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Verizon to End Grandfathered Unlimited Data Plans

32 pointsby joedevabout 13 years ago

13 comments

cletusabout 13 years ago
I really wish other governments would take a leaf out of the book of the Australian government (the ACCC specifically) on this one.<p>Some years ago the ACCC clamped down on the use of the word "unlimited" in advertising ADSL services. They said it was misrepresentation to use the term unless you really could download all you want, there was no traffic shaping, no soft quota and no excess usage fees.<p>Basically, the "unlimited" moniker all but died overnight. But this is a Good Thing [tm]. It means you don't get shady practices where, for example, AT&#38;T shapes traffic beyond 3GB/month for "unlimited" users.<p>Basically, in Australia you get what you pay for and you pay for what you get. I think this is an infinitely better system. With current bandwidth limits and technology in the US, mass availability of cheap (truly) unlimited cellular Internet access is simply not economically viable.<p>Data point: the UK IIRC defines "unlimited" as anything that covers 95% of the population. This led to, for example, a friend of mine getting his parents on Tiscali ADSL, downloading a couple of Ubuntu distros, getting classified as a "downloader" by the ISP and put on their shitty network. Those already on it had figured out the only way to download through BitTorrent and the like was to use port 80/443. So the Web had become unusable at peak times. And this qualified as "unlimited".<p>Unlimited plans are marketing tools in the US to retain customers. Both AT&#38;T introduced them, removed them and grandfathered existing users. The whole point is to put up a barrier to customers leaving (as they'll lose their grandfathered plans). The sooner we end the charade the better.
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Karunamonabout 13 years ago
Oh well, sucks to be them. The only reason I'm giving Verizon any money right now is the unlimited data plan and contract. They change the rules, I get out of my contract. So long!
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dkokelleyabout 13 years ago
If I'm understanding this correctly, my 3G iPhone 4 on my currently grandfathered unlimited plan is safe for now, and in February when my contract expires, I should be able to keep the same plan. If Apple comes out with an iPhone 4G and I choose to get it, then it's goodbye unlimited data.<p>Still, I suppose Verizon is doing things adequately. Their throttling for heavy data users applies only when the tower is at capacity, and speeds return once the congestion is gone. (Compare this to AT&#38;T, which artificially slows data speeds, even when capacity isn't an issue.) As for the plans, any way you slice it it's a worse deal to go from $30/mo for unlimited to $30/mo for 2GB. At least overages are billed at a sane rate ($10/GB seems appropriate to me, although I've only used 0.5GB this month with 4 days left in cycle).
jarydabout 13 years ago
I've been using an LTE phone with unlimited data for over a year now.. I wonder if they will just surprise me with a new contract the next time they send me the bill..
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jiggy2011about 13 years ago
"Unlimited" mobile plans tend to be bullshit.<p>I know people who have signed up for these and been given heavily restricted handsets that won't allow tethering, won't allow web downloads or app store downloads over a certain size unless of wifi.<p>Plus they tend to be significantly slower than my 1GB/month account which costs less and I never use even 1/2 of.
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JangoSteveabout 13 years ago
It seems like the article may be intentionally vague on this point, but I can't tell if already-grandfathered unlimited 4G customers are going to have it yanked this summer (which I guess would let them out of their contracts on their subsidized phones scott free), or if they simply won't be able to renew the unlimited part once their contract is up.
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officialchickenabout 13 years ago
One thing I really enjoy about traveling outside the US is cool and inexpensive telecommunications options. It feels like bronze age here in the good old United Subsidized phones of America. We've got to give up our addiction to subsidies!
mvanveenabout 13 years ago
What does this move signal to people grandfathered into AT&#38;T unlimited data plans? Is the end nigh? Do consumers have any available legal recourse?
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lsiebertabout 13 years ago
I went to Verizon because for a while it looked like it would have the best Android phones. They had good connectivity too when AT&#38;T sucked.<p>Now... I guess Sprint?
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readmeabout 13 years ago
I got a letter from them about "cheap new data plans" that I could get but I didn't open it. But now I know what it really was :(.
Quizzyabout 13 years ago
Makes sense for Verizon, and if they are being greedy, others will step in to fill the void.
codgercoderabout 13 years ago
Isn't it great to have so many wireless carrier choices? :-/
lucian303about 13 years ago
No surprise here.