Quizzes & Puzzles8 mins ago
Has Bt Just Made A Terrible Mistake?
With the current storm my Mums house and surrounding areas have been left without power since 11.53am, and its still has no power at the time of writing this.
One of our neighbours, who is a vulnerable lady on her own lost the use of her only connection with family etc.
Her landline has been cut off as it recently went digital and is connected to her broadband router.
I only found this out as I went to see if shes ok, but shes in tears as shes in darkness and can't contact anyone.
My point is when landlines were still analog they remained active despite a power outage.
Surely BT should recognise this has a mistake?
Answers
"Here we go again, public service privatised and service no longer matters, it's profits before people."
It has nothing to do with privatisation.
If BT had not been privaised it would still have had to embarke on "Digital Voice" (or something very similar with perhaps a different name).
The reasons have been made clear above but the single most significant reason is that the Public Switched Telephone Network (PTSN) relies on global manufacturers to make the switching equipment that resides in each telephone exchange. In short, they are not making it any more because nobody wants it.
Switching voice calls by Internet Protocol (VOIP) is far more flexible and efficient and it does not require service providers to provide what is essentially a duplicate network used just for voice traffic and not much else.
As soon as VOIP became feasible and practical it was always going to be that the PSTN was eventually going to be abandoned. I'm surprised it has taken so long.
Possibly BT could do better with their programme for vulnerable customers but tthe two choices are to either rely on the mobile network for these (very infrequent) outages or arrange some form of power back up for the phone.
But it has nothing whatsoever to do with "...a public service being privatised." In fact if it was a normal commercial company not subject to rigorous regulation, customers would simply be given notice of what was happening and told to make contingency plans for power outages.