The database ISPs use may well contain information about whether the line can take broadband. If the line is OCB, it may be flagged in the database as not being a standard line, which is why ISPs reject you. I recommend this site for checking your line for ADSL, as it gives you lots of extra information:
ADSL line checkThe best place to ask broadband questions is
ADSLguide.
peterjwfrench wrote on Aug 9
th, 2006 at 3:54pm:
A soultion around this ask bt if you can sign up for broadband tempoary usally they will say yes after it being installed (i know there more expensive) wait a few working days ring up and get a mirgration code - find your prefered ip and then give them the mirgration code even then if your phone gets cut off your broadband will probley work 9/10 times its fine.
If BT don't want people to have broadband with OCB, why are they going to let someone use their own ADSL service (if that's what you are suggesting)? Also, like most ISPs, BT have a minimum contract period of 12 months. Once you sign up with them, you can't cancel for the first year.
peterjwfrench wrote on Aug 9
th, 2006 at 3:54pm:
If anyone in your road has broadband then you might want to by yourself and ADSL router and put in your old ids from bt after you canx there broadband service and then use password and username as if you where still with bt and youl be connected to bt - however you will not get true broadband speed unless the other person down the road isn't using there connection they do someing like a connection ratio the more people on broad i.e usally 1:50 which is 1 large connection to 50 users if all 50 users you can experience slow times other use 1:30 which is better.
Again, it's not clear what point you are making. Are you suggesting you try to use someone else's wireless connection? If so, many people secure their connections these days. And while this isn't illegal, it's slightly immoral if the other person hasn't agreed to it.
If you are suggesting to use someone else's login, that won't work as it's tied to a particular line. In addition, how would you have the line ADSL enabled when the whole issue is that BT won't do this while the line is restricted?
bbb_uk recommended cable broadband, and I'd second that, although you'll need your landlord's approval to install it. It's reliable, and you don't have to mess about with microfilters, MAC codes, and all the other baggage that comes with ADSL.