T-Mobile is found guilty (again) of overselling its objectively impressive 5G network
In addition to spending a lot of time hyping up its objectively impressive 5G breakthroughs and expansions over the last year or so, T-Mobile has also had to dedicate a relatively large amount of legal resources to defending some of its most bombastic network marketing claims.
5G coverage doesn’t equal network reliability
In other words, there simply is no proof (at least not yet) that T-Mo’s low-band 5G signal is in any meaningful way more “reliable” than its 4G LTE service or those of the competition. Perhaps more importantly, it’s impossible to objectively claim that “no 5G network is more reliable than T-Mobile’s 5G network” based on existing data.
Meanwhile, all “reliability” claims will be discontinued until T-Mobile can prove its “nationwide” 5G service has something else going for it than “just” unrivaled coverage.
Some of T-Mobile’s 5G availability claims were also found to be misleading
Although the NARB technically went a little easier on the “Un-carrier” than the NAD, letting the general 5G coverage superiority claims stand, other parts of The Science Guy ad concerning the same broad topic were once again slapped down.
Last but certainly not least, Magenta was (predictably enough) asked yet again to ditch a dubious demonstration suggesting Verizon’s 5G Ultra Wideband coverage is limited in many places to the space taken up by a “typical bus bench.”
To its credit, T-Mo has every intention to comply with the latest NARB recommendations, even though it’s not technically legally obligated to do so. Then again, the controversial ad challenged by Verizon is pretty old anyway, so the “Un-carrier” isn’t exactly reaping many marketing benefits from it anymore.
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