LigerXT5 t1_isp62fo wrote
Reply to comment by HuntingGreyFace in Comcast wanted $210,000 for Internet—so this man helped expand a co-op fiber ISP | Fed up with Comcast and AT&T, Silicon Valley residents started their own network. by chrisdh79
This is a rise going on, Suddelink/Optimum (same company, owned by Altice), ATT, and a few others are caught in this. People looking to move, told there's service, move in, and find out there isn't. I've witnessed this a few times on the edges of my town. Some are lucky to even get 3-6Mbs on a 12Mb plan with ATT.
Theory till practiced enough: What I'd suggest is before signing paperwork for buying a house, have an ISP tech visit and confirm there is service, and confirmed speeds to be expected. If all goes well, schedule a followup to install, after all the paperwork is done. This sounds like the most simple and legal option.
Theory 2: Home owners looking to sell need to start listing what ISPs are confirmed, by the ISPs themselves, when listing to sell. That way the home owner is still not in troubled mix, and the legal issues go to the ISPs who can't keep their coverage maps accurate.
HuntingGreyFace t1_isp8uuv wrote
its happened every time ive moved in the last 15 years.
DENelson83 t1_ispkug7 wrote
The problem is actually having the ISP tech visit before closing on the house. Most large ISPs will not do this.
MelodyMyst t1_ispm4aq wrote
You. An always just look around yourself. It’s not too difficult to see if there is a cable from the pole. If it’s underground there is a box nearby. Ask the neighbors.
There are lots of things you can do in your own.
DENelson83 t1_isrbgyu wrote
None of those will actually allow you to determine if a piece of property is wired up or not. If the lines are underground, you obviously will not be able to see them.
Maybe what needs to be done is a call to 8-1-1.
MelodyMyst t1_isrfams wrote
That’s not even remotely true.
CaptainKenway1693 t1_isrz7np wrote
It certainly is for my home. My next door neighbour had Frontier and my property didn't. When asked why I couldn't receive service I was informed that they were at capacity. When Frontier finally decided to run new cable in the area I was able to get cable ran to my home. But my place and my neighbours place are both connected to the same box, so nothing is visually different from before.
[deleted] t1_isryybo wrote
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ihohjlknk t1_isql6qo wrote
This is what i think about when i read these stories. How can a home buyer possibly confirm that the house is hooked up to an ISP? You can't take a customer service agent's word at face value.
LigerXT5 t1_isqlyhw wrote
The only solid answer is finding out what the current owner is using, and the speed test results, as well as the package they are signed up for.
TK421sSupervisor t1_isrhm2y wrote
Put it in to the purchase agreement? Everything is negotiable. If the seller misrepresents this, they’re on the hook no?
PM_ME_C_CODE t1_isqle7n wrote
>What I'd suggest is before signing paperwork for buying a house, have an ISP tech visit and confirm there is service
And get it in writing. That way if even after the tech says "yes we can" and they can't, you can sue.
A home is a massive investment. CYA.
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