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This discussion topic has been answered Discussion topic: Outage in area no interet

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This message was authored by: Louise233

Outage in area no interet

How much longer is my internet going to be down it been down since yesterday no internet no tv as have sky glass 


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This message was authored by: Daniel0210 Answer

Re: Outage in area no interet

Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more

@Louise233 
Sky usually quote 2 WORKING DAYS as a potential fix time as this is the service level agreement in the UK between ISPs and Openreach for fixing a fault. Openreach claim to be successful within that timeframe in about 85% of cases. Some repairs take longer, for example when Openreach need to dig the road up (after getting permission from the local council).

▪️

This link explains the Ofcom agreed auto compensation scheme which Sky operates for when there is a TOTAL loss of Sky Broadband or Sky Talk for UK customers.
https://www.sky.com/help/articles/auto-compensation

If you have a total loss of service and it isn’t fixed after two full WORKING days from when Sky are notified of the fault, you will become eligible for it.

From Ofcom’s website:~
If your broadband or landline service stops working, you will have to report the fault to your provider. If the service is not fixed after two full working days, you would not need to ask for compensation or contact your provider again, as your provider has systems in place that mean you will start receiving compensation automatically if the repair takes too long.

This auto compensation is applied 30 days after the fault has been repaired and will come in the form of a credit appearing on your Sky account (from 01/04/25 the new rates are £9.98 per day)

▫️There is no equivalent scheme in place for customers in the Republic of Ireland.
▫️There is no automatic compensation for TV services affected by a broadband problem.
▫️I’m not aware of City Fibre being part of this scheme.
▫️Sky broadband being discussed here is a domestic service therefore whilst it's fine for customers who work from home to use it for that purpose they won't receive additional or quicker support.


▪️I AM NOT A SKY EMPLOYEE (undercover or otherwise)▪️
NOTE: I only provide help on the forum boards so Direct Messaging is switched off

▫️
Sky customer since 2001
with:
Sky Q | Sky Superfast Broadband | Sky Talk | Sky Mobile

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This message was authored by: TimmyBGood

Re: Outage in area no interet

Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more

@Louise233 

 

Area outages typically get attention over weekends: individual domestic circuit failures don't.  The response will be proportional to the number of properties affected.

 

Glass can potentially receive a digital terrestrial television signal if an external aerial is attached.

* * * * * * *

Sky Glass 55" (on ethernet) & two Stream Pucks (one ethernet / one WiFi)
BT Halo 3+ Ultrafast FTTP (500Mbs), BT Smart Hub 2
This message was authored by: Daniel0210 Answer

Re: Outage in area no interet

Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more

@Louise233 
Sky usually quote 2 WORKING DAYS as a potential fix time as this is the service level agreement in the UK between ISPs and Openreach for fixing a fault. Openreach claim to be successful within that timeframe in about 85% of cases. Some repairs take longer, for example when Openreach need to dig the road up (after getting permission from the local council).

▪️

This link explains the Ofcom agreed auto compensation scheme which Sky operates for when there is a TOTAL loss of Sky Broadband or Sky Talk for UK customers.
https://www.sky.com/help/articles/auto-compensation

If you have a total loss of service and it isn’t fixed after two full WORKING days from when Sky are notified of the fault, you will become eligible for it.

From Ofcom’s website:~
If your broadband or landline service stops working, you will have to report the fault to your provider. If the service is not fixed after two full working days, you would not need to ask for compensation or contact your provider again, as your provider has systems in place that mean you will start receiving compensation automatically if the repair takes too long.

This auto compensation is applied 30 days after the fault has been repaired and will come in the form of a credit appearing on your Sky account (from 01/04/25 the new rates are £9.98 per day)

▫️There is no equivalent scheme in place for customers in the Republic of Ireland.
▫️There is no automatic compensation for TV services affected by a broadband problem.
▫️I’m not aware of City Fibre being part of this scheme.
▫️Sky broadband being discussed here is a domestic service therefore whilst it's fine for customers who work from home to use it for that purpose they won't receive additional or quicker support.


▪️I AM NOT A SKY EMPLOYEE (undercover or otherwise)▪️
NOTE: I only provide help on the forum boards so Direct Messaging is switched off

▫️
Sky customer since 2001
with:
Sky Q | Sky Superfast Broadband | Sky Talk | Sky Mobile

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