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T-Mobile is writing the manual on how to fuck up the internet

15 pointsby Lx1oG-AWb6h_ZG0over 9 years ago

5 comments

scintill76over 9 years ago
&gt; As soon as you reach that cap, you’re kicked down to 2G speeds which are basically unusable for most things worth doing on the internet. When I was on T-Mobile’s 1GB plan before it announced Music Freedom, I nearly used my entire data allowance listening to Google Play Music on a one-way bus ride from New York to DC.<p>There&#x27;s another solution to this, that the corps would also like us to forget: own your media and take it with you. Use re-sellable mediums so you can &quot;rent&quot; even if nobody is offering rentals on the media you want.<p>Honestly it almost feels entitled to complain that your ISP will let you pull multiple HD video streams for hours on end every day for free.<p>&gt; The truly simple solution is to just offer unlimited data access for everything.<p>The problem is that nobody&#x27;s network has unlimited capacity. Even if you believe their complaints of congestion are false and they&#x27;re just penny-pinching on their infrastructure and adding fees to squeeze every last dime of profit, there will be some physical limit to what they can do. I&#x27;d be interested in hearing a counterpoint here -- can the networks really profitably support something absurd like every subscriber streaming video 24&#x2F;7? While that may look like a strawman, the article emphasized several times about how they want &quot;truly unlimited&quot;, so the only way to give that is to assume everybody is saturating the bandwidth their hardware is capable of, and doing it 24&#x2F;7, right?
digikataover 9 years ago
There&#x27;s a key difference between a broadband isp and a mobile service. Customers have a much wider choice of mobile carrier than they do a last-mile isp.<p>Of the mobile carriers, T-mobile was the one to at least attempt to shake up a pretty terrible mobile service landscape by providing some level of customer oriented value. So personally they get a bit of a pass from me, though I do worry about long term implications T-mobiles &#x27;zero rating&#x27; of some services.
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tzsover 9 years ago
If you pay for an N GB&#x2F;month data plan, and your ISP provides you with N GB&#x2F;month that you can use any way you want with no throttling or blocking based on origin or content type, then they have satisfied net neutrality.<p>If the ISP wants to offer additional free services on top of that, I don&#x27;t see how that can be a net neutrality issue. If it harms competition, then it might be an antitrust issue, so deal with it there. No need to try to shoehorn it into net neutrality.
ntw1103over 9 years ago
At what point did it become okay to have such profanity in the main titles of news articles?
msoadover 9 years ago
So FCC rulings against this type of service is not applied to mobile providers?
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