I've been in the communications industry for almost 30 years & I don't think I've ever heard anything good about CenturyLink.
CenturyLink left 86-year-old woman with no Internet service for a month
Submitted 1 year ago by fne8w2ah@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world
Comments
Jaysyn@kbin.social 1 year ago
GFGJewbacca@lemm.ee 1 year ago
A company finally engaging in something resembling customer service or doing their fucking job after being contacted by journalists threatening to expose their behavior? That’s never happened before and certainly won’t happen again. /s
agent_flounder@lemmy.one 1 year ago
As a former customer this doesn’t surprise me in the slightest.
Our neighborhood and its twisted pair is 50 years old. I had DSL from the moment it first became available, and over time they upgraded the speeds. I have been WFH since 2006.
During that time I had had multiple cases of DSL going down and in many cases a new modem cured it.
But suddenly, during the Pandemic, the modem started losing its link 1-5 times a day every day. Totally unacceptable. I called multiple times. They came out multiple times. They weren’t able to find a problem on their end even after multiple visits and we had eliminated the problem being on my end.
It’s like nobody had any ownership of the issue or any sense of duty to proactively troubleshoot the problem to resolution. They almost treated every call as an isolated momentary issue despite having the prior info and me relaying it. They would just come out, do a line test, and when everything looked ok, they would shrug and leave. And the problems would continue as before.
Perhaps it was an intermittent hardware fault in the CO. Perhaps it was just old copper they were unwilling to spend any money on upgrading. I found I wasn’t alone. A few others had the same issue in the neighborhood too.
I’m on brand new fiber now with a different provider and reliability is orders of magnitude better as one might expect.
But yeah, fuck CenturyLink.
autotldr@lemmings.world [bot] 1 year ago
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Helen Marie Plourde, an 86-year-old Minnesota resident, just spent over a month without home Internet and phone service because CenturyLink failed to fix a problem that began in July.
Christopher Mitchell, director of the Community Broadband Networks Initiative with the Institute for Local Self-Reliance in Minneapolis, put Deloney in touch with us.
"For the past month, [Plourde] has been going to my mom and dad’s house to use the Internet two times a day because hers went out and CenturyLink can’t be bothered fixing it.
That didn’t end up being necessary because CenturyLink sprang into action after Ars contacted the company’s media relations team on Thursday night.
A CenturyLink technician went to Plourde’s home on Friday morning and fixed a line problem on a nearby street, restoring her Internet and VoIP phone service.
On Friday morning, CenturyLink told Ars that “the help ticket did not escalate through Velocity’s process properly, so it wasn’t in our system.”
The original article contains 510 words, the summary contains 156 words. Saved 69%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
DosDude@retrolemmy.com 1 year ago
I love the stock image of an ethernet cable with only phone capabilities having continuity. Good choice from whoever made that decision.
atyaz@reddthat.com 1 year ago
Don’t you need 2 pairs for phone
reallynotnick@lemmy.world 1 year ago
For a 2-line connection yes, but single line is just 1 pair.