Broadband provider
Bulldog has been
rapped over the knuckles for breaking the
Committee of Advertising
Practice code on 'truthfulness' and 'prices'.
Bulldog advertised its 8Mbps broadband service for £9.75 with an asterisk
pointing to the small print warning that users would also need a Bulldog phone
service costing £10.50 a month.
Members of the public and rival broadband provider
BT objected to the advert, which
ran in the UK national press.
The small print referred read: 'New customers ordering Bulldog Go@ctive by
30th November 2005 will be charged £9.75 per month for the period of their
contract. Bulldog home phone line required (£10.50 per month) and is only
available with Bulldog @ctive packages. Broadband speed is up to 8 meg
downstream. Terms and conditions apply.'
Bulldog said that the ad was no longer running but that it would advertise
the 'up
to 8 meg broadband' service again in the future.
The complaints were upheld despite the
Advertising Standards
Authority's (ASA's) agreement that most consumers would understand that
broadband services required a phone line.
"We considered, however, that Bulldog's offer was bundled, because new
customers could not obtain the broadband service for £9.75 a month without also
paying £10.50 a month for Bulldog's telephony service," said an ASA statement.
"Because it was bundled, Bulldog's offer differed from those of some of their
competitors, who did not require customers to take their phone line when taking
their broadband service."
The ASA said that the advertising breached CAP Code clauses 7.1
(truthfulness) and 15.3 (prices). It told Bulldog to amend its future ad
vertising to include the phone line requirement directly below the headline
price claim.
Members of the public also complained to the ASA that they could not get the
offered service.
Some consumers contacting Bulldog were told that the 'up to 8 meg' service
was not available for their phone number and were offered a lower speed service
at a higher price.
However, the ASA dismissed these complaints. "We noted that Bulldog could
deliver the service to 32 per cent of UK households and businesses and also
noted that the ad stated 'Subject to local availability' and 'To find out if you
can get Bulldog, call...', which we considered made clear that Bulldog was not
available to everyone," said the ASA statement.
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