In short, no, because it's extremely difficult to get data. The data have to come from the companies themselves, which are obviously reluctant to provide that data. There are a lot of so-called war stories about how everybody used to hate their cable company and now they hate their Internet service provider. That, I think, happens across the OECD.
However, there are regulators that are now looking at some quality parameters, mainly at speeds, because, as you know, Internet service providers advertise that you will be getting eight megabytes or twenty megabytes per second, but when you're at home, you may end up getting only one or ten megabytes per second. There are regulators who are trying to impose a truth in advertising requirement that would give you a good idea of what speeds you will actually be getting. But in terms of quality, of how many times the network goes down, etc., I think there are very few regulators, if any, that are actually collecting those data.