Forum Discussion
Has ping / tracert been blocked on 5g network?
Hi, I too wish T-Mobile would fix this, and that the issue deserves to be newsworthy!
I have been having major issues related to my T-Mobile home internet, primarily devices like home assistants and their accessories that rely on lower latency to fulfil requests. My Nest Mini now takes on average 10 full seconds to begin loading the response. Beyond that, issues with security since my cameras have increased lag making my doorbell camera less useful, and problems with my DNS not able to properly filter the web. I'm not the only one and neither are any of you:
https://community.t-mobile.com/tv-home-internet-7/dns-provider-for-home-internet-38694
Clearly this is an aggressive rollout of provisioning. To report my locale, I'm in the PNW but most of you are in the South/Midwest states like Texas. Well, location doesn't seem to matter IMO as I still have noticed many issues recently, to the timeframe given in this forum, in where my web filter has not been able to deny requests properly on one of my home computers. I believe ICMP details noted are related.
Sadly enough, I am JUST learning how to network in college, in my second year and taking classes related specifically to latency and ping... So just wanted to note that I am genuinely affected by this… My own learning material has me doing these types of ICMP ping requests in Windows, and some posts here are lining up with my college material, but while learning from other members here has been fun, it also means to realize that my learning just got a lot harder BECAUSE of my fervent interest in bleeding-edge wireless tech… It doesn't have to be this way!
When testing using Fast.com and other methods, I'm anywhere between 50ms and 1.2seconds loaded for latency. While that hasn't been an issue, what's different is that now never reporting the lower number. One second of latency means I can pretty much throw away my Xcloud membership LMAO I have much better results playing using my phone's mobile hotspot.
Other tests, like Edge's in-browser utility, no longer can report latency at all and therefore the program hangs. Just as another user said, it makes it harder for a given person who doesn't know what's going on understand what's happening. This issue is compounded when the customers end up calling staff who have no source of truth for information on ping/latency leading to no progress for either party.
All in all, this is snowballing quickly and the best action really is to roll back these changes or communicate the incoming fixes. At minimum, progress in this would feel like acknowledging that the official stance isn't that "ping isn't used anymore" by T-Mobile and instead the stance customers want to see would be closer to working on a solution to the existing latency and ICMP problem for T-Mobile Home Internet users Nationwide.
Thanks to other forum members here, I understand now that if I want to continue to effectively filter my web I now need an addition device, a VPN (a hardware solution akin to a PfSense router) between my modem and personal router… and I would rather configure my own hardware like the ASUS modem I had before, but T-Mobile Home Internet does not support other hardware even if I did try and use a hotspot or 3rd-Party 5G Modem. I really don't want a bunch of networking equipment at home, I'd wanna leave that for school lol... so it's horrible to see this provisioning and clearly it's basically "love it or leave it" unless we outcry. So I'd like to join you all in a big +1 @inductivesoul @iTinkeralot @ShanStewart @Walkabt and ask T-Mobile to sympathize with customers, geeks and nerdy students alike and cool it with the way their locking down these gateways.
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