this post was submitted on 02 May 2026
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If you have FTTB, your ONT is probably a modem since the PON ends once it hits the building server room. We will usually allocate an unsplit distribution fiber to multi tenant buildings, then the building owner contracts with the ISP or some other company to handle the internal stuff.
My ONT is fiber to the home, so it's literally just a box that converts the raw fiber signal to a SFP connector.
It used to be FTTB (DSL from there), only installed a couple of years ago, but recently they ran fiber into all the apartments. There's a new thin plastic cabinet, about 40x40 cm, in the bike cellar (server room lol) with a laser warning sign on it. All done in cooperation with the ISP it seems. In fact the landlord seemed utterly uninvolved.
Also why would it be called a modem in one situation, but not the other? Like what's the difference here.
ONTs generally do less work than modems from my understanding. I deal primarily with PON so to me it's all physical fusion splices. We have done some work with older Coax networks, and those have a lot more active mux/demux equipment (as well as powered signal repeaters, which don't really exist on a PON) all over the place to cram as much bandwidth as possible into a single copper cable. That's not really a problem with fiber until you hit an OLT cabinet.
I would also like to add that the terminology in telecom is absolutely insane. It's up there with the oil industry when it comes to acronyms and multiple names for the same thing. We also frequently use "Transmedia" to refer to the cables and we call enclosures "closures".