CNN — (CNN) — The next time you buy a home or mobile internet plan, you’ll see a new label that lays out exactly how much you’ll be paying, typical download speeds, and information about your plan. Probably. Internet provider policies.
That information will now be standardized across providers and displayed in new disclosures modeled after nutrition labels found on food packages in grocery store aisles, the Federal Communications Commission said.
The new labels, which go into effect on Wednesday and will be required by all major internet service providers (ISPs), are designed by the U.S. government to help consumers understand the mix of plans, rates, and promotional rates. This is one of the latest measures taken by It’s on the market today.
FCC and White House officials say the transparency the labels provide could help Americans save money.
“The FCC borrowed the nutrition label model format from food because we wanted to make basic information about broadband internet services easier to recognize and understand,” said Alejandro Roark, FCC Director of Consumer and Governmental Affairs. he told reporters on a conference call. .
The FCC-mandated disclosure, known as the “Consumer Broadband Label,” must be provided at the point of sale both online and in stores, and is often provided in both English and Spanish.
You should include information about network practices such as early termination fees, data caps, and speed throttling. And they need to be easily accessible. Providers are not allowed to embed labels in fine print or on separate web pages, and consumers must be able to conveniently refer to labels whenever they pay a bill or want to compare plans. said Rourke.
Americans are still limited to a small number of providers in many parts of the country. And the FCC revealed in a report last month that tens of millions of Americans still lack access to high-speed internet at all. The problem is especially acute in rural and tribal areas, where roughly a quarter of Americans lack access to broadband.
To make matters worse, nearly 1 in 5 U.S. households, an estimated 23 million households, and an estimated 59 million people across the U.S., are forgoing their internet plans completely due to the impending end of a popular federal aid program. You are at risk of losing it. Also within this month. Research shows that without affordable connectivity programs, many people would be forced to choose between getting internet at home and paying for groceries.
Still, forcing ISPs to be clearer with consumers could be a small step toward improving competition among internet providers, and could reduce junk fees and other misleading business practices. It’s part of the Biden administration’s broader push to fight back, White House officials who took part in the call said.
“These are mechanisms designed to make companies more likely to compete with each other on consumer price and product quality grounds and less likely to compete with each other through confusing terms or misleading customers. ,” the official said.
The label took years to create. In 2016, the FCC Advisory Committee first released a version of the disclosure that providers were not required to adopt. Then, under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act of 2021, the FCC moved to require broadband disclosure labels and went through a lengthy process to design and finalize the labels.
Ultimately, it could provide consumers with an easy way to compare plans and services from providers like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T. The labels must also be machine-readable, which helps researchers and product review sites gather data about his ISP’s plans and marketing.
Providers would be required to prominently display the label, and FCC officials would monitor evidence of violations and consumer complaints, which could lead to agency investigations and fines.
An FCC official said in a telephone conversation, “We will closely monitor the implementation to see if there are any problems.”
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