Canadian Telecoms Make The Most Money on Data Usage In The World: Tefficient (huffingtonpost.ca) 69
An anonymous reader shares a report: Canadian wireless users have some of the lowest data usage in the world, but Canadian telecom companies make the most money off the customers they have, a new report shows. A study by telecom comparison site Tefficient looked at data usage per SIM card in 36 countries worldwide in 2017, and how much money telecoms made per gigabyte of wireless data used. Canadians used about 1.3 GB of data per month per SIM card last year. There were only five countries where wireless customers used less than that -- the Czech Republic, Portugal, Germany, Belgium, and Greece. By contrast, Indian telecoms had the lowest revenue per gigabyte, and showed the highest growth in data usage in 2017 -- more than 300 percent.
Not news for Canadian (Score:5, Interesting)
As A Canadian myself, this is not news. The price for cell phones are about the highest in the world and the big 4 are making sure there is little competition...
Re: Not news for Canadian (Score:1)
Ya yell.me about it 100 /mo for unlimited minutes and 10 gigs of data, but then again 2nd largest country in the world with 35 Mill sparrsly populated kinda makes sense
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I was going to post the same thing. I doubt any Canadian who has a cell phone will be surprised by this news. I might be a little surprised that there isn't some other country whose telecoms are squeezing their customers harder, but I think most of us would have assumed we were top five at least before this study came out.
...even for those who don't have them (Score:2)
I was going to post the same thing. I doubt any Canadian who has a cell phone will be surprised by this news.
Even those of us who do not have cell phones are not surprised by this news since the insane expense of cell phones in Canada is why I don't have one.
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You can buy a $100 Android phone off Amazon and use it on a $15-$40/month prepay (depending how much you actually use it as a phone). You don't have to pay the premier robber-baron prices. You will still have to pay extra for data, though.
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Buy a prepaid SIM from Koodo. Set it up on their web site using their self-serve portal. Plug it into any unlocked phone. Tada, you get Telus service for a fraction of the price.
You're still getting gouged by the oligopoly, but it's a gentler gouging.
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You don't understand. Even a limited $15 plan text or voice only plan, or a entry-level $50 text/voice/data plan is severely gouging you. In Poland, you can get a monthly sim (no contract) from Orange for 25-30 PLN (about $9 CAD), which gives you unlimited minutes, unlimited texts, and 15GB of data.
Koodo, as an Canadian example, only gives you 10GB for the low, low price of $90 (must be a sale, it was $110 last time I checked). You can add an international roam-like-home for just $10/day... but you'd be
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Oh, I understand I'm still getting screwed. I can't do anything about that, though. I'm just saying you don't have to pay Telus or Bell $100 a month or more for terrible service.
Re: ...even for those who don't have them (Score:2)
What I don't understand is why you would even WANT 15 gigs of data. My current plan is for 3 gigs per month and I don't think I've ever exceeded 2. Most months I barely go over 1.
I get that there may be areas out in the boondocks where you can't get cable or ADSL for home use, so a cheap 4g data plan would be a huge benefit ... but I have no clue how so many people with good connection at home and living in cities littered with free WiFi still manage to blow through dozens of gigabytes in a month.
Re: 640 Meg should be enough for anyone... (Score:2)
It's kilobytes, kid.
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The rate plans in Canada are all about timing and location. If you renew around Christmas you can generally get a much better plan.
I got unlimited talk and text nationwide + 10gb of data for $60 (taxes in) last Christmas and then a week later that same plan was a about $115 + tax.
You can get similar $60 plans all the time but the trade off is you have to live in Manitoba. I guess they figure you're suffering enough so they'll give you a little break on your phone bill.
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Not a surprise (Score:1)
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SpaceX requires a phased array antenna about the size and shape of a pizza box. Maybe fine if you own a home.
But no good for:
Apartment dwellers
Condo owners
People with homes with shitty HOAs
Mobile service
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For starters, there's no "unlimited" plans in Canada. And this includes those BS ones that slow you down after a gig - none of it exists in Canada. You pay for X gigs, that's all you get. Granted, they don't throttle video either, but that I thin
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For starters, there's no "unlimited" plans in Canada.
https://www.lightspeed.ca/ [lightspeed.ca]
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Out east, for ISP's, Eastlink appearantly hasn't had any issues for my relatives, and Aliant (now owned by Bell) was pretty good. Aliant was regularly giving speed upgrades and recently made all the fiber plans symmetrical,
Does this include wireless internet? (Score:2)
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I'm just far enough east of Vancouver that I didn't have any cell and just dial up ($45 a month + $30 for the land line). Telus finally put up a tower and has this rural internet deal. LTE, about 12 Mb/s down (8-25 depending on time of day) and 1-2 Mb/s up (slower the down, better the up) with a 250 GB limit, including payments on the $300 internet hub (it's half that for regular plans), it's close to a $100 a month. Nice after dial-up but if I was a couple of miles closer to town, it would be 300/300 unlim
Germany (Score:2)
The most common data plans in Germany give you between 500 MB and 1 GB data per month, so it's not a surprise their monthly average is below 1.3 GB per month. Throttling sets in HARD if you hit your cap, limiting you to 64 kbps if you don't get cut off completely.
You try using the internet of today at 64 kbps.
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The issue, as far as I can tell, is that Germany never really invested in cell infrastructure and it's coming back to bite them HARD.
They didn't really invest much in landline infrastructure outside the cities either, so I'm stuck choosing between a pricy 8 GB/month cap on wireless or a 448/96 kbps (yes, kbps) ADSL connection. That's all I can get here.
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Here is how that works, the more like the US a western country is the crappier it's broadband is for exactly the same reasons. Specifically a corrupt establishment trying to keep broadband down and expensive because, at election time it makes it possible for all candidates to have equal access to the electorate and not the anti-corporate control candidates to be effectively censored by corporate main stream media. Also profit, simply cartel activity and bribes paid in tax haven to allow inflated rates to be
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Better then getting charged something like 50 cents a MB if you go over, with no warning. I'd rather get cut back to 64 kbs, especially since up till last year, I was stuck with 26.4 kbs on dial up.
Now for home internet, I have a rural LTE plan with a 250 GB limit and generally about 12 Mb/s down.
"...it may be because the rates are higher..." (Score:2)
Adam Smith is still laughing (Score:2)
Really ? charge more for something people buy less. You don't say.
Misleading summary (Score:3)
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My ISP, Telus, is very profitable with mostly increasing profits every year.
According to https://www.cbc.ca/news/techno... [www.cbc.ca] all the Canadian Telecoms are the most profitable in the world at 45.9%. That article is old but ddg returns other results showing their profitability, eg https://ycharts.com/companies/... [ycharts.com] shows 12.24% quarterly.