No, it means you still don't understand how things work and as long as you don't understand, you remain an unsatisfied customer.

when I was connected to cytanet on 2mbit I measured my speed on a server and it showed exactly 2mbit. on another server it showed 0.5mbit. is that particular IPS not using the right servers? An ISP cannot choose the right servers to satisfy our monitoring needs and check millions of servers to get the proper speeds EVERYWHERE on earth.
Look from how many places the line passes from me to get to youtube. If lets say number 8 has a slow connection and/or heavy traffic, everything is messed up. it's not the ISP problem. that's why you might get different results from various speed tests on speedtest.net
1 * * * Request timed out.
2 11 ms 9 ms 8 ms v880.core-r.nic-east.cablenet-as.net
3 18 ms 12 ms 7 ms 109.110.244.5
4 120 ms 108 ms 123 ms pos100.edge-r.hex67.uk.cablenet-as.net [91.184.1
92.137]
5 106 ms 130 ms 123 ms 195.66.226.125
6 105 ms 107 ms 114 ms 209.85.252.76
7 167 ms 166 ms 172 ms 216.239.43.192
8 205 ms 195 ms 201 ms 209.85.251.9
9 187 ms 186 ms 191 ms 72.14.232.215
10 225 ms 212 ms 193 ms 209.85.253.161
11 306 ms 231 ms 315 ms yw-in-f93.1e100.net [74.125.47.93]
Trace complete.
Which simply means that this particular ISP is not using the right servers

The measurements for an Internet Service Provider (ISP) are computed by averaging the daily averages of all users (again based on VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE cookie) who use the same ISP and are in the same geographic region. The ISP speed number will be an average of all users across all types of Internet connectivity and service plans offered by the ISP.
http://www.google.com/support/youtube/bin/answer.py?answer=174122