NBN Outage Report in Glenormiston South, Corangamite, State of Victoria
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The National Broadband Network (NBN) is an Australian national wholesale open-access data network project and offers landline phone and internet network.
Problems in the last 24 hours in Glenormiston South, State of Victoria
The chart below shows the number of NBN reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Glenormiston South and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by NBN users through our website.
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Internet (73%)
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Total Blackout (11%)
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Wi-fi (11%)
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E-mail (4%)
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TV (1%)
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Phone (%)
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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NBN Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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NickSharples90🇦🇺
(@nicksharples90) reported
nbn router shat it self now i need a new one the **** thing is they are not ******* cheap to replace well there goes my ethereum money
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Mishta Wolf
(@mrWabbit44) reported
My dish is installed in a terrible location. With A dense canopy of trees above it. I'm amazed it works at all. It does have brief interruptions but i still get solid speeds. Still far superior to the NBN satellite service my folks use next door. (I'm in Australia) That seems like dial-up compared to the Starlink. I'll mount the dish in a good location eventually... My only gripe is the price.
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Milan 🇦🇺🇷🇸
(@inter_miki) reported
@QuentinDempster The service isn't even out, and how do you know they quality of the service. Also, complaining about starlink being out for 2 hours when NBN goes out for days is funny.
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Willtech t.me/Willtech201
(@Willtech101) reported
Do you remember you said you looked up who owns Australian Internet and I never have to pay for it anyway and with NBN there would be arrangements and then you outsourced the company. #auspol
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Jim Pine
(@JimPine8) reported
@ZappedAU You can do a 250 x 100 or 500 x 200 on BASE NBN plans or 250 x 250 or 500 x 500 on NBN Enterprise but costly. The biggest problem we have is that WW servers are filling up with stuff that might get very few views this actually costs us more money for paid Google of MSFT plans.
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@MyAccou_001
(@Myaccou012264) reported
@QuentinDempster Ha ha they need spacex to launch them they wont be as many so the capacity will be lower perhaps Ok up to a certain density and cost more. It will take time so any farm that wants internet now will buy starlink and the demand for this NBN service will be dead on arrival.
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10 News Sydney
(@10NewsSyd) reported
BREAKING: Telstra customers have been warned that triple zero calls are currently unavailable in some parts of north east New South Wales. The outage is impacting mobile, NBN, ADSL and landline connections, with Telstra attributing the issue to severe weather across the region. “We’re making good progress restoring services following the severe weather in north east NSW,” said a Telstra spokesperson. “Widespread power outages are affecting parts of our network and our technicians are working closely with authorities to get in and bring services back online when it is safe to do so.”
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Deepa
(@Deepa51000467) reported
Week+ without internet thanks to @SuperloopAU’s botched transition & @nbnaustralia’s inability to send a technician. Forced to run on mobile hotspot. Superloop never warned us NBN would force FTTC→FTTP switch. Costs mounting daily. #SuperloopFail #NBNFail #SydneyInternet
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Lane
(@galt72) reported
@craigkellyAFEE Starlink. (The NBN is absolute shite anyway.) Elon will never go for this crap.
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Pattern Rotator
(@borisyeltzin) reported
Nope. Grok told me so. And in the worst case scenario traffic can be redirected from satellite to satellite to a ground based receiver outside of Australia. Does Starlink’s Traffic Use the NBN? Starlink, operated by SpaceX, provides satellite-based internet via a constellation of low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites, delivering connectivity directly to user terminals (e.g., dishes) without relying on terrestrial broadband networks like the NBN for the core data transmission. Here’s the analysis: Technical Independence: Starlink’s service bypasses traditional ground-based infrastructure for the bulk of its data delivery. It uses its own network of satellites and ground stations (e.g., the Boorowa, NSW station) to connect users, meaning its traffic doesn’t route through NBN’s fiber, copper, or satellite (Sky Muster) networks. This is a key selling point—rural Australians like Grant Vowles in Tasmania switched from NBN to Starlink for speeds up to 200 Mbps, far exceeding Sky Muster’s 25-100 Mbps, precisely because it operates independently. Integration with Local Providers: However, partnerships like Telstra’s resale of Starlink services introduce nuances. Telstra Satellite Internet, powered by Starlink, includes a Smart Modem with a Wi-Fi home phone line, suggesting some integration with local networks for ancillary services (e.g., voice over Wi-Fi). Yet, the primary internet traffic—data downloads and uploads—still relies on Starlink’s satellite link, not NBN infrastructure. The requirement for a Starlink Ethernet Adaptor to connect to Telstra’s modem further indicates a separate data path, not a handover to NBN. Critical View: The establishment narrative often frames Starlink as a direct competitor “bleeding” NBN customers (e.g., 200,000 users by 2025), implying a clean break. But the lack of transparency about backhaul (e.g., how ground stations connect to global internet) leaves room for doubt—some data might indirectly touch NBN or other Australian networks at peering points. Still, no evidence suggests Starlink’s core traffic depends on NBN, making the answer largely no.