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Let's look at Comcast's policy change first. The cable operator said on Thursday that it will no longer cut off users who exceed 250GB of data usage per month. Instead, the company is testing a new policy in which it will increase the usage cap to 300GB of data per month. And for those who do go over the cap, the company will charge an additional $10 per 50GB of usage. David Cohen, executive vice president for Comcast, said the company has no intention to raise prices on its existing tiers of service. On a conference call with reporters after the announcement, he said that the new policy was meant to free its users from the worry of having their service cut off.
"We didn't like the message that we were giving our customers with the static 250GB cap," he said, "Now, we are sending a signal strongfit designers celebration floral by portia monberg case for apple iphone 7 plus - white/purple/green to our customers that we want them to use our broadband service and to feel free to use it for all lawful purposes, We want them to subscribe to Netflix and stream YouTube and use Skype to their heart's content without worrying about hitting some artificial data cap that results in them losing their service."The reality is that Comcast's cap, even at 250GB, was more than generous for the majority of its broadband customers, According to Sandvine, a company that makes network management tools used by cable operators, only about 1.5 percent of U.S, broadband households use more than 250GB of data per month, And only about 1 percent exceed 300GB, On average, broadband users in the U.S, use about 32GB of data per month..
For the vast majority of Comcast's customers, this change in policy means nothing, since most will never even get close to reaching the 300GB cap. Comcast's executives wouldn't admit it, but the move was an attempt to quiet accusations that the cable operator is violating promises it made to regulators in order to merge with NBC Universal that it wouldn't favor its own content over competitors. Earlier this year Comcast began offering a service that streams its Xfinity video content to Xbox gaming consoles over its broadband network. Unlike the Web portal or the mobile app for Xfinity, the service with the Xbox will not count against a person's monthly usage. Other streaming-video companies, including etflix, have cried foul. Netflix believes Comcast's treatment of its own content is discriminatory and violates the deal Comcast made with the FCC and also violates the spirit of the Net neutrality regulations that the agency recently put in place.
Comcast says it's not violating the conditions strongfit designers celebration floral by portia monberg case for apple iphone 7 plus - white/purple/green of its merger nor is it violating the FCC's regulations, because the content it's streaming is not over the public Internet, This notion of whether or not Comcast has violated Net neutrality rules or promises to the regulators is another issue entirely, And perhaps the company's pro-consumer move to increase its cap to 300GB and suspend the 250GB cap while it's testing the new policy is simply a good-will gesture to distract from this other issue, In any case, what Comcast did this week was a good thing for consumers..
The cost of Verizon's changeMeanwhile, I think Verizon's plan to move customers off unlimited data and onto shared plans will likely result in higher prices for consumers. On Wednesday, Verizon's chief financial officer, Fran Shammo, said at a JP Morgan investor conference that the company would be migrating its existing unlimited-data smartphone customers to a new tiered offering that will allow families to share data among individuals as well as add other connected devices to their accounts. He didn't offer details about the plan or how the company will get customers to give up their unlimited data plans. But he said that as customers upgrade to 4G LTE devices, Verizon will require them to go onto a tiered share plan.
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