Clearwire this week changed their terms and conditions governing the use of their service. The changes are sufficiently materially adverse that subscribers under contract should be able to cancel service, if they wish, without incurring any early termination fee.
The most prominent change is Clearwire’s ability to crack down on whatever they define “excessive usage” to be, and the redefining of ‘unlimited service’ as ‘limited and speed throttled service.’
All-New to the Clearwire Terms & Conditions:
Nature of the Service.The Service provided to you is intended for reasonable, periodic, non-continuous use by a person using a computing device, consistent with the type of use made by a typical individual consumer of our Internet services. Examples of allowed uses of our Service include web surfing, sending and receiving email, sending and receiving photographs, occasional on-line gaming, and the occasional non-continuous streaming of videos and downloading of files. Examples of uses that are not permitted include the continuous unattended streaming, downloading or uploading of videos or other files, maintaining an unattended or continuous uninterrupted connection to the Internet such as through a web camera or machine to machine connections that do not involve active participation by a person, or operating an Internet hosting service such as web hosting or gaming hosting. You may not use the Service in a manner that impairs the user experience of other users, or that otherwise impairs network performance. Both fixed wire-line Internet service and wireless Internet service have limited bandwidth capacity. Like fixed wire-line service, CLEAR’s Service can suffer from congestion and reduced performance when usage by some individuals exceeds the usage of typical individual consumers, thus having a negative impact on the entire network. This AUP is intended to ensure that the activities of a few users do not unfairly impair the activities of all users of the Service.
Clearwire’s unlimited use plans have always carried a clause giving the company the right to terminate or suspend service for exceptionally excessive usage, after several contacts with customers. The old language:
Unlimited Use Plans. (Effective January 9, 2009)
While the determination of what constitutes excessive use depends on the specific state of the network at any given time, excessive use will be determined by resource consumption and not by the use of any particular application. When feasible, upon observation of an excessive use pattern, Clearwire will attempt to contact you by e-mail at the e-mail address on file or otherwise to alert you to your excessive use of bandwidth and to help determine the cause. Clearwire representatives also are available to explain the parameters of this AUP and to help you avoid another excessive use incident or to upgrade you to a different class of Service that comports with your usage. If you are unavailable or do not respond to Clearwire’s attempt to contact you regarding excessive use, or if excessive use is ongoing or recurring, Clearwire reserves the right, set forth in the “AUP Enforcement and Notice” provisions below, to act immediately and without further notice to restrict, suspend or terminate your Service.
The new language now permits the company to use “network management” techniques such as reducing your speed if they feel you are excessively using Clearwire’s “unlimited” service. Although the new language sounds friendlier — deleting references to suspending or terminating your service — Clearwire’s Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) maintains those rights in another section. When all is said and done, Clearwire still gets to limit your usage -and- can now also reduce your speed:
Unlimited Use Plans. (Effective November 22, 2009)
If you subscribe to a service plan that does not impose limits on the amount of data you may download or upload during a month , you should be aware that such “unlimited” plans are nevertheless subject to the provisions of this AUP . What this means is that all of the provisions described in this AUP , including those that describe how Clearwire may perform reasonable network management such as reducing the data rate of bandwidth intensive users during periods of congestion, will apply to your use of the Service . The term “unlimited” means that we will not place a limit on how much data you upload or download during a month or other particular period , however , it does not mean that we will not take steps to reduce your data rate during periods of congestion or take other actions described in this AUP when your usage is negatively impacting other subscribers to our Service.
Clearwire (and the soon-to-be-launched Road Runner Mobile from Time Warner Cable and Comcast’s mobile broadband option) share the same Clearwire WiMax network. As investors in Clearwire, the cable operators have won the right to rebrand the service to provide a mobile option for their broadband customers.
Customers considering signing up for service should carefully verify the terms and conditions of their contract, as well as the quality of service provided where you expect to use the service the most. Several websites highly critical of Clearwire have been established with hundreds of upset customers who were promised broadband speeds and barely managed much more than dial-up speeds using the service.
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“Clearwireblows” ran a speed test illustrating serious speed problems using Clearwire in Texas this past April. (2 minutes)
Customers who wish to end their contract without incurring a cancellation fee can do so following this procedure:
- Contact Clearwire in writing and inform them you are exercising your right to terminate service without charge or penalty because of materially disadvantageous changes to the Clearwire Terms and Conditions effective November 22, 2009. Under their terms, you have a right to discontinue service in accordance with the section “Revisions: Reservation of Rights.” Namely, “…if you do not wish to continue Service after a change that is materially disadvantageous to you, you may terminate this Agreement by providing written notice to Clearwire within twenty (20) days of the effective date of the modification.” The link above contains contact addresses you may use.
- Contact customer service by telephone and inform them you have followed the written cancellation procedure outlined above.
- Be certain to insist Clearwire not charge any termination fees, and that you do not agree to pay any such fees.
- Should you experience any difficulties, contact the Better Business Bureau as this customer did. The BBB helped facilitate an immediate cancellation with no termination fees.
“The Service provided to you is intended for reasonable, periodic, non-continuous use by a person using a computing device, consistent with the type of use made by a typical individual consumer of our Internet services.” Huh? So they just don’t want any outliers, but only people that don’t use the service to do anything but check emails and stuff. They want some class of customer and are prejudiced against others, without defining what they consider “typical”? I figured their typical customer would be anyone that wants internet when they travel, since you can carry the clearwire modem with you and… Read more »
TWC isn’t going to implement Clear’s TOS just because they bought into them for wireless service. Cable service will remain uncapped and unthrottled as long as people whine loud enough/there is enough competition. The guy with the speed test was probably getting a crappy signal, which isn’t the best thing in the world but very different than throttling or saturated backhauls. Additionally, he might have been using the old, sucky, pre-WiMAX tech that Clearwire started out with. Just possible reasons why Clear might not have been working out for him What do you want Clear to do at peak times… Read more »
Here is a link to my latest speed test performed only a few days ago using Clear’s fantastic new WiMax service that you speak of. Posted here was my original video of the previous service offered by Clearwire and here is my new video of my new Clear WiMax service. http://www.clearwireblows.com/2009/12/clear-wimax-speed-test-just-the-facts/ There is no improvement to display because there wasn’t any… in fact I’d say my overall internet service is worse because not only do I have really low download speeds, browsing the web itself is a daunting task and I suffer from almost 25% packet loss. Clearwire Sucks and… Read more »
It all seems a little complicated to me. If I sign up for fast internet I should get it all the time and not ever have to consider anything about peak usage. I love Comcast’s roadrunner high speed internet and never have problems with it but I wish I could carry it with me on my laptop.
“anything beyond checking your email once a week is beyond what a typical individual would use”-Clearwire
I mailed in my cancellation. But their Customer Service wasn’t doing anything over the phone other than coming up with every reason under the sun why this wasn’t “materially adverse”. They just advised me to mail in my cancellation. I advised them I was simply calling to let them know that I mailed in the cancellation under the Terms & Agreement that states I can cancel without fees or penalty as long as its received within 20 days of the effective date. We’ll see what happens. But when you call they’ll try to have you provide reasons why the agreement… Read more »
I’ve had Clearwire since the “beta test” prior to roll-out of the service several years ago. I had the business package, and it was fine under Clearwire, and for a while under Clear. About three weeks after the switch to Clear, the so-called 4G network, I began to notice a series of outages, always explained only as “a field problem, being addressed by personnel …. with unknown estimated time to repair …” The typical outage was an hour or two, but occasionally it was the better part of a day. Now, for the past two weeks, my download speed rate… Read more »
I don’t know why your getting such crappy speeds guys. I signed up for the 1.5Mbps/0.5Mbps package and I have done multiple tests on http://www.speedtest.net and I always come up with 2.0+ MBPS or higher sometimes. Always high speeds. I use my connection for Youtube, WOW(World of Warcraft), Oline games(in general), Hulu.com streaming shows, and CLEAR hasn’t said a peep to me. I am in Georgetown TX BTW, a 4G network now, I used to be with Criket Wireless until I found out they Throttle you to 10K/s (about 115/kbps–KILOBITS BTW) after you go over 5GB/mo. Here’s the proof: I… Read more »