Congress boosts funding for drive to replace Chinese equipment

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News

The U.S. House of Representatives has approved additional funding for a federal initiative to replace Chinese-made communications equipment

By: Brad Randall, Broadband Communities

A budgetary shortfall for the federal government’s “rip and replace” initiative, aimed at replacing Chinese communications equipment, is one step closer to being wiped out.

The drive to replace Chinese telecom equipment in the United States was first authorized by the Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Act in 2020. According to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, the Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program had faced a shortfall of more than $3 billion.

Those concerns seem to have been addressed by H.R. 5009, formally the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (FY2025 NDAA).

Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY), who led the program, said “FY2025 NDAA fully funds the Rip and Replace shortfall to root out Chinese spyware and maintain connectivity of rural telecommunication networks across the country.

Additionally, with H.R. 5009’s passage in the House, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-AL), who serves as chair of the House Armed Services Committee, called on the Senate “to quickly pass this important piece of legislation.

‘The most dangerous threat facing our nation’

Comments in a release on the committee’s website explained the importance of the funding, in Rogers’ own words.

“China is the most dangerous threat facing our nation – the FY25 NDAA is laser-focused on deterring China and protecting our nation,” his statement read. “The FY25 NDAA boosts funding for U.S. defense initiatives in the Indo-Pacific; supports the continued modernization of our nuclear deterrent; revitalizes our defense industrial base; and expedites the fielding of innovative technologies.”

According to Rosenworcel’s November letter, the Reimbursement Program for equipment will require almost $5 billion in total.

The program aims to “complete the permanent removal, replacement, and disposal of Huawei and ZTE communications equipment and services in their networks,” Rosenworcel wrote.

Join the conversation about connectivity in North America. Click here to learn more about Broadband Communities Summit 2025.

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Reflections on the World Communication Awards

Reflections

by Marc Anné, Chair of Judges at the World Communication Awards

LastWednesday evening, all the shortlisted nominees as well as the Judges enjoyed the 26th anniversary of the World Communication Awards (WCA). This year, the Oscar grade gala event took place in The Marriott, Grosvenor Square, London. 

On behalf of the Judging Panel, I hereby congratulate all the winners and finalists of this year, as well as a big thank you to all the WCA award entrants for their participation and involvement. The quality and level of this year’s submissions was once again superb. The Judges praised the DNA of the WCA, namely the diversity and quality of the entries and highlighted the integrity and impartiality of our judging process.

We are also pleased to see an increasing presence of various African, Latin America and USA players in the WCA.

This year, we broke records with 219 entries across 23 award categories, showcasing incredible innovation and excellence.

You can find the full list of Award winners here.

On behalf of the 100+ WCA Judges, I want to warmly thank all the award entrants for their participation and involvement.

So, wwhat were some of the common trends, solutions, recurring themes and strategies that characterized the WCA submissions this year?

Key trends and topics from this year’s World Communication Awards
  • As expected, the newly introduced AI Award became a popular category. 2023 saw the rise of generative AI, and 2024 proved to be the year of its integration into telecommunications. I will soon publish a dedicated LinkedIn post on AI awards trends and strategies.Enhancing customer and user experience, by leveraging foundational AI models and Large Language Models providing selfcare and trouble ticketing, was a hit.Also, the automation of various telco processes, across their operations cycle, are getting streamlined by deploying various AI solutions aiming to increase productivity. Use cases covered included the Lead to Quote cycle, preventive maintenance inspections, and invoice analytics.

    The AI proactive recognition of anomalous data pattern behaviors and the presentation of possible root-causes and actionable insights is leading the way towards autonomous networks.

    AI enhanced knowledge management systems, as well as various AI assisted energy efficiency solutions, were presented in various submissions.

    As well as AI innovation helps to improve fraud mitigation and eliminates artificial inflation of traffic.

    Finally, the world’s first autonomous telecom store was presented in the category of the Future Award. It integrates advanced AI, Machine Learning, sensor fusion, robotics and facial recognition technologies. 

  • Obviously 5G remains a recurring theme with lots of progressive innovations and new solutions presented in various award categories.

    5G slicing was regularly the entries’ theme in various award categories, such as for example: differentiated connectivity with guaranteed SLA’s via committed slicing performance levels for enterprise customers.Pilots were also presented in 5G core disaster recovery networking solutions offered via a public cloud platform. The world’s largest-scale 5G Redcap low-bandwidth pilot for IOT devices did form part of the entries.Various global e-SIM connectivity solutions were also touched upon.

    The ‘Low Altitude Economy’ was mentioned as a Best Network Transformation initiative, aiming to optimize low altitude 5G network communications for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

    Another notable entry covered a smart 5G application within a dedicated network infrastructure that can withstand high temperature and vibrations in wind farms.

  • Network operations based on open-source solutions and generic hardware were praised as regaining control of the operator’s networks by avoiding vendor lock ins.
  • The Edge to Cloud connectivity theme gave rise to many entries such as hybrid multi-cloud solutions which aim to seamlessly move data services and application between on-premises private cloud. Even an Edge SIM was presented as a multi-cloud connection Cloud Router solution that bypasses the public internet and passes IOT traffic to a private layer 3 network.
  • The Cybersecurity Award covered various zero-trust solutions. Mitigation of phishing, malware and scams was presented with real time authentication services of seamless digital identities via Open API. Also noteworthy was the premiere of a commercial quantum-secured network trial for quantum secured communication services.
  • In the Beyond Connectivity Award as well as the Access Innovation Award the respective “golden” 10 or 15 seconds was touched upon: avoiding that fans switch to another provider after more than 10 seconds of poor network conditions or allowing callers to watch a video set of 15 seconds by callee while waiting the call to connect.
  • In the Digital Transformation Award solutions were cited which massively improve Mean Time to Repair (MTTR) and complaint handling via a central data repository, creating a single source of truth for network operations. Customers and omni-channel experiences were another area of focus as well as a human-centered digital transformation approach with for example empowered marketeers who make UX/UI changes without technical assistance.
  • One of themes in the Platform Award is the monetization of 5G and deployment of new VAS services spanning across silos of systems (5G, Edge, computing, IT/BOSS, cloud, etc.). Digital ecosystems platforms aim to transform transactional approaches into relational ones.
  • The new Connected Communities Award covered different types of network solutions for different types of geographies and users: the world largest overwater microwave link for King Island; the first city owned high speed fiber network in Arkansas funded without state subsidies.
  • The more than justified Crises Response Award winner is the Ukrainian operator Kyivstar defeating adversity amid network attacks with a long-term investment strategy to rebuild communications in a country torn by war. Other entries in this category covered themes such as: connectivity solutions to overcome undersea avalanches of Africa’s West Coast generating outages on various subsea cable systems, as well as satellite services to recover from terrorist attacks in Burkina Faso.
  • The Best Wholesale Operator Award covered entries from all parts of the world, Africa, Germany, Egypt, Indonesia, Poland, Bahrain, etc.
  • The multi-orbit satellite strategy, encompassing LEO, MEO, GE, LTE/5G and Wifi, was a recurring theme in the Satellite Telecoms Award. ]This year’s themes such as the unserved, the unbanked, the digital divide and bridging digital skills were present in quite a few award categories, namely in the Best Operator in a Growth Market, the Beyond Connectivity as well as the Best Wholesale and the Platform Award.One particular entry description touched me. It presented the deployment of affordable outdoor public Wifi networks in post and bank offices, shops and schools in remote Indian villages aiming to bridge the digital divide: “Villagers earlier would often travel many kilometers to nearby towns to get digitally connected and earn income”.
  • One of the telco industries awards I personally am most proud of is the Social Contribution Award.  It is a merit that our industry not only exists to generate turnover and profit, but also serves many social goals, whether altruistically or otherwise. Various technologies for social goods became a widespread theme in the WCA as in mobile money platforms; earthquake detecting sensors and disaster messaging services; books reading apps in native language addressing illiteracy.Also, vulnerable populations get empowered with programs such as developing ICT schools for students and seniors, trainings for persons with disabilities and financial literacy and ICT courses for women.
  • The adjacent category, the People and Culture Award, contains submissions which put forward the theme technology with a heart (“technology moves forward but no one is left behind”), fostering a culture of innovation by encouraging employees to identify critical points and propose innovative products and solutions to address the shortcomings.
  • The expanding challenge of climate change is a topic that is taken seriously in our sector. The Sustainability Award proves this, not only in traditional CSR / net zero type of executive statements, but also in concrete applications and programs aiming to generate immediate results: radiative outputs of LTE base stations; optimization of CPU load of cloud servers, cooling systems and radio energy consumption when not in use; conducting positive business behavior through employee participation via sustainability programs such as planting of thousands of mangroves.
  • Entries in the Total Experience Award category, representing an integrated customer, employee and partner’s approach, provide diverse solutions for a variety of shortcomings across end-to-end journey and customer touch points: estimated lead time to connect versus pre-sales estimations; issue detection accuracy; mean time to know user experience issues; average response times; billing related calls; etc.One CSP claimed to leverage more than 1 billion customer data via AI in order to enhance the 5G customer experience!

    We also notice in many different award categories that there is
    increasing customer satisfaction focus, as well as citing Glassdoor and Trustpilot ratings.The Net Promoter Score (NPS) is now fully established as a CX measuring instrument. Although the Judges sometimes questioned the sky high NPS results presented in some submissions: 70 to 80+ scores were no exception. In many cases, unfortunately, not sufficient context data is shared regarding the type of satisfaction survey, the total number of respondents, the type of services surveyed, etc. This may partly make it not always that credible!
  • Finally, the Startup Award, perhaps the most exciting judging category, involves independent assessment of the initial entries, live presentations of the year shortlisted contestants, followed by an intensive judge meeting with Q&A’s. The entries embraced many different areas and audacious solutions: smart parking analytics; granular mobile coverage maps; autonomous networks of network etc. We do hope that some of these companies will make it from an idea at the kitchen table idea to successful quoted companies.  

In terms of entry format and presentation, the Judges are pleased to see increasingly personalized entrants’ video’s, which are embedded in the various on-line submissions. In these video pitches, executives are doing their utmost to convince the Judges why their contribution should win the respective award. A convincing visual testimonial sometimes makes the ultimate difference between winning or losing.         

We wish our industry a successful, innovative, and peaceful year ahead! 

Marc Anné 

Chair of the WCA Judges 

Broadband ISP Andrews and Arnold Trial UK 2.5Gbps Speeds via CityFibre

Internet provider Andrews & Arnold (AAISP) this month became the latest ISP to introduce symmetric broadband speeds capable of harnessing the top 2.5Gbps (2500Mbps) tier on CityFibre’s growing Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) network, which is currently available to around 4 million premises across the UK. But for now it’s only a trial with limited availability.

The ISP is currently somewhat limited by CityFibre’s own availability of their new XGS-PON based full fibre network (progress report), which has been deployed into over 90% of their fibre exchanges. But the new 2.5Gbps capable XGS-PON products are currently only available to around 20% of their actual ready for service footprint (rising to 40% by the end of the year).

In a very few number of residential areas we are able to order symmetric 2.5Gb/s speed CityFibre services as a trial. At the moment this is only available for new installations. Where 1Gb/s speeds are currently available we should be able to offer upgrades to 1.2 or 2G download speeds (the upload speed will remain at 1G),” said A&A’s multi-gigabit trial page (here).

The trial packages for new customers all attract a one-off installation fee of just £10 and a simple 1-month minimum contract term. But you’ll need to choose your own router, as they don’t yet supply one for these trial tiers. Otherwise, the prices are as follows (credits to Chris for the news tip).

Download / Upload Technology Home::1 no usage cap*
1.2Gbps / 1Gbps GPON £65.00 PM
2Gbps / 1Gbps GPON £75.00 PM
1.2Gbps / 1.2Gbps XGS-PON £65.00 PM
2.5Gbps / 2.5Gbps XGS-PON £75.00 PM

* Services are also available with a 1TB/month usage quota, for £10 per month less than the above prices.

Speeds listed are the “line rate” actual throughput will slightly lower due to overheads etc.

Ofcom Publish New Online UK Internet Safety Codes of Practice

Ofcom has today published the “first edition” of its new online UK safety codes of practice for “tech firms” (e.g. social media) and smaller websites under the government’s Online Safety Act (OSA). Providers now have 3 months to ensure they’re able to tackle “illegal harms” (content), such as terror, hate, fraud, child sexual abuse and assisting or encouraging suicide.

On the surface, it all sounds sensible and well-intentioned. After all, it’s widely understood, and few could disagree, that the old model of self-regulation has struggled to keep pace with the changing online world, which has allowed far too much “harmful” content to slip through a fairly weak net.

NOTE: The Act and its codes are far-reaching and will touch many websites and online services (big and small alike). But it’s also true to say that Ofcom lacks the resources to monitor everything, thus their focus is likely to be fixed on the worst offenders and major social media firms.

The new Act essentially responds to this by placing new safety duties on social media firms, search engines, messaging, gaming and dating apps, and pornography and file-sharing sites of all sizes. Failing to comply with these rules could be extremely costly: “We have the power to fine companies up to £18m or 10% of their qualifying worldwide revenue – whichever is greater,” said Ofcom.

In “very serious cases” they can also apply for a court order to have broadband ISPs and mobile operators block a website or service in the UK.

Types of harmful content

The Online Safety Act lists over 130 ‘priority offences’, and tech firms must assess and mitigate the risk of these occurring on their platforms. The priority offences can be split into the following categories:

Terrorism
Harassment, stalking, threats and abuse offences
Coercive and controlling behaviour
Hate offences
Intimate image abuse
Extreme pornography
Child sexual exploitation and abuse
Sexual exploitation of adults
Unlawful immigration
Human trafficking
Fraud and financial offences
Proceeds of crime
Assisting or encouraging suicide
Drugs and psychoactive substances
Weapons offences (knives, firearms, and other weapons)
Foreign interference
Animal welfare

However, trying to strike the right balance between Freedom of Expression, individual Privacy and outright Censorship is a difficult thing to get right, particularly when attempting to police the common and highly subjective public expression of negative human thought. Not to mention complex issues of context (e.g. people joking about blowing up a city vs actual terrorists), parody and political speech. Humans often get it wrong, and automated filtering systems are even worse. But only time will tell whether the pros of the new approach are enough to outweigh the potential cons (e.g. overblocking of legal content that is mischaracterised).

Who the rules apply to

All in-scope services with a significant number of UK users, or targeting the UK market, are covered by the new rules, regardless of where they are based.

The rules apply to services that are made available over the internet (or ‘online services’). This might be a website, app or another type of platform. If you or your business provides an online service, then the rules might apply to you.

Specifically, the rules cover services where:

  • people may encounter content (like images, videos, messages or comments), that has been generated, uploaded or shared by other users. Among other things, this includes private messaging, and services that allow users to upload, generate or share pornographic content. The Act calls these ‘user-to-user services’;
  • people can search other websites or databases (‘search services’); or
  • you or your business publish or display pornographic content.

To give a few examples, a ‘user-to-user’ service could be:

  • a social media site or app;
  • a photo- or video-sharing service;
  • a chat or instant messaging service, like a dating app; or
  • an online or mobile gaming service.

The rules apply to organisations big and small, from large and well-resourced companies to very small ‘micro-businesses’. They also apply to individuals who run an online service.

It doesn’t matter where you or your business is based. The new rules will apply to you (or your business) if the service you provide has a significant number of users in the UK, or if the UK is a target market.

The first step in implementing all this sees Ofcom giving in-scope providers three months to complete “illegal harms risk assessments“. Every site and app in scope of the new laws thus has from today until 16th March 2025 to complete an assessment to understand the risks illegal content poses to children and adults on their platform.

Subject to their codes completing the Parliamentary process by the above date, from 17th March 2025, sites and apps will then need to start implementing safety measures to mitigate those risks (e.g. effective moderation that can identify and remove “harmful” content), and Ofcom’s codes set out measures they can take. Some of these measures apply to all sites and apps, and others to larger or riskier platforms.

Dame Melanie Dawes, Ofcom’s CEO, said:

“For too long, sites and apps have been unregulated, unaccountable and unwilling to prioritise people’s safety over profits. That changes from today.

The safety spotlight is now firmly on tech firms and it’s time for them to act. We’ll be watching the industry closely to ensure firms match up to the strict safety standards set for them under our first codes and guidance, with further requirements to follow swiftly in the first half of next year.

Those that come up short can expect Ofcom to use the full extent of our enforcement powers against them.”

Peter Kyle MP, UK Technology Secretary, said:

“This government is determined to build a safer online world, where people can access its immense benefits and opportunities without being exposed to a lawless environment of harmful content.

Today we have taken a significant step on this journey. Ofcom’s illegal content codes are a material step change in online safety meaning that from March, platforms will have to proactively take down terrorist material, child and intimate image abuse, and a host of other illegal content, bridging the gap between the laws which protect us in the offline and the online world. If platforms fail to step up the regulator has my backing to use its full powers, including issuing fines and asking the courts to block access to sites.

These laws mark a fundamental re-set in society’s expectations of technology companies. I expect them to deliver and will be watching closely to make sure they do.”

The Act also enables Ofcom, where they “decide it is necessary and proportionate“, to make a provider use (or in some cases develop) a specific technology (this must be accredited by Ofcom or someone they appoint) to tackle child sexual abuse or terrorism content on their sites and apps. The regulator are consulting today on parts of the framework that will underpin this power.

Otherwise, the first set of codes and guidance sets up the enforceable regime, although Ofcom are already working towards an additional consultation on further codes measures in Spring 2025. This will include proposals in the following areas:

  • blocking the accounts of those found to have shared CSAM (Child Sexual Abuse Material);
  • use of AI to tackle illegal harms, including CSAM;
  • use of hash-matching to prevent the sharing of non-consensual intimate imagery and terrorist content; and
  • crisis response protocols for emergency events (such as last summer’s riots).

And today’s codes and guidance are part of a much wider package of protections, with more consultations and duties coming into force, including:

  • January 2025: final age assurance guidance for publishers of pornographic material, and children’s access assessments;
  • February 2025: draft guidance on protecting women and girls; and
  • April 2025: additional protections for children from harmful content promoting, among other things – suicide, self-harm, eating disorders and cyberbullying.

The heart of the new Act and Ofcom’s code are absolutely in the right place, even if the road to hell is paved with good intentions. The internet can be a heaven for some of the most vile hate, bullying, racism, child abuse, and terrorism etc. Whole communities have even sprung up around these topics, and hostile governments often exploit them.

Suffice to say, the desire to rid the online world of such things is more than understandable – particularly for those who have suffered the most. In keeping with that, it’s easy to see why the new laws have been able to attract so much support from the wider electorate and cross-party MPs. But the potential problem is not with that goal, it’s with the overly-broad and feverishly complex sledgehammer approach to achieving it.

The wrongful assumption seems to be that all sites will already have the necessary development skills, budget, knowledge, legal experience and time to implement everything. But what may be viable for bigger sites, is not workable for everybody else, especially smaller sites that lack the necessary pieces to stand any realistic chance of properly implementing such complex rules (e.g. Ofcom’s risk assessment guide alone is 84 pages long). More support should be provided for those.

Some sites may thus respond to all this, and the risk of increased legal liability, by seeking to restrict speech through the removal of user-to-user services or the imposition of much more aggressive automated filtering systems, which raises the risk of excessive overblocking (i.e. censorship by the backdoor of extreme liability).

However, the new rules will also seek to give users an avenue of appeal for any removed content, which must be replaced if found to have been wrongfully removed. But not all third-party systems work that way and this risks putting sites that allow user-generated content (millions of them) into a bit of a damned if they do, damned if they don’t boat. The risk of an intolerable level of liability and legal complexity is not to be understated in all this.

Ofcom has said they will “offer to help providers comply with these new duties“, which at present mostly seems to consist of various complex documents that, in some cases, require a degree in regulatory waffle and law to fully comprehend. But they do plan to introduce a new tool in early 2025 to help providers check how to comply with their illegal content duties, and there’s another tool for checking if the rules apply to you.

The regulator also said they were “gearing up to take early enforcement action against any platforms that ultimately fall short“, which is likely to cause most concern for the big social media sites, particularly those that have become a bit lax of late in terms of moderation (fingers tend to point toward ‘X’). Suffice to say that there are still a lot of unknowns with the new law and the next few years may be a bit bumpy.

Ofcom’s First Edition Codes of Practice and Guidance
https://www.ofcom.org.uk/../statement-protecting-people-from-illegal-harms-online/

Business ISP bOnline Launch New FTTP Broadband, VOIP and Unlimited Calls Plan

Business focused UK broadband ISP bOnline today claims to have launched a new “industry beating” full fibre broadband (FTTP), Voice-over-IP (VoIP) and unlimited calls package for small businesses that costs from just £29.95 ex. VAT a month (this is said to represent a 33% drop over its equivalent previous monthly pricing).

The press release states that, after 6 months, the monthly charge will increase by £7 to £36.95 a month, although bOnline state that this still represents a 17.8% drop over its previous equivalent pricing for the same bundle of services (£44.95 per month). But what the announcement doesn’t include are any details about the package itself (contract term, speeds, installation etc.).

NOTE: The package is available to those covered by Openreach’s national FTTP network, which covers 16 million UK premises.

The good news is that we did find details of the bundle on their website, which offers speeds of 115Mbps (20Mbps upload), unlimited UK landline & mobile calls, digital line +45 VoIP features and an included router. You can take this package on either a 12-month or 24-month minimum term, and both include the 6-month promotional price.

Anthony Karibian, Founder and CEO of bOnline, said: “We are delighted to be leading the way in delivering best value communication services to small businesses across the country. We also applaud Ofcom for highlighting the price hikes, which in our eyes are completely unjustified, that established telecom providers have been forcing on customers in the last year for their landline services and their encouragement to consumers to shop around for best rates.”

Ofcom UK Set Timetable for 5G Mobile Auction of 26GHz and 40GHz

The UK telecoms regulator has today set out their expected timetable for the long-in-gestation plan to auction off a large chunk of millimetre wave (mmW) radio spectrum frequency in the 26GHz and 40GHz bands, which will be used by mobile operators to deliver faster 5G (mobile broadband) services. But you’ll have to wait until October 2025.

At present EE (BT), O2 (Virgin Media), Vodafone and Three UK already have access to several 5G bands between 700MHz and 3.8GHz. Such frequencies reflect the same sort of mid-band radio spectrum that mobile network operators have been harnessing since the advent of the first 3G and 4G networks many years ago.

NOTE: The regulator aims to make 6.25GHz of spectrum frequency available across the 26GHz and 40GHz bands.

The move to auction off 26GHz (25.1-27.5GHz) and 40GHz (40.5-43.5GHz) is designed to complement those existing bands by providing lots of additional spectrum frequency to operators, which means more data capacity for extremely fast speeds (e.g. multi-Gigabit). But such signals tend to be very weak, which means they’re often only best for serving busy urban areas (shopping malls, airports etc.) and fixed wireless broadband (FWA) links.

However, the auction process for this, which was set out in 2023 (here), has been stuck in a state of limbo for much of 2024 while the country awaited a final decision on the mega-merger between Vodafone and Three UK. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) granted approval for that merger on 5th December 2024 (here), although “legal-completion” is still expected to take 3-6 months to achieve. As a result, Ofcom has today confirmed when the new bands will be auctioned off.

Ofcom Statement

On 5 December 2024, the CMA published its decision to approve the proposed merger between H3G and Vodafone’s UK businesses.

We have considered whether we need to review any of the policy decisions we have taken for the mmWave auction in light of the CMA’s decision, and we consider all of our decisions would remain appropriate in a three player market. In particular, we do not consider that the new structure of the market changes our reasoning for not imposing competition measures.

We will now commence preparation for the auction. In order to enable the merged entity to prepare for the auction, we currently expect to work to the following timetable:

  • accept applications to participate in the auction on 16 and 17 September 2025; and
  • begin the principal stage of the auction in October 2025.

Ofcom are currently aiming to award several 15-year, fixed term citywide licences (“high density areas”) to use the “new” mmWave bands – reflecting 68 major towns and cities across the UK, as well as some localised licences for “low density areas” within those cities via their Shared Access licensing framework. The UK is a long way behind other countries that have already awarded spectrum in the mmW bands, but one advantage of playing catch-up is that supporting mobile kit and device support should be more mature.

Building Digital UK Reveals Gov’s Gigabit Broadband Build Progress

The Government’s Building Digital UK agency has published its annual performance report (accounts here), which provides breakdowns of how many premises in the United Kingdom have received gigabit-capable broadband coverage as a result of their public subsidy (i.e. funding provided under the prior “Superfast Broadband” programme and the current £5bn Project Gigabit scheme).

The data itself doesn’t carry any particular surprises, but it does provide some additional context that we don’t normally get from the regular updates. In terms of the headline figures, BDUK estimates that its interventions delivered 143,900 premises with gigabit-capable coverage between 1st April 2023 and 31st March 2024.

NOTE: Ofcom separately forecasts that gigabit coverage should hit around 97-98% by May 2027 (here), mostly thanks to commercial deployments (BDUK largely focuses upon the final 10-20% of largely rural and poorly served premises).

The figure means that an estimated 1,064,500 total premises have been given gigabit-capable coverage by BDUK’s gigabit programmes so far (including those built in the years prior to Project Gigabit), which we assume is almost entirely from full fibre / FTTP builds.

Of the premises covered by BDUK in this period (2023-2024):

92% (132,700) were rural, compared to 23% of all premises in BDUK’s premises base in the UK being classed as rural

➤ 43% (62,400) previously received speeds below 30 Mbps

➤ 8% (11,100) were delivered under our new Gigabit contracts (Government Infrastructure Subsidy scheme)

A premises is counted as provided with gigabit-capable coverage (or ‘passed’) when it is possible to access a gigabit-capable service for the supplier’s standard price and be connected in the supplier’s standard timescale. We count both directly subsidised premises as well as uncommercial premises that were not directly funded but received connections as a result of nearby BDUK-funded projects; as a result, all premises passed figures are estimates based on a combination of raw supplier data and modelled estimates.

We covered 17,300 fewer premises between 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024 compared to the previous year due to the wind down of delivery under the Superfast Broadband Programme.

Project Gigabit aims to help extend broadband ISP networks capable of delivering download speeds of at least 1000Mbps (1Gbps) and uploads of at least 200Mbps to “nationwide” levels of UK coverage (c.99%) by 2030 (here). The project has already committed around £3bn of its budget and covered over 85% of premises, but there are still some big contracts yet to be awarded, and the delivery phase will take several years to fully complete.

Sadly, BDUK has not yet provided a useful breakdown of progress by each awarded Project Gigabit contract, which is a serious oversight of the new programme that should be addressed. But we do get this, and there’s also a deeper regional breakdown available.

Country Total premises passed to 31 March 2024 Between 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024 Between 1 April 2022 and 31 March 2023 (r) Between 1 April 2021 and 31 March 2022 (r) By 31 March 2021 (r)
England 744700 93600 94100 98400 458600
Northern Ireland 126000 21000 40200 32600 32200
Scotland 81500 24000 17700 6800 33000
Wales 112200 5400 9100 13000 84700
TOTAL 1,064,500 143,900 161,200 150,800 608,500

UK ISP Home Telecom Adopt New Pricing Policy for Mid-Contract Hikes

Customers of internet provider Home Telecom, which is part of the wider Telecom Acquisitions (TAL) group that also includes several other UK ISP brands (No One, Leetline, Fleur Telecom, Eclipse Broadband etc.), have this week begun to receive emails notifying them of a change that will make their “annual price increase simpler“.

The email itself, which was also sent to customers on some of Home Telecom / TAL’s other ISP brands, didn’t include much in the way of detail and largely just redirected people to check their T&C documents. This is perhaps a bit unusual, as providers are normally expected to put a little more effort in to clearly communicating major changes, especially when it involves a price change (simply nudging people to read the small print isn’t always enough).

The provider’s previous T&C’s did include a policy on annual price rises, which increased prices each April by the “Retail Price Index (RPI) rate of inflation at that time“. But it appears as if Home Telecom uploaded a new set of terms on 1st October 2024 and are now notifying their customers about the change.

Home Telecom’s Customer Email

Hello XXXXXXXXXXXX,

We’re getting in touch to let you know we’ve made some changes to our Terms and Conditions, specifically, making the annual price increase simpler. If you would like to read them click here, or visit our website, www.hometelecom.co.uk where a link can be found on the footer of every page.

These terms and conditions will be in effect from January 15th 2025. You don’t need to do anything, by using your service after that date you are agreeing to the new terms.

Thank you for being a Home Telecom Customer,

Kind Regards,

The Home Telecom Team

The new T&Cs, once you find the relevant reference to “7.12 Agreed Annual Price Adjustment“, actually don’t contain much detail and instead direct customers to hunt out the “Tariffs and Charges document on the website“. Oddly, Home Telecom chooses not to include a direct link to that document within clause 7.12 itself, but they do include several other links earlier on the same page (here).

The Tariffs and Charges document doesn’t, on the surface, do a particularly good job of clearly setting out what’s changed (i.e. no before vs after). But the bit on page 3 for “Annual Price Increase – We increase the price on all our tariffs on 1st April each year“, does include a solitary figure of £3, albeit without clarifying whether that’s £3 extra per year or £3 extra per month. We’ll assume it’s the latter because that’s in keeping with what other ISPs have been adopting. But HT could be doing a better job on the communication front here (i.e. next time, just put this all clearly in the email).

The situation did cause a bit of initial confusion for some of No One’s customers, as quite a few of them had not previously been subject to mid-contract hikes and were still within the minimum term of their original contracts. But the provider has since confirmed that the change is being applied to everybody and that customers “have a 30 day period where you can cancel without penalty due to these changes” (detail that should have been in their email).

I just got through to Home Telecom CS again and they confirmed that all customers are having T&Cs changed. I was then transferred to Home Telecom retentions who confirmed ‘Right of Exit’ without Penalty as per Ofcom rules and have cancelled,” said Jon (HT customer) to ISPreview. A similar discussion also cropped up on Reddit, which confirms the same policy.

Why the Change?

The new policy is of course intended to reflect Ofcom’s earlier move to BAN broadband ISPs and mobile operators from doing mid-contract price hikes that are linked to confusing inflation and percentage-based changes (here). BT, Plusnet, EE, TalkTalk, Vodafone, Virgin Media, Three UK and other providers have already adopted a similar approach, albeit with some variations.

The change was never designed to stop mid-contract hikes completely (it’s more about making future pricing clearer and simpler), but it did require providers to tell customers precisely what any future price increases would be when they sign-up “in pounds and pence“. This rules out changes to core subscription prices that are linked to unknown future inflation values or percentages.

For example, BT will also increase the monthly prices of their broadband customers by £3 from 31st March 2025. But this approach does have its flaws, such as with the fact that it will hit cheaper entry-level packages harder than more expensive ones (this is not very proportional). The fact that providers can specify a specific rise ahead of time will also do little to dampen calls for an outright ban on mid-contract hikes in favour of fixed term pricing.

Court Sides with Wychavon Council in Judicial Review of Broadband Poles

The Lifford Gardens and the Sands Residents Association, which represents part of Broadway in Worcestershire (England), has lost its Judicial Review case against the local council’s decision to allow the deployment of a new FTTP broadband network using wood poles. The Birmingham High Court ruled that the council had acted lawfully.

ISPreview first covered all this in June 2024 (here and here), which gives the full context. But to recap, the case focused upon FullFibre Limited’s network build in the village. However, rather than specifically going after the network operator itself (FullFibre is merely an “interested party“ in the case), local residents had instead secured a Judicial Review (JR) of the Wychavon District Council‘s (WDC) decision to allow the work to take place.

NOTE: Judicial Reviews are a special type of court proceeding in which a judge reviews the lawfulness of a decision or action made by a public body. Such reviews are designed more to investigate how a decision has been made, rather than whether the outcome of that decision was the right one.

The deployment of poles often seems to attract a fair few complaints. Suffice to say that a lot of people find them ugly, particularly when deployed in areas that haven’t had them before, which has in some parts of the country triggered strong anti-pole protests. Similarly, the aforementioned case partly reflected the fact that, when deploying new poles for overhead cables (locals find these ugly), there are usually extra considerations for Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) like those that exist in parts of Broadway.

The residents’ association claimed that the council may have failed to properly interpret or take account of such considerations, which affect the siting and appearance of the development (i.e. did the council take enough action to ensure the visual impact would indeed be minimised, so far as practicable?) – this is needed for the work to be considered Permitted Development (PD).

Part of this case also touched on whether an underground deployment would have been viable as an alternative to poles, which is always a tricky one for cost-sensitive network operators to balance (trenching is several times more expensive).

In addition, residents had suggested that the local authority might have been a little too close to the network operator after they “appointed a person who was not in planning to oversee the planning directorship dealing with the proposed installation of poles … when this individual had a pre-existing relationship with the personnel of [Full Fibre Ltd].”

The Three Grounds for the Case

1. When a planning authority deals with Permitted Development (PD) notices under PT 16 GPDO, in order to conclude the proposal falls within the scope of permitted development, should it also be satisfied that the condition attached to “minimise visual amenity as far as practicable” is met.

2. Does consideration of ‘as far as practicable‘ mean consideration of undergrounding the infrastructure and are economic considerations relevant to that decision.

3. Where the Code Regulations require consultation with the LPA [local planning authority], can PD rights be granted despite there being no consultation.

The hope was that, one way or another, the case may bring some additional clarity around the issue in AONB and this is something that would be useful for everybody to have. The risk for locals was that, if they lost, they could be liable for the council’s costs and vice versa. But if they won, the council might have been forced into making amendments, which could have set a wider precedent.

The case, which was funded by over £10k of donations to the association’s Crowdjustice Page, was ultimately heard at the end of October 2024. After considering what was said during that hearing, Deputy Judge Richard Kimblin KC this week ruled in favour of the council by dismissing all three grounds of the claim. See the full outcome of this case here: AC-2023-BHM-000256.

Richard Kimblin KC said:

“It is clear that the available options were the subject of survey, iterative design and with regard to the need to minimise visual impacts … there were substantive enquiries and exchanges of information between FullFibre and the Council. Further, the Defendant in these proceedings is the Council, not FullFibre.

The Council expressed itself to be satisfied with the proposals and the information with which it had been provided. In circumstances where the consultee has been corresponding with the developer and has indicated its assent, that is a very strong indicator that Regulation 3(b) has been satisfied.”

In short, the judge confirmed the council’s stance that it had no power to prevent the installations. The BBC News has also covered this story and carries with it a quote from the Council’s Executive Board Member for Planning, Paul Middlebrough, who said: “We take no pleasure from this ruling as we have sympathy with our residents. Giving [PD] rights to the installation of [telecoms poles] has resulted in communities across the country having a blight imposed on them against their wishes, while councils are left powerless. We urge the government to urgently review the regulations regarding the installation of poles and at the very least amend them.”

The deployment of poles is currently governed by the Revised Cabinet and Pole Siting Code of Practice Nov 2016, which are voluntary but do leave open some limited potential for enforcement action by Ofcom. But the regulator actually has few powers here and can only stop broadband operators from deploying their own infrastructure in “very limited circumstances, like when national security or public safety are at risk“.

However, the new Labour-led government, much like the old Conservative-led one, has recently called on broadband operators to “end the deployment of unnecessary telegraph poles” (here), to “share existing infrastructure when installing broadband cables as the default approach” and pledged to “revise” the existing Code of Practice (as linked above).

The government’s telecoms minister has previously suggested that PD or other rights for poles could be taken away from network operators that don’t play by the rules. But we’d hope this would, if ever enacted, be a targeted and temporary sanction with a high bar for enactment, and not an industry-wide restriction, as the latter would be suicidal for related investment and coverage plans (e.g. the government’s own 2030 target for “nationwide” coverage of gigabit broadband).

However, questions remain over what practical changes the new Code will actually deliver, since any overly burdensome changes risk increasing the costs of deployment for operators and thus potentially reducing their roll-out plans. But we do anticipate that it will most likely result in a need for greater pre-build consultation with communities, as well as some improvements to the complaints process. The new code is expected sometime in early 2025.

Confusion as New UK Mobile Operator Ymobile Suddenly “Pauses” Service

Some customers of new UK mobile operator, Ymobile (Ycorp), which only launched one month ago while pledging to offer a “simpler, more streamlined and environmentally friendly” alternative to traditional mobile networks (here), have suddenly been told that their service will be “terminated” in January 2025.

The operator, which promoted itself as being the United Kingdom’s “first data-led, eSIM MVNO“, claimed to be powered by Three UK’s national 4G and 5G network via a virtual operator (MVNO) agreement and appeared to offer a simple range of 30-day data-only (mobile broadband) eSIM plans (e.g. £5 for 10GB and up to 100GB for £15).

In addition, the umbrella Ycorp group were also promoting themselves as being able to enable brands and businesses to easily build their own privately labelled Full or Lite data-driven eSIM MVNO. Suffice to say that the launch seemed to be reasonably polished, but something seems to have changed in the last 30 days or so.

The first sign that something might not be quite right came after a few of ISPreview’s visitors began noticing that their website had suddenly vanished, leaving only a large “Page not found” (404) error notice (pictured). Several of our readers who had signed up to one of their eSIM plans then received the following message, which states that the operator “have decided to temporarily pause Ymobile’s service” and terminate customer plans.

Ymobile Customer Email

Hello,

I am writing to personally thank you for being part of Ymobile’s journey during its initial phase. As one of our early adopters, your feedback and experience has been invaluable in helping us refine and improve our service.

As part of our ongoing commitment to delivering an outstanding mobile experience, we have decided to temporarily pause Ymobile’s service while we prepare for the next stage of its development. This decision follows the completion of our beta phase, and we now begin our process of developing a more robust and advanced version of the service for launch in the future.

What this means for you:

– You will still be able to use your mobile plan for the next 30 days, but your plan will be terminated on Monday 13th of January 2025.

– In accordance with our Terms & Conditions (attached to this email), Ymobile will refund you for any payments you’ve made in advance for services you are not able to use; i.e., if your plan auto-renews shortly before the termination date above, you will be automatically refunded for all remaining days in your 30-day plan that you aren’t able to use following the pause in our services.

– You also have the right to cancel your Ymobile plan at any time including prior to the suspension of our services. To do this please contact our Customer Service Team: hello@ymobile.co.uk

If you have any concerns or questions, please contact the team at hello@ymobile.co.uk

Thank you for being part of the Ymobile story. We’re excited about what’s next, watch this space!

Best regards,

Mike Greaves
Chief Executive Officer, Ycorp

Call us old-fashioned, but there’s a rather stark difference between how Ymobile express this as, on the one hand, being a temporary “pause“, and then almost immediately inform customers that their mobile plans “will be terminated on Monday 13th of January 2025,” while providing no indication of any future continuation of service. You don’t generally treat customers this way when things are going well. But at least they have given the right amount of notice and offered refunds, which is good.

The mention of this being a “beta phase” is also rather perplexing, particularly given that some of the emails we received came from those who appear to have signed up AFTER they announced their public launch. ISPreview has shot off an urgent comment request to hopefully gain some clarification on these events. The related UK company details for Ycorp certainly don’t currently appear to show any obvious issues.

UPDATE 9:42am

Ymobile has sent us an official statement, but it largely reiterates the aforementioned customer email.

A spokesperson for Ymobile told ISPreview:

“As part of our ongoing commitment to delivering an outstanding mobile experience, we have decided to temporarily pause Ymobile’s service while we prepare for the next stage of its development.

This decision follows the completion of our beta phase, and we now begin our process of developing a more robust and advanced version of Ymobile for launch in the near future.

All of our current users’ contract agreements have been fulfilled, and the service is now in the process of being paused.

We appreciate all our users’ trust and understanding as we take this step, which will enable us to offer them an even better service moving forward. We will keep all our users updated on our progress, and we look forward to starting this new chapter in our journey soon.”