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Bell’s Usage Meter is Still Wildly Inaccurate, Customers Charge

Phillip Dampier September 15, 2011 Bell (Canada), Canada, Data Caps, Public Policy & Gov't 5 Comments

Still Not Measuring Usage Correctly

Bell Canada’s Internet usage meter is still giving wildly inaccurate measurements of Internet usage, some customers allege.

Eleanor White, a Bell broadband customer, found Bell measuring some 30-44GB of usage, despite the fact the biggest bandwidth application in use by the account holder is a 16kbps audio stream running regularly throughout the day.

White estimates the monthly usage from that radio stream can’t be more than three gigabytes for the entire month, even leaving the stream running 16 hours a day.

“I hardly ever watch online video, and I estimate my usage from the radio stream and doubling it to account for e-mail reading and web browsing to be no more than 5.6GB a month,” White says. “But Bell measures at least 6-8 times as much, month after month.”

Bell’s usage meter has been implicated repeatedly for being inaccurate, occasionally by the company itself.  But the tool remains online and Bell continues to maintain its Internet Overcharging schemes, even for customers on its hybrid fiber-copper Fibe network.

Customers accuse Bell of overmeasuring usage on Fibe broadband as well.

“From the moment I got switched to Fibe, my traffic [measurement] went through the roof, at least according to the traffic monitor,” says Jurjen.  “[But that measurement doesn’t reflect] what we were actually using the Internet for.”

“Don’t try to get this solved; Bell won’t do anything (trust me, I tried for about five months),” Jurjen says. “The only solution: switch ISPs.”

Jurjen thinks the day holding Bell accountable for their broken usage meter is long overdue.

“For every service that you get billed by a unit, you must be certified by Measurements Canada. Just check your local gas station, it’ll have stickers all over. Same for your electricity provider,” Jurjen says.

“However, Bell is not certified by Measurements Canada. If you have a lot of spare time and money, do us a favor and start a trial against Bell.”

Industry Minister Holds Closed Door Meetings With Big Telecoms And You’re Not Invited

Phillip Dampier August 30, 2011 Bell (Canada), Canada, Editorial & Site News, Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, Rural Broadband, Telus, Wind Mobile (Canada), Wireless Broadband Comments Off on Industry Minister Holds Closed Door Meetings With Big Telecoms And You’re Not Invited

Industry Minister Christian Paradis just completed nearly two weeks of private meetings with some of Canada’s largest telecommunications companies regarding issues important to the industry, but has not scheduled face time with ordinary Canadian consumers or the public interest consumer groups that represent their interests.

Minister Paradis

Wire Report provided the schedule:

Aug. 16
Cogeco Cable Inc.
Shaw Communications Inc.
Quebecor Media Inc.
Globalive Wireless Management Corp.
Xplornet Communications Inc.
Public Mobile

Aug. 17
EastLink
BCE Inc.
Mobilicity
Telus Communications Co.

Aug. 22
Rogers Communications Inc.
MTS Allstream

Aug. 24
SaskTel

Bloomberg reports the primary topic on the agenda is upcoming spectrum auctions for additional wireless frequencies and loosening restrictions on foreign-ownership rules regarding would-be wireless competitors interested in entering Canada’s cell phone marketplace, which currently has the third-highest prices for mobile-phone services in the world, according to the OECD.

A rules change regarding foreign ownership may open the door...

Canadian telecom providers may not have more than 20 percent of their operations owned or controlled by foreign entities, a percentage that could be adjusted in the coming months.  But while changes in foreign ownership rules may benefit new entrants like Globalive Holdings, which operates Wind Mobile, it could also spell profound changes for millions of Canadians.  Industry analyst Dvai Ghose told Bloomberg he expects any relaxation of foreign-ownership rules may also pave the way for a mega merger of Bell and Telus.

“If you allow foreigners into our market, it becomes much more compelling to say we should allow one Canadian champion,” said Ghose, co-head of Canadian research at Canaccord Genuity.

That “champion” could quickly become Canada’s version of AT&T, dramatically reducing competition and raising prices, especially for captive landline customers who rely on the companies for broadband and landline service.  Telus and Bell currently compete with one another in the wireless market, where they would have an enormous share and combined market power should they be permitted to merge.

That would be a high price to pay for many Canadian consumers who do business with Bell or Telus, especially when contrasted with the fact Wind Mobile has attracted only 271,000 customers as of the end of March 2011.

...to a mega-merger of Bell and Telus.

Unfortunately, consumers are not included in Minister Paradis’ day-planner to share their views of further marketplace consolidation or wireless spectrum reform.  In fact, they don’t even have a right to learn what exactly was discussed during the closed door sessions.

A spokeswoman for Paradis, Pascale Boulay, would only confirm the minister met with 13 companies since Aug. 16, but refused to elaborate on the meetings.

Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius Genachowski tried this approach with some of America’s largest telecommunications companies last summer, holding a series of closed door meetings.  They eventually produced telecommunications policies so watered down, they neutralized Genachowski’s earlier commitments to protect Net Neutrality and foster additional competition.  Will Canada repeat America’s mistake?

Bell’s Hilarious ‘Come Back’ Website Gives Subscribers Reminders Why They Left

Customers who flee Bell Canada’s products and services for lower prices and less abusive Internet Overcharging are being encouraged to visit what Bell internally calls its “customer winback” website.  It’s Bell Canada’s place to extend special pricing and promotional offers to those considering a return to the telephone company.  But Stop the Cap! found the offers less than compelling and some of the company’s claims a real stretch:

There are many reasons to switch to Bell.

Switch to Bell for the most reliable home phone service1. We’ve made many enhancements and are so confident you’ll enjoy our services, they come with a complete 30-day satisfaction guarantee, or your money back2.  Switching is easy.  You can keep your existing home phone number3 and we’ll take care of the details with your current service provider.

With Bell Home phone you’ll enjoy:

  • The most reliable service
  • No reconnection fees

Plus, take advantage of savings on more great Bell services for your home.

Bell Internet – Perfect for sharing

  • The largest fibre optic network in Canada
  • Upload speeds up to 3x faster than cable4
  • Free Wireless Home Network

Bell Satellite TV- Over 100 HD channels

  • Stunning HD picture quality – 10x better than regular cable
  • Canada’s best HD PVR5 – set and manage recordings from anywhere
  • On Demand movies in 1080p HD – the highest quality of any provider

With Bell Install, you get a complete and customized installation at no charge6. Sit back, relax and we’ll set everything up for you.

Join the thousands of customers switching to Bell every week and start saving.

With six footnotes to the fine print in as many paragraphs, warning bells begin to ring almost immediately.  Those footnotes can cost customers some real money:

1. Applies to traditional copper-based (excluding fibre-based) wireline telephony; compared to cable telephony and based on continued service during extended power outages at customer’s home.

In other words, Bell phone service is more reliable because it works when the power goes out, unless it’s from Bell’s Fibe TV.  When power drops, your Bell Fibe phone line goes with it.  But if your phone lines are rotten, nothing will save you from a phone service outage, whether you are a wireline or “fibre-based” customer.  By the way, although Fibe is fibre part of the way, it ultimately arrives for most customers on the same copper wire phone line technology you’ve had for decades.

2. Credit offered on service fees for TV, Internet, Home phone (excluding Mobility), and applicable installation, activation or equipment fees; does not apply to usage fees (such as long distance, additional Internet usage capacity, On Demand TV programming). Client must call within 30 days of activation. Conditions apply, see bell.ca/satisfaction.

Among the other terms and conditions not immediately disclosed:

  • No refunds will be issued to customers modifying or upgrading any existing Eligible Services;
  • Prior to issuing a refund for equipment purchased directly from Bell, the equipment must be returned to Bell in the same condition as when it was purchased, with all original packing materials, manuals, accessories and associated equipment, along with proof of purchase;
  • You may claim no more than one (1) refund under the Bell Satisfaction Guarantee in any 12 month period;
  • You must be fully compliant with the terms and conditions applicable to your Eligible Services, and
  • All accounts for Bell services must be in good standing.

3. Within same local calling area

A no-brainer.

4. Current as of May 1, 2011. Comparison between Bell Fibe Internet 25 (upload up to 7 Mbps) and Rogers Ultimate Internet (upload up to 2 Mbps).

Bell apparently doesn’t think Quebec’s Videotron is worth mentioning.  They upgraded to 3Mbps upload speeds for their highest tiers last February.  Like AT&T’s U-verse, “fiber to the neighborhood” networks simply cannot deliver the fastest download Internet experience that fiber to the home or cable DOCSIS 3 providers can deliver, although the upload speed for Fibe (when you actually achieve 7Mbps) is a nice change from the neutered speeds cable companies provide for “the up side.”  But Bell counts your upload traffic against the usage allowance.

5. Based on a combination of 30-second skip function, 9-day programming guide, expandable recording capacity and remote PVR feature. Additional equipment required.

Additional equipment costs additional money.

6. Conditions apply; see bell.ca/fullinstall for Bell Internet and bell.ca/installationincluded for Bell TV. For Home Phone, available to customers with Home Phone Choice or Complete, or with Unlimited Canada/US long distance plan, or the Bell Bundle; one-time activation fee (up to $55/line) applies, credited on the account before taxes, and additional charges may apply for installation of a new phone jack.

A complete and customized installation “at no charge,” except for that pesky $55 “activation fee” eventually credited on the account (but you still pay GST/PST on the ‘rebated’ amount).  Some of our readers have complained to us that they’ve had to call Bell, sometimes repeatedly, to get that activation fee credited back.  Bell sometimes forgets.

Unfortunately, for too many in suburban and rural Canada, it’s Bell telephone infrastructure or nothing — no cable provider exists to offer a competitive alternative.  They are the company that charges more for less.

Considering Bell is Canada’s number one advocate for Internet Overcharging, you can do better with almost any other provider.  Let Bell know they can “win you back” when they deliver scheme-free service at a fair and reasonable price.  Until then, tell them they can swing alone.

CRTC Vice-Chairman: “What Is So Undemocratic About Allowing a Few Companies to Control the Internet?”

Pentefountas

Stop the Cap! is following this week’s extensive hearings into Internet Overcharging in Canada by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).  The debate into Bell’s attempt to mandate usage-based billing for -every- provider in Canada, regardless of whether they are owned or operated by Bell, reached a new level of absurdity this morning when a Conservative appointee to the CRTC, Tom Pentefountas — the vice-chairman of the commission — asked this question to an astonished panel headed by Openmedia.ca, a consumer group fighting usage-based billing:

“What is so undemocratic about allowing a few companies to control the Internet?”

Pentefountas was openly hostile at times against Openmedia, questioning their membership, their funding, and whether they had a “self-interest” in the fight.  They do — consumers, a concept that evidently escapes the very Big Telecom-friendly new commissioner, appointed by the government of Stephen Harper.

Yesterday, much of the hearing was focused on Bell’s defense of UBB, and we noted Mirko Bibic’s increasing discomfort as the Bell lobbyist came under increasing scrutiny and hard questioning that he never experienced during earlier hearings (those that led to the CRTC’s approval of UBB).  Now that the public (and higher government officials) are watching and listening, what used to be a non-confrontational experience is today sounding increasingly skeptical of the arguments for UBB by many commissioners.

We’ll have audio archives of the hearings available here when they are published online.  They help build the record of carrier arguments for UBB, independent findings which call out those arguments, and the opposition to UBB and why flat rate broadband is important to the knowledge-based economy of North America.

There will be hurdles to overcome, starting with confronting the attitudes of commissioners like Mr. Pentefountas, who evidently does not understand the implications of a few corporate entities controlling Canada’s Internet.

Follow live coverage of the CRTC hearings here.

Updated: Canada’s Telecom Regulator Investigates Rigged Broadband Pricing in Six Days of Hearings

The Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission is investigating Canadian ISP practices all week in a series of public hearings.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) opened the first day of hearings on the practice of usage-based billing for Internet usage, advocated by the country’s largest wholesale provider of Internet bandwidth, Bell Canada.

These hearings are a follow-up to earlier ones that ultimately allowed Bell to mandate usage billing not only for its own customers, but for all independent ISPs that purchase bandwidth from the company.  Since the vast majority of independent providers purchase bandwidth from Bell, the CRTC ruling would have mandated the end of “unlimited use” Internet plans across the country.

Nearly a half-million Canadians disagreed with the CRTC ruling and created a political firestorm earlier this year, demanding that the government step in and overturn the CRTC ruling.  Bell temporarily withdrew the usage based billing mandate pending the outcome of hearings expected to run from today until early next week.

Appearing at today’s hearing, executives from Bell continued to defend usage-based pricing and plan pricing that forces consumers to guess at how much Internet usage they will need each month.

In more aggressive questioning than earlier hearings, CRTC chairman Konrad von Finckenstein questioned Internet pricing plans that do not “rollover” or rebate consumers for unused usage, but still penalizes customers for going over their plan limits.

von Finckenstein also questioned Bell’s pricing for independent ISPs, particularly penalty rates ISPs who underestimate their wholesale usage needs would face under Bell’s advocated pricing model.  The chairman seemed suspicious of the fact Bell does not charge its own ISP unit penalty rates, only independent providers.

The hearing will also explore why companies like Bell can deliver “unlimited viewing” on their Fibe TV IPTV service, but cannot deliver unlimited Internet access to end users.

Interested in following the hearings live? Visit the CRTC live stream hearing page.

[Updated 10:20am ET: Bell Canada executives just admitted in this morning’s hearings its Internet Overcharging scheme involving usage pricing many times higher than the actual cost of provisioning the service was driven by “competition” and not by “congestion” issues.  In other words, Canadian consumers are paying very high Internet pricing and overlimit fees because of the pervasive lack of competition, not because companies need the extra money to “upgrade their networks.”]

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