Cox Expands Home Internet Data Caps, While CenturyLink Abandons Them (arstechnica.com) 73
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Cox, the third largest U.S. cable company, last week started charging overage fees to customers in four more states. Internet provider CenturyLink, on the other hand, recently ended an experiment with data caps and is giving bill credits to customers in the state of Washington who were charged overage fees during the yearlong trial. Cox, which operates in 18 states with about six million residential and business customers, last week brought overage fees to Arizona, Louisiana, Nevada, and Oklahoma. Cox was already enforcing data caps and overage fees in Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and Ohio. California, Rhode Island, and Virginia technically have monthly caps but no enforcement of overage fees, according to Cox's list of data caps by location. Massachusetts and North Carolina seem to be exempt from the Cox data caps altogether. Similar to Comcast, Cox lets capped customers use 1TB of data a month and charges $10 for each additional block of 50GB. Cox will introduce a pricier "unlimited" plan later this year, Multichannel News reported. If Cox continues to match Comcast's pricing, the unlimited data plan would cost an additional $50 a month above what customers normally pay. A year ago, CenturyLink started a data-cap trial in Yakima, Washington, imposing a 300GB-per-month cap and overage fees of $10 for each additional 50GB. But instead of expanding the overage fees to more cities, CenturyLink ended the "usage-based billing program."
Would be interesting if we had a choice (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess this would be mildly interesting if we had a choice between two companies for cable/broadband service. However, as things stand, cable/broadband service is similar to Obamacare plan providers: residents of many if not most countries simply don't get a choice and have to pay whatever the local monopoly wants.
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Century link is dsl and cox is cable those are the only two internet options in my area.
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No caps, no blocked ports, a low level but decent SLA....
Why would anyone get the consumer version?
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6 month introductory deal 25mbps for $74/mo after that it's $139/mo that's about the best they offer in my area.
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Trouble is that you don't own your VPS. (Score:1)
One can stop payment on a physical server's network connection and retain it if so one chooses. One cannot do the same for a VPS, even if one wished.
Never mind that there are privacy issues with not owning your own hardware.
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Daily (or more frequent) backups ensure that no matter what happens to the host, you have your data.
Depending on what you're doing, that could be a problem. Mine hosts a few websites and my personal email. If I cared to do so, there may be additional measures I could take to secure m
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That was true 10 years ago when high data users meant "bittorrent users".
These days a ton of people are watching all of their TV via Netflix, Youtube, Hulu, and other streaming services. While they may not have a good feel for how much a given amount of data is, the average user can certainly be affected by a cap now.
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These days a ton of people are watching all of their TV via Netflix, Youtube...
Plus, the cap applies to the account, and households with more than one person are having to share the monthly usage allotted by the account's service plan. I have one user in my house, me, as a general rule, so I am not likely to find an imposed cap to be a problem. If I had a wife and a couple of kids, I'd be in a different boat.
Re:Would be interesting if we had a choice (Score:4, Insightful)
If you and every neighbor are streaming HD and online gaming after work for 3-4 hours between 6PM and 10 PM then you won't exceed the cap and the network will still lag at that time of day not because a few users are hogs but because everyone showed up at the same time. You want to blame the teenagers that are out of school for the summer and sitting around playing xbox all day, it's not their fault everyone comes home around the same time every evening.
CAPS are a way to create more revenue without spending more.
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FTFY.
The solution is already within our power - get your local government to stop granting these stupid monopolies. For whatever reason, that is the choice we made - instead of letting the market sort this out with competition, we decided it would be better to let elected government officials do it through regulation. And they chose/were bribed to create monopolies via regulation which are causing all these
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How do you think this would work, exactly?
Let's presume you're fine with the way streets looked soon after the invention of the telegraph and telephone, with huge bundles of wires blotting out the view as dozens of companies ran their own lines on every street, often causing poles to fail from sheer overload, crushing cars and people. (Yes, there is a reason why the government doesn't allow just anyone to attach stuff to the poles.
With no regulation forcing them to do so, do you believe that the power compa
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What about just forcing the existing companies to share their lines, providing wires or bandwidth at wholesale cost? Well, that's a regulation, and we tried that in the 1990s and the existing companies threw a fit and got it overturned.
I think you just identified the real way to fix this competition issue completely. You simply allowed the signal of this paragraph to get lost in the noise of all the issues with Solandri's solution [slashdot.org].
As far as I see it, there are a few ways to fix the issue of broadband competition in the United States. One way is the one we used in the past for the internet to start in the first place. Require the owners of the last mile networks to connect any ISP to customers at wholesale rates. It worked in the past,
Re: Would be interesting if we had a choice (Score:2)
If you use DSL, chances are good that you have many choices, even though lots of people don't seem to know this. DSL is on the copper POTS lines and subject to different legislation.
Because I use DSL, I have the PUC watching my back. I can use any service provider that is willing to serve me. The owner of the lines must allow it, maintain it, and is limited in their abilities to charge for it - they must provision it, at a good price, to any company who wants to provide DSL services, as well as phone servic
Century Link still had them in my area (Score:2)
First I heard of it (Score:2)
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The parent post was censored to -1 by abusive moderators.
I'm going to go ahead and disagree with your opinion there. To quote the entire parent post:
Get over your whining, snowflakes.
Nonconstructive and offensive preamble.
If you don't like data caps, get a different ISP.
Bad assumption that everyone has a choice in service providers in their area.
Feel free to also move to a location with different ISPs. It's not hard at all.
Arrogance in stating that mobility is easy. For most people this is a very hard thing.
So all in all, I would agree with the -1 moderation. Not a post worthy of being seen by anybody. (Except those who read at -1 for fun. :))
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Only most people have a choice between cable, DSL, mobile broadband, and satellite broadband.
In practice, this is a choice between cable and DSL because both mobile broadband and satellite broadband have caps that are two orders of magnitude tighter than those described in the article.
Let's say hypothetically that you move to escape substandard home Internet access. And then the day after you move, the cable ISP and DSL ISP serving the area to which you moved substantially tighten their caps. What's your next step?
Thanks, can I have $20k (Score:2)
Yeah, I know, I'm feeding the trolls, but what scares me is somebody might mod this joker up.
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What makes you think we don't have monthly data caps in Canada? Not only do we have caps, they're even worst! How would you feel about paying $10 per GB over your limit?
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Interesting! Surely they are tracking these connections as well to at least manage abusers. If they aren't policing these connections, it does look like a possible way to skirt, albeit with drawbacks for sure, the cap. I imagine a bridge could maybe be put in place to connect a person's router/firewall equipped LAN to Cox's public-side WiFi network provided by the person's own Cox-provided router. If Cox is paying close enough attention, one would need to distribute their usage in such a way that both t
Per their SEC filing it costs them $9/mo (Score:5, Informative)
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Broadband, like healthcare, is much, much cheaper when it's paid for by the government and they know it. They don't want _you_ knowing it.
I think it's more that government doesn't have that fierce profit motive so they can offer a service at near cost price. Economy of scale re: exiting from the local municipality network might increase costs a bit, but certainly not to the tune of $71/month/connection...
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I think it's more that government doesn't have that fierce profit motive so they can offer a service at near cost price
Cox doesn't have that either. They are a monopoly in nearly every market they are in. As is probably reasonable, due to the extreme up-front cost in laying all that cable. Cable is what is known as a "Natural Monopoly". All the problems people associate with government-run services are really just classic problems with monopolies: the rules are just different when the people making the decisions don't have to worry about you running to a competitor.
The only real difference between a corporate monopoly and
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The overage cost on my server is € 1.17 ( US € 1.33 ) per TB. My server provider also has hardware upgrade costs which I can only imagine are higher since they have to support larger traffic volumes since their minimum package comes with 2 TB monthly while charging less than Cox does.
The only difference is that the server hosting space is more competitive, if my provider gets more expensive I will simply leave so they can't suck my wallet dry the way home ISPs can.
Mod parent Up (Score:2)
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For example, will it cost Cox more if I download 10 Tb in a month than 1 Tb?
Yes. Similar to an airplane full of mail, there is a finite amount of stuff you can put on a fiber line or an airplane. If they have to add more routes (a new fiber line, or another cargo plane) to accommodate the traffic, there is real cost there. Now, I know that the typical bitch in articles like this is "They sold me an unlimited plan, therefore I should get unlimited data", but that's not what you were asking.
Then let them upgrade their bloody network (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to sound rude, but why is it so hard to accept that your being lied to?
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You're missing the lie (Score:2)
Not so. (Score:1)
It's just revenue generation, not any good purpose.
If it really was about that, they'd limit speed.
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Cox no longer offers specific "Home Business" Internet plans. They've been rolled in with the other Business ones.
As an MSP and Internet Reseller.... (Score:1)
Misleading headline (Score:2)
When I saw the headline, my first thought was "Finally! Their caps are so low!" Unfortunately, it's the not the cap itself that's expanding, it's the number of people forced to bear it.
Hopefully CenturyLink serves some/more Cox markets (Score:1)
Would be nice for CenturyLink to show Cox the error of their ways by picking up Cox customers.
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CenturyLink can promise whatever they want.
I abandoned them when it became obvious that they were only a Last Mile provider here. That means we always had an excellent DSL connection, but there were days and days when there was no DNS or any kind of connectivity past the DSL connection.
CenturyLink provided tech support that consisted of 'unplug your modem' quality, and after weeks of dealing with intermittent zero connectivity I gave up.
My only conclusion was that they were not interested in selling me any