Downdetector and Speedtest sold to Accenture for $1.2B

(theverge.com)

71 points | by Garbage 1 hour ago

8 comments

  • jpalomaki 57 minutes ago
    "By integrating Ookla’s data products, including Speedtest®, Downdetector®, Ekahau®, and RootMetrics®, Accenture will help Communications Service Providers (CSPs), hyperscalers, and enterprises optimize the mission-critical Wi-Fi and 5G networks that power their digital core. [...] Ookla’s data platform is anchored by more than 250 million consumer-initiated tests per month, complemented by controlled drive, walk, and embedded testing options"[1]

    [1] https://newsroom.accenture.com/news/2026/accenture-to-acquir...

    • simonw 27 minutes ago
      Is there some legal reason to scatter announcements with that many ® symbols, or do they just do it for style reasons / because they think it makes the announcement look more impressive?
      • kube-system 6 minutes ago
        Using the symbol allows them greater protection under the Lanham act, because it counts as “notice” that the mark is registered.

        Without it, it limits your ability to recover damages from infringement.

      • conception 8 minutes ago
        Legal. Gotta protect your trademarks.
  • progforlyfe 1 hour ago
    that's nuts, unless I'm missing something, it doesn't seem like those products are that mind blowingly complex... wow. Makes we want to try building my own for the hell of it.

    Downdetector in fact just seems to be a website catalog with essentially a guestbook and hit counter...

    • eddythompson80 22 minutes ago
      Of course they are not complex. They do have a network effect though. If you go to your local ISP and say “hey, my 500mbps plan is only doing 100mbps on Speedtest.net”, they’ll “fix it” (usually by working with Ookla to put an edge endpoint on their network)

      If you tell the “hey frankyspeeddetect.com isn’t doing my 500mbps” they’ll tell you to it’s an issue with that random website. ISPs and services reach out to Ookla to onboard with them because they have a network effect/mindshare of whatever you wanna call it

    • maccard 3 minutes ago
      You’re not paying for the tech, you’re paying for the name and the users. Speedyest claims 40m unique users per month.
    • Seattle3503 28 minutes ago
      The valuation must be outside of the tech. Are there relationships or contracts Accenture is getting access to?
      • awakeasleep 13 minutes ago
        or overlapping board members who are essentially paying themselves
      • thefourthchime 15 minutes ago
        it must be
    • rozenmd 39 minutes ago
      the best part is Downdetector is inaccurate as hell - if AWS is genuinely down, folks get curious and search other providers, causing Downdetector to mark them as down too
    • guessbest 19 minutes ago
      That's a lot of money just for network topography, but may someone let them in and it has a whole map of an otherwise hidden or inaccessible network.
    • kobalsky 9 minutes ago
      speedtest has a lot of volunteers hosting local servers, which you need to do a good last mile speed test.

      that capilarity is not something you can achieve overnight.

    • kingleopold 1 hour ago
      dont miss it, its almost all about users and revenue not how complex or simple product is.
    • fontain 1 hour ago
      Ookla has huge amounts of data, speedtest’s software is integrated into networks and used by hundreds of millions of users, they have the most comprehensive information about internet connections. You can recreate the software but you can’t recreate the data without decades of integration into what seems like every network.

      https://www.ookla.com/ You can see an overview of the data they collect and sell on the corporate website

    • dyauspitr 24 minutes ago
      The valuation is the name recognition and that that’s where people go to do those things
  • functionmouse 5 minutes ago
  • yokoprime 45 minutes ago
    may i suggest nettfart.no by the norwegian government as an alternative ? at least the name is fun
    • Mordisquitos 8 minutes ago
      It's not the net fart that kills your connection, it is the server smell.
    • vinay427 30 minutes ago
      While neat that a government operates this, I’m not sure it’s a viable alternative for most users given that the servers are AFAIK all in Norway. For example, the latency from my network was 150-200ms (compared to 6ms for the Speedtest.net server) and the speed test results appear less consistent than they may be in/near Norway.
    • firefax 10 minutes ago
      why is it named this? i'm guessing "fart" means something different in your language :-)
      • pmdr 1 minute ago
        "speed" in Swedish and Norwegian. Probably Danish as well.
    • joshuat 40 minutes ago
      fast.com is my go-to in the rare case I need to check network speed these days
      • cseleborg 9 minutes ago
        I read a while ago that certain ISPs will optimize the traffic to Netflix's servers, and so when you run fast.com (which is my default, by the way), you get your Internet speed for watching Netflix, but not necessarily for other things.
        • cseleborg 4 minutes ago
          Out of curiosity, I just compared my home wifi between fast.com and cloudflare's speed tedt and got similar results, completely and definitely disproving (n=1) my claim above.
      • taberiand 21 minutes ago
        We used fast.com to speed test our new office internet connection and the next day got an irate email from corporate (who had argued we didn't need the new connection) about "watching Netflix all day". I imagine some C-level thought they had a real gotcha! moment until I showed them the site.
        • musicale 21 minutes ago
          This is another advantage of fast.com.
    • BoingBoomTschak 13 minutes ago
      I recommend https://speed.cloudflare.com/ personally.
  • MaciejR 55 minutes ago
    And now every SLA that Accenture is held to for uptime suddenly will never be breached…
  • coreyh14444 1 hour ago
    Why tho?
    • folkrav 53 minutes ago
      It's almost always user data these days, so probably that.
    • ranger_danger 48 minutes ago
      Maybe the owners were ready to cash out and move on with life?
  • IshKebab 1 hour ago
    That seems like a lot for name recognition. I bet you could rebuild their technology for like $20m at the most, and buy 100% market share for like $100m easy. Unless they have some other assets other than the obvious?
    • wartywhoa23 1 hour ago
      Isn't Speedtest's huge dataset of Internet speeds mapped to time, location and IP address, as well as data on VPN usage (a user checks the speed of his/her direct connection then turns VPN on and checks over that too, all within the same session) such an asset?

      I doubt they didn't collect all of that.

      P.S. Now marry that huge dataset with services that Accenture provides, among others:

      "In February 2025, Vice News spoke to a former Accenture employee under the condition of anonymity. His project on the WhatsApp team for Meta required him to sift through images and decide whether or not they depicted child sexual abuse, which he coped with "through a lot of substance abuse". The former employee claimed to have witnessed multiple missed opportunities to protect children, and alleged that one colleague had previously been arrested for possessing child abuse materials. In a statement, Accenture said they are "committed to helping companies keep their platforms safe through services such as content, advertising, and compliance reviews."¹

      ¹: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accenture

    • jedberg 1 hour ago
      Fast.com has existed for 15 years yet isn't nearly as popular. It's easy to build a new speed test, but much harder to get people to use it.

      Downdetector wins because of SEO. Most people don't get there directly, they google for "is $x down" and then get sent to downdecetor. Which from my understanding works by simply showing you how many people came to their site with those search terms. They don't actually check the sites.

      • tcdent 31 minutes ago
        Fast is a Netflix product so the fact that you've even heard of it is in direct relation to the weight of the brand that launched it.

        speedtest.net has been the first search result on Google for "speed test" for decades. Partly the boost of domain SEO and partly the boost of it being an effective exit node for searches for that term for that long.

        (Nobody searches "ookla" and nobody is going to search your tier-3 .com)

    • pyvpx 1 hour ago
      It takes more than money to supplant the name brand that every ISP games and every front line support worker uses by name
    • cyanydeez 1 hour ago
      selling peoples ip addres for some reason along with whatever privacy invasion tech they have.
  • fleroviumna 8 minutes ago
    [dead]