What It Feels Like Living In A Third World Country - Germany And The Internet

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Behind me lies one of the most annoying weeks in my whole life. And ironically, that's not because something of real consequence has happened in my life but simply because my internet stopped working and getting access to it again has been an odyssey in way too many acts. Living in a major city in Germany, supposedly one of the most advanced countries in the world, you'd think something as simple as getting access to the internet shouldn't take much time at all but boy would you be wrong with this assessment...

In this article I'm first going to share the whole story of what happened and what I had to suffer through in order to finally have it fixed. At the same time, I'm going to discuss what this whole thing tells us about our reliance on the internet and how important it is to take measures and be prepared for such a thing happening. Let's get right into it!

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Photo by Andre Hunter

Two weeks ago I started to notice that most sites I tried to load took a bit longer than what I was used to. Every now and then, my streams started to buffer mid stream, and so on. I didn't give it too much thought at first and it was only temporary and only happening every now and then. I only realized something was wrong when I found out about Doctor Who Worlds Apart 9 days ago. The site has a lot of images and animated stuff and no matter what I tried, I failed to load it. After some testing around, I realized that my downstream was to blame as I only had about 1 MB of downstream left and even with that, download rates would drop below 10 KB/s at times.

Things got increasingly worse over the weekend and by last Monday, it had finally died completely, not loading anything that consisted of more than a few lines of text. I called my ISP's service hotline and after a lot of time spent waiting and listening to awful music I finally got some decent service from a friendly lady. She told me that it was a known issue, my node has been under way too high load because of Corona recently and they were already in the process of fixing it. To do so, they'd do an emergency node-split and afterwards, everything should be working again. While this all sounded rather good, the actual fix was scheduled to take place on February 26th, until then things should be expected to work rather bad, if they work at all.

Obviously, this was kinda unacceptable, yet the young lady only claimed to be sorry but that there was nothing she could do about it. It took me actually canceling my contract to even get them back to me and offering to not charge me any fees for the whole month. I pay 45€ a month for a business connection, so that's quite some money, but that money is not nearly as important than having actual access to the internet. So I looked into switching my ISP and as crazy as it might sound, there's exactly one other service available that wouldn't take several weeks to get it even running.

I wanted to make sure everything would go smooth from there, so I called their hotline to get some more information. I was greeted by a computer voice telling me that the expected wait time would be approximately 1 minute. That's not too bad, is it? Well, 15 minutes later I was still waiting (and again listening to awful music) when their system decided to just hang up on me. Great stuff. 5 minutes later I got a SMS asking if I was satisfied with their service. Surprisingly, after that episode I had lost all interest in switching to them.

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Photo by Markus Spiske

So I went back into discussions with my current ISP. I have a mobile contract with the same company, so I had the great idea that they could just keep their money and instead provide me with enough data volume so I could use my phone as a hotspot as long as my internet wasn't working. At first I was told that that's not possible because obviously, their mobile services are completely different branch of the company and they can't just have them pay for the issue. Right.

It took me an unbelievable 6 rounds of discussions with (seemingly) increasingly important members of their support personal until somebody decided to actually provide me with a so called "Giga Box" - basically a device that provides Wifi - and "gift" me 150 GB of free data to operate it for the month. Today I've received said box and so far, it seems like it's working and I'm back on the internet.

Everything considered, this whole charade cost me at least 6 hours waiting in line and discussing with sometimes pretty clueless support personal with questionable German skills. In short, it was utterly annoying. A week without proper internet also means I can't follow most of my crypto routine and I've probably lost somewhere between 50$ and 100$ worth of lost opportunities because of that.

The whole thing made me realize just how dependent we are on having unhindered access to the internet. I obviously can't surf the web without internet, so I can't properly post my articles, I can't trade. But there's a lot more to it. I can't play my games, I can't watch TV, I can't listen to music, I can't access my banking. In short, without access to the internet, I can't do anything. It's a wonder I was able to turn on the light without internet. Hadn't I had access to my companies internet during working hours and access to my mobile, I wouldn't even been able to determine the hotline numbers I had to call or the customer ID they asked me for.

Now I can only hope that things are better elsewhere in the world, but this is something to really think about. All the decentralization, the immutability, it all means jack if you can't access it. At least here in Germany, there are exactly two ISPs that control more than 95% of the net. There are a lot more providers, but they mostly rely on the net built by these two ISPs to provide their internet access. If they would willingly choose to disconnect you or are just utterly incompetent like in my case, there's almost nothing you can do. If something crazy had happened in the crypto world that would have required my immediate attention, there would have been almost nothing I could have done about it.

The aforementioned Giga Box is a good first step and I'm certainly going to keep it even after my normal internet connection is working again, but after last weeks experience, I don't think this will suffice. Turns out, having access to the internet is coming right after having my basic needs fulfilled and I'm not prepared to leave that to the whims of some incompetent morons running my access. As a first step, I'm getting data sim cards from different providers so I'd at least be able to create a hotspot with my mobile through different nets if I had to. At the same time, I'm looking into alternative ways of accessing the internet like satellite access. Ultimately, if we want to truly be immutable, we'll have to be as independent of any single ISP as we possibly can.

And that concludes my little rant, at least for now. Just writing down this hole shit-show helped to make things more bearable a lot. Now it's time to look ahead again, I've got plenty of catching up to do and BTC is just trying to get across the 40k $ mark again. There are fun times ahead of us!

Thank you all for reading and see you next time!

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18 comments
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The most surprising thing in your whole article was:

in Germany, there are exactly two ISPs that control more than 95% of the net

That got me to wondering what the situation is in the UK but I couldn't find the information easily.

Sounds like customer service in Germany is similar to here. Glad you're back up and running anyway.

Have a fun weekend!

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It's the kind of thing you don't think about as long as everything is working fine but gets you really worried once things stop working ;-)

Thank you for stopping by and have a great weekend!

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Wow! Doctor who , one more game.

Look like we have the best internet experience in the world despite in third world. You will not believe that for less than $4(monthly price) , I can get > 4G network with 2 GB limit daily in mobile, If my broadband suck I power my laptop with mobile data.

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Wow, that's pretty amazing indeed, seems we have a lot of catching up to do in that regard!

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Let me know how the new ISP is doing for you. I seriously would go nuts without an internet connect as sad as it is to say that lol. ISPs are seriously always a pain to deal with. Where I currently live however has been one of the better ones. Nearly always up and if it crashes it tends to only be for a short while. Even during a hurricane the thing kept on going!

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and access to my mobile, I wouldn't even been able to determine the hotline numbers I had to call or the customer ID they asked me for.

i hadn't thought about that and you are completely right. It's terrifying if you think about it... Thankfully, for us the number is on the bill that arrives once per 2 months but who knows if they decide one day to have these bills only via internet

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Mine are only online already and I've always liked that... up until now that is ;-)

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I know your pain. When I moved to Germany where I was the first time living it took 3 months to have an appointment for the installation. I said f... that and went to the neighbour one story below who had a fiber connection and offered him that I pull a cable from his router and we split the cost. His German girlfriend was against as it is against the rules. He was coming from East Berlin and immediately accepted it. There was no issue with the connection and we all have been happy, less cost for both.

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Haha, ya "it's against the rules" is about the strongest argument you can bring up against anything in Germany. The truth is, you can get away with so much around here yet people simply won't even consider doing it because it's against the rules...

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Yes, brainwashed people... that id why referral links are bad seen, as you want to take their money :)))

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That's what monopolistic practices of some companies lead to, you end with an awful service and they even don't attend well their customers because they know that you haven't alternatives.

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Spot on - that's the main issue. They can get away with anything basically because there's just nothing you can do about it.

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Here the Internet is not a issue... I dont have the broadband in my home... I am using Hotspot from my mobile for streaming on TV or when using the laptop....
What is Gigabox?
Its good that you are online now...

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This story so much reminded me of a similar episode I had many years ago when I was living in Frankfurt am Main. My issue was that I moved apartments, needed a new router for the new connection. Support thought that the router was faulty, and sent a new by mail. Turned out it was some faulty wiring was the root cause, but the whole episode was somewhere around 30 days, before I finally had a technician there to fix the issue in 15 minutes. But back to your headline - I live in South of Mexico now, and there are other types of issues here and also unexpected slowdowns/interruptions. Other issues also include power outages due to lightning etc. Other parts of the world has different issues :-)

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That's certainly true and to tell the truth, I'm pretty happy to live in Germany. So the title was more meant as sarcasm than anything else :-)

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your experience is lived daily in my country Venezuela. In Venezuela there are few people who can enjoy the service of the internet, I pay $ 20 monthly to obtain a service which is not very good.

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If the internet is your biggest problem then you should be thankful! In South Africa we have, and still do, experience Electrical Loadshedding, so our power grid is switched off for 2 hours at a time according to a daily schedule. No internet, no coffee, no nothing. You may want to re-evaluate what you call third world. We are thankful to have sunshine and great beaches though, so I guess that makes up for bad services.

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The 3rd world country thing was more meant in a sarcastic way, I'm pretty happy to live in Germany, most things are handled pretty well around here. But it's always a matter of perspective and what's most important at any given time ;-)

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