FCC App Lets Android Users Measure Mobile Broadband Speed
itwbennett writes "The FCC's new Android app will allow users to measure the speed of their mobile broadband connection, while providing aggregate data to the agency for measuring nationwide mobile broadband network performance. Released as open-source software on Thursday, the free FCC Speed Test App will test network performance for parameters such as upload and download speed, latency and packet loss. An iPhone version of the app is in the works."
Can't they just ask the NSA?
If every 3-letter agency in the federal government wasn't so busy spying on us, I might get it. But nowadays, I don't trust anyone from Washington.
Memo to ISP network engineers: identify servers used by FCC and add QoS rules to prioritize the relevant traffic.
I have this installed, and it keeps separate track of BOTH wifi measurements and cellular network measurements.
But it measures both, and allows you to swipe left and right to see each measurement it took.
What I've learned: My carrier is pretty pathetic.
Note
Being Open source, you can see exactly what is being reported, but I predict that won't stop the tinfoil hat crowd from claiming the binary does not reflect the source code.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
It would seem that Speedtest already has app for most major mobile players. What is so what is different about that one, beside the fact that all the result is centralized by the FCC (with the associated risks) ?
It's shit megabytes. This is America where we're 15 years behind everyone else and it costs more.
There appears to be no magic new technology here.
It measures upload and download speed and packet loss and latency.
The target server from which upload and download are measured is not clear.
Carriers prefer you only measure against a server on their own network, and will blame the upstream for any measurements to other locations.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
All of these speed tests are ludicrously easily-gamed, and are thus of next to no value in the real world. They don't tell you what speed you're getting on real-world websites, they tell you what speed you could theoretically get when your internet provider lifts caps on bandwidth, prioritizes your traffic over those of other users on the same cell tower / network for the duration of the test, etc.
And you're naive if you think some or all of the above doesn't already happen.
How much of my data plan is running this speed test for the FCC going to eat up?
Is it weird in here, or is it just me?
didn't the fcc do something very similar with home broadband routers?
They gave out routers to selected volunteers around the country. The routers measured and sent data automatically. May be if they were to give out cheap Android phones, this would probably be more successful
I have one of these and the program is still running. Details of the program can be found here. As stated above, they gave out routers that perform intensive testing on your broadband connection over time. Looking at the website they are announcing a new mobile application, so I assume that it is an extension of the same overall program.
Given Apple's stance on Open Source - will they refuse permission to have it in their catalogue ? Then what happens if the FCC insists that they list it ? Once it is there someone will ask for the source of the Apple libraries that it is linked to ....
Time to get some popcorn and watch the fun!
Anyone know where to download this directly as an APK file?
From the github link provided in the summary.
We can only hope that the authors were wise enough to request randomly named data blocks
Or better yet, use some sort of public-key crypto so that nothing can imitate the FCC servers. In any case, it's supposed to be free software; you can verify that the source does what it says it does.
The upstream is exactly what tests like this are supposed to test: connectivity to the Internet itself.
... the app will contact a single FCC-hosted server sitting on a 10mbit Ethernet connection in some office somewhere on 12th st.
Ooo its the feds. cant install this.. etc.
Really, its the FCC, they are the least of our concerns. the other agencies already have your content, so why bother worrying about these guys.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I can't get any information on the endpoint or their testing methodologies. It shows a 2% packet loss on every test but i've been running winmtr continuously to a ip in the dallas area and have received no packet loss and my tests on speakeasy test to dallas are at the qos i'm paying for. All in all I say this is just another half assed government money pit.