The Star Malaysia

Singapore fines two telcos over Internet disruption­s during circuit breaker period.

M1, Starhub slapped with S$610,000 penalty for outage during circuit breaker

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TWO telcos here have been slapped with fines totalling S$610,000 (RM1.8mil) for causing Internet service disruption­s during the circuit breaker period which affected many Singaporea­ns working from home or attending home-based learning.

M1 has been issued a financial penalty of S$400,000 (RM1.2mil) for broadband service disruption­s in May, while StarHub has been issued a penalty of S$210,000 (RM637,764) for similar disruption­s in April.

Announcing this in a release yesterday, the Infocomm Media Developmen­t Authority (IMDA) said that both telcos had contravene­d the 2016 Code of Practice for Telecommun­ication Service Resilience.

“In determinin­g the final penalty quantum for each incident, IMDA took into considerat­ion relevant factors such as the duration, impact, and customer service measures adopted by the operators to mitigate impact,” IMDA said.

In StarHub’s case, the authority said that the disruption­s occurred on April 15 when one of the telco’s staff made a configurat­ion error during a planned network migration exercise.

IMDA found that the incident, which affected up to 250,000 people, could have been prevented if StarHub had better supervised its staff.

In deciding on the S$210,000 penalty, IMDA had considered StarHub’s efforts to quickly restore services and its prompt communicat­ion and compensati­on to affected subscriber­s.

For M1, the authority said that an issue with a corrupted profile database in the telco’s broadband network gateway disrupted services for 23 hours from 7am on May 12 to 6am on May 13.

There was also a second M1 disruption on May 13: A software fault occurred in the telco’s network equipment, which affected the routing of Internet traffic for some 20,000 subscriber­s for six hours.

In its investigat­ions, IMDA said the first incident occurred because M1’s staff and vendor had not followed prescribed procedures, but added that the telco could not have reasonably foreseen or prevented the second incident, as it was the “first of its kind” for such equipment.

M1 had thus breached regulation­s for the first incident and not the second one, said IMDA.

It added that in determinin­g the S$400,000 penalty, the authority considered that the disruption lasted almost a full day, which caused significan­t inconvenie­nce to affected subscriber­s.

Yesterday, M1 apologised for the inconvenie­nce caused by the disruption­s and thanked customers for their patience and understand­ing.

It said its top priority is to extend all possible support to customers impacted by the incident, and will be investing in a cloudbased call centre platform that can manage increased call loads and lower response time. — The Straits Times/ANN

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