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Verizon To Throttle High-Bandwidth Users

tekgoblin writes "Verizon has enacted a new policy today that allows them to throttle 'high' bandwidth users on their network. We're not sure exactly what 'high' means but it is probably over 2GB of data per month. This comes as the iPhone launches on Verizon's network. The policy is said to only affect the top 5% of data users on the network. When these 5% of users hit the soft limit they will be throttled during peak times of the day. From the note sent to customers: 'Verizon Wireless strives to provide customers the best experience when using our network, a shared resource among tens of millions of customers. To help achieve this, if you use an extraordinary amount of data and fall within the top 5% of Verizon Wireless data users we may reduce your data throughput speeds periodically for the remainder of your then current and immediately following billing cycle to ensure high quality network performance for other users at locations and times of peak demand. Our proactive management of the Verizon Wireless network is designed to ensure that the remaining 95% of data customers aren't negatively affected by the inordinate data consumption of just a few users.'"

3 of 305 comments (clear)

  1. iPhone by fermion · · Score: 5, Interesting
    iPhone went on sale today with unlimited data and tethering. A few hours late we learn that Verizon will be throttling bandwidth. If this is not bait and switch, unethical advertising, and intent to deceive the consumer I don't know what it.

    Look at this way. Verizon is already giving the user a slower data rate than iPhone users have come to expect. Now they are saying if you use 'too much' as defined by them, you may be effectively cut off. After all, the definition of 'too much' and 'throttling' is defined completely by Verizon. Previously 'too much' was 150 MB, and who knows what throttling is. Maybe Edge?

    This reinforces my previous expectation that though Verizon has the best network in the US, they will never give the average customer a square deal or straight answer.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  2. 5%? by cshake · · Score: 5, Insightful

    5% - It seems small at first, but when you realize that they have 94.1 million subscribers in the US, that's 4.7 million people they're throttling. If they identify that number of people as using "extraordinary amount[s] of data", I'd say that there's a more fundamental problem here.

    And note the part where you get throttled for your entire next billing cycle too.

    I'm not a Verizon subscriber, and I still use a "dumb" phone without a data plan, but this still seems that they need to change what they're offering up front instead of giving everything and then taking it back if you dare use it.

  3. Re:2GB is far too little for "unlimited" by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Contributing to the problem" is one odd fucking way of spelling "using the service she is paying for". Do you work for verizon or just shill for free?