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AT&T Communications United States Your Rights Online

AT&T Begins Capping Broadband Users (dslreports.com) 180

Karl Bode, reporting for DSLReports (edited for clarity): Just a reminder to AT&T customers: the company's usage caps on U-Verse broadband connections is now in effect. When AT&T originally announced broadband caps on fixed-line connections back in 2011, it capped DSL customers at 150 GB per month and U-Verse customers at 250 GB per month. But while the DSL customer cap was enforced (by and large because AT&T wants these users to migrate to wireless anyway), AT&T didn't enforce caps for its U-Verse customers. Until now, anyway. Back in March AT&T announced it would begin enforcing usage caps on all connections starting May 23. As of today, U-Verse customers face different caps depending on their speed tier. AT&T says customers on U-Verse tiers with speeds between 768 Kbps and 6 Mbps will now face a 300 GB cap; customers on U-Verse tiers of speeds between 12 Mbps and 75Mbps will see a 600 GB cap, and customers on speeds between 100 Mbps and 1 Gbps will see a cap of 1 terabyte. Users who exceed these caps in any given month will automatically have to pay for 50 GB of additional data for $10 each.
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AT&T Begins Capping Broadband Users

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  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:34AM (#52171465)

    The helpful folks at AT&T would like to remind you that they have a great Uverse cable package too....should your HBO Now/Sling/Hulu accounts be causing you to go over their new broadband caps.

    • by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:49AM (#52171567)

      The helpful folks at AT&T would like to remind you that they have a great Uverse cable package too....should your HBO Now/Sling/Hulu accounts be causing you to go over their new broadband caps.

      I logged into my account, and as a Uverse internet-only customer in Houston, I am now under a cap. I'm not sure how they can unilaterally do this without revisiting the contract.

      Predictably, I have an option in my account now to "add TV to get unlimited data".

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:52AM (#52171593)

        They are altering the deal. Pray they don't alter it any further

      • I'm not sure how they can unilaterally do this without revisiting the contract.

        If you're on month-to-month service, as opposed to a 12- or 24-month commitment, the provider alters the contract by sending the new terms to you along with your bill. If you pay it without canceling service, you accept the offer of continued service.

        • I'm not sure how they can unilaterally do this without revisiting the contract.

          If you're on month-to-month service, as opposed to a 12- or 24-month commitment, the provider alters the contract by sending the new terms to you along with your bill. If you pay it without canceling service, you accept the offer of continued service.

          And if you have a commitment and they alter the terms you can not accept the change and get out of the commitment for no charge. IIRC some cell phone companies had that happen when they raised a fee a few cents and customers walked away with a phone and no cancellation fee. ART may have had a cap written into the contract, however and simply didn't enforce it.

          • And if you have a commitment and they alter the terms you can not accept the change and get out of the commitment for no charge. IIRC some cell phone companies had that happen when they raised a fee a few cents and customers walked away with a phone and no cancellation fee.

            To get around that, they leave the "service" price alone, and instead raise one of the "fees" (of some description or another) [cnet.com]. They claim it's not altering the contract, which only speaks to service price, they had to raise the administrative fee to cover costs.

            They seem to be getting away with it, too.

      • > I'm not sure how they can unilaterally do this without revisiting the contract.

        You mean what's already been in the contract since 2011? Just because they're enforcing it now doesn't mean the contract has changed.

      • You're always been under a cap with AT&T internet, they just rarely enforced it. However now they have *increased* the cap for most people while also saying that they will enforce it. I don't really see the problem here.

  • Do I have to post FUCK AT&T on a Slashdot forum. FUCK AT&T until there are no cells left in the organism.
    • Tilting at windmills. Internet outrage has only a minuscule effect on the real world, and outrage on a niche site like Slashdot has even less effect.

      Write your congressman, complain to the FCC. Those avenues are also weak due to regulatory capture and the corrupting nature of our style of campaign finance, but they are still orders of more effective than swearing into the void.

  • In Seattle I have multiple providers of 1Gbps service that I can choose from with low rates. My guess is it is the proximity to Microsoft and the progressive city council that has helped make this happen. Data caps stink!
    • Re:In Seattle... (Score:4, Informative)

      by pr0fessor ( 1940368 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @11:01AM (#52171675)

      They are basically saying I'm going to give you a monthly account but at 75mbps you can only use it for about 18 out of 720 or so hours in month.

      Alright I know that even with me being a cord cutter and all my TVs running on streaming services and kids playing games on xbox live I only use about 400-450GB a month because those services don't actually serve up video at 75mbps but if you're selling 75mbps on a monthly account the cap needs to be 75 * number of seconds in a month.

      • by Shatrat ( 855151 )

        if you're selling 75mbps on a monthly account the cap needs to be 75 * number of seconds in a month

        You can get that, but you'll be paying closer to $1,000 per month. The only reason normal people can afford retail internet connections is because they are oversubscribed. The wholesale cost of bandwidth is counter-intuitively many times more expensive than the retail cost.

        • They are selling a service on monthly account and then capping it but I don't even get to keep my unused data... so if I use 400 this month I don't get to keep my 200 and next month when I use 700 they charge me an extra $20. All those people that never go over and always have a couple hundred GB left over aren't getting a $10/50GB discount either.

    • by glomph ( 2644 )

      I live in Queen Anne, to get anything broadband-ish I have a choice of Comcast or Comcast. I won't go into detail here, but their business practices are... questionable. Century Link DSL need not apply, I have too many friends that have been screwed by them and their 'fiber' service.

      In most places in Crony Capitalismland, a given location has a choice of identically one broadband provider. Thus you pay far more for far less than one does in regulated Europe, where the local last-mile proprietors *m

      • You said it better than I could;

        I live in rural Spain (arse-end of nowhere) and I STILL have more internet choices than most of the US, it appears...
      • Not where I live (in Seattle). I have 3 ISPs with 1Gbps in Seattle to choose from. I pay $29.95 a month for mine. You have CenturyLink, Wave and Comcast to choose from.
        • I have exactly one provider, CenturyLink, $60 a month for DSL 7/1 service, no cable available. CenturyLink bought the local phone company and mothballed all the work they were doing to improve service, to include laying residential fiber and now says no to any upgrades in the foreseeable future.

          Granted I live on the Eastern Plains but it just shows what competition can do to prices and service. Since the military stationed me here moving is not an option.

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      In Seattle I have multiple providers of 1Gbps service that I can choose from with low rates. My guess is it is the proximity to Microsoft and the progressive city council that has helped make this happen. Data caps stink!

      Must be a fairly recent development.

      Five year ago I had a roommate who finished his degree and was hired right into Microsoft. At the time we were sharing a 50 mbps cable modem connection (we were in Kansas), and apparently he could not get higher than 15 mbps in the area of Seattle he was relocating to. It was an uptown apartment so maybe it was a case of old infrastructure and an incumbent provider controlling it.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:42AM (#52171511)
    Why we let them do this. You know, we could pass a law and make them stop.
    • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:53AM (#52171603)

      Yeah, good luck getting that law through all the Congressmen they've bribed.

  • ..then they wouldn't NEED datacaps. But it's cheaper/more profitable for them to have a shitty, overbooked network and charge people for 'overages'.
    • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:57AM (#52171641)

      ..then they wouldn't NEED datacaps.

      They likely don't need data caps now. They just want you to buy their Uverse cable/phone package. And putting caps on online cable alternatives is a great way to...ahem... "encourage" you.

      • by Shatrat ( 855151 )

        Every residential ISP network is overbooked. If it wasn't you couldn't afford it. AT&T's is more overbooked than most, because they prioritize investment in their mobile network because it's less regulated and more profitable.

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      The fiscally optimum amount of network infrastructure is not the amount where bandwidth congestion management isn't needed, but the amount where the marginal cost (MC) of expanding the network equals the marginal revenue (MR) it would bring. Or in other words, when the additional profit from expanding the network drops to zero.

      So when you say a "properly built network" doesn't need data caps, you are actually referring to an overbuilt network.

      Now that we know that a properly built network has congestion (a

  • Doesn't matter (Score:4, Informative)

    by dlenmn ( 145080 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:46AM (#52171545)

    I've got 18 Mbps ATT DSL, and I don't think that I could hit that cap anyway given that their service is so unreliable. My connection goes down at least once almost every evening... (Granted, it usually comes back 5-10 minutes later, but still.)

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Once an evening? I have a service interruption every 20 minutes.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Every 20 minutes? I have a service interruption every *@#$*!@..... *NO CARRIER*

      • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

        Call support and complain they will send a tech out.

        I've had to have them come out and work on the line at work 10 times or so in the last couple of years last time they switched me to a diffrent pair to the local hub now the connection is stable and we get 12mbps instead of 6mbps.
        Although we are on our 6th modem now.

        They've never charged us for any of the service calls but they do charge about $100 each for the modems when they are out of warranty.

    • I've got 18 Mbps ATT DSL, and I don't think that I could hit that cap anyway given that their service is so unreliable. My connection goes down at least once almost every evening... (Granted, it usually comes back 5-10 minutes later, but still.)

      I'm a Uverse customer who previously had DSL. I'm convinced that AT&T is doing this deliberately with DSL customers to drive them to Uverse. Uverse is significantly more reliable and for me at least it was cheaper and faster than my DSL service anyway. My DSL went down at least once a day and eventually it got so inconvenient that I moved to Uverse. I had to change TV providers though which is one of the reasons I delayed getting off DSL because I had TV from another company and I was OK with it. O

      • by dlenmn ( 145080 )

        I had Uverse (i.e. DSL+TV) for until last March because they gave me a nice intro offer. It was never any more stable.

    • I had a similar problem on my Uverse, the Modem thingy would reboot itself every night it seemed. I even had it replaced and it didn't stop. One day I went in and disabled IPv6 on the thing. Haven't had a problem since.

    • Have you replaced your lines outside? I've had similar problems at every place I've lived at, and re-runing the line often fixes intermittent connection issues.
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @10:50AM (#52171575)

    Instead of capping [urbandictionary.com] them, AT&T could just limit their usage.

  • So are business plans still exempt? $50/mo gets 12/1mbps uverse business here without phone.

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      Are business plans even available in residentially zoned blocks? Some ISPs don't understand telecommuting.

      • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

        Afaik you just ask for a business plan and they happily charge you extra. But I don't know that for sure as I don't live close enough to town to get dsl.

      • Yes, you can get a business U-verse account, even if you're in a residential area. I have no cap and 5 static IPs for my house. I pay more, of course but, I don't have to deal with problems such as data caps and dynamic IPs.

      • Don't know about AT&T but with Charter and before them Frontier with me it hasn't been a problem.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I thought net neutrality meant no preferential treatment to a particular source of traffic. Data caps apply equally to all sources of traffic. To which provision of the legislation do you refer?

      • Data caps inevitably lead to "zero rating" certain services that said vendor provides. This means that some things do not count against your monthly data usage effectively penalizing you for using anything outside of their approved network which is exactly the kind of shit that the net neutrality laws were put in place to prevent.

        • Somewhat correct on this. The placing of the cap is not against net neutrality law but the use of zero rating certain services is not inevitable.
          Also it will be up to the FCC to decide if it is allowed, such as they are doing now by asking for public comments.
      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        That's the problem. There is a preferential treatment to source of traffic.

        How? Everything is digital over those lines, now. No analog broadcasting over wire. That means everything is a bit, a 0 or 1. AT&T places a cap on the 0s and 1s not originating from their services.

  • Where forced to make TV cap free as they can't not count IPTV data. And if they did change for tv data then comcast will have a field day with that.

  • Fuck AT&T (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @11:03AM (#52171681)

    I am so glad that I left AT&T, the mobile company, because of the same kind of bullshit that they are pulling here. It looks like the other half of their business is not much different. T-Mobile's service isn't the best, by any stretch, but at this point I'm content to continue paying [less] for their business practices.

    All of the carriers, except possibly Sprint, are raking in profits faster than they put it into the bank, while they continue to have the cartel attitude to screw the customer with fees (every time Verizon or AT&T introduces or raises a fee, then the other follows).

    Want to upgrade your device? Oh, that will be $30. Oh, you're on an enterprise account? That should be waived. Please contact customer service to have it removed, because we hope you don't and then we can keep the fee. Please, bring your own phone so we can charge you money for doing it!

    It's so frustrating because AT&T is not a capitalist company -- they are not seriously competing. Both AT&T and Verizon are at the same place that they were years ago, except with better technology doing things for them (like building penetration for AT&T). I have not seen a new area get covered by AT&T in years. The only thing they seem to do is to keep the towers running with relevant hardware (a good thing), and that's it. Then they sit on the profits and moan that they need to charge users for using the service they're paying for.

    Let's think about it: a 1 TB data limit for a 1 GB connection. I can only assume that they are using Apple math for binary values, but to be as fair as possible, you could theoretically use your data cap in 1024 seconds, or just over 17 minutes. That makes sense?

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      As your bandwidth approaches infinity, presumably you have no use case where you're using 100% of your bandwidth in sustained use. Do residential users really have a normal usage case that involves downloading 1 gig of data every second? Sure, you can get a 50 gig game in 50 seconds, but do you now need to be able to get 200 games that size in one month?

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      Doesn't the 1TB data cap give the ISP a business case to bring fiber to everyone?

  • Why don't they just invest in some infrastructure and bring their customers into the twentieth century.

  • Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EmeraldBot ( 3513925 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @11:23AM (#52171827)
    To give you guys some perspective, if you have a 20mbps connection a 600GB cap, that's approximately 60 or 70 hours, or about 3 day's worth. If you only use that connection speed during your 9-5 workday, that's still only about 8 days, or a little over a week. I understand that Slashdot and code merges don't eat that much, but any kind of streaming or video would do a connection like this in in about two or maybe three weeks if you're careful. Imagine if we had three major companies who made cars, all of which come with a driving cap of 200 miles and cost $50 for every 50 miles after. That's what we live in.
    • Nobody except filesharers use their bandwidth that way. The vast majority of users' usage is bursty, hitting the cap for a fraction of a second, then dropping to zero for several minutes. Even sustained usage like Netflix tops out at about 5 Mbps per 1080p stream. So it's meaningless to break down usage into "approximately 60 or 70 hours" unless you're a filesharer who's always maxing out their bandwidth.

      For some REAL perspective, bandwidth without caps requires a dedicated connection. An OC3 costs a [t1shopper.com]
      • For some REAL perspective, bandwidth without caps requires a dedicated connection.

        No one is asking for a dedicated connection, so you can drop the hyperbole. What is wanted is (a) a guaranteed and realistic minimum (dedicated) bandwidth for each user—as a percentage of the user's peak burst rate—and (b) a fair division of the remaining bandwidth between all active users. Oh, and no extra charges for unplanned overages. "The vast majority of users" as you've defined them should generally be able to achieve the advertised burst transfer rates; those who use their connection 24/

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      It is also less then 1 Windows reinstall if I include my Steam games.

  • "We want to continue providing a great experience for our Internet customers so weâ(TM)re giving U-verse Internet customers more choices,"

    Yeah, because so many customers have said, "We want to have our data capped for a better internet experience".

    [Disclaimer: I am (or was) a moderately satisfied UVerse customer]

  • by hyphnos ( 2876657 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @11:53AM (#52172045)
    i received a notice modifying my terms on 18 mb uverse a few weeks ago telling me the cap was being removed... thanks google
  • I don't exactly live in the sticks, just very far from any AT&T CO. The best DSL I could get form them was 1.5 (really 1.25) down. And I put up with it for a long time, because I really don't do much online. I have all the bandwith I need in the form of a good blu-ray player and 1.25 is good enough for basic-to-moderately complex web sites.

    I asked about better speeds. Repeatedly. No can do. No UVerse for me, not at any price. And having had DirecTV back in the late 90's I wasn't keen on repeating

    • by TheSync ( 5291 )

      I don't exactly live in the sticks, just very far from any AT&T CO. The best DSL I could get form them was 1.5 (really 1.25) down.

      The average copper local loop in the US is 4.25 km. This is higher than any other OECD country, and almost four time as long as the average length in Italy for example.

      Those people 2+ km out are never going to see data rates over 5 Mbps down, regardless of technology.

      It is possible that it is because the US adopted electronic telephone switching before other countries, and/o

  • These are OUR PIPES, and don't you forget it!

    (combining an actual quote from a broadband exec with, Road House [youtube.com])

  • $10 per 50GBytes?

    That's $0.02/MByte

    If you have the temerity to take your AT&T phone across the border to Canada, they will charge you $2.00/MByte. 100X more.

  • Nothing more than an exercise of a monopoly, protecting its cash cow--leveraging that monopoly, possibly illegally, to squeeze more money out of customers at the threat of making the services they're paying for useless.

    I can burn 150 GB just watching netflix. What a joke.

  • by ArhcAngel ( 247594 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2016 @01:27PM (#52172927)
    Whenever I get close to the cap I just upload some really large files to roll the odometer back.
  • If you notice, paying the unlimited fee raises the broadband costs beyond the TV costs in most cases. So you can cut the cord all you want, they'll maintain their profit per customer regardless.

  • It wasn't over the data cap thing (a host of other issues with their service and billing), but it was a nice coincidence. Also coincidentally, Time Warner Cable is bumping their top tier internet package from 50mbps to 300mbps in our neighborhood this month for the same price (which is cheaper than Uverse's top tier 60mbps service).
  • If you end up having to uncut the cable due to cost of overages with Netflix, Hulu, and the like, be sure you tell those services WHY you are leaving and encourage them to take the same course of action you are like complaining to the FCC and writing your congressman.

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