consumer

Georgia Tech Proposes Internet Consumer Nutrition Label


Nick Feamster, assistant professor at Georgia Tech's College of Computing and researcher at the Georgia Tech Information Security Center offers his expertise on the Epislon data breach and what users and custodians can do to protect their data.Com

August 1, 2011

When it comes to broadband speeds, U.S. Internet service providers (ISPs) largely deliver on their promises, says a report issued today by the Federal Communications Commission, but “throughput” is only one of several metrics listed in the report that affect network performance. ISPs should provide a broadband “nutrition label”—easy-to-understand information about service-limiting factors—and users need better ways of measuring the performance their ISPs are delivering, concludes a study from the Georgia Tech College of Computing.

Georgia Tech Proposes Internet Consumer Nutrition Label

Subtitle: 
Researchers say consumers deserve more complete picture of service they receive.
Summary Sentence: 
Researchers say consumers deserve more complete picture of service they receive.

When it comes to broadband speeds, ISPs should provide a broadband “nutrition label”—easy-to-understand information about service-limiting factors—and users need better ways of measuring the performance their ISPs are delivering, concludes a College of Computing study. Source: Office of Communications

Location: 
Atlanta, GA
Contact: 

Brendan Streich

404-894-7253

Release: 
Tuesday, August 2, 2011 - 09:57
Expire: 
Monday, October 31, 2011 - 09:57
Media Item: 
65456
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