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Re: 50p phone levey - not on Virgin phones ?
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and you dont pay the landline cost £11, so why should we pay more. |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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edit Look at it another way: if you were exempt because you're already on a super-fast cable network, wouldn't all those who already have fast ADSL also be exempt? |
Re: 50p phone levey - not on Virgin phones ?
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At the risk of opening another rather large can of worms, it becomes a bit like the TV license - only (currently) the BBC gets anything from it but you can't use any other channels without paying for it. I'd almost rather they were honest about it, did it as a tax or charge similar to the TV license and kept it away from the ISPs having to deal with it. Applying it as a levy against fixed lines makes things easy for the government and (in general) shifts the cost of administering the whole lot on to the ISPs. Hmm - the more I think about this the more I think VM are getting the short end of the stick here. VM absorbs tax cost to remain competitive, BT get faster super duper network, BT charge VM higher rates for the privilege of running Virgin.net ADSL over new super duper network... |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
... only if Virgin do opt to absorb the levy. The Government will naturally be keen for the phone companies to do this as it renders their tax on phone lines effectively invisible to voters. Personally I'd do as the airlines do, and make it very clear on the bill exactly what taxes are being levied and how much.
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re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
True enough - I hope that they all do that. I can see BT pretending it's not there though as they can plan long term - spend a bit now to get people signed up on the basis of them subsidising them on the basis they can recoup the costs long term with the better network.
I seem to remember a while back, BT got the green light to charge more for these better services when they were available as a whole profitability thing/incentive to invest in them. I wonder if that will get revoked or not. |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
if BT was a national company still owned by the goverment then i don't think id be as worried but its not its private company and all i can see is BT getting 100 of 1000s new customers through new upgraded lines that have been partly paid for from cable money and Virgin getting screwed (pardon the pun).
now if Virgin was to get a share of this money to upgrade and lay new cable then im all for it. |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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The issue here is the minimum level of universal service we as a nation can expect to get from the fixed-line telephone network operated by the former State monopoly, British Telecom. The now-privatized BT plc, having inherited an infrastructure built largely at the taxpayers' expense, has in return to provide a fixed line to anyone who wants one (I mean everyone, with few, if any exceptions), and that line has to be usable for both voice and data. The problem is, the current minimum acceptable data speed that BT is obliged to provide is, IIRC, a mere 28.8kbps. It's reasonably easy to do that, but now the Government wants to raise the minimum service level to 2mbps. That is impossible to achieve without serious investment in technology in the very places where it will be impossible to make a financial return on it (such as on my line, which is 4 miles from a rural exchange that has fewer than 200 properties connected to it). And BT is no longer a State monopoly whose losses simply get swallowed up in the chancellor's next budget report. It's a plc, and is obliged to make a profit. The money that is raised with this levy will be spent on bringing the minimum data speed up to 2 meg on those lines that cannot already support it. In essence, a lot of money being spent in a few poorly-served, mostly rural locations around the UK. Your cash is going to upgrade my phone line. That may sound unfair, but it is simply what happens with every penny of tax you pay. It is spent where and when it's needed, and it is not needed anywhere on the Virgin network, as that network is already capable of far in excess of 2 meg. |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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too rite its unfair if your not happy with your speed then u pay BT for your line to be upgraded why should we have to pay. i dont see this as a goverment helping the have not's in the internet world i see it as the goverment finding another way of taxing us to pay for their bank bailout fiasco. how is £6 a year from every house that has a fixed line going to help thats no where near enough plus if it was to be true the goverment wouldn't give the full £6 towards the fund they would prob give £4 of it to the fund. |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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The parts of the UK that do not already have 2 meg ADSL broadband, do not have it because it is very expensive to do in those parts. Thus, everyone pays something to subsidise the effort. There is nothing unusual or controversial about this. Quote:
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re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
Road Tax was original for the up keep of the roads!!!
Need I say more? Just another thought, when the whole country have fibre optic broadband will they stop the tax? |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
This isn't going to give fibre-optic broadband to the whole country. It's mostly going to provide range-boosting equipment to make ADSL work on the long or poor quality lines where it currently either doesn't work, or provides sub-2meg speeds. It may also result in wireless solutions in some places.
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re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
i get the feeling your all for this Chris
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re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
i am for it there are many areas where dial up 56k dial up is just a dream as more and more purchases are made online getting every one access isnt just about them being able to surf its about business in general being able to sell to them if £6 year per fixed line will help i am all for it personally i think they should have done it per household with either net or phone access |
re: [Update and merge] 50p landline tax shelved
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It will be good for the economy. It will allow small home-grown businesses more freedom to start up in rural locations that could do with the boost and it will, in the long term, reduce the cost of delivering public services. A lot of government stuff is online now but they can't go for exclusive online delivery while a large minority of people are still unable to access it. A universal 2meg service will change all that. I am on the end of a very long phone line myself but I can - usually - get slightly over 2 meg already. This allows me to work from home whenever it's appropriate. This is only the case because the Scottish Government paid BT to put broadband into my exchange. Prior to that I was on dial-up only, which was a real shock after moving from a house with TL cable broadband, I can tell you. The availability of broadband at home has saved my employers lost productivity when weather has made commuting impossible and, in my most recent contract, has saved a small fortune in money and CO2 emissions as I have been able to work from home for more than a year now. When this 50p levy results in booster equipment being installed on the lines up here, I hope to benefit from further speed increases, and people further up the line from me who currently don't get broadband at all will be able to get the same advantages I now have. |
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