Forwarded from NANOG list:

> The effective date will be determined later, after publication in the 
> Federal Register and OMB review under PRA.
> 
> November 17, 2022?The Federal Communications Commission today
> unveiled new rules that will for the first time require broadband 
> providers to display easy-tounderstand labels to allow consumers to 
> comparison shop for broadband services. The Report and Order approved by 
> the Commission creates rules that require broadband providers to
> display, at the point of sale, labels that show key information consumers 
> want?prices, speeds,fees, data allowances, and other critical 
> information. The labels resemble the well-known nutrition labels that 
> appear on food products.
> 
> https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-requires-broadband-providers-display-labels-help-consumers-0

Even though the label only specifies "typical latency", I have a sense that 
this is a good step forward. If your ISP specifies 5 msec as "typical" and 
their crummy router is bloated, can you get a repair if you call them and say 
that it's averaging 150msec? 

At what point does the expense of handling all the tech support calls outweigh 
the expense of actually making (and deploying) good routers?


_______________________________________________
Bloat mailing list
Bloat@lists.bufferbloat.net
https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/bloat

Reply via email to