The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Net exec takes lie detector test

The things people will do to get their name in print

An executive at the Mirror's ISP, ic24, has taken a lie detector test to prove that the service really is free.

ic24's marketing director, Jill Playle, underwent the polygraph test to prove that the new "After Eight" campaign - providing free Net access between 8pm and midnight, Monday to Friday and
9am to 5pm at the weekend - is a genuinely free offer.

Playle said: "It's time to call a spade a spade and to clear up all the confusion that riddles the market right now.

"We're all sick to death of reading about so-called free Internet time, as long as you pay a set up charge or a monthly fee.

"That's not free at all. With this offer we're giving our users exactly what it says on the packet and I would urge others to start doing the same before we're all tarred with the same brush," she said.

Strong words. That should ruffle a few feathers in the marketplace.

In fact, none more so than the Mirror's, very own campaigning Net journo, Matt Kelly, who's torn into poor performing ISPs - including LibertySurf and LineOne - like a man possessed.

Can't wait to see him rip into ic24 should it ever fall below his impeccably high standards. ®

Related Stories

LineOne ditches free Net access
Customers bash LineOne
ISPA slaps LineOne
Virgin delays unmetered Net access promise

Free whitepaper: Calculating total power requirements for data centers

Don’t Miss

Dollar101 uses for a former merchant banker

Comment Innovators who work out the best one will make a killing

The Year in Operating Systems: No battle of big ideas

Small change for 2009

Photography: Yes, you have rights

Comment Unless the police say you haven't

Enormous HP box spotted from space

Exclusive pics of Peterborough packaging pandemonium