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Solve : Comcast Sets Monthly Bandwidth Limit for Customers? |
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Answer» Comcast, the largest provider of cable-based broadband service in the U.S., will limit residential customers to 250 gigabytes of bandwidth a month beginning Oct. 1, the company announced late Thursday. Link At approx 8 Gb a day I could live with that - altho any limitation can seem unwelcome. My satellite (Hughes net with Earthlink) - can go silly beyond about 300MB - or at least used to!!!Rumor has it the FCC is about to pounce on both cable and ISP providers...mainly for unfair business practises. Can't happen soon enough.I hope, they're gonna get busted...Well this is better than my ISP, who claim that my bandwidth is unlimited until I go over 60 GB and a 60 GB limit magically appears...Quote Comcast will contact customers who go above the 250G byte limit and ask them to curtail their use, Comcast said. If a customer goes over the monthly limit again during the following SIX months, Comcast will suspend service for a year. WOW. Pretty harsh penalty! And if you are wondering (I was) Quote An average Comcast customer uses two to three gigabytes of bandwidth a month, Comcast said. To reach the 250G-byte limit, a customer would have to do one of the following: send 50 million e-mails, download 62,500 songs or download 125 standard-definition movies, the company said in its announcement. That is an enormous amount of usage for a home computer. The limit (if they're really gonna do it) is pretty high, I must say, but it's more about a principle. When I signed up for Comcast, they didn't tell me about any limits, it was supposed to be UNLIMITED.Quote When I signed up for Comcast, they didn't tell me about any limits, it was supposed to be UNLIMITED. Looking at it like that, they should just be able to add this new restriction to new accounts. I see petitions and class action law suits in the future....Maybe, it was some clause about changing rules, but reading 150 pages of a fine print was probably too much for me...LOLI admit that limitations suck, but it's a pretty fair amount, I think. And I'm sure there's probably something in their fine print that allows them to do this. The penalty is quite ridiculous, though.I'll throw my vote in as well as the penalty being ridiculous. I'm still opposed to the 250 limit even if it seems fair mainly because I can see them just continuously chopping away at it until we're all stuck with a 50 gb limit unless we pay more.Quote because I can see them just continuously chopping away at it until we're all stuck with a 50 gb limit unless we pay more.An excellent point!Broni, check your contract on your ISP service if you have it. Most state that there will NEVER be a limit, and the company cannot render that contract void. VERIZON, my fathers ISP, has tried to impose false charges and increase the amount he is paying. He SETTLED that with a few legal threats due too the FACT that he has a hardcopy of his ISP contract. They CANNOT change the amount charged and they CANNOT impose fee's unless it is a service he legally subscribed too, even then, that service would be SEPARATE from the contract. I'd advise some studying for Comcast customers. Get your contract out and figure out if you, or they are going to be the ones screwed by the limit. The contract is there for a reason you know.. Thanks, Dead_Reckon It looks like some digging through old papers is due... Comcast should just limit data in/out by speed. Peak times, speed slower a bit, non peak times, speed faster. Not excessively limited but people will conserve bandwidth knowing that if they download something big, it may take longer at a certain time? |
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