Tech Support > Computers & Technology > Internet & Broadband > Pipex Solo - Legal?
Pipex Solo - Legal?
Posted by Malcolm Reeves on September 7th, 2003


Hi,

I was reading the pipex info where they say business use is not
allowed. When you compare

Solo 512K download, 256k upload, contention 50:1, £24.44 pm

Home Office 512K download, 256k upload, contention 50:1, £29.32 pm

There is no difference, AFAIK, except the price. Setup is also free
on Solo and £70.50 on the Home Office. The difference is even more
marked with the 1MB offerings.

But bytes are bytes at the end of the day. Pipex give no
bandwith/traffic limitations and in practice a heavy home user
could easily consume more bytes than a light business user. So,
is it legal to charge businesses more for the same product just
because they are a business. Is this not an unfair contract
term?

I mean, unless you can show a business gets something more, or uses
more, how can you charge them more and not be discriminating? And how
can you bar them from a product unless you can show a reason? Take a
one man SOHO situation, compared with say, a large family. Who will
use the most BW?

BTW I guess this may apply to many ISPs as well as pipex, I just
haven't looked.

Malcolm

--

....malcolm

Malcolm Reeves BSc CEng MIEE MIRSE, Full Circuit Ltd, Chippenham, UK
(mreeves@fullcircuit.com, mreeves@fullcircuit.co.uk or mreeves@iee.org).
Design Service for Analogue/Digital H/W & S/W Railway Signalling and Power
electronics. More details plus freeware, Win95/98 DUN and Pspice tips, see:

http://www.fullcircuit.com or http://www.fullcircuit.co.uk

NEW - Desktop ToDo/Reminder program (free)

Posted by Nick Shaw on September 7th, 2003



"Malcolm Reeves" <mreeves@fullcircuit.com> wrote in message
news:0b1nlv8du5puf4viq4e6chrdr032f1ss96@4ax.com...

They are only offering a service, which you can choose to, or not, subscribe
to. Why winge - go elsewhere if you do not like it.

Cheers

Nick



Posted by Paul King on September 7th, 2003


"Malcolm Reeves" <mreeves@fullcircuit.com> wrote in message
news:0b1nlv8du5puf4viq4e6chrdr032f1ss96@4ax.com...
<big snip>

Put your foot in the other shoe, and consider that Pipex are doing a
"service" by giving Joe Public access at a cheaper level because Joe Public
(in balance) doesn't make the same revenue as Big Mega Companies. Thus they
sell access to Big Mega Companies (and I don't care whether that's a one
mand band or a multinational - they both have to generate revenue to succeed
and pay corporation tax etc.) at the "true" rate, and piggyback Joe Public's
costs onto it.

In the end "You pays your money and takes your choice"

It works for me!

Paul

--
paul.g.king@theobviousdsl.pipex.com
Reply address is spamtrapped. Remove theobvious for valid e-mail address


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Posted by Alec on September 8th, 2003



"Malcolm Reeves" <mreeves@fullcircuit.com> wrote in message
news:0b1nlv8du5puf4viq4e6chrdr032f1ss96@4ax.com...
industries. You pay more for a business line than a private BT line for
example, but basically you get the same phone line and hardware. Main
difference is in more business-oriented service and support, like quicker
response to line faults and bigger compensation, free entry in business
directories etc. From broadband provider like Pipex, you'll get freephone or
local-rate support (instead of national or premium rate) and other services
more geared to business use like more comprehensive web-hosting. Also
remember most businesses can reclaim VAT, which narrows the differential.

Alec



Posted by robert w hall on September 8th, 2003


In article <3f5bb7f5$0$254$cc9e4d1f@news.dial.pipex.com>, Paul King
<paul.g.king@theobviousdsl.pipex.com> writes
or work, on a contract/consultant basis, from home?
(personally I'm with demon, who don't fuss I think)
--
robert w hall

Posted by Tera on September 8th, 2003


On Mon, 8 Sep 2003, robert w hall wrote:

Paul would put you on a par, on turnover, with a multinational!

Someone (self employed) asked me recently about the cost of ADSL
and I think Free UK is one of the cheapest which allows business
to use it. From their T+C document defining the customer as "the
person, group of people, or company, who receive the Service from
FreeUK under the terms of this Agreement," 22.99 (inc VAT), and
has Claranet managing the service.

Posted by s7uar7 on September 8th, 2003


It's my understanding that the business users effectively subsidise the
service for the home users. The ISPs and BT need to pay for the
infrastructure in order to cope with peak demand i.e. 9-5 Mon-Fri, and it's
the business customers that tend to use it then. Rather than leave it
sitting mostly idle in the evening and weekends this bandwidth is sold to
home users at a cheaper price. Yes, home users have access during the day,
but most won't use it then. If the cost to business users was decreased
we'd see the cost to home users increase.

"Malcolm Reeves" <mreeves@fullcircuit.com> wrote in message
news:0b1nlv8du5puf4viq4e6chrdr032f1ss96@4ax.com...


Posted by Peter Morgan - 0870 432 9631 on September 8th, 2003


On 8 Sep 2003 17:18, "s7uar7" <s7uar7@hotmail.com> wrote:

For many ISPs, I suspect "peak demand" to be from 1700 to 0100 rather
than 0900-1700, though the trend may have changed with the introduction
of "anytime" dial-up packages in recent years. The only "off peak" time
might now be 0200-0700 which is when a few ISPs have had scheduled slots
for maintenance, as this causes disruption to minimum number of users.

I don't know what proportion of PlusNet's users are "business" and
what proportion are "home" but take a look at the traffic on
<http://portal.plus.net/supportpages.html?D10diomB6dQ%3D>
and draw your own conclusions about 'peak' and 'off-peak'.

Posted by Deleted Unread - use reply-to on September 9th, 2003


In article <ibmplvcc282vah1mr0idb0q2tbkb6gao4e@news.clara.net >,
Peter Morgan - 0870 432 9631 <2003.08@020directory.com> wrote:
Now with Bulldog, you're probably safe in assuming peak = 9am-5pm as their
Primetime ADSL packages offer 512k during the day and more in the evening.
However they're more of a business-focussed ISP than most.

Zane.

Posted by Malcolm Reeves on September 9th, 2003


On Mon, 08 Sep 2003 20:57:58 +0100, Peter Morgan - 0870 432 9631
<no.mail@lastname.org.uk> wrote:

That's an interesting graph. I would expect personal use to be much
larger than business use myself (although you will also get personal
use during business hours, and on business lines, IMO).

I have been told that legally is ok to discriminate business/home but
not on the basis of colour/sex/etc. BUT, selling the same product for
2 different prices is misrepresentation so if a court would consider
the two products the same then pipex could be in trouble.

Looking around, other ISPs don't make a distinction. For example
Eclipse actually says on its pages that you can use the home products
for home or business. Pay more for the business products and you get
20:1 rather than 50:1 contention. That's fair enough, pay more get
more. Pay more get the same is what I object to.

Malcolm

--

....malcolm

Malcolm Reeves BSc CEng MIEE MIRSE, Full Circuit Ltd, Chippenham, UK
(mreeves@fullcircuit.com, mreeves@fullcircuit.co.uk or mreeves@iee.org).
Design Service for Analogue/Digital H/W & S/W Railway Signalling and Power
electronics. More details plus freeware, Win95/98 DUN and Pspice tips, see:

http://www.fullcircuit.com or http://www.fullcircuit.co.uk

NEW - Desktop ToDo/Reminder program (free)

Posted by Peter Morgan - 0870 432 9631 on September 9th, 2003


On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 10:51 +0100, Malcolm Reeves wrote:

*some* other ISPs don't. I suspect most do, "because they can" and the
general pricing for those that do means there's variety, just as with a
service for home users, so few will worry that they're well above the
average for 50:1 at 500 kbps

Yes, Demon, Eclipse, FreeUk and perhaps some others - I was aware of the
tele-worker friendliness of Eclipse last year when a friend wanted ADSL
for home. I hadn't known they were leaving the choice to the customer
to such a degree. Maybe some other ISPs will follow suit one day!

I understand exactly how you feel. I can think of few services from
BT where the same charge is levied for residential and business lines,
but in many cases, I believe the business rate is the same as any home
users pay including the VAT. Business users may get better CS handling
(shorter waiting period when calling, and faster installation at least)


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