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Associated Press Credits Stop the Cap! for Revealing AT&T’s Secretive End to Data Caps

Phillip Dampier June 16, 2010 AT&T, Data Caps, Editorial & Site News Comments Off on Associated Press Credits Stop the Cap! for Revealing AT&T’s Secretive End to Data Caps

An Associated Press report gave credit to Stop the Cap! for getting first official word that AT&T ended its Internet Overcharging experiment in Beaumont, Texas and Reno, Nevada.

Stop the Cap! reader Scott Eslinger managed to get an AT&T customer service representative to read aloud a confidential memo distributed by the company terminating the experiment effective April 1st.  Because AT&T never disclosed the end of the experiment to impacted customers, the coverage by the wire service should help spread the word to residents that the rationing is over:

The phone company confirmed Tuesday that it is no longer holding DSL subscribers in Reno, Nev., and Beaumont, Texas, to data consumption limits and charging them extra if they go over.

With AT&T’s retreat, no major Internet service provider is championing the idea of charging subscribers for their data usage. Time Warner Cable Inc. was a major proponent of the idea and also conducted a trial in Beaumont, but backed away last summer after its plan to expand metered billing to other cities met fierce resistance from consumers and legislators.

AT&T’s trial started in November 2008 in Reno, and was later extended to Beaumont. It ended on April 1 this year, said AT&T spokeswoman Dawn Benton.

“We’re reviewing data from the trial, and this feedback will guide us as we evaluate our next steps,” Benton said.

AT&T should carefully review feedback from customers who despise usage limits and overlimit fees.  Studies show the overwhelming majority of customers do not like their broadband usage artificially limited with arbitrary allowances and overlimit fees, and customers will dump providers who ignore their wishes.

AT&T’s experiment never saved consumers a penny — the company simply slapped allowances as low as 20 GB per month on existing speed-based tiers.  Customers already face practical usage limits from Internet providers.  Those purchasing slower speed tiers are usage limited by those speeds.  Those who pay for higher priced, faster tiers benefit from naturally greater allowances those speeds provide.  Adding a new layer of limits only discourages customers from using the service they already pay good money to receive.  Besides, as profits explode in the broadband sector, the costs (and investment) to provide the service have declined, wiping out the justification for these schemes.

Stop the Cap! opposes all of these Internet Overcharging schemes.  While many providers seek to demagogue some broadband users as “data hogs” or “pirates,” the fact is today’s “heavy user” is tomorrow’s average consumer.  High speed broadband has the potential to revolutionize education, health care, private business, and entertainment, but not if a handful of major providers decide to end innovation by rationing the service to its customers.

No Data Caps or Speed Throttles For Sprint Customers (Unless Roaming)

Phillip Dampier June 15, 2010 Data Caps, Sprint, Wireless Broadband 1 Comment

Sprint will not limit use or throttle speeds for users of its 3G or mobile WiMax networks, despite a report from Engadget claiming the company was on the verge of applying speed throttles on its users exceeding 5 GB per month of usage.

A Sprint spokesman told Dow Jones Newswires any limits would apply only for Sprint mobile broadband data users roaming on other companies’ data networks using modems attached to laptops or personal computers.  Smartphone users are not affected.

“Sprint does not, nor plan to limit speeds, nor change a customer’s ability to use any particular application or Internet site,” said Sprint spokesman Mark Elliott.

However, the company has made it clear it can temporarily suspend a customer’s ability to roam on Sprint’s data network if “excessive usage” is detected.  Current plans provide up to 300 megabytes of service while roaming.  Higher allowances are available for purchase.  Customers will receive text messages notifying them when they reach 75 percent and 90 percent of their allowance.  After that, Sprint can cut off service until the next bill cycle begins.

Sprint has to pay higher fees when customers roam on non-Sprint networks, hence the usage limit.

Sprint, America’s third largest wireless carrier behind Verizon Wireless and AT&T, is trying to position itself as the competitive choice for customers who do not want to worry about usage allowances and overlimit fees.  The company hopes customers who are tired of escalating wireless bills will once again look beyond the two largest providers.

AT&T Customers in Beaumont and Reno Finally Get Word The Internet Overcharging is Over

Phillip Dampier June 14, 2010 AT&T, Data Caps, Editorial & Site News, Wireless Broadband Comments Off on AT&T Customers in Beaumont and Reno Finally Get Word The Internet Overcharging is Over

Beaumont, Texas

AT&T has distributed an internal memo to customer service representatives that informs them AT&T’s Internet Overcharging experiment in Reno, Nevada and Beaumont, Texas has ended.  Stop the Cap! reader Scott Eslinger was able to get an AT&T representative to read from the official memo that many AT&T customers have yet to hear about themselves.  Stop the Cap! had word in February the usage limit test was set to end April 1st, but actually getting official word that declared it dead and buried took much longer.

With no official notification to customers in the two impacted cities, many may be under the impression that usage limits remain.

AT&T representatives notoriously provided inaccurate information to customers about the experiment, with several customers signing up for “unlimited” service only to be notified days later they were actually facing limits ranging from 20-150 GB per month depending on their service plan.

Eslinger, who lives in Beaumont, notes representatives regularly mislead him into believing his service was unlimited even during the trial, except it was not.

“Every time I talked to AT&T no matter what I called about I always asked if the rep knew the status of the ‘broadband usage trial’ as I wanted to know when it would be over. No one ever had any idea what I was talking about,” Scott writes.  “They regularly told me that my AT&T broadband account included ‘unlimited’ use.”

But when Scott ran over his allowance, a nasty letter arrived in the mail saying otherwise.  Even then, AT&T customer service representatives kept telling him the letter must be a mistake.

“The first time I got the letter stating that I had gone over and would be charged the next time I went over I called AT&T and the rep actually had me fax in the letter so they could ‘fix’ it as that just ‘didn’t seem right.'”

We agree.  Internet Overcharging schemes are not right.  They represent little more than transparent rationing of broadband usage to reduce their costs while potentially earning $1.00 per gigabyte in overlimit fees for those who broke their allowance.

Although AT&T told Scott he couldn’t get a copy of the memo officially terminating the usage limit experiment, because it was a confidential, “proprietary AT&T document,” the rep read it out loud to Eslinger over the phone anyway.

“Reminder, the broadband usage trial in the Reno, Nevada and Beaumont, Texas market areas ended on April 1, 2010. Remember customers outside of the Reno and Beaumont are not impacted.”

Lvtalon

Reno, Nevada: One of the communities chosen for AT&T's Internet Overcharging experiment

Scott noted it was news to him.

“I never recall receiving this via email or snail mail; you would think they would have told everyone they ended it,” he writes. “Hopefully it will NEVER come back!”

One can hope.  Unfortunately, AT&T is the company that ended its unlimited wireless data plan for smartphone customers, now limiting them to just 2 GB of wireless usage per month, with a steep overlimit penalty for those that exceed it.

For millions of AT&T DSL and U-verse customers, an Internet rationing plan that limits consumption could prove costly, especially for those in rural areas where alternative providers simply are not available.

The best ways to deliver the message AT&T’s usage limits are not acceptable:

  • Inform the company you are not happy with usage limits or so-called consumption billing that seeks to consume all of the money in your wallet;
  • Don’t buy service from AT&T and tell them why.  Existing customers can be grandfathered on their existing unlimited plans, but new customers should shop elsewhere for service.

For many AT&T representatives, complaints about usage limits will be news to them, too.  Scott closes his note with word that even AT&T’s executive office customer service department, the one reserved for customers complaining to senior management, had never heard of the usage cap trials either.

Cable Trade Press Understands AT&T’s 2GB Cap – ‘You’ll Blow Right Through It’

Spangler

While the mainstream media and some of AT&T’s apologists tell consumers AT&T’s 2 GB monthly usage limit will impact only a handful of “abusers,” the cable trade press is telling its readers the industry insider’s secret — consumers will blow right through those caps.

Todd Spangler, who is an Internet Overcharging advocate and columnist for Multichannel News, a cable industry trade magazine, writes the implications of AT&T’s usage cap couldn’t be clearer to him.

The new iPhone 4, introduced yesterday to the predictable media crush, provides 10 hours of battery life for playing video, among other features.

But now that AT&T has eliminated its all-you-can-eat plan for smartphones, you will blow through the maximum 3G usage for the entry-level 200 MB plan if you watched just 4 minutes of streaming video per day. That would include commercials.

Even AT&T’s more generous DataPro 2-GB plan would allow just 35 minutes per day of streaming video (assuming you used your iPhone for nothing else), according to the carrier’s online data calculator.

Like a stopped watch, at least he’s right twice a day.

Spangler celebrates the opportunity AT&T’s overcharging scheme provides the cable industry to “grease the skids” for data caps and overpriced consumption billing on cable modem service.

In Spangler’s “Cable companies pay my salary”-world-view, it wasn’t that Time Warner Cable did the wrong thing when it tried to triple broadband pricing — to $150 a month — for the exact same level of service customers previously enjoyed.  It was all about its execution.

Spangler characterizes Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt as a victim, burned over the company’s failed overcharging experiment in 2009.  When one plays with matches, is it any surprise there are consequences?

Consumers will respond to more overcharging schemes the same way they did a year before — with overwhelming condemnation and opposition.  It’s hard to convince consumers to pay a higher price for limits on usage while telling shareholders you’ve invested less to expand your network, charged more to access it, all while the costs to provide the service have dropped dramatically.  Consumers call that out for what it is: greed.

Make no mistake, consumers hate usage caps and overpriced consumption billing and Time Warner Cable has no justification to introduce either.

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/CNBC ATT Cuts Unlimited Data 6-2-10.flv[/flv]

Normally business-friendly CNBC covers the introduction of the 2 GB usage cap on AT&T smartphone data usage.  Then the CNBC anchor got skeptical about AT&T’s claims this was good news for consumers, admitting she hates overcharging schemes that deliver a surprise on the bill at the end of the month.  Lance Ulanoff, editor of PC Magazine expressed some doubts himself.  (8 minutes)

Alaskan Snow Job: GCI Selling Unlimited Broadband That Isn’t

unlimited

Main Entry: un·lim·it·ed
Pronunciation: \-ˈli-mə-təd\
Function: adjective

1 : lacking any controls : unrestricted <unlimited access>
2
: boundless, infinite <unlimited possibilities>
3
: not bounded by exceptions : undefined <the unlimited and unconditional surrender of the enemy — Sir Winston Churchill>

An Alaskan Internet service provider is baffling its broadband customers with a blizzard of BS regarding just how unlimited its “unlimited” service plans really are.

A Stop the Cap! reader in The Last Frontier drops us a note to alert us of yet another provider trying to pull a fast one on its customers.

GCI markets cable-TV, telephone and broadband service in larger communities across many parts of the state.  Its broadband service, dubbed “Xtreme,” offer DSL-like speeds at a significant price premium over what users in the lower 48 pay for Internet access.

Since 2007, our reader writes, GCI offered customers a deal.  In return for letting the company provide all of your telecommunications needs — cable, phone, and Internet, GCI would provide you with unlimited broadband service.  The triple-play package was sold for at least $80 a month, and many customers agreed to the bundled route to avoid GCI’s restrictive, data-capped plans sold to its broadband-only customers.

GCI is now reneging on its end of the deal thanks to a creative redefinition of the word “unlimited.”  For the convenience of those who may be English-challenged, Stop the Cap! has provided the Merriam-Webster definition of the word “unlimited” above, which hasn’t changed much since its first use in the 15th century.

Broadband providers like GCI think they are clever enough to change all that.

Much to the chagrin of GCI’s bundled customers, the company unfairly slapped a “Fair Access Policy” on all of its unlimited customers on April 1st.  Customers started receiving usage warnings this spring, which came as quite a surprise for an “unlimited” service plan.  But the company insists it hasn’t limited its “unlimited” plans at all:

GCI offers some cable modem Internet service plans with “unlimited downloads”, meaning GCI does not bill customers additional fees for usage in a given month.

Actually, that isn’t the meaning of “unlimited” at all, no matter how much the company wishes it was.  Again, see the definition above.

In fact, even using GCI’s own definition, nonsensical as it is, it isn’t reality-based either.

Customers who exceed the arbitrary limits GCI determines as “fair,” could be subjected to higher pricing.  GCI’s website currently lists the overlimit fee starting at an impenetrable $0.005 per megabyte, which sounds pretty low until you realize it’s $5.00 per gigabyte, which is significantly higher than what most other naughty cappers charge.  On slower speed plans, GCI’s overlimit fee is a whopping $0.03 per megabyte — $30 per gigabyte.

What happens when you overuse your GCI unlimited Internet?  GCI will contact you to discuss your account and then ask you to agree to either reduce usage or pay additional fees for usage in a given month.

GCI loves to make its limits look mighty big by representing them in megabytes instead of the more commonly used gigabyte measurement.  They also include the usual comparisons: over 10,000 web pages, 250,000 e-mails, 1,000 pictures, etc.  On the lower speed plans, GCI avoids defining the far-smaller allowances for higher bandwidth services like near-DVD HD video streaming some Alaskan families may want to use during those cold and dark Alaskan winter evenings.

Here are the limits GCI assigns to its “unlimited” service plans:

Plan Name Usage
Ultimate Xtreme 40,000 MB
Ultimate Xtreme Family 60,000 MB
Ultimate Xtreme Entertainment 80,000 MB
Ultimate Xtreme Power 100,000 MB

That’s usage ranging from 40-100 gigabytes.  What this illustrates yet again is that Internet Overcharging schemes are ridiculously arbitrary.  A provider in rural Alaska defines “fair” use of its slowest speed “unlimited” broadband tier (3 Mbps/512 Kbps for $45 a month) at 40 gigabytes.  Meanwhile, Frontier Communications considers it fair to define its DSL service usage allowance at just 5 gigabytes per month.  Comcast says 250 gigabytes a month is fair.  AT&T’s wireless smartphone data plan now carries a 2 gigabyte limit AT&T claims is about right.

As is also commonly the case among Internet Overchargers, any unused allowances do not “roll over” to the next month.

GCI considers anyone exceeding these limits engaged in continuous high-volume data transfers, extensive use of streaming video and peer-to-peer file sharing programs, or using an unsecured wireless signal everyone in the neighborhood has hopped on to use.  But just backing up your family computer through an online backup service over a month could easily put you over these limits.  If a “mutually agreed on” solution cannot be reached to either limit your use or increase your price, GCI will show you the door.

Essentially, GCI hobbles its broadband service plans by imposing limits on services that could challenge some of its other products.  For standalone broadband customers, GCI builds in plenty of protection against customers potentially using its Internet service to bypass its cable and phone offerings, despite some recent speed and usage allowance increases.  How much online viewing will you feel safe doing on some of these Internet service plans:

Standalone Xtreme Plans Current Speeds & Included Usage New Speeds & Included Usage Usage Allowance Increase
Xtreme 1 Mbps/512 Kbps – 5.12 GB usage 3 Mbps/512 Kbps – 7.5 GB usage 2.38 GB
Xtreme Family 2 Mbps/512 Kbps – 10.24 GB usage 6 Mbps/512 Kbps – 15 GB usage 4.76 GB
Xtreme Entertainment 3 Mbps/768 Kbps – 20.48 GB usage 8 Mbps/768 Kbps – 25 GB usage 4.52 GB
Xtreme Power 4 Mbps/1Mbps – 30.72 GB usage 10 Mbps/1Mbps – 40 GB usage 9.28 GB

Monthly service fees

Standalone Xtreme Plans Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, Kenai, Mat-Su, & Soldotna Ketchikan, Petersburg, Seward, Sitka, Valdez, & Wrangell
Xtreme $44.99/m $54.99/m
Xtreme Family $54.99/m $64.99/m
Xtreme Entertainment $74.99/m $104.99/m
Xtreme Power $104.99/m $154.99/m

Our reader in Alaska thinks the usage limits are unjustified considering GCI’s capacity, and its prices:

GCI has well over 600 Gigabits of capacity across two undersea fiber optic cables.
Since 2007, the only way to get an unlimited download option for the company’s various speed tiers was through its bundled packages.  With the new limit on “unlimited” downloads, GCI fraudulently misrepresents its service to Alaskans.

GCI is the poster child for the cable industry’s push for metered billing. I think you’re well aware that cable companies view metered billing as an anti-competitive solution to fend off emerging competition from online content providers like Hulu and Netflix Online. Time Warner backed down when confronted with the possibility of regulation for the entire industry. They will however try again if companies like GCI continue to have success over a long term. This is why it’s imperative that groups like Stop the Cap! fight beyond your region and get regulation passed to bar forced bundling and data transfer limits entirely. Content providers (video services) should be separate entities from network providers (ISPs). It’s the only way to keep rates low and businesses competitive. Thank you for keeping up the good fight.

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