Telstra announces BigPond e-mail compensation plans

By Iain Ferguson
17 October 2003 05:00 PM
Tags: e-mail, telstra, worm, virus, iain, ferguson, bigpond, switkowski
Telstra plans to credit its BigPond Internet customers with two weeks' free BigPond service and three months' free usage of its anti-virus, spam filtering and firewall products as compensation for extended e-mail delays attributed to a spam-generating worm.

Telstra's chief executive officer, Ziggy Switkowski announced the initiatives at a press conference late Friday afternoon at which he acknowledged the frustrations of customers and the performance of the BigPond service had "not been up to the standards expected" by the telecommunications heavyweight.

"Telstra apologises for any inconvenience caused," Switkowski said.

Telstra officials said the mail distribution systems had been up to speed over the last couple of days, but acknowledged that customers would see e-mails "dribble through" over the next couple of days. They should be back to normal by next week, BigPond boss Justin Milne said.

The carrier said it would hold a new round of discussions with the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) -- whose office told ZDNet Australia   this week they had urged the carrier to provide customers with a rebate of BigPond access fees and would examine claims by small business customers of economic loss -- early next week.

The carrier said it believed the measures were an "appropriate response at this stage" and said it would engage in "active and open dialogue" with the TIO over the issue.

Switkowski said the additional e-mail traffic generated by the worm was "in the 20 to 30 percent range" higher than the average daily traffic of around 8.5 million e-mails per day.

The carrier would have added around 30 percent additional e-mail server capacity by the end of the weekend to accommodate the problem. By the end of the calendar year, the carrier planned to have doubled the capacity available at the start of this month.

Switkowski said in a statement "customers will automatically receive [the] credit and free security services so need not request that of us.

Customers will need to visit the BigPond homepage in order to activate the free security services."

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Talkback 9 comments

    No compensation for the others ...Anonymous -- 17/10/03

    No compensation for the others on poor service and what about me? I have been greatly inconvenienced today of having no phone, no Internet access overnight with Telstra's very poor website.

    Telstra should be fined!

    What sort of lousy system do t ...MrDamage -- 17/10/03

    What sort of lousy system do they have that a 20-30% increase in traffic breaks their system?
    How the hell are they going to handle the Xmas season, with a 100%+ increase in traffic?
    And i better get more than 2 weeks free use. I have missed a fair few days of work due to the email problems, not to mention unpaid invoices because they werent delivered when they should have been.
    Considering these problems have been occuring over the last 4 weeks, i better get more than 2 or there will be hell to pay.

    20 to 30% increase of email? G ...wilson wu -- 18/10/03

    20 to 30% increase of email? Give me break! I wonder how long can Telstra's increased capacity can hold on?

    The most frustrated thing was, when I had no internet access, of course no email, and after 30 minutes struggling to get through to Telstra's tech support, the guy asked to check Bigpond's WEBSITE for the more details!! I was completely lost for word before I was hung up!!!

    Great for Telstra customers. N ...Anonymous -- 19/10/03

    Great for Telstra customers.
    Not only have I received poor provision of service from ozemail but they slugged me an extra $60 for going over my download limit as I tried to install workable spamfilters and firewalls. This was a direct debit and overdrew my account. I had no warning that ozemail planned o take such a course of action.
    So much for Ozemail unlimited!

    What about the "web sites ...digitalis -- 20/10/03

    What about the "web sites" mess?

    BigPong's user web sites have been seriously disrupted for many weeks, some users' sites have completely disappeared and most can't FTP to them to make changes (which is almost as bad).

    BigPong hasn't even put this on their so-called "service status page", yet alone fixed it. It must be another one of this "non-core" services...

    Email still down Monday mornin ...Anonymous -- 20/10/03

    Email still down Monday morning at 10am. Any calls to Telstra Broadband Cable helpline disconnects after menu selection.

    To add insult to injury the one email that arrived this morning was sent from Telstra on Saturday and was a charge for excess use.

    Loving the ads for BigPond cable all over TV at the moment! Perhaps I can answer their tagline "What would you like?". A service that @#$ken works!

    Let me get this right. For th ...Anonymous -- 20/10/03

    Let me get this right.
    For the frustration of an unreliable email delivery system, brought on by only a 20 - 30% increase in load (poor planning) the customer is rebated 2 weeks worth of access. Is this a reflection on the rest of their systems? Ironic, that someone did an email for excess charges. Maybe the real economic cost/damage should be accessed, for examlpe how many customers called out a PC Tech only to be told that it was a Telstra problem and with the usual "It's not me" from telstra; what was that cost? What about the cost to sme with late email to customers?
    Really a 20 - 30% load increase caused breakdown only shows that Telstra is only in for the buck and not for it's customers.

    Culprit - Privatisation. As so ...Anonymous -- 20/10/03

    Culprit - Privatisation.
    As soon as a company or any part of a company is privatised, their loyalties suddenly switch from their customers to their shareholders. Most people can think of at least 3 examples of this, where quality has dropped and prices have gone up.
    Telstra, electricity distribution, gas distribution, the rail network, etc etc.

    Perhaps with the exit of permanently sleeping telecommunications minister richard alston, there might be a few changes to force telstra to back up their claims with real results instead on just resting on their once great past (until competition) glories. However looking at his replacement brings a shiver to my spine.

    All those people who signed up with telstra in the first place without looking at the alternatives have rocks in their heads the size of Ayer's Rock. Just about all of telstra's services can be obtained from other providors at much lower prices and with much higher emphasis being placed on the quality of the service, not just how much the public can be screwed out of their hard earned dollars.

    As a computer tech and reseller, I strongly urge people to NOT use telstra.
    They are the most expensive, have a long history of troubles with their network, are the most expensive, have innefectual tech support, are the most expensive, spend more money on advertising than on maintaining and futureproofing their network, and are the most expensive.

    Did I say they were the most expensive?!

    Two weeks compensation for Big ...Anonymous -- 17/11/03

    Two weeks compensation for Bigpond disruptions what a joke, when we have been without the service for up to five weeks. I would expect free subscription for a minimum of six months considering the clients and workload I have lost due to the isp problems - not mine!!!!

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