FCC crowdsources mobile broadband testing

New app allows any Android user to help measure network performance and download speeds.

smartphones

The Federal Communications Commission is deputizing anyone with a mobile device to play a part in its version of Verizon's "Can You Hear Me Now?" campaign.

The new FCC Speed Test App, which dropped Nov. 15 for Android users, allows anyone who wants to install the open source software on their device to collect mobile broadband speeds to help paint a picture nationwide of network performance, upload and download speed, latency, and other factors that contribute to device performance.

The app runs in the background, and automatically conducts performance tests while otherwise idle. It is designed to avoid contributing to data overages with mobile users, consuming 100 megabytes or fewer per month. Users on tight plans can adjust the data use. The FCC promises that data collection is purely anonymous, that no personally identifiable information such as phone number, device number, or subscription information is collected.

The app works by collecting user location, device type including operating system, time of data collection, and cellular and broadband performance characteristics – basically signal strength and speed.

Users can see test results from their own device inside the app. Beginning next year, the FCC will present the data graphically on a map to allow users to compare network speeds across the country, with the goal of allowing a high level of detail on network gaps and slow spots in urban areas. By the second quarter, results will be broken down by network provider, mobile device, and operating system. Later in the year, data will include peak performance by time of day and days of the week.

Currently, the app is available only to Android users. An iPhone version is in development and should be out by the end of January 2014.