Comcast to make monthly Internet use cap official

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Comcast to make monthly Internet use cap official: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance

Comcast to set official limit on Internet use to deter bandwidth hogs


NEW YORK (AP) -- Comcast Corp., the nation's second-largest Internet service provider, Thursday said it would set an official limit on the amount of data subscribers can download and upload each month.
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On Oct. 1, the cable company will update its user agreement to say that users will be allowed 250 gigabytes of traffic per month, the company announced on its Web site.

Comcast has already reserved the right to cut off subscribers who use too much bandwidth each month, without specifying exactly what constitutes excessive use.

"We've listened to feedback from our customers who asked that we provide a specific threshold for data usage and this would help them understand the amount of usage that would qualify as excessive," the company said in a statement on its Web site.

Customers who go over the limit are contacted by the company and asked to curb their usage.

"We know from experience the vast majority of customers we ask to curb usage do so voluntarily," the company said.

Comcast floated the idea of a 250 gigabyte cap in May and mentioned then that it might charge users $15 for every 10 gigabytes they go over, but the overage fee was missing in Thursday's announcement.

Curbing the top users is necessary to keep the network fast and responsive for other users, Comcast has said.

Comcast stressed that the bandwidth cap is far above the median monthly usage of its customers, which 2 to 3 gigabytes.

Very few subscribers use more than 250 gigabytes, it said. A user could download 125 standard-definition movies, about four per day, before hitting the limit.

The cap is also above those of some other ISPs. Cox Communications' monthly caps vary from 5 gigabytes to 75 gigabytes depending the subscriber's plan. Time Warner Cable Inc. is testing caps between 5 gigabytes and 40 gigabytes in one market. Frontier Communications Co., a phone company, plans to start charging extra for use of more than 5 gigabytes per month
 
I can't wait till the first pack of users sue if the words UNLIMITED INTERNET continue to appear anywhere in their adds, documents or websites; even though it now will likely include the ever famous *
 
Good thing my BT site had a bonus week so I could build up my ratio. Looks like I won't be able to leave my computer up as a server as much anymore.
 
Can't wait to see the subscriber numbers begin to plummet. You can count on a lawsuit by unhappy customers who signed up "unlimited internet" and were just switched to "limited internet". Comcast had better offer a no penalty cancellation plan due to this change in terms. Glad that I switched our work account over to DSL.
 
I was first pretty upset when I saw this, but I know I never get near that. However as Online video streaming gets more popular, I suspect people will start running into problems. Dish Network, Direct TV, Netflix, TV networks, etc have a lot to loose by this, especially as they start streaming more HD programming. I wonder if somehow they could swing something with anti-competition on this one as in a sense, Comcast is limiting the choices of streaming video of their competition while allowing their VoD to TVs without limits. At least that's what I hope will happen. But on the opposite side of the coin, didn't the cable companies win years back with not having to allow competition over their infrastructure so that could loosely apply here. Will be interesting to see how this plays out over the next few years as the convergance of technology complicates things.

-Mike
 
It's just another step in the maturation process of the internet though and will be the force behind getting software developers to figure out the next step in compression and narrowing the bandwith requirements for streaming video. Mpeg4's already out and just like with computers its obsolete so that means that there has to be someone working on the next generation of mpeg or something better and for those of us who play alot of online gaming well the game sites are gonna have to both cut down on the size of the game clients and cut back on the streaming content thats now becoming commonplace in some large mmo's such as entropia universe.
 
As the internet is being tapped for more and more media applications vis a vis ther latest VOD service from D* downloads the movies involuntarily via your connection, not by satellite. We now have our biggest broadband provider attempting to restrict usage. This is a serious conflict that will need resolution in the next few years. It may be necessary for big users to have two services they can switch off if the per gigabyte charge is impractical.
 
Excessive users to blame?

Can't wait to see the subscriber numbers begin to plummet. You can count on a lawsuit by unhappy customers who signed up "unlimited internet" and were just switched to "limited internet". Comcast had better offer a no penalty cancellation plan due to this change in terms. Glad that I switched our work account over to DSL.

I agree:)

They advertised “Unlimited”, so why are the quote “excessive users“ to blame?

The problem is that Comcast oversold the services beyond their capacity to support “unlimited usage” to everyone with the limitations of the technology for cable modems and the sharing of the bandwidth unlike DSL.

But, Oh no! let’s blame it on the customer!

Sprint did the same thing with their “Unlimited Roaming” oversold beyond their capacity. So their fired their customers!, and now look what happening to them with customers cancelling out left and right.
 
This is actually good news for the 98% of the people who don't abuse the service. Make the 2% pay for business class service if they feel a need to download the entire content of the Internet.

THIS IS WHY!!!


WE are not abusers; we are wanting EXACTLY what was advertise and what we pay for and to take advantage of the latest and greatest technology being offered t us; but ISPs NOW want to regress and renege on their offerings - PERIOD!



As the internet is being tapped for more and more media applications vis a vis ther latest VOD service from D* downloads the movies involuntarily via your connection, not by satellite. We now have our biggest broadband provider attempting to restrict usage. This is a serious conflict that will need resolution in the next few years. It may be necessary for big users to have two services they can switch off if the per gigabyte charge is impractical.



I agree:)

They advertised “Unlimited”, so why are the quote “excessive users“ to blame?

The problem is that Comcast oversold the services beyond their capacity to support “unlimited usage” to everyone with the limitations of the technology for cable modems and the sharing of the bandwidth unlike DSL.

But, Oh no! let’s blame it on the customer!

Sprint did the same thing with their “Unlimited Roaming” oversold beyond their capacity. So their fired their customers!, and now look what happening to them with customers cancelling out left and right.



EXACTLY!
 
Yea, im mad too but this is very liberal. 250 GB per month is about 8 Gigs per day!

There should not be any reason why anyone would download 8 Gigs per day unless they where doing file sharing, or downloading alot of porn.

I'll tell you one thing, this does put a dent in Dish Networks IPTV service.
 
Yea, im mad too but this is very liberal. 250 GB per month is about 8 Gigs per day!

There should not be any reason why anyone would download 8 Gigs per day unless they where doing file sharing, or downloading alot of porn.

I'll tell you one thing, this does put a dent in Dish Networks IPTV service.

I wondered how long it would take before cable found a way to limit internet use as they are potentialy loosing TV viewers that are watching TV over the internet. Netfilx and Hulu have lost of good programming for download!
 
I wondered how long it would take before cable found a way to limit internet use as they are potentialy loosing TV viewers that are watching TV over the internet. Netfilx and Hulu have lost of good programming for download!

Maybe if Comcast would'of watch whats going on and listen to customers
and add decent TV channel lineup at reasonable price rates.. then that wouldn't happen... would it ? :rolleyes:
 
250/30 days is 8.33 GB/day. 8330 * 8 = 66,640 megabits.

Assuming 10 mbit/sec continuous download speed 6,640 seconds or 1.85 hours.

It seems a bit limiting, considering an HD movie could be 10-20 GB. I guess you only get one every other day....

It will be interesting to see if they tier it. If one were to want a lot of movie downloads at 500GB one probably would be needed.

Cableone has an interesting one CableONE - Internet where they limit usage from 2pm til midnight, if you go over the usage cap for your plan they cut your speed in half. As long as you did all your downloads between midnight and 2pm you get full rate without a cap.
 

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