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AT&T Starts Throttling Heavy Wireless Data Users

tekgoblin writes "AT&T has started tossing out warnings for users that fall into the top 5% of data users on their wireless network. AT&T announced this change back in July and is now starting to actually enforce it."

6 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. Perfect Plan by kuhnto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There will always be a "top 5 percent", sot they will eventually throttle everyone to 0.

    --
    "A 'person' is smart. 'People' are dumb, panicky animals and you know that."
  2. Trickle down by rwa2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the top 5% hoarding all of the resources is the most effective way to run a limited economy! They know the best use of those packets and can distribute them better than all those poor saps that use lower QoS queues. This unnatural regulation is going to strangle the health of the overall network and everyone is going to suffer SEVERELY! And it's all the current administration's fault!

  3. Re:Saw This Coming. by friedmud · · Score: 4, Informative

    No - the wireless industry is not a free market. Spectrum is a very closely held resource carefully distributed to 3 or 4 major players... so free market forces can't fix this. If there was an infinite amount of spectrum and anyone could jump in and make a new wireless company... then there could be proper free market forces.

    I'm not saying we should just let people go crazy with spectrum either (spectrum chaos would be bad for everyone). How to handle wireless pricing going forward is definitely going to become a problem.

  4. Re:It makes some kind of sense by Xtravar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This. This is why we can't have nice things.

    --
    Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
  5. Re:I think the top 5 percent are selfish by Pi1grim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey. Those 5% of the users are trying to use what they bought. They paid fair and square for what was advertised as "unlimited plan". If provider is unable to hold his end of the bargain then there should be consequences for false advertising. The only one you are subsidizing is your wireless provider, not those 5% of the users that actually tried to use the service.
    Imagine someone rented you a room and said that you can use it anytime you want. And then you suddenly find out that it is rented to several other people are renting that same room and the witty landlord just decided to use the fact that all of you are at home at different times to sell rent it to all of you simultaneously. Who should you sue/roughen up, the other clients, that are "spending too much time in the room" or the landlord?

  6. Re:I think the top 5 percent are selfish by saihung · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A contract by its very nature is a set of terms by which two parties agree to exchange things of value. If one of those parties can change any provision of the contract at will, with no possibility for negotiation and no additional value provided in exchange for being able to change the contract terms, then it's not really a contract at all.

    The problem here is that AT&T has all of the cards. It can force me to abide by the terms of the contract no matter how onerous, can prevent me from accessing the courts when I have a grievance, and then has the power to change that very same contract that you and I have to abide by no matter what, on a whim. If that seems fair to you, then you must be an AT&T shareholder.