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#1 |
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LEGAL SPICE ;)
Forum Legend
Join Date: Jul 25, 2005
Location: OXNARD, CA - WHERE THE DALLAS COWBOYS TRAIN & PRACTICE
Posts: 38,689
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Cable firm tries limits, charge for Internet use
NEW YORK — You're used to paying extra if you use up your cell phone minutes, but will you be willing to pay extra if your home computer goes over its Internet allowance? Time Warner Cable Inc. customers — and, later, others — may have to, if the company's test of metered Internet access is successful. On Thursday, new Time Warner Cable Internet subscribers in Beaumont, Texas, will have monthly allowances for the amount of data they upload and download. Those who go over will be charged $1 per gigabyte, a company executive said. Metered billing is an attempt to deal fairly with Internet usage, which is very uneven among Time Warner Cable's subscribers, said Kevin Leddy, Time Warner Cable's executive vice president of advanced technology. Just 5 percent of subscribers take up half of the capacity on local cable lines, he said. Other cable Internet service providers report a similar distribution. "We think it's the fairest way to finance the needed investment in the infrastructure," Leddy said. Metered usage is common overseas, and other U.S. cable providers are looking at ways to rein in heavy users. Most have download caps, but some keep the caps secret so as not to alarm the majority of users, who come nowhere close to the limits. Time Warner Cable appears to be the first major ISP to charge for going over the limit: Other companies warn, then suspend, those who go over. Phone companies are less concerned about congestion and are unlikely to impose metered usage on DSL customers, because their networks are structured differently. Time Warner's tiers will range from $29.95 a month for relatively slow service at 768 kilobits per second and a 5-gigabyte monthly cap to $54.90 per month for fast downloads at 15 megabits per second and a 40-gigabyte cap. Those prices cover the cable portion of subscription bundles that include video or phone services. Both downloads and uploads will count toward the monthly cap. A possible stumbling block for Time Warner Cable is that customers have had little reason so far to pay attention to how much they download from the Internet, or know much traffic makes up a gigabyte. That uncertainty could scare off new subscribers. Those who mainly do Web surfing or e-mail have little reason to pay attention to the traffic caps: a gigabyte is about 3,000 Web pages, or 15,000 e-mails without attachments. But those who download movies or TV shows will want to pay attention. A standard-definition movie can take up 1.5 gigabytes, and a high-definition movie can be 6 to 8 gigabytes. Time Warner Cable subscribers will be able to check out their data consumption on a "gas gauge" on the company's Web page. The company won't apply the gigabyte surcharges for the first two months. It has 90,000 customers in the trial area, but only new subscribers will be part of the trial. Billing by the hour was common for dial-up service in the U.S. until AOL introduced an unlimited-usage plan in 1996. Flat-rate, unlimited-usage plans have been credited with encouraging consumer Internet use by making billing easy to understand. |
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#2 |
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certified wackball#3
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Forum Icon Join Date: Aug 03, 2003
Location: hiding under the third booth at Arnold's
Posts: 58,179
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ok, by show of hands, how many have already received multiple warnings from their ISP, and which ISP was it?
*hands up* Time Warner (DIRTY SOB's - i just do it to piss them off) |
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#3 |
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Hats for Bats
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Jan 23, 2001
Location: northeast Ohio.
Posts: 5,315
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I have DSL
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Jan 04, 2001
Posts: 53,128
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#5 | |
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#6 |
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Happy Easter!
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Forum Idol Join Date: Jul 19, 2002
Location: Detroit, Michigan
Posts: 102,598
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This idea sucks. They already charge an arm and a leg for the stuff.
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#7 |
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Site Owner
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Location: Marietta, GA
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I sure hope Comcast never does this. They recently upgraded a lot of people to 2Mbps of upload speed.
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#8 | |
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Cheers!
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