Telstra plays down BigPond problems

Despite continual problems with its BigPond service, Telstra continues to play down the extent of disruptions experienced by its Internet customers.

Last week Telstra's NSW and ACT-based ADSL customers were hit by a 12-hour outage. Earlier in the week a number of its customers were unable to access BigPond's mail servers.

Telstra retail spokesperson, Kerrina Lawrence, last week put a positive spin on the mail server outage, saying it only resulted in a loss of one quarter of the mail's functionality.

"They were able to look at their existing mail, they were able to send mail and, after repeated attempts, some customers would have been able to retrieve incoming or new mail, but no-one was actually physically disconnected," Lawrence told ZDNet Australia.

Telstra's broadband ADSL network has born more than its fair share of criticism of the BigPond service.

Depsite the continual outages, the carrier has challenged suggestions that the network is unreliable and it now believes the worst of the network's problems are behind it.

Lawrence conceded that the ADSL network had some problems initially but said that the network has been "relatively stable" since April 2001.

"In June we felt that the teething problems were sufficiently contained with the network architecture investment we were making," said Lawrence. "We felt that we were in a position to stand behind the performance of the network and that's why we introduced the Service Level Guarantee."

However, there appears to be little change in the frequency of glitches affecting BigPond's ADSL network since February last year.

Telstra's ADSL problems appeared late February 2001, soon after the network was rolled out and continued throughout the year.

In July 2001 a report by ZDNet Australia showed that the ADSL service had been down for 331 hours over a two-month period early that year. That report kicked-off a series of new reports carrying a familiar theme.

In August 2001 two outages appeared with days of each other, followed by more hiccups the following month as ADSL users were cut off from international Web sites.

The ADSL service made a poor start to 2002. Telstra blamed software bugs when its ADSL customers found themselves unable to access peer-to-peer file sharing in January and again in February when some customers were unable to log on to the ADSL network at all.

New reports of problems with the services have been appearing on an almost monthly basis since.

Following another outage in March, in April ADSL wholesale customer iPrimus appeared to be persuading its Sydney customers to continue to use the service by pledging to moving them off Telstra's network access equipment and onto its own. At the time, then iPrimus general manager Ash Chopra said the Telstra ADSL rollout was the least reliable he'd ever witnessed.

New reports of outages have appeared in recent months. Disruptions in June and July--the most serious affected customers in four states--formed rehearsals for last week's incident.

Today Victorian and Tasmanian BigPond customers were unable to access Web sites outside Telstra's domain.

Telstra's Service Level Guarantee is currently under scrutiny from the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO). Telstra's TIO liaison officer has confirmed that it has received a complaint from the Ombudsman regarding its ADSL service that has "a service level aspect to it".

Talkback 7 comments

    "Relatively Stable" ...Anonymous -- 12/08/02

    "Relatively Stable" If ever there was a statement that needed clarifying it is those 2 words.
    Does this mean if I pay on time once every 6 months (ie. I can use their network for 1 full month out of every 6) then I would be a "Relatively Good Payer". Some how I doubt it. It is time Telstra admitted that they have made some terrible mistakes with thier network and custmoer service. Once they admit this then not only will they but their customers will be able to move forward until then none of us will believe the SPIN that they are trying to deliver.

    Nothing is stable about the T( ...K.Styles (A very,very disgruntled user) -- 13/08/02

    Nothing is stable about the T(H)elstra network. It continues to stumble from day to day. Who do the twits in T(H)elstra marketing think they are kidding. No amout of spin will convince anyone that it will ever be reliable.
    T(H)elstra have been screwing us for over 2 years. We never get more than a few hours of reliable uninterrupted network or email access. I don't even bother to call Tech.Support anymore. Its the same old story..."Its out of our control. Engineering are dealing with the problem" or the almost laughable "Its a scheduled upgrade".

    Stop trying to convince us the network is reliable. We know it isn't. Admit you have a problem. We might then be able to go forward from the abysmal service you offer at present.

    Ms Lawrence, like the organisa ...Anonymous -- 13/08/02

    Ms Lawrence, like the organisation she speaks for, has been living in a fantasy world for the past two years.

    The drivel she spouts carries credibility only within the four walls of her office.

    The utter contempt Telstra has for its customers is eloquently expressed in Ms Lawrence's comments everytime BPA has problems.

    I have a MEGA contract plan wi ...April Hunter -- 14/08/02

    I have a MEGA contract plan with bigpond and experienced problems with reteiving mail for 3 days. I contacted Bigpond Technical support and asked if there was a problem their end. I was told NO. He then said all problems and any planned interruptions were posted on their site and I must keep myself updated by visiting the site regulary. The man then asked if I had either PC-cillin or Nortons antivirus on my system ? "I have PC-cillin" I told him and he told me that, that was my problem, it is conflicting with the mail, saing that it changes the settings of incoming mail from mail.bigpond.com to localhost, and thats my problem, then told me to uninstall my antivirus program from the computer and delete all mail accounts and then redo the mail accounts again and it should work. I was very uneasy about having my computer unprotected from viruses and I said " what if I get a virus?. He simply replied " well thats the risk you have to take."
    WHAT.........

    I knew this was wrong , said OK and hung up, I then contacted my father and he said that what bigpond had said was rediculous and went through his mail settings with me and ours were relatively the same, even though he is with blueskyinternet. "Telstra's a bunch of idiots" he roared, "I told you not to go with them.."

    So now thanks to your emails and website I now know that telstra flatly lied to me and if I had done what they had advised, I would of put my computer at great risk of becoming a pile of rubbish riddled with viruses.
    Would they of bought my a new computer or paid for repairs had this happened No! BUT, I bet they still would of billed me for a monthly internet account.

    Great advice Telsta ! LIARS

    When Dingoblue went belly up r ...Anonymous -- 23/08/02

    When Dingoblue went belly up recently I switched back to Telstra for my phone account. They wanted to know if I would be interested in signing up for internet as well. I informed that if their home user accounts were as bad as the internet connection we use at work, then I would be a fool to use their service for my home connection. Long experience has taught me that the larger the company, the worse the service (and even MORE so if the company is publicly owned). I'm therefore with a small privately owned ISP where the service is great and the connection is trouble-free. Thanks a lot Telstra, but no thanks. Stick to what you always did well - phones.

    Telstra is one big joke ! Need ...fred Fedsun -- 16/10/03

    Telstra is one big joke ! Need I comment more?

    We move to a new subdivision o ...Anonymous -- 03/05/04

    We move to a new subdivision of an old suburb 5 Km from Perth CBD in August Last year and have been trying to get connected to ADSL. Guess what! Telstra cut corners and put in a cheaper cable and now we have just been told we cannot get ADSL. We need it for use by international students who would use it for uni study, communicating with family back home, and watching movies in they own language. Who lives in a third world country? Them or Us!

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Brad Howarth The key Topik is always money
    One of the big problems of the internet is that is practically impossible to keep up-to-date on preferred topics. You can limit your sources, but this can mean missing a lot of valuable data.
  • Array Do we need the legislative blackmail?
    Virtually everyone in the telecommunications industry has their say in the Senate Standing Committee's public hearing into the pending legislation to split up Telstra, in this week's Twisted Wire podcast.
  • Array Give Tax a break for a Change
    Considering the circumstances the Australian Taxation Office's (ATO) Change Program has been operating in over the last few years, it really hasn't been going too badly.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured