How Comcast-TWC Will End Your All-You-Can Internet Buffet

How Comcast-TWC Will End Your All-You-Can Internet Buffet

There are broad, sweeping implications for the proposed merger of Comcast and Time Warner Cable. This is not one of them. This is a very specific, fine print change. But for TWC customers—and, eventually, the rest of us—it’s going to be the single worst part of the deal. Welcome to broadband data caps! They’re here to ruin everything.

Read more…


    



Former FCC Chairman Says Data Caps Are More About Monetizing Traffic Than Controlling Congestion

 Former FCC Chairman Says Data Caps Are More About Monetizing Traffic Than Controlling Congestion

As long as there’s been the Internet, cable companies have always teased its customers with data caps, which we’re sure you recall is exactly how Internet access was given back in the 90s. Nowadays, the only industry that has issued data caps on Internet-related data is the mobile industry as the majority of wireless carriers have implemented data caps.

For years, we’ve been told the purpose of data caps has been to help deal with congestion as cable companies apparently are always suffering from all of their customers watching Netflix at the same time. It turns out there really is no congestion that require cable companies to charge you more for going over a limit they attempt to enforce, instead, it’s all about increasing revenue for broadband providers.

Former FCC Chairman Michael Powell was speaking with a Minority Media and Telecommunications Association audience recently, saying, “cable’s interest in usage-based pricing was not principally about network congestion, but instead about pricing fairness.” When asked to weigh in on data caps, Powell said labeling the cable industry’s interest as an issue about congestion management to be “wrong.” “Our principal purpose is how to fairly monetize a high fixed cost.”

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Google Image Search Gets A Major Update, Report: U.S. Ranked In Ninth Place In Global Broadband Average Speed,

Why You’re Totally Justified in Hating Data Caps

Going over your mobile data cap limit costs more than a long distance phone call from a hotel room and for what? Crossing some invisible line in the sand drawn by your carrier? That’s some bullsh*t. Brian Boyko explains exactly why data caps don’t so much protect network infrastructure as generate revenue. [Blogphilo] More »