To answer my own question.
Apparently that acceptable compensation of -- one month's free line rental (worth £16 today) for 24 hours' loss of service -- was abolished in 2006, according to a poster on
Which forum.
In fact, it looks like it was a gradual withdrawal of compensation; refunds getting progressive worse every year; BT exploiting what psychologists call the '
boiling frog syndrome':
From
Which forums (Sept 2013):
In 2006 they [BT] switched to offer about 30p per day, or to divert your calls to a mobile and pay £1/day to compensate customer for any outgoing calls from their mobile.
Today, BT has reduced its compensation to derisory levels. Even for those suffering very lengthy periods of no service.
Tony Hazell, the
Daily Mail's finance columnist, reports on
one most unfortunate woman. She was given just £10 as a "gesture of goodwill" for 26 days without a service.
As usual, with BT citing the arbitrary firewalls erected between
BT Openreach and
BT Retail to excuse paying her any more. A grand corporate swindle in itself.
The comments beneath the Mail's article are insightful too.
Note all the reports of engineer no shows; and engineers turning up unannounced when no one's at home.
What a mess
BT Openreach is in.
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Edited by deleted (Fri 20-Nov-15 02:27:47)