Shaw Cable, western Canada’s largest cable company, has quietly lowered usage caps on virtually all of their broadband plans, while “forgetting” to change the date on their Terms of Service:
Lite was 13GB, nowincreasedto 15GB ($2/GB overages)
High Speed was 75GB, now decreased to 60GB ($2/GB overages)
Xtreme was 125GB, now decreased to 100GB ($1/GB overages)
Warp was 250GB, now decreased to 175GB ($1/GB overages)
Nitro was 500GB, now decreased to 350GB ($1/GB overages)
Shaw’s terms of service page documents changes implemented by the cable company and includes the revision date, changed whenever the terms change. Not this time. Blogger “Thewunderbar” documented Shaw left the revision date on the document unchanged, suggesting the cable company hadn’t made any adjustments to their service since July, 2010. After publishing his piece, Shaw quietly updated their website to reflect the correct date.
Cable and phone companies in Canada have established a unique, unchecked duopoly. They are systematically increasing prices while decreasing the amount of service provided to Canadian consumers. Shaw’s decrease in usage limits comes with no corresponding price cut for Internet service.
At a time when Netflix streaming is attempting to make inroads into Canadian homes, broadband providers who also have interests in pay television (cable, phone or satellite) are working overtime to make sure no consumer believes they can safely cancel their cable-TV service and watch everything online.
Over the past four years, Canadian ISPs have embarked on a wide range of Internet Overcharging schemes:
The elimination of flat rate, unlimited broadband service;
The introduction of low usage allowances designed to trip up an increasing number of consumers leading to,
The introduction of stinging overlimit fees for customers exceeding usage limits, at prices marked up from 500-5000 percent above wholesale;
The introduction of speed throttles which artificially slow your broadband experience to speeds sometimes just above dial-up;
The ongoing limbo dance of usage caps that decrease in size over time, exposing more consumers to overlimit fees, making them think twice about everything they do online.
Nobody has successfully monetized the broadband experience like Canadian ISPs have. Even as their costs to deliver the service continue to rocket downwards, companies keep on increasing prices, exposing Canadian consumers to unwarranted bill shock from unjustified overlimit fees. What does it cost Shaw per gigabyte? An estimated 1-3 cents. What do they charge you? Up to $2.
It’s nothing short of a rip-off, and Stop the Cap! urges Canadian consumers to contact their member of Parliament and demand immediate action to ban these innovation-killing, job-retarding, unjustified overcharging schemes.
The company’s explanation for their overpriced bandwidth comes with a tall tale about their competitors they simply made up out of thin air:
Data transfer allotments allow Knology to offer higher speed service with lower prices. Unlimited, open usage plans offered by other providers typically employ network controls to slow down the high usage customers.
That’s news to us, and to their nearest competitor AT&T. They deny speed throttling any of their U-verse or DSL customers.
While the company’s download speeds are impressive — up to 50Mbps — their upload speeds are not, topping out at a paltry 1Mbps.
Knology's pricing is nearly identical to its predecessor Sunflower Broadband, except for the $5 rate hike for its most popular Silver plan.
Knology claims they expand usage allowances based not on network capacity, but by the percentage of customers they gouge with overlimit fees:
Data transfer allotments: Each level of internet above includes the amount of data transfer indicated measured in Gigabytes (GB). The data transfer allotments are increased regularly, based on usage patterns, to ensure the number of customers who go over their allotments remains under 10%. Additional GB of data transferred beyond the allotment is billed at $1.00 per GB if not purchased at a discount before the end of the billing period. The percentage of Knology customers charged for extra data transfer beyond their allotment was 6.1% in April 2009.
Paul Bunyon, Knology's new director of marketing
Bemusingly, customers with time machines who can travel into the future and determine they will exceed their allowance for the month can pre-purchase an increase in their usage allowance at a discount.
No time machine? Then you either pay the standard overlimit rate, watch your usage like a hawk, or potentially over-buy excess usage that expires at the end of the month.
Customers tell Stop the Cap! the company’s single, unlimited use package is “the same piece of garbage it always was,” writes Larry who lives in Lawrence. He had high hopes Knology would do the right thing and abandon Sunflower’s overcharging schemes.
“Apparently not, and after a month with their unlimited service, I have scheduled my U-verse installation with AT&T,” Larry writes. “Even on Knology’s limited packages, they don’t provide the speeds they promise.”
Larry also says the higher speed tiers Knology offers deliver diminishing returns.
“If their uplink is congested, or the web sites you visit are busy, it won’t matter if you have 10Mbps or 50Mbps — the speed is effectively the same,” he says. “Besides, upload speed is more important these days and 1Mbps is just plain lousy in 2011.”
“Bye, bye SunKnology.”
Sunflower's Old Broadband Plans & Pricing (February 2010)
The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission
Thanks to quick work from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), Canadian broadband providers have wasted no time announcing new usage limits and penalties for those who exceed them.
The principal culprit for the Internet Overcharging: Bell (Canada), the nation’s largest telecommunications company.
Bell’s newly won right to charge wholesale customers usage-based billing rates has caused a collective groan from independent providers from Vancouver to Charlottetown. Primus, the second-largest alternative communications company in Canada, threw up its hands and announced it was going to pass Bell’s costs along to their customers. Some other providers have already raised rates, shocking customers who received December bills with $100 in overlimit penalties.
“It’s an economic disincentive for Internet use,” said Matt Stein, vice-president of network services for Primus. “It’s not meant to recover costs. In fact these charges that Bell has levied are many, many, many times what it costs to actually deliver it.”
That is a hallmark example of what happens under Internet Overcharging schemes like “usage-based pricing,” usage caps, or other limited use plans. Customers don’t pay for their actual broadband use — they overpay, especially when stiff penalties are imposed when they exceed their usage allowance.
“Canada’s broadband market is a racket, period,” says our reader Andy, who lives near Petawawa, in northern Ontario. “If you are in a major city in the south, you can choose Bell or one of their lackeys or the cable company, which almost always means Shaw or Rogers in English-speaking Canada.”
Andy doesn’t have access to cable, so his broadband comes courtesy of DSL from the phone company. He counts himself lucky he has that, even though it only delivers around 512kbps and is down at least once a week, especially when the weather is bad. Other communities have no broadband at all, and some areas are so desperate for access, they have provided financial incentives to attract a provider to town. It rarely succeeds. Zeropaid reports a handful on unscrupulous would-be providers have taken the incentives and left town with no broadband service to show for it.
“These guys only want the easy customers and they’ve got them in Toronto or Ottawa,” Andy says. “The rest of us can live with dial-up.”
The Canadian government occasionally launches highly publicized demonstration projects to deliver rural broadband in northern Canada, often over wireless, something Andy scoffs at.
“When the TV cameras are shut off and [Prime Minister] Stephen Harper’s political bandwagon goes home, the networks last for about a month until something goes wrong and the whole thing shuts down, sometimes for weeks before someone repairs it,” Andy says.
There oughta be a law.
Katz
In fact Canada, a country with a reputation for keeping a regulatory eye on essential services, has an agency that is supposed to protect consumers and monitor telecommunications services. Unfortunately for Canadians, it was that agency that gave Bell the go-ahead to kill unlimited, flat rate broadband — the service that has kept most independent service providers in business.
Critics charge the Commission has been acting more like a Big Telecom industry trade group than an independent oversight body, and many independent providers openly wonder how long they’ll survive with Bell’s predatory pricing.
Reviewing who serves on the Commission may provide some answers about why they seem to be closely aligned with Canada’s largest telecom companies. Many of the commissioners used to work for the very companies they are now asked to regulate, and some are likely to return to them after their stint at the CRTC. The agency’s supposedly independent commissioners know if they want future employment in the telecommunications industry, it’s best not to antagonize your next boss.
Take Commissioner Leonard Katz. He joined the CRTC in 2005 and was appointed vice chairman of telecommunications in 2007. For 30 years before joining the Commission, Katz was employed by Canada’s largest telecom firm, moving up through Bell’s management ranks from 1974-1985. His last big job at Bell was as the assistant director of Bell’s regulatory lobbying department, where he spent his energy and time dealing with federal politicians and the CRTC. Katz also loves Canada’s wireless industry, dominated by Rogers Communications. He was founder and chairman of the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association Clearinghouse for wireless carriers.
Arpin
Or there was Michel Arpin, a consummate former insider at some of Canada’s largest corporately-owned broadcast station groups like Astral Broadcasting, Mutual Broadcasting, and Radiomutuel. He also had a side relationship with Telus, a western Canadian telecom company that also belongs to the Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB). Arpin served CAB as vice-chair and chair. Arpin, the corporate media man, also served as the vice-chairman of the CRTC’s broadcast division until late last year.
Other examples:
Rita Cugini — A regional commissioner for the province of Ontario, her professional background has been working for some of the province’s biggest media interests, including Alliance Atlantis, Telelatino, and CFMT/OMNI. She also is integrally involved with the Canadian Association of Broadcasters, which bends the ears of regulators regularly on a variety of matters;
Tim Denton — About as close to the broadband industry as you can get, Denton’s role as a commissioner began in 2008, but his money was made working for the broadband industry, including the Canadian Association of Internet Providers, which lobbies for big broadband provider interests.
Candice Molnar — Serves today as regional commissioner for Manitoba and Saskatchewan, but she knows most of the prairie provinces’ movers and shakers by name, having spent more than 20 years at SaskTel, Saskatchewan’s biggest phone company. She helped guide SaskTel from provincial to federal regulation when she worked there and her voting record shows her heart is still with her former employer.
Cugini
With a Commission stacked against ordinary Canadian consumers, it’s no wonder Internet Overcharging schemes and stifled broadband competition rule the day in Canada.
“Rural Canada always pays the biggest price,” says Andy. “If it didn’t happen in Toronto or Ottawa, it didn’t happen at all.”
Andy complains Canadian broadband will never improve with Internet Overcharging schemes in place.
“They complain about your usage and say if they can restrict it, they can improve service to more people; well, where is my better service?” Andy asks.
“At least I don’t have to worry about their usage allowances… yet,” Andy says. “Even if I left my connection running continuously, at these speeds I doubt I could do much damage.”
What would you do if your broadband bill was the same as your monthly rent?
That’s a question 21-year-old Notre Dame de Grace resident Amber Hunter has been dealing with since the neighbors began hacking their way into her wireless router, gaining access to her cable modem service from Videotron, Ltd., and running her bill into the next province.
It’s the predictable outcome of what happens when Internet Overcharging schemes gain traction, leaving ordinary consumers literally holding the bill.
Videotron sells usage limited broadband service across Quebec, but heavy users who routinely exceed their arbitrary usage caps knew there was a limit on the overlimit fees Videotron charged.
Not anymore.
Videotron left the usage caps on, but removed the limit on how much they can charge customers who exceed their monthly usage allowance.
Videotron sets prices like the OPEC of the Internet -- the sky is the limit
“The sky is the limit, or at least your bank account,” writes our Montreal reader Hei. “The only thing unlimited with Videotron are the overlimit fees.”
Hunter had no idea she was being hacked.
“I had no idea what a gigabyte was, so when I started getting higher bills, I just assumed it was from watching TV shows online,” Hunter says.
Her boyfriend told her otherwise, making it clear it was impossible for her to be running up 350GB a month in usage just from watching a few movies and TV shows.
Since August, Hunter has accumulated more than $1,800 in broadband bills stemming from parties unknown who hacked their way into her wireless router and “borrowed” her Internet account. Videotron itself is directly responsible for part of this debacle, encouraging Hunter to upgrade to a higher tier of service that upgraded her from a 30GB usage allowance to a 100GB usage allowance, with a major catch.
Hunter had become accustomed to paying her usual broadband bill plus the $50 maximum penalty charged for her “overuse.” So a Videotron representative suggested a higher usage allowance plan might lower her bill. But somehow, the Videotron customer service agent forgot to mention that the new plan no longer included a limit on overlimit charges.
When Amber switched plans, her broadband bill exploded. Now the waitress hands over most of her weekly salary to Videotron.
“I’m a student, and I work at a bar, and now most of the money I have goes to pay my Internet bill,” Hunter told the Montreal Gazette. “It’s more than I pay for school and books, and I don’t have a lot of money left for food.”
She still owes the cable company $506 and they aren’t interested in providing her any service credits beyond the $313 they gave her a few months ago.
It took a Videotron help desk employee to finally unravel the mystery of the Internet Overcharges — someone was hacking into her wireless network. Exactly who has been living their online life usage-limit free at Amber’s expense may never be known. Those living in apartment complexes and other multiple dwelling units can often find a dozen or more wireless connections, some password protected, others not.
Hunter’s wireless network was secured with a difficult to guess password using a four year old Linksys router. Unfortunately, older routers often lack robust security and are easily hacked.
A handful of Canadian ISPs still offer unlimited broadband accounts.
As far as Videotron is concerned, it’s all Hunter’s fault — she should have understood what a gigabyte was, how many she was supposed to be using, what the security capabilities of her router were, that they were properly enabled, that she checked her usage on a daily basis looking for anomalies — investing her time, effort, and energy to stop the cable company before it billed her an enormous amount… again.
Speaking for Videotron, Isabelle Dessureault said, “It’s a case where Videotron showed some understanding and listened to what happened. We’re well-renowned in the industry for our technical support team. We credited her account for $313, but at a certain point, we need to share the responsibility. We don’t like these kind of situations.”
Videotron’s responsibility to their customers stopped where their profit margin began. The company could have sent Amber a bill for the wholesale cost of her Internet usage, which she could have paid with a few of her bar tips.
Because Hunter’s broadband bills were now rivaling her monthly rent she decided to invest in her financial future, buying a new router and making sure the wireless was turned off. Today she runs dozens of meters of Ethernet cable between all of her computers, just to keep the neighbors off her connection.
Although Videotron has become intractable, demanding Amber pay up, one of their competitors used the opportunity to score public relations points that Videotron sacrificed.
Jarred Miller, the president of the Internet Service Provider YOUMANO offered to cover all of Hunter’s overage fees amassed over the past year that also includes a free year of Internet service with his company, a generous offer Hunter will take.
YOUMANO is one of a handful of Canadian ISPs still offering unlimited Internet access, and do not think of themselves as the OPEC of the Internet.
The entire affair is a warning to Americans. If you think Videotron is an Internet evildoer, imagine what Verizon, AT&T and Comcast could do to your bank account. If they have their way, you’ll need to become intimately familiar with your router, the concept of a gigabyte, and take a class in “negotiating to win” when fighting over your future enormous broadband bills.
Listen to an interview with Amber Hunter. She appeared on this morning’s Daybreak on CBC Radio Montreal to discuss her experience with Videotron Internet Overcharging. (8 minutes)
You must remain on this page to hear the clip, or you can download the clip and listen later.
Roku CEO Anthony Wood told a cable trade publication he is not worried that providers will kill the market for his online video set-top box with Internet Overcharging schemes.
Wood told Multichannel News the broadband industry faces enough competition to prevent one or both traditional providers from implementing usage caps and metered pricing for broadband service.
“What we see from a practical point of view in the marketplace is that there’s enough competition from cable, telcos and wireless so that in every market there’s an unlimited option — and the price is competitive,” he said. “Unlimited sells — it’s just a good marketing strategy.”
Wood may want to inform broadband providers of that, because several American phone and cable companies are experimenting with slapping usage limits on their customers, making his web-streaming set top box an expensive proposition. For customers of Frontier Communications in Elk Grove, Calif., using too much Roku could mean broadband bills as high as $300 a month.
With some HD movies consuming 2-4 gigabytes per title, some companies experimenting with usage limits as low as 5GB per month would make online video the primary culprit for consumers blowing through their monthly usage allowance. After one bill with overlimit fees arrives, the Roku box will be the first thing to go.
Netflix, a major investor in the Roku box, could see its plans to shift to online distribution of its massive DVD rental business stymied by large phone and cable providers, many of whom see Netflix and other online video services as competitors who use their broadband service to send movies to consumers. Some cable and phone companies contend Roku, Netflix, and other online video streamers are freeloaders — using their networks “for free” and demanding additional compensation to keep carrying their content.
Wood discloses another reason why cable and phone companies could potentially adopt a hostile position towards his 100-employee operation — “cord cutting.”
Wood told Multichannel News about 12% of Roku customers say they have canceled cable or satellite TV after buying the set-top while another 12% said they reduced their service level.
The cable industry is trying to retain customers by putting an increasing amount of cable content online for subscribers who maintain their cable-TV package. Roku gives subscribers one more reason to downgrade or cancel service, a problem that could be stopped with an Internet Overcharging scheme that makes using the product an expensive proposition.
Some Roku watchers believe Wood is making a mistake underestimating the telecom industry’s willingness to protect its turf.
Two years ago Roku VP Tim Twerdahl said the company was not worried about Comcast’s 250GB download cap. But since then, other providers have proposed far lower caps.
Roku is best known for letting Netflix subscribers stream the video rental firm’s online titles direct to television sets. But Roku also delivers access to Hulu, Amazon video, and a growing number of new “channels” delivering classic movies, music/music videos, news, and user-created programming.
The company offers three set-top models: HD ($60), which delivers up to 720p video; XD ($80), which adds support for up to 1080p and 802.11n Wi-Fi; and the XDS ($99), which offers dual-band 802.11n and component video and optical audio outputs. The top model occasionally sells for as little as $79.99 when on sale from Amazon.com or direct from the manufacturer.
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