I don’t speak for Aquiss but what I can say is that compensation was paid to me when I had a week long FTTP outage last year. I have been an Aquiss customer for some years: this may or may not have been a factor.
The unfairness of the compensation scheme is that ISPs can find themselves on the hook for problems not of their own making: for example, a technical issue within BT Wholesale. Wholesalers are not subject to OFCom oversight/regulation.
Where do you get this notion that ISPs are the fall guy when it comes to service outages , you provide no evidence to support your unfounded opinion.
ISPs have contracts with suppliers that include payments/rebates etc for non supply etc, so your argument is weak , if an ISP in on the hook for paying compensation to it’s customers that’s because they have the contractual relationship with the consumer, Openreach have to pay the ISP if the problem ultimately was theirs, and any other supplier no doubt will have contractual obligations to the ISP , including compensation when due …it’s pretty clear that an unscrupulous ISP could claim compensation for their losses and then offer nothing in return to their customers that actually suffered the loss if they are not part of the Ofcom scheme, they could of course make good will payments if asked by their customers or but they may also refuse, using a ‘defence’ that’s seemingly acceptable to some that post on here , which is ‘ it’s my supplier fault , it’s not my fault so I don’t owe anything’ , ignoring the fact the consumer doesn’t pay the ISP suppliers for service, they pay the ISP .
Ofcom’s take on this is that’s in a competitive market, these differences are useful in determining which companies to use , they let the consumer decide if they want a ‘standup’ company that abides by the Ofcom compensation scheme , or use one that doesn’t that’s your choice.
Edited by Iniltous (Wed 09-Apr-25 13:58:40)