ASA stings Be over broadband claims

When 24MB isn't 24MB

Written by Iain Thomson

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has upheld a complaint against broadband supplier Be after rival NTL and a member of the public complained that the ISP's Be unlimited service could not supply the 24MB speeds it promised.

The complainants claimed that the 24MB advertised speeds were unattainable for most UK residents since it relied on being very close to an exchange equipped for ADSL2+ and that Be had a very small coverage area.

Be responded by pointing out that it only advertised in areas with the ADSL2+ exchanges, and stated that "a significant proportion of users" could get over 16Mbps if they were within 1km of their local exchange.

The ASA said in its ruling: "We considered that some consumers would reasonably expect to achieve speeds in the range of the headline speed and might feel misled if they could only achieve speeds of around 8Mbps.

"We noted the small print disclaimer in the ad and considered that many consumers would have some knowledge of the limitations and factors that affect ADSL broadband service speeds.

"We considered, however, that the significant drop off in the speed of Be unlimited's service for some customers was a significant enough condition to warrant a more detailed disclaimer in the body copy."

Be cited a similar case in which the ASA ruled that Bulldog's 8MB service was allowed to be advertised at that speed because of signal degradation but, while this was noted, the ASA ruled that the Be unlimited advert was misleading.

However, the ASA praised Be for its constant co-operation and willingness to change the adverts immediately.

See also:

reader comments

related articles

ASA blasts genealogy site and raunchy banner ad

But Advertising Standards Authority lets Sony off the hook again 28 Jun 2006

 

Watchdog savages Vodafone over ad claims

ASA unhappy with offer for 'free' TV and text messages 28 Sep 2006

BT rapped over 'free' calls claim

ASA not happy with telco's internet calls offer 02 Nov 2006

O2 praises Crystal Clear broadband campaign

Says its new service will "be a breath of fresh air... with no broken promises” 12 Oct 2007

Vodafone rapped over mobile internet ad

Fine print not clear enough, rules ASA 11 Jun 2008

Cotton ad rapped over "sustainable" claim

Advert claiming US cotton is sustainable banned after watchdog rules the claim cannot be substantiated 14 Mar 2008

latest news

Avnet grabs Abacus for £42.2m

UK components distributor finds a buyer after claiming its flagging share price undervalued its business 10 Oct 2008

Taylor Made boosts headcount

VAR continues recruitment drive through the tough times by adding five new staff 10 Oct 2008

Channel firms welcome AMD business spin-off

Resellers claim vendor’s divergence will benefit competitive landscape 10 Oct 2008

poll

Education gap?

Education gap?

Is there still business up for grabs in the education space?

Previous poll results

Vendor Q&A Session: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

Vendor Q&A Session: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

During this Q&A session Rick Wallis, UK Sales Director at NEC Computers, talks about the firm’s reasons for committing to a 100 per cent channel strategy

In The Studio with CRN: Dave Poskett, HP

CRN TV catches up with Dave Poskett, director of Solutions Partner Organisation for the UK & Ireland at HP

events

Channel Awards logo

CRN Channel Awards 2008

The Channel Awards recognise excellence and exceptional performance from businesses and individuals in the UK technology channel

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation