharging schemes like usage caps and consumption billing.  The CRTC has been so submissive to Canadian telecom, they might as well be their trade association.

Tell him rural broadband expansion doesn’t do much good if the existing providers, which got Canada into this mess, are still in charge of running it.  Real broadband reform requires a government committed to universal broadband that works for Canadians and doesn’t simply profit from them.  Demand Net Neutrality commitments from the Liberal Party and an end to overcharging schemes.  Universal broadband doesn’t mean much to Canada if Canadians can’t use it without fear of overlimit fees and enormous bills at the end of the month. — Phillip Dampier)

Ignatieff announces the Liberals' rural broadband plan at Contact North in Thunder Bay, Ont.

The Liberal Party of Canada has promised rural Canadians they will not be left behind the digital online revolution, unveiling a promise Tuesday to deliver universal broadband access to all Canadians within three years of taking office.

Michael Ignatieff, Liberal leader made the commitment as part of a series of planks the party introduced under its “Rural Canada Matters” platform to attract support from rural Canadians, who tend to vote Conservative.

“Too many rural communities can’t get access to essential services, because we don’t have the digital infrastructure to deliver them,” said Ignatieff. “That’s why I’m committing a future Liberal government to 100 percent high-speed Internet for every rural, remote and Northern community in our country.”

According to Ignatieff, using proceeds from a 2011 wireless spectrum auction, a Liberal government would invest to achieve an interim target of 100 percent high-speed Internet connectivity of at least 1.5 Mbps. A Liberal government would also seek to set a more ambitious goal for 2017, Canada’s 150th anniversary as a country.

The Liberals blasted the incumbent Conservatives for breaking their promise to deliver rural broadband to Canadians.

In 2006, Canada’s Telecommunications Review Panel recommended the federal government achieve 100% high-speed Internet connectivity by 2010. This goal was not achieved under the Conservative government.  According to the CRTC, in 2009 close to 800,000 Canadian households still did could not access high-speed Internet – or 20% of all rural Canadians. At the turn of the century, Canada ranked second in the world in Internet connectivity, but has now fallen to tenth place.

Ignatieff announced the plan in Thunder Bay, Ontario at an Internet access center run by Contact North.  He characterized the current state of broadband in Canada as threatening the country’s economic competitiveness and quality of life for rural residents.

“While railways and highways were the essential infrastructure of the 20th century, fiber optic lines, satellites and wireless towers, are the digital infrastructure needed to connect our communities and strengthen our economy in the 21st century,” said Liberal Rural Caucus Chair Mark Eyking, “In all regions of Canada, families and businesses depend on access to the Internet and mobile phone coverage.”

New Democratic Party (NDP) MP Bruce Hyer (Thunder Bay-Superior North) praised the Liberal plan.

The Liberal Party is trying to capture an increased share of traditional Conservative Party supporters with a rural-focused agenda

“Obviously, country-wide broadband is a good idea,” Hyer told The Chronicle-Journal newspaper in Thunder Bay. “And there should be virtually no community of any size in Canada, and nowhere along the Trans-Canada, for sure, that we don‘t have high-quality mobile phone access and service. The United States has those things, and we should have them, too.”

But NDP MP John Rafferty (Thunder Bay-Rainy River) told the newspaper he’s heard it all before.

“Liberals have been talking about rural broadband access for a decade now,” he said. “The interesting thing is that he says rural Canada matters. But clearly it hasn’t mattered to Liberals for a long time, or else we would’ve had broadband.  They had a chance to do this. What they’re doing is regurgitating old promises.”

Rafferty said the Liberals first brought it up in 2001, and said then it would cost $4 billion.

“I’m not sure where he comes up with ($500 million).”

Another concern for the Liberal Party plan is the fact it relies entirely on private providers to deliver the service, something they have refused to provide many rural Canadians thus far.  In effect, the government would transfer $500 million dollars earned from large telecommunications companies buying additional spectrum and then hand it all back to those same companies to construct slow speed broadband services they can then profit from.

While many Canadian officials blame Canada’s large rural expanse for the digital divide, others blame Canada’s broadband providers who have engaged in usage-limiting schemes, increased prices, and throttled the speeds of certain broadband services.

Country

Universal Service Target

Target date

US 4 Mbps 2020
UK 2 Mbps 2012
Canada (Liberal Proposal) 1.5 Mbps within 3 years of being elected
South Korea 1 Mbps Currently available
Finland 1 Mbps Currently available
Ireland 1 Mbps 2010
Germany 1 Mbps 2010
France 0.5 Mbps 2010

AT&T To Settle Lawsuit Over DSL Speeds – Customers Get Up to $2.90 a Month, Law Firm Gets $11 Million

Phillip Dampier May 5, 2010 AT&T, Broadband Speed, Consumer News Comments Off on AT&T To Settle Lawsuit Over DSL Speeds – Customers Get Up to $2.90 a Month, Law Firm Gets $11 Million

AT&T has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit that accused the company of selling DSL service at speeds it often never provided to customers.

The case, Robert Schmidt, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated vs. AT&T and SBC Internet Services, Inc., (d/b/a AT&T Internet Services), was filed in 20o9 when AT&T customers learned the company was configuring some customers’ DSL modems at maximum speed rates below those advertised by AT&T.

AT&T has agreed to settle the lawsuit for a maximum of nearly $100 million, or less depending on the total number of claims received nationwide.

The amount customers are entitled to receive will vary depending on how much of an impact AT&T’s speed limiting configuration had on a their service.  The settlement is also retroactive back to April 1, 1995 meaning longtime AT&T DSL customers could be entitled to several hundred dollars in compensation.  For those dissatisfied with the speeds they received from AT&T’s DSL service, their compensation will be limited to a one-time payment of $2.00.

For some others, the settlement will provide more generous compensation.  The law firm that brought the case, Dworken & Bernstein, will receive up to $11 million in compensation and also get to hand out $3.75 million dollars of AT&T’s money to no less than 20 charities.

Some Background

AT&T provides DSL service to the vast majority of its customers.  This technology works over traditional copper wire phone lines.  Unfortunately, that infrastructure was never designed to carry data, but after years of development engineers found a way to make Ma Bell’s wires work for broadband service.  Unfortunately, the service has never been able to provide consistent speeds to every customer.  The further away you are from the phone company’s central office (where your phone line ultimately ends up), the slower the speed your line can support.  Someone a block away from the phone company office can easily achieve the speeds AT&T promised its customers in its marketing.  But if you are a few miles away, chances are you cannot.

For those more distant, or who live in areas with bad phone lines, your DSL modem won’t be able to maintain a consistent connection at the speeds AT&T sold you.  That will cause the modem to reset itself regularly, trying to re-establish an appropriately fast connection.  That can drive customers crazy because your service will often stop working while the modem tries to renegotiate the connection.  Some phone companies stop the constant reconnection battle by configuring the modem to work at a lower, more stable speed that will work with an individual’s phone line.

For instance, here in Rochester Frontier Communications advertises 10Mbps DSL service.  But for me, more than 10,000 feet away from Frontier’s central office for my area, the line simply couldn’t support that speed.  So Frontier locked the modem to deliver just 3.1Mbps, not the 10Mbps the company markets to customers in this area.

While that practice may seem technically smart, it’s obviously not legally smart, as AT&T has discovered.  Even using the traditional weasel words of “up to” when marketing broadband speeds, AT&T felt it was exposed to charges of false advertising and defrauding customers, and decided to settle the case.  It should be noted AT&T strongly denies any allegations of wrongdoing, but has agreed to settle to avoid the burden and cost of further litigation.

AT&T now faces the prospect of paying compensation to every DSL customer it speed limited in this fashion, and has also agreed to stop the practice.

The Details

Who Gets the Settlement? — Potentially any AT&T DSL customer paying for service after March 31, 1994.  This also includes customers of companies acquired by AT&T:

  • SBC Internet Services, Inc., d/b/a AT&T Internet Services
  • BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc.
  • Pacific Bell Internet Services
  • Southwestern Bell Internet Services, Inc.
  • Ameritech Interactive Media Services, Inc.
  • SNET Diversified Group, Inc.
  • Prodigy Communications Corporation
  • Oklahoma Internet Online

Many AT&T customers may have already been notified about this settlement through postcards or other mailers sent by AT&T based on customer records.

What Kind of Settlement Will I Get? — For longstanding AT&T DSL customers, the amount could be substantial, so it’s worth your while to participate, even if you are no longer a customer.  For most everyone else, it’s probably worth $2.00.

There are three types of benefits that will be paid to those who submit valid claims under the settlement once it becomes final. Payments will be made by check or by credits on a customer’s bill.

  • Group A Benefit. If AT&T’s Records indicate that AT&T configured the downstream speed of your DSL service, for one month or more during the Settlement Class Period, at a level lower than the Maximum DSL Speed for the plan you purchased, you may be eligible to receive $2.90 for each month your service was so configured.  This could add up to hundreds of dollars.
  • Group B Benefit. If you are not eligible for the Group A Benefit and AT&T’s Records show that your DSL service may have performed, for one month or more during the Settlement Class Period, at downstream speeds below the following levels, you may be eligible to receive $2.00 for each such month:
    • 200 Kbps, if you purchased a plan with a Maximum DSL Speed of 768 Kbps;
    • 384 Kbps, if you purchased a plan with a Maximum DSL Speed of 1.5 Mbps before October 2008;
    • 769 Kbps, if you purchased a plan with a Maximum DSL Speed of 1.5 Mbps after October 2008;
    • 1.5 Mbps, if you purchased a plan with a Maximum DSL Speed of 3.0 Mbps; or
    • 3.0 Mbps, if you purchased a plan with a Maximum DSL Speed of 6.0 Mbps.

    Because the settlement provides for monthly credits, you could also receive hundreds of dollars in refunds or service credits, making participation in the settlement worthwhile.

  • Group C Benefit. If AT&T’s records do not show that either you fall within Group A or Group B but you nonetheless believe that your DSL service has not performed at satisfactory speeds based upon the plan that you purchased, you may still be eligible for a one-time payment or bill credit of $2.00. In other words, if at anytime you were underwhelmed by AT&T’s DSL speeds, you can file a claim and get two dollars back.

AT&T has also agreed to monitor customers’ DSL speeds over a period of 12 months and if service cannot achieve the speeds promised, the company will either make repairs to boost speed or adjust billing.

For AT&T customers in Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, and Texas, AT&T’s settlement would replace a similar class action case filed in St. Louis.  Ford and Dunne v. SBC Communications, Inc. and SBC Internet Services, Inc., would have only covered customers after December 31, 2000.

Customers who believe they are entitled to participate in the settlement can get additional information and file an online claim at the DSL Speed Settlement website.

Revision3 CEO: Free and Fair Competition Impossible Without FCC Establishing Common Sense Ground Rules

jim-lauderback (Courtesy: Forbes)

Lauderback

Establishing a free and open marketplace for competitive broadband is impossible unless the Federal Communications Commission asserts its authority and enacts strong Net Neutrality protections.

Those are the views of self-proclaimed libertarian-leaner Jim Lauderback who runs Revision3, an Internet-based television network.

Penning a column in today’s Forbes, Lauderback strongly believes broadband services should be reclassified as a Title II common carrier service, and should be regulated by the Federal Communications Commission.

I fundamentally believe that customers should have unencumbered access to any service they wish to use or run, up to the bandwidth limits that they have purchased. The big broadband companies should be prohibited from granting favored bandwidth and quality of service preference to any site or application.

Why? Because Verizon, AT&T and Comcast are for-profit companies, and without restrictions they could–and probably would–grant preferred network access to their own services. Imagine the power Comcast could wield to promote its own video networks, particularly if the NBC merger is approved. Why wouldn’t Comcast ensure that NBC, G4, Syfy and MSNBC look great when streamed over its broadband network, while simultaneously throttling YouTube, CBS’ TV.com, movie and sports streams from Netflix and Major League Baseball, along with any other non-company owned video services (including those from my company, Revision3)? Comcast, Verizon and AT&T are in business to make money, and anything that will make their owned and operated networks more successful is just good business. It works for them, but not for their customers.

Lauderback declares today’s broadband marketplace a oligarchy — one cable and one phone provider.  With the increasing prevalence of term commitments, bundling, and other contractual obligations, many of today’s providers are successfully locking their customers in place.

“Service bundling gives these two even more power over their customers and makes it even harder to switch,” he writes. “I discovered this first hand last week, when I tried to move from AT&T’s increasingly spotty DSL service to Comcast. Comcast was happy to take my money, but it would have cost me almost twice as much unless I also shifted my TV and local phone service to Comcast.”

Those who support open hand-to-hand competitive combat in a free market understand that healthy competition cannot exist when a handful of players get to control how the game is played.

Insight Leaves 300,000 Louisville Customers With Frozen Pictures for Nine Hours – No Refunds (Unless You Ask)

Phillip Dampier May 4, 2010 Consumer News, Video Comments Off on Insight Leaves 300,000 Louisville Customers With Frozen Pictures for Nine Hours – No Refunds (Unless You Ask)

More than 300,000 residents from Louisville to Lexington in Kentucky and north into Indiana were left with no cable service for more than nine hours today after an equipment failure at an Insight Communications office on Okolona Road wiped out analog cable.

Louisville cable viewers channel flipping up and down the dial found nothing but frozen pictures, a captured moment in time from 2:53am this morning.  What they found next when calling Insight was nothing but hours of busy signals.  Some customers in southern Indiana found some channels worked fine while others did not.  In all, the outage impacted at least some channels across most of Insight’s service area in Kentuckiana.

Louisville, Kentucky

Insight initially blamed the problem on a router failure that developed during routine overnight maintenance.  A backup router also failed at the same time.  Company officials originally anticipated service would be restored by six this morning, but that did not come to pass.

Because the equipment failure had never been seen before by Insight technicians, it took nearly nine hours to finally resolve the problem.  Local television stations were deluged with calls from viewers wondering what happened to their favorite shows, and Insight’s dropped ball was topic number one on most local talk radio programs today.

Insight subscribers were especially upset that they couldn’t reach the cable company for answers.  Customer service lines were left jammed through much of the day.

Insight spokesman Jason Keller apologized for the outage.

Subscribers either saw this message, or a frozen picture across their channel lineup this morning.

“Everything that we have has a redundancy built into it. This is no different, but unfortunately on this particular morning with this particular piece of equipment, both the main equipment and the backup did not function properly,” Keller said, calling the outage “highly unusual.”

Keller called today’s outage the largest that he has seen during the company’s 10 years of service in Louisville.

By 10:00am, Louisville customers had their HD channels back, with the remaining analog channels restored by 1:30 this afternoon.

Despite the severity of the outage and its widespread impact, Insight Communications is refusing to issue blanket refunds to affected customers.  Instead, individual customers have to call or contact the company and request a refund, which they characterize as an amount under $1.00.

Customers can cost Insight more than that just by availing themselves of that option, and registering their displeasure over today’s long-lasting outage.

Impacted customers can request a refund online or by phone at (502) 357-4400.

Most television newscasts in the Louisville area treated today’s outage as their top news story, with several issuing periodic updates throughout the morning into the afternoon about the service problems.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WAVE Louisville Equipment problems cause loss of service for Insight customers 5-4-10.flv[/flv]

WAVE-TV in Louisville told viewers “it’s not our fault” that Insight subscribers couldn’t watch the station for at least nine hours today.  (2 minutes)

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WLKY Louisville Insight Experiences Cable Outages 5-4-10.flv[/flv]

WLKY-TV in Louisville said it received tons of calls from concerned viewers, one of whom was upset that the company “doesn’t want to give customers answers.”  (2 minutes)

[flv width=”432″ height=”260″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WHAS Louisville Technical Problems at Insight 5-4-10.mp4[/flv]

WHAS-TV, also in Louisville spent time outside of WHAS Radio’s studios this afternoon covering angry reactions from Insight customers on local talk radio.  (2 minutes)

[flv width=”432″ height=”260″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WHAS Louisville After Nine Hours Insight Restores Service 5-4-10.mp4[/flv]

WHAS followed up its earlier report with a wrap-up during its early evening newscast explaining what caused the nine hour outage.  (3 minutes)

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WDRB Louisville Insight Outage Ends 5-4-10.flv[/flv]

WDRB-TV in Louisville explained to its viewers how they could get their money back for a day’s worth of frozen pictures.  (2 minutes)

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