Telco penalised after customer’s NBN migration goes wrong

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has directed iiNet to conduct an independent audit of its systems after a customer was left without internet for more than three weeks during the process of moving to the NBN.

An ACMA investigation found iiNet failed to take reasonable steps to minimise the customer’s phone and internet disruption during the process.

ACMA chair Nerida O’Loughlin said it is simply not acceptable for customers to be left in the dark with no internet service while they are moving to the NBN.

“On this occasion iiNet have let this customer down, and they have fallen short of what consumers should be able to expect from their telco providers.

“Telcos must ensure customers who experience problems during their move to the NBN can still access a service while those issues are being fixed.

“Under ACMA rules, iiNet should have offered the customer an interim service while the issue was being fixed, and this didn’t happen.

“Once we see the results of the audit, we will monitor iiNet’s progress to ensure this issue doesn’t happen again,” she said.

If iiNet fails to comply with the direction ACMA may commence court proceedings seeking remedies such as injunctions and civil penalties of up to $10 million.

The ACMA investigation found iiNet’s actions breached the Telecommunications Service Continuity Standard and Service Migration Determination, which are part of a package of rules developed to protect consumers moving to the NBN.

Rules in relation to service continuity came into effect in September 2018 following ACMA research that found almost one in six households moving to the NBN was left without a working connection for more than a week. For almost one in 10 households, the interruption was for more than two weeks.

Have you migrated your service to the NBN? How long were you left without access to the internet during the process?

5 comments

They should be penalised if customers had to wait for more than 2 weeks to be connected. Our entire street transition was almost seemless. Connection completed, no loss of internet, all done within the same day. Very puzzling people had to wait so long.

I didn't believe all the disruption to customers when the NBN was installed till I had it done in July  I have had problem after problem even the installation took a week with no internet with no modem and then the wiring was not all done so dropping out of service happened 5-6 times with Optus telling me to get in behind the cupboard and switch the wires then being told I had to do it every day to get good service ... I said I was old and I ddid not wish to have to do that.    All seemed well on Monday and NBN inspector came and all was running well.   But then it still kept dropping out    Now I have a faulty modem and have to wait for internet to be restored and wait in at home from 1 to 5 pm to have a tech come with a new modem and set it up    OHHHHHHHH   None of the techs on line actually listen to the problem and go off on a tangent and they have a speil that they can only repeat and repeat  And keep saying I am so sorry    they mustt say tthat in their sleep!!!!!

I changed to NBN 20 months ago.I changed from Telstra to TPG. I was told I would be off the air for 12 hours. I was back in business 2 hours after I turned my new modem on. I must be one of the lucky ones.

I had a short window of about an hour while i was switched from ADSL to NBN. 

Sadly my new NBN FTTN connection can't offer better than an average 18.71 Mbps download because of the distance of my house to 'the node'.

Complained but nothing my provider can do because of the NBN infrastucture involved in my street.

It does for me at the moment but anything superior would be welcomed.

Doesn't seem to matter who the carrier is, there are problems across the sector.  We are worse off than many third world countries when it comes to internet services.  Not good enough

5 comments



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