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| Home | News | Technology News |
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| Virgin rapped on broadband claims |
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| 2011-06-29 |
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| /spandiv style="float:right;width:305px;display:inline;font-size:13px;font-weight:400;font-style:normal;line-height:16px;" img src="http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53762000/jpg/_53762942_virginmedialtdad1.jpg" width="226" height="282" alt="Screen grab of the online campaign"span style="width:226px;"The campaign included links to an Ofcom report on broadband speeds/span /div div class="story-feature related narrow"Related Stories/div p class="introduction" id="story_continues_1"Virgin Media has been reprimanded by the Advertising Standards Authority for an online campaign accusing rival broadband services of "conning" customers./p pThe campaign, called "Stop the broadband con" was aimed at changing the way other broadband providers advertised their services./p pBT and Sky complained and the ASA ruled in their favour./p pIt means the campaign cannot appear in its current form again./p pThe website launched by Virgin included a letter from Richard Branson, claiming rivals were "not keeping their promises", a speed test, and links to Ofcom's official broadband report. It also featured a video, parodying Sky's broadband advert./p pIt encouraged users to share the information with their friends and it was this viral element of the campaign that allowed the ASA to apply its advertising rules to it./p p"We considered the ad went beyond highlighting the disparity Virgin believed existed between advertised broadband speeds compared to those that were delivered and implied that other ISPs dealt with consumers dishonestly in relation to broadband speeds," the ASA ruling said./p pVirgin Media argued that its campaign was intended to highlight "widespread dissatisfaction among consumers about the advertising of broadband speeds."/p pIt is an issue that has been highlighted by Ofcom. Research conducted in March found that just 14% of customers on 'up to' 20Mbps services received speeds of over 12Mbps, while 58% averaged speeds of 6Mbps or less./p pIn response to the ruling a Virgin Media spokesperson said: "Advertising 'up to' broadband speeds you can't deliver is a con. The ASA, Ofcom, numerous consumer groups and thousands of internet users have all reiterated our call for change and, instead of complaining about a legitimate effort to give consumers a voice in the debate, Sky and BT should step up to the challenge and start being honest about their broadband," a Virgin Media spokesperson said./p pIt has called on Ofcom to force providers to advertise typical speeds rather than 'up to' speeds./p pBT welcomed the ASA's decision./p pJohn Petter, managing director at BT Retail, said: "This is incredibly embarrassing for Virgin Media: its campaign for the industry to use 'average' as opposed to 'up to' speeds relied on misleading broadband users to make its point."/p pThe ASA also told Virgin Media "to ensure their marketing material did not discredit or denigrate other marketers"./ppThis article is from the a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk" title="Link to BBC News"BBC News website/a. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites./p
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| (BBC News) |
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