Home » New website allows Louisville residents to measure internet speeds

New website allows Louisville residents to measure internet speeds

Will show locations of city’s best service

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (April 29, 2016) — Louisville Metro Government’s OPI2 Innovation Team, PowerUp Labs and other partners today launched a new web-based application aimed to increase transparency about internet service quality in Louisville.

SpeedUpLouisville.com collects and will share user-generated information about local broadband service speeds, rates and service quality in our community.

The website will help citizens, businesses, policymakers and others better understand where Louisville residents can access high-quality internet service, and where there are needs.

Once collected, the data will be displayed on an interactive map and available for free download, with the goal of increasing transparency about Internet service quality in Louisville and to continue the conversation around fiber in our community.

“The more residents share their internet speeds, the easier it will be for Louisville to attract competition into underserved parts of our community, and the more obvious it will be where residents are not getting the advertised service levels,” said Ted Smith, the city’s chief of civic innovation.

Mayor Greg Fischer urged residents to visit the new website.

“Our community is working hard to attract the investment of private ultra high-speed Internet providers like Google Fiber, AT&T GigaPower and others,” Fischer said. “Citizen participation can help accelerate the pace of competition and more importantly, help us level the playing field across the metro-area.”

Citizens can visit SpeedUpLouisville.com from any device to take the free Internet service test. The data provided by the test and short survey will be stored in a publicly available database, combined with other results, and published to the map and to SpeedUpLouisville.com in a form that does not identify contributors.

This test does not collect information about personal Internet traffic such as emails, web searches, or other personally identifiable information.

SpeedUpLouisville.com was developed through a partnership between PowerUp Labs, Civic Data Alliance, LVL1, and OPI2’s Innovation Team. It builds on a concept initiated by the city of Seattle, New America’s Open Technology Institute and Open Seattle for their recently released open-source broadband map.

The SpeedUpLouisville.com  project started at a local civic hackathon led by the Civic Data Alliance and hosted by Code Louisville. Eric Littleton, Jon Matar and the PowerUp Labs software development team later volunteered to continue the work started during the hackathon. LVL1, a local makerspace, also provided funding for the paid web tools required to complete the project.