zatoicchi
02.07.08, 11:21
A press campaign by Virgin Media that promoted broadband download times for TV shows and music has been banned after rival internet provider BT complained to the advertising regulator that the speeds quoted were inaccurate.
The national press ad, which ran with the headline Hate To Wait, featured a table with download times for TV shows and music tracks based on different broadband packages offered by Virgin Media.
BT complained to the Advertising Standards Authority that the download speeds quoted in the ad were misleading because Virgin Media's traffic management policy capped downloading speeds at peak times.
Virgin Media, which has made much of the fact that its cable network offers superior broadband speeds than rival operators, said that its traffic management system "only focused on the heaviest downloaders and uploaders" on its network.
This was because it was the heavy users who slow the internet speeds for other subscribers, especially at peak times, according to Virgin Media.
The company added that its traffic management system was only active from 4pm until 9pm and threshold levels were graduated based on whether users had, say, 2Mb or 20Mb connections.
Virgin Media ad banned over broadband speed claims (http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jul/02/asa.advertising)
The national press ad, which ran with the headline Hate To Wait, featured a table with download times for TV shows and music tracks based on different broadband packages offered by Virgin Media.
BT complained to the Advertising Standards Authority that the download speeds quoted in the ad were misleading because Virgin Media's traffic management policy capped downloading speeds at peak times.
Virgin Media, which has made much of the fact that its cable network offers superior broadband speeds than rival operators, said that its traffic management system "only focused on the heaviest downloaders and uploaders" on its network.
This was because it was the heavy users who slow the internet speeds for other subscribers, especially at peak times, according to Virgin Media.
The company added that its traffic management system was only active from 4pm until 9pm and threshold levels were graduated based on whether users had, say, 2Mb or 20Mb connections.
Virgin Media ad banned over broadband speed claims (http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jul/02/asa.advertising)