Comcast to limit customers' broadband usage

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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Comcast Corp, the largest U.S. cable operator, said on Thursday it will cap customers' Internet usage starting October 1, in a bid to ensure the best service for the vast majority of its subscribers.


Comcast said it was setting a monthly data usage threshold of 250 gigabytes per account for all residential high-speed Internet customers, or the equivalent of 50 million e-mails or 124 standard-definition movies.

"If a customer exceeds more than 250 GB and is one of the heaviest data users who consume the most data on our high-speed Internet service, he or she may receive a call from Comcast's Customer Security Assurance (CSA) group to notify them of excessive use," according to the company's updated Frequently Asked Questions on Excessive Use.

Customers who top 250 GB in a month twice in a six-month timeframe could have service terminated for a year.

Comcast said up to 99 percent of its 14 million Internet subscribers would not be affected by the new threshold, which it said would help ensure the quality of Internet delivery is not degraded by a minority of heavy users.

U.S. Internet subscribers are typically not aware of any limit on their Internet usage once they sign up to pay a flat monthly fee to their service provider.

As Web usage has rocketed, driven by the popularity of watching online video, photo-sharing and music downloading services, cable and phone companies have been considering various techniques to limit or manage heavy usage.

But Comcast has come under fire from a variety of sources for its network management techniques.

The U.S. Federal Communications Commission investigated complaints by consumer groups that it was blocking peer-to-peer applications like BitTorrent, and earlier this month ordered Comcast to modify its network management.

Comcast has said that by the end of the year it will change its network management practices to ensure all Web traffic is treated essentially the same, but has also been exploring other ways to prevent degradation of its Internet service delivery.

One consumer group said while Comcast's new 250 GB limit was "relatively high," it could eventually ensnare customers as technology progresses.

"If Comcast has oversold their network to the point of creating congestion problems, then well-disclosed caps for Internet use are a better short-term solution than Comcast's current practice of illegally blocking Internet traffic," said S Derek Turner of Free Press, a Washington, D.C.-based consumer advocacy group that filed a complaint about Comcast's network management practices earlier this year.

The Philadelphia-based company is not alone in trying to come up with ways to limit heavy Internet usage.

Time Warner Cable Inc, the second-largest U.S. cable operator, said in January it would run a trial of billing Internet subscribers based on usage rather than a flat fee.

Comcast spokesman Charlie Douglas said Comcast was also considering so-called consumption-based billing, but no decisions had been made.

(Editing by Braden Reddall)


website: Comcast to limit customers' broadband usage - Yahoo! News
 
250 GB is relatively enough for everyone, IMO, better than 5 GB or 50 GB.

If subscribers keep go exceed the limit and increase of demand would cause Comcast to have additional more bandwidth and monthly bill will going shot up, just better to limit at 250 GB to prevent skyrocket of monthly bill for install more bandwidth to meet the demand.

I believe it will happen to telephone companies to cap on DSL or optical fiber in later time, even some providers are lucky.
 
Still nothing news since early 2000's

That's why.... I switched to Verizon DSL.
We were not happy to pay double $$ to Comcast. Also, Comcast gave everyone cap for download/upload speed. Often dead internet during peak hour.

Switch to Verizon DSL. I think we use Verizon DSL for 6 years. Now, we have Verizon FIOS. Just add $4 more than DSL.

DSL - $30 per mo
FIOS - $34
Comcast - $60 plus rental modem (without Cable TV).
 
I bet if Comcast cap the usage of internet, then may lose numbers of subscribers. :shock:
 
250 GB is relatively enough for everyone, IMO, better than 5 GB or 50 GB.

If subscribers keep go exceed the limit and increase of demand would cause Comcast to have additional more bandwidth and monthly bill will going shot up, just better to limit at 250 GB to prevent skyrocket of monthly bill for install more bandwidth to meet the demand.

I believe it will happen to telephone companies to cap on DSL or optical fiber in later time, even some providers are lucky.
Yeah... even when I download anime, it's usually 50 episodes at the most... per month... at under 200 MB each. That's 10 GB worth of videos per month. Along with heavy use of YouTube and other videos that I look at from time to time, I probably do 20 GB at the most.

Oh, how much memory does a typical WoW player use per month?
 
Yeah... even when I download anime, it's usually 50 episodes at the most... per month... at under 200 MB each. That's 10 GB worth of videos per month. Along with heavy use of YouTube and other videos that I look at from time to time, I probably do 20 GB at the most.

Oh, how much memory does a typical WoW player use per month?
I just looked it up... approximately 5 to 10 MB per hour.

If a person, with no life, played WoW 10 hours a day... that's 3 GB at the most per month.

No worries! :)
 
I just looked it up... approximately 5 to 10 MB per hour.

If a person, with no life, played WoW 10 hours a day... that's 3 GB at the most per month.

No worries! :)

How can I know how much MB or GB do I use?
 
I just looked it up... approximately 5 to 10 MB per hour.

If a person, with no life, played WoW 10 hours a day... that's 3 GB at the most per month.

No worries! :)

Yes worry! Why because videophone usage. For those who do small business... If they average 5 hours a day videophone. That is 9.2 GB. And if that is constant for 20 business days a month. That 184 GB. That only give you a room under 66 GB to use for personal uses of internet download or upload pictures. Or email, or video mail, or other things.

Some of us will hit 250 GB just for videophone usage. That can be a major concern.
 
Yes worry! Why because videophone usage. For those who do small business... If they average 5 hours a day videophone. That is 9.2 GB. And if that is constant for 20 business days a month. That 184 GB. That only give you a room under 66 GB to use for personal uses of internet download or upload pictures. Or email, or video mail, or other things.

Some of us will hit 250 GB just for videophone usage. That can be a major concern.

Businesses are probably exempt from cap on usage, also will have pay high rate as well.

It has nothing with FCC or ADA about cap on usage of broadband, Catty suggested us to file the complaint to FCC and that's very ridiculously suggest, even I know FCC wouldn't care.
 
Yeah... even when I download anime, it's usually 50 episodes at the most... per month... at under 200 MB each. That's 10 GB worth of videos per month. Along with heavy use of YouTube and other videos that I look at from time to time, I probably do 20 GB at the most.

Oh, how much memory does a typical WoW player use per month?

Memory? What do you mean by memory? It's do nothing with internet.


Yes worry! Why because videophone usage. For those who do small business... If they average 5 hours a day videophone. That is 9.2 GB. And if that is constant for 20 business days a month. That 184 GB. That only give you a room under 66 GB to use for personal uses of internet download or upload pictures. Or email, or video mail, or other things.

Some of us will hit 250 GB just for videophone usage. That can be a major concern.

Read again.

Comcast said it was setting a monthly data usage threshold of 250 gigabytes per account for all residentialhigh-speed Internet customers, or the equivalent of 50 million e-mails or 124 standard-definition movies.

Business is not residential so business is safe.
 
Yes worry! Why because videophone usage. For those who do small business... If they average 5 hours a day videophone. That is 9.2 GB. And if that is constant for 20 business days a month. That 184 GB. That only give you a room under 66 GB to use for personal uses of internet download or upload pictures. Or email, or video mail, or other things.

Some of us will hit 250 GB just for videophone usage. That can be a major concern.
Actually, those who use Comcast for business purposes will have bigger bandwidth and pay more.

My former roommate had a business account for his internet and had to pay more than I had to for my residential account.
 
How can I know how much MB or GB do I use?
You can always check your billing statement or contact your internet service provider to ask them how much you used last month. :dunno:

There are programs you can download (for a fee) that will measure your bandwidth use.
 
Yes worry! Why because videophone usage. For those who do small business... If they average 5 hours a day videophone. That is 9.2 GB. And if that is constant for 20 business days a month. That 184 GB. That only give you a room under 66 GB to use for personal uses of internet download or upload pictures. Or email, or video mail, or other things.

Some of us will hit 250 GB just for videophone usage. That can be a major concern.

Could you tell me how you came across this numbers? The number I got for 100 hours of video usage at 384Kbps setting is 16.48 GB..

Assume 384Kbps which is 0.046875MB per second
60 seconds = 2.8125MB
1 hour = 168.75MB
5 hours = 843.75MB
100 Hours (20 days) = 16875MB or 16.48GB

Far nowhere at 184GB usage. Again, assume 512Kbps setting: 21.97GB usage.
 
memory = bandwidth :roll:

no, memory is what your computer uses to make images and other programs run faster. you are confusing "memory" with "data"

data is stored in all different kinds of mediums. hard drives, flash drives, and yes, memory.

Bandwidth is the amount of data that you can move in and out of a specific media (ethernet cable, SATA cable, whatever).

so, when you ask how much memory a WoW player uses, you really mean, how much bandwidth does a WoW player use.

now, that is not what is being discussed here in this forum. what is being discussed is the amount of data transferred per month. If you had any idea what you were talking about, you would have asked,

"how much data does the average WoW transfer per month?"

So :roll: yourself.
 
no, memory is what your computer uses to make images and other programs run faster. you are confusing "memory" with "data"

data is stored in all different kinds of mediums. hard drives, flash drives, and yes, memory.

Bandwidth is the amount of data that you can move in and out of a specific media (ethernet cable, SATA cable, whatever).

so, when you ask how much memory a WoW player uses, you really mean, how much bandwidth does a WoW player use.

now, that is not what is being discussed here in this forum. what is being discussed is the amount of data transferred per month. If you had any idea what you were talking about, you would have asked,

"how much data does the average WoW transfer per month?"

So :roll: yourself.
Gee, you really take everything I say... literally. :roll:

Yes, I know the difference between "memory" and "bandwidth". I wasn't saying that memory and bandwidth were the same thing. I was saying that I meant to say "bandwidth" when I accidentally said "memory".
 
Gee, you really take everything I say... literally. :roll:

Yes, I know the difference between "memory" and "bandwidth". I wasn't saying that memory and bandwidth were the same thing. I was saying that I meant to say "bandwidth" when I accidentally said "memory".

Accident:
bullshit6gfph8.jpg
 
What should I do I have a Netflix Roku Player Which Streams Movies a Tivo, Comcast Phone, Internet I download a few Animations a month
I just Downloaded netstat Live and realize that it will not be accurate because when my Computer is off my Roku Player is Streaming What should I do
 
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