Japanese Broadband Caps Compared To US Broadband Caps
from the take-a-look-around dept
With various US broadband firms implementing usage caps sometimes as low as 5GBs/month, we are quite concerned about how these moves will hinder innovation by effectively placing much greater mental transaction costs on using any kind of application online. In defense of these caps, some have pointed out that even Japanese ISPs (sometimes used as an example of a much better broadband system than in the US) are also implementing caps.Broadband Reports now has the details on some of those caps, and they're much higher than in the US (just like Japan's broadband speeds). The cap is 30 gigs per day of upload. There are no download caps. So, yes, the Japanese caps (that some want to use as an example of why caps are necessary) are many times greater per day than what some US firms want to offer per month -- and it's only for upload, rather than download. Suddenly, I get the feeling we'll be hearing the example of Japanese broadband caps a lot less frequently.
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Filed Under: broadband, broadband caps, japan, us
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Re: by Anonymous Coward on Jun 26th, 2008 @ 11:58pm
Actually, No. The connection bandwidth is in megabits per second, while the cap is in Mega Bytes per second.
So if you actually have 100mbps upload bandwidth, and used the upload bandwidth at full capacity for 24 hours you would be able to upload approximately 69GB per day. Which is approximately 44% of your total bandwidth, when you have a cap of 30mbps per day.
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Re: Re: by Anonymous Coward on Jun 26th, 2008 @ 11:58pm
"The connection bandwidth is in megabits per second, while the cap is in Mega Bytes per second.:
^ bits instead of megabits, and Bytes instead of MegaBytes per second
"when you have a cap of 30mbps per day."
^30GB instead of 30mbps
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Re: Re: Re: by Anonymous Coward on Jun 26th, 2008 @ 11:58pm
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=100+megabits+per+second+*+1+day
1 terabyte per day at full speed.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?aq=f&hl=en&safe=off&q=30+gigabytes+%2F+100+mega bits+per+second
41 minutes (less than 3% of the day) to hit 30Gb
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Re:
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From the but-they're-EVIL! dept.
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Down Under
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Down Under
$50 will usually get you between 10 - 20Gb per month. Some isp's will offer as much as 100 Gb per month, but thi is usually trageted at businesses.
Oh to live in Japan...
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Re: Down Under
I oay $70 a month for
40Gb peak and 110Gb offpeak 3am-9am
And When I lived on Campus at university we HAD (there was no alternative) to pay 2.0c/Mb or 20 Gb
The US has it good...
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Caps in the UK
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South Africa
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No No No :)
At 30GB per day, I run a small ISP and we don't even send up 30 GB per day. On average we push up about 5.5 GB per day. Of course we don't have customers that are streaming content but we do host roughly 120 domains.
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Re: No No No :)
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Re: Re: No No No :)
No, the cap is designed to put the kabosh on Grandma sending out endless baby photos to her friends in the canasta club.
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Re: Re: Re: No No No :)
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Japanese network traffic is different
The significance of these network flows is cost. The cost of providing internet content, where the traffic is contained with a single country is much, much lower. Perhaps as much as an order of magnitude. Certainly less than a quarter of the international traffic cost.
In the US, the actual cost to a tier-1 ISP of delivering a GB of data is generally rated at between $0.10-$0-20. In Japan and Korea the cost of a GB is estimated at around $0.02.
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umm... beg to differ
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