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Comcast Is Raising Its Data Caps From 300GB To 1TB (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Comcast has announced today it will be raising its monthly data cap of 300GB to 1TB beginning June 1st. They will however charge more to customers who want unlimited data. After June 1st, less people will need to buy unlimited data from the company. Previously, users were charged an extra $30 to $35 a month for unlimited data but now they will have to pay an additional $50 for unlimited data. "All of the data plans in our trial markets will move from a 300 gigabyte data plan to a terabyte by June 1st, regardless of the speed," Comcast's announcement today said. The reason for the change? Customers are exceeding the 300GB cap. In late 2013, Comcast said only 2 percent of its customers used more than 300GB of data a month. That number was up to 8 percent in late 2015.

4 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"Unlimited nights and weekends" by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comcast hates giving you what you paid for.... Comcast rewarding customers? HA!

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  2. Re:Which they really SHOULD by geek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why should Comcast give everyone unlimited access to a self imposed limited resource?

    Fixed that for you

  3. Re:"Unlimited nights and weekends" by The+Raven · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They can't. Even if they thought it was a good idea systemically.

    • What's sucking most people's bandwidth? Streaming.
    • What can't you timeshift? Streaming.
    • What can you timeshift? Torrenting.

    So if they implemented time based data surcharges, they would drive users to piracy. Since Comcast and Time Warner both have significant media holdings, any policy that incentivized piracy (would be a non-starter.

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  4. Re: Which they really SHOULD by jxander · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because the limits are false.

    Comcast, Cox, Time Warner, etc. have made their own little monopolized diamond business, creating artificial scarcity.

    The problem is that they've done this to a basic utility service, instead of an exorbitant luxury item like diamonds.

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