No problem.
Yes, rural and remote households are absolutely affected the most—or anyone who relies on low-cost Internet services, particularly rural and remote households.
For most of us, high-speed Internet underperformance is going to be irritating and will still be a huge problem, but when lower-speed Internet of the kind you would get in a rural community underperforms, it's effectively denying people an essential service. It's a difference between getting an average speed of 75 megabits per second on a plan that's advertised as 100 versus, if you're in a rural community, getting 2 megabits per second on a plan advertised as 15. The latter is something that actually stops you from using the Internet effectively in 2023.
I really need to stress that ensuring transparent and accurate broadband services is non-negotiable in closing the digital divide in rural and remote Canada.