T-Mobile is Making Its 'Unlimited' Data Plan Even More Confusing (theverge.com) 75
When T-Mobile announced "One" plan, little did the company know that people wouldn't like seeing their "unlimited" data plan offer video streaming max out at 480p resolution. The company is making some tweaks to that plan, only to make things more confusing to people. It will now begin selling "HD day passes" for $3 per day, allowing customers to stream in 1080p for 24 hours. The Verge reports: That's simple enough, but here's where it gets really weird: T-Mobile is also offering a plan called T-Mobile One Plus, which, among other benefits, offers unlimited HD day passes. So by subscribing to the plan, you can stream 1080p video all you want every single day -- but only if you go and activate the HD day pass again every single day. Presumably, T-Mobile is hoping you'll forget to activate those passes, or else it would have just lifted the 480p quality limit without this bizarre constraint. Making this even more confusing, T-Mobile originally announced plans to offer an "HD add-on" for the One plan that offered unlimited HD streaming without constraints. That's no longer going to be an option, however, so if you want HD video streaming, you're stuck re-enabling it every day. A T-Mobile rep framed the change as "giving customers more" for the same price, which is true (both cost $25 extra per month), but the new plan also involves the strange new reactivation hurdle.
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Maybe s/he has one of these:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
How many ones and plusses? (Score:2)
So now I will have to get T-Mobile One Plus on my OnePlus One on T-Mobile? (just kidding, I have Ting who uses T-Mobile's network)
HD-Traffic vs. SD-Traffic (Score:5, Interesting)
How can T-Mobile differentiate between these,
as far as I know the connection to youtube is cryptographically secured.
So one could be guessing by the data rate and the duration, but with browsers using buffering that would be complicated.
However I would tunnel the traffic through my trusty unlimited broadband at home or my root server, using ssh.
So T-Mobile ain't see nothing yet !?
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it's not when you're connecting to a binge on partner
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So you are saying that if I want to access a streaming service over t-mobile I will do that without encryption?
How can t-mobile enforce for example your phone not to encrypt the connection?
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There are multiple ways [t-mobile.com] that a provider can setup their stream to qualify for Binge On zero rating of data. Having your application request a video from a particular server/IP/net block may be sufficient if the provider and T-mobile have agreed to the setup.
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First off, I'm not using FUD, because I just asked a question, how to tell based on traffic, and I give a suggestion of a possible circumvention.
You however just state that t-mobile would identify a connection as streaming video?
One way would be ip/port, this however does not answer my question, how to differentiate between 480p or 720p on a cryptographically secured connection with certificate check.
It might pause and resume, but keep in mind your browser is also buffering the video content when viewing yo
Re:HD-Traffic vs. SD-Traffic (Score:5, Interesting)
How can T-Mobile differentiate between these, as far as I know the connection to youtube is cryptographically secured.
Even with TLS encrypted HTTPS connections, you can see the domain name of the request. If it says youtube.com, T-Mobile can rate limit the connection to something much slower than what it usually would give you. And the rate limiting forces YouTube to downgrade the video resolution.
So, it's not T-Mobile that selects the lower video resolution, it's YouTube. All T-Mobile does is provide differential network performance based on service; of course, that sounds suspiciously close to a violation of network neutrality. But that's a question for the FCC to decide.
I suspect the reason why this originally didn't work for YouTube, when T-Mobile first starting rolling out BingeOn is the fact that Google is increasingly using HTTP/2.0 which supports multiple streams in a single connection, and it also is often using QUIC which fundamentally looks very different to a HTTP connection over TCP.
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Sounds like the solution to tmobile's binge on throttling is an always on VPN session on your phone.
But that kindof defeats the purpose. If tmobile can't detect that it's video then yes it's not throttle but it also counts against your data so if you wanted zero rated video then tmobile has to know that it's video.
Re:HD-Traffic vs. SD-Traffic (Score:5, Informative)
How can T-Mobile differentiate between these,
as far as I know the connection to youtube is cryptographically secured.
TMobile addressed this in their technical notes: https://www.t-mobile.com/conte... [t-mobile.com]
This requires that video detection signatures be present. T-Mobile will work with content providers to ensure that our networks work together to properly detect video. We will continue to work with content providers as new traffic identification means are needed in the event of future technology enhancement or changes. Use of technology protocols which make detection of video difficult such as https and UDP require additional collaboration with TMobile to enable the video detection.
Presumably you have to work hand-in-hand with TMobile developers to make sure your streams are recognized. I haven't found the technical truth. There was an interesting academic paper: http://david.choffnes.com/pubs... [choffnes.com], also outlined here: http://dd.meddle.mobi/bingeon.... [meddle.mobi]
How does BingeOn classify traffic? Our prior differentiation work suggested that DPI devices classify applications using regular expression matches on certain
fields of HTTP requests and responses, and SNI fields in TLS handshakes
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Thank you that's an intersting perspective.
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So the technique either a) violates network neutrality, or b) is brittle and will lead to a lot of customer complaints for miscounting
Re: HD-Traffic vs. SD-Traffic (Score:2)
A lot of video services adapt the bitstream they send based on available bandwidth. So I would guess that if T-Mobile thinks your TCP connection looks like video, they cap it at some 480p-plausible bit rate.
Station wagon full of DvDs (Score:2)
I think what they are saying is they are going to screw with your latency and data rate such that an HD movie will stutter and an SD will play.
Basically, they are going to give you unlimited bandwidth in the same sense that a station wagon full of dvds is unlimited bandwidth. Yes there's a very very long latency but when the wagon arrives the delta function is so large that if occupies the entire spectrum. Voila unlimited data with unlimited bandwidth, very high latentcy
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Unlimited **1 (Score:5, Funny)
**1 -- Not applicable to all plans. Void where prohibited. See merchant for more details. Days that end in Y are excluded. Mobile data restrictions apply. The party of the first part is not beholden to the party of the second part, but is otherwise beholden themselves to the third. Prior approval is required for data entitlement. Data packets larger than 100bytes subject to fee.
Feeling Justified (Score:2)
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"We believe carrier pigeons could vastly boost the speed and reliability of our network." -- T-Moblie
If the truth were known... (Score:2)
... I doubt any of the cell phone leading providers would escape long prison sentences. If I didn't have to have a cell phone for employment, I wouldn't own one.
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my employer provided Galaxy S6 rarely uses more than 1GB in a month
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The same could be said in the other way, as t-mobile expands coverage.
It becomes less and less necessary to do business with the devil twins of Ma Bell just to get a good signal. (After the old AT&T was broken up into 8 parts, 5 of them re-merged to create new at&t, and 2 of them merged to form Verizon, which means that at&t and verizon together represent 7/8 of a company considered so evil and monopolistic that it had to be cut up and scattered to the four winds like some sort of demon)
Both at
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I am a Verizon customer as well, but there are a few things that make this intriguing
For one, Verizon does not have an unlimited plan. When one doesn't have that, then one can't enable the data on all devices at all times. Which in my case defeats the purpose of having a data plan. I don't use it for GPS - my car has it. So only thing I use it for is if I'm in a shop, and need to check a few things online in that store's app, or if I get a VOIP or FaceTime call. Aside from that, either at home or wor
New App (Score:1)
How long until someone writes a $0.99 app that automatically enables HD on a daily basis.
Been a customer for over a decade (Score:1)
Use the Tmobile Music Unlimited prepaid plan (Score:4, Interesting)
It's $50 ($55 with tax).
I get unlimited music and 1 gig of data.
Recently right as the month ends I'm hitting 900mb (and that's with youtube videos).
They tried to upsell me to the post paid plan.
It was $70 ($77 with tax). And otherwise the same plan.
I looked at the salesperson and explained my plan again.
She went, "oh.. right" and stopped.
Do you have a great plan to recommend? I'd love to hear it. Every month, I have the option of changing plans or even services. I love it.
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In the three years i've been using the plan i've gone over the 100 minutes once when i was on a business trip. Ended up spending about $30 extra that month (i believe the extra rate is 10 cents/minute.)
I may have gone over the 5GB data limit a couple times near the end of the month, but either it was a short enough period or the
Re: Use the Tmobile Music Unlimited prepaid plan (Score:2)
I'm in the same plan, it has binge-on and music streaming. I don't watch video on my phone but I do use audio a lot. I buy refills with my target redcard, which gives 5% off and no sales tax. I do talk a bit, but Google voice or Vonage takes care of that.
Cell service, to me, isn't worth much more than $1/day.
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Comment removed (Score:3)
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Citation needed. Data caps haven't been about network congestion for years. They're purely a money making ploy.
Re: These are good changes (Score:2)
For cellular data caps are about network congestion. For terrestrial Internet, congestion can be solved if the provider is willing to throw more money at it. But for cellular, the options for building more capacity for the last mile is building more towers and making each tower less powerful so it serves a smaller area.
There are two problems with that. It takes years sometimes for municipalities and neighborhoods to approve a tower being built and even if you do have more towers, if you are in a heavily pop
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This argument reminds me of having to explain to junior developers why they don't need to use a binary search on an array size of 10.
Everything you have just said is correct, but none of it proves that data caps are actually necessary to combat congestion. In your theoretical example of an oversubscribed tower, limiting city users to the same arbitrary number of bytes as a rural user with a tower to themselves most of the day does nothing to help. It does make the carrier a lot of money, though.
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The grandparent post I replied to mentioned "towers getting congested". The parent I replied to mentioned "data caps not being necessary". My explanation was regarding *towers getting congested* so the two things were conflated.
So to be more clear, T-mobile in particular is getting rid of data caps and they are depriotitizing heavy users when towers are congested. Meaning in your example, the rural user would get the full speed, and the user that was under 26Gb would be prioritized over the user who had gon
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I'll believe that when I see it. I've never gone over my T-Mobile data cap, but family members on my plan have, and they can tell the moment it happens, regardless of whether or not they're in a congested area: immediate drop to sub-Edge speeds until the end of the billing cycle.
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I think you're still confusing two different things.
As of today, T-mobile has plans that explicitly have data caps with a certain amount of "high speed data" and unlimited plans. If you have a plan with data caps you will always be "throttled" to 2G speeds after you go over your high speed allotment. If you have an unlimited plan your data will be "depriotitized" after you over 26Gb. I've never noticed a slow down once I go over the 26Gb.
Currently, T-mobile also has "Binge On" if you are watching video from
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Except there still is a cap. Read the fine print. Past certain usage all your data is throttled.
Granting your argument for the moment, artificially limiting bandwidth to
TMobile One Plus unlimited tethering (Score:2)
Re: TMobile One Plus unlimited tethering (Score:2)
There is a difference between being "deprioritized" and "throttled". Throttling involves placing a hard limit on the speed of data transmission. Deprioritzation means if traffic is heavy in your location, other people who haven't reached the threshold will get more bandwidth allocated to them than you do.
T-Mobile is playing fire (Score:2)
This should be ILLEGAL. (Score:4, Insightful)
My basic take it is this. No one especially a data carrier should have any right to inspect packets I PAY to transmit any more then they have the right to randomly search my car without legal cause and search warrant. It should and needs to be ILLEGAL for any data provided to in anyway inspect or log traffic contents or destinations unless it is for purposes of debugging a problem. If they want to meter the amount of data fine, make it clear in the contract, they have no more business knowing what I send and receive then the electric company who powers the routers. Sorry that doesn't allow carries to milk their current networks for every last penny they can stick it to people for , but customers have a right to privacy that includes not having a corporate hack decide which data I'm worthy to receive and what rates, we agree, I pay, end of story. All this traffic inspection is violation of basic privacy and as a society and as consumers we should vehemently oppose it. Perhaps apple and Google should start enabling router based TOR by default on their phones. Sad that it has to come to that, because tor is a bandwidth hog but if carriers aren't going to treat people right that is what everyone should start doing.
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You're voluntarily entering into a agreement with a private company. YOU are giving them that right when you sign the agreement.
They do.
They don't necessarily know or care what you're se
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>>You're voluntarily entering into a agreement with a private company. YOU are giving them that right when you sign the agreement.
True, however it is not possible to get needed services from any company that doesn't snoop on your data because of a combination of anti-competitive monopolistic collusion shored up by government bureaucracy. You could say the same thing about your bank, by having a bank account you agree to having all your personal business monitored and if you look suspicious your recor
Reactivating The Day Pass Daily (Score:1)
I'm still unlimited (Score:2)
And so far intend to stay that way.
I don't get throttled. Ever.
I don't get rate limited. I get HD video all I want, so far.
I've only gone over 13GB/month once, but no impacts.
I need to add a line soon, but it won't be these. I'm not ready to sacrifice functionality (video quality) for cost, at least not this formula.
Bitch at your congresscritter (Score:2)
Write an angry letter / email / facebook / tweeet and vent your outrage at your congresscritter. Tell them T-Mobile is a sneaky sneak being a sneak!
Oh snap, they're bought and paid for! They won't listen. They don't give a rat's ass.
Jump ship. Maybe if enough people dump T-Mobile, they'll get the message.
Oh snap, you're just a grain of sand in a big beach!
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Unless you intend to give up on cell service entirely, all you are doing is trading one devil for another. Even an MVNO like straight talk isn't an option, since part of your monthly fee is going into the pockets of one of the big 4 to cover tower usage.
money grab (Score:2)
https://www.whitehouse.gov/net-neutrality (Score:1)
how are any of these data plans even legal?
https://www.whitehouse.gov/net... [whitehouse.gov]
Keep paying while we put up hurdles. (Score:2)
Dear Valued T-Mobile Customer,
Please pay for this service, but don't use it. Seriously, our infrastructure can't support it and we simply can't afford to upgrade. You have no idea of the pressure we're under. I mean we have shareholders to think about, and a stock price to manipulate. Frankly, your data service is the least of our concerns. So, enjoy your unlimited* data, but just... don't use it. Please. Pretend it's not there...
...but... y'know... be cool. Keep paying for it. Shareholders, etc. You know h