Comcast Says It's Going To Slap All Of Its Customers With Data Caps, Makes Half-Hearted Attempt To Walk Back Earlier Statements When Backlash Kicks In
from the what-are-you-going-to-do?-go-without?-HAHAHAHAHA dept
Comcast, perhaps feeling a bit too confident about its chances to swallow up Time Warner Cable, is talking about rolling out data caps to all of its subscribers. It had, up to this point, only "offered" it in certain areas on a "trial basis." Customers hated it, of course, but that's not really what Comcast was gauging with its trials. It was only interested in seeing a) how profitable it was and b) whether that profit would offset losses caused by the few customers lucky enough to have options.
With a merger on the line, Cohen chose his words very carefully, responding to a rather dancing, ambiguous question by industry analyst Craig Moffett (long an avid supporter of usage caps, and, apparently, "variabilization") with some dancing ambiguity of his own:As Karl Bode points out, it's fun to watch Cohen pretend that Comcast isn't eventually going to cap everyone. If the merger goes through, you can be sure former Time Warner customers will be experimented on and eventually capped as well. But, hey, it's not really a monopoly because the two companies don't compete head-to-head, as someone at the Washington Post claimed in defense of the merger. Instead, it's more customers being screwed by the same company's lousy idea.
Moffett: Bottom line is, 5 years, 10 years from now, do you think that we will be in a model where the Internet is fully variablized, or usage is fully variablized, or at least variablized to the extent that most people are selecting from a reasonably large number of usage plans that match their usage to their price?
Cohen: I actually think the answer to that is, no. I would say, if you made me predict today, and I don't want to get myself in any trouble, if you made me predict today, I would predict that in 5 years Comcast at least would have a usage-based billing model rolled out across its footprint.
But I would also predict that the vast majority of our customers would never be caught in the buying the additional buckets of usage, that we will always want to set the basic level of usage at a sufficiently high level that the vast majority of our customers are not implicated by the usage-based billing plan. And that number may be 350 -- that may be 350 gig a month today, it might be 500 gig a month in five years, but it will never -- I don't think we will want to be in a model where it is fully variablized and 80% of our customers are implicated by usage-based billing and are all buying different packets of usage.
Surely the contingent that declares "vote with your wallet" during these sorts of announcements has dwindled to near zero at this point. For most of the country's population, the choice is that or DSL, the offering AT&T and others can't wait to rid themselves of. And it's not like other companies won't initiate their own caps once Comcast puts its limits in place. If one big player is doing it, then everyone can hop on the money train without shedding a ton of customers. In an inversion of the "if everyone's special..." argument, the cable companies will operate under the "if everyone's a crappy service provider, then no one's a crappy service provider" motto.
With this in place -- along with the pay-for-play internet -- Comcast can collect on its customers' Netflix addiction on both ends. The easy money will now be even easier, and no expense will be spared to ensure
Even if Comcast isn't granted its monopoly, its willingness to deploy unpopular usage caps will only encourage Time Warner to speed up its roll-out of the same terrible plans. At this point, the biggest players are hardly putting any energy into maintaining the farcical facade of "network congestion." After all, Netflix chews up a ton of bandwidth, and Comcast has just bumped the speed at which this gets "used up" in exchange for an untold amount of money. If congestion was actually a problem, data hogs like streaming services would either be priced out of the market or more of the market would already be laboring under restrictive caps. But Comcast says "Use more internet!" -- just as long as it gets a larger cut of the action.
There's zero benefit for the consumer.
What companies like Comcast are doing is simply taking current, already-expensive flat-rate plans and pricing -- and affixing usage caps and overage fees on them, making existing product immeasurably more expensive. Under that model, everybody pays more -- no matter what. The industry claims they're just "experimenting" with "creative pricing," but the end result is usually just a rate hike wearing lipstick and a dress.To extend the metaphor, Comcast's cap plan is like a hooker putting an egg timer on the nightstand and charging you every time she flips it over -- all the while telling you she's just "variabilizing" your sexual experience. And as she walks out the door with a handful of "overage fees," she points out that her service isn't really that restrictive because most of her customers "never achieve orgasm."
Now, Comcast has since made a half-assed retraction of these statements, which doesn't change anything for the thousands of users in uncompetitive Southern markets that are still dealing with data caps. Karl Bode does a great job taking apart the PR speak hastily assembled in the wake of its earlier remarks. Here's Comcast:
We have been trialing a few flexible data consumption plans, including a plan that enables customers who wanted to use more data be given the option to pay more to do so, and a plan for those who use less data the option to save some money. We decided to implement these trials to learn what our customers’ reaction is to what we think are reasonable data consumption plans.And here's Bode:
Except as we noted the other day, Comcast knows full well what the consumer reaction to these plans is: they hate them. The company's 300 GB offer simply puts pricey overage fees on top of already-steep flat-rate pricing, and their other plan offers users a small $5 discount off flat-rate pricing if they agree to a 5 GB usage cap. Comcast isn't testing whether consumers like caps, they're testing how they can market usage caps in such a way that sees the minimal amount of user revolt.While it's truly wonderful that Comcast will give customers the "option" to pay more for using more data, most customers would just rather have uncapped connections or data caps high enough that they don't need to cut the kids off Netflix mid-month. Add to that the fact that these caps are wholly reliant on Comcast's unverified measurement of data usage -- along with the fact that Comcast is openly pursuing paychecks from data-heavy services -- and you have the makings of a very profitable "offering." And Comcast has never been coy about preferring larger margins to satisfied customers.
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Filed Under: broadband, broadband caps, data caps, david cohen
Companies: comcast, time warner cable
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CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
A: XFINITY Internet customers' median monthly data usage is 20 - 25 GB per month.
Statistics 101 - average (mean) is NOT median.
http://customer.comcast.com/help-and-support/internet/data-usage-average-network-usage
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I threatened them, that I, as an IT guy, would start moving folks off of Comcast. The rep I was speaking to laughed at me and said, "no you wont"
I am at 45 clients moved from Crapcast and counting. So fuck those guys. I can get the same shit service from quest over dsl currently. I would mention other companies but they all seem to renting shit from quest.
Somewhere I have the fukwits name from Comcast. I will hop back in and post it shortly.
N.
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Comcast compared to a hooker!
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I still don't understand why they want to implement caps in an era of too cheap to meter internet access. I guess they thought their network performance and reliability weren't bad enough so they have to layer a complex billing scheme on top based on opaque measurements.
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Re:
And their data meter is also a joke. I've had 40-50% discrepancies with my router, in Comcast's favor of course. Basically they'll charge you overages based on a magic number generator.
Why do they want to implement caps? So they can milk more money out of their customers.
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Hmmm, I fail to see how saving $5 a month for 5GB scales with the extra 300GBs I could have for an extra $5 a month. Comcast's pricing structure is completely imbalanced.
The $5 savings isn't worth the risk of paying an extra $60 on top of my monthly monopoly base price of $100 a month for TV and internet.
300GB / 50GB = 6
6 x $10 = $60
So trying to save $5 ends up costing me $160 a month, because I tried to save $5. What an insane pricing structure.
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customers hate it
Reasonable data caps should never be an issue for the large majority of users. So Comcast knows that most of their clients will not have an issue. The vocal minority is something they will have to deal with.
Google Fiber will in the end face the same issues, but they will resolve it in a different manner: They won't be concerned about the bottom line, and will just pour money in regardless. They are the ultimate deep pocket competitor buying marketshare no matter the cost, and while it's beneficial to the end users for the moment, the long term isn't so certain. If Google actually started to charge what it costs for them to offer service and maintain it, their rates would be much higher, I suspect. Put in a monopoly position if they squeeze the existing players out of a marketplace, there is no reason to assume that they would not implement caps or raise rates significantly to cover their true costs.
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Sure, fine with me.
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A: Organize it so that people protest in shifts. Find a populated spot and ensure 24/7 protesting with signs and hand out forms informing the public about the issues but have people protest in shifts. If you have enough protesters large numbers of protesters can remain protesting for prolonged periods of time. Try to keep a minimal amount of people protesting at any one time and plan it so that the most number of people are protesting during the most important/visible hours and try to base it on relevant visibility.
B: have a fund where people that have work and whatnot can fund those that are protesting to provide them with needed supplies.
C: Instead of just protesting in one location alone try changing the location of protesting based on relevant visibility during various times of days and days of the week. Or put more people in the areas of highest visibility.
D: Crowdfund a lobbyist. If it's a former politician that's even better because then we can offer politicians that have previously voted for favorable legislation with revolving door favors. Make sure we only crowdfund former politicians that have a record of voting for favorable legislation. If this is considered 'illegal' we can do what the MPAA et al do and use the same loopholes that they use. For instance if there is a two year time limit before a politician leaving office can become a lobbyists we'll keep hiring a politician that has been out of office for two years. Or we can do what current lobbying organizations do, like the MPAA, and we can give them a lobbying position but call it something else.
(I know none of these are particularly good ideas but I figure they can be thrown out there).
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Re: Re:
Of course, your cable modem probably counts the nearly 200GB in spurious ARP traffic the head-end sends you every month, but you know, what's $40 in overages among friends?
Of course, you could avoid that by renting their cable modem for $7 a month instead of buying your own. Theirs doesn't count the ARP traffic. How convenient.
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Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
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Re: Google Fiber
Goal: Convert 100% of Comcast/Time Warner/Whatever customers to Google Fiber.
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Re: Re: Google Fiber
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Re: customers hate it
[Citation needed]
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Re: Re: customers hate it
http://customer.comcast.com/help-and-support/internet/data-usage-average-network-usage
the average usage is about 10% of the proposed cap.
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Take that!
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Re:
The funny thing is, Comcast have not learned the lesson here.
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Re: Re: Re:
And in my case two months were off by over 100GB, of a 300GB quota. It was so bad, I was starting to wonder if someone had somehow spoofed my modem's MAC address and was stealing service. But I had to change modems in September, and the overages occurred before and after both, making that theory less likely.
Personally I still feel it's just making shit up.
Oh, and let's not forget the 2-3 months of the bandwidth meter failing to load data 99% of the time.
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Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
So while it may be true that most people don't get near their cap, that link isn't proof of anything beyond "Comcast is using this to justify their data caps".
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Re: Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
Yes, it part of their justification, but it also appears to be (gasp) true.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
Not a problem if you're dealing with a competitive company that's funnelling revenue into improving infrastructure for future expansion. This conversation is happening because they don't appear to have been doing that, and there's nothing in the current proposals that indicates it will happen in the future.
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Re: Take that!
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Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
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The datacaps are comcast's attack on cord cutters
Step #1) Implement data caps, get all your competitors to do the same thing after seeing how much money there is in it.
Step #2) Make sure those data caps are set arbitrarily low so that they make you more money.
Step #3) Sell cable to cord cutters to arguing that with overage fees for using too much bandwidth that an expensive cable subscription would be cheaper than constant overage fees.
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So then, what's the point of the plan if it isn't actually used?
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Fair is Fair...
Would be interesting to see how the city would react if i put a water tank on my property, and filled it on the 1st of every month with the exact amount of gallons I'm allotted.
You know....You could do the same with internet if you have more than one carrier available... use one up to the cap and switch over to the other. have both DSL and cable, or you could run them at the same time... put your media server on one, and everything else on another... I could do that in my area, but not everyone can.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
Will Comcast commit to indefinitely raising the caps so that the large majority of their users don't hit them? Unlikely.
Just think, what if they put the caps in 10 years ago? We didn't have Youtube then. Netflix existed, but it was all DVD-by-mail then. Streaming music services were in their infancy with almost no user base. Steam was just getting off the ground as well and there weren't many games going to digital distribution. What was the average usage back then? Couple hundred MBs a month, if that? Now even going by that link, 10 years later, it's 2 or 3 orders of magnitude greater.
Caps by their very nature inhibit innovation, as it adds barriers to new services, and it adds a mental transaction cost on the users side if they have to worry about going over.
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Re: The datacaps are comcast's attack on cord cutters
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
i *was* (emphasis on 'was') a SamKnows household, where they provided their router to us and 'measured' the speeds we were getting through our craptastic DSL provider...
(which -OF COURSE, ONLY in amerika!- i have ZERO CHOICE of an ISP... oh wait, i DO have a choice: either their shitty DSL, or, a 2400 baud dialup, or, um, NOTHING...)
i *was* pretty big on these guys efforts, UNTIL i started noticing something strange... they would send a monthly email which would have a (crappy) graph showing my download speeds over the course of the previous month...
one of the weird things was, how consistently flat it was, showing about 3Mbs over the whole month, when i knew we had problems...
*THEN* we had some outage problems, and i *just happened* to notice the next months graph was showing we had available service at regular speeds during a time period where I KNEW we did not have DSL service, PERIOD...
i wrote them an email saying, 'heh, what gives, i KNOW we did not have available service during this week or two, but that is NOT reflected in the graph which shows full speed, no interruptions...'
they write back that it is because they may take a 'sample' at some point and call *that* the speed for that day/week/whatever... ? ? ? (there was some other technical gobbledygook that i didn't realize the logic-fail until sometime afterwards...)
i wrote back and say 'bullshit', if you are NOT measuring my speed consistently and using a 'sample' that obscures several weeks of ABSOLUTE OUTAGE, then it is either a flawed methodology, or it is PURELY BULLSHIT window dressing for the ISP's...
they wrote back some lame shit i didn't even bother to respond to; but it sure did put me on notice that i think SamKnows is either a scam, or an industry front to polish their turds for them...
so-o-o-o, go down the road a couple months after intermittent problems with connectivity, and get SamKnows reports that do NOT reflect what our service is being, which is shitty...
gets to the point where it is essentially not working at all, and put in service call; idiot tech support droid will not listen when i tell him i think it is their modem, and has me do for the tenth time what i've done already, and -of course- does not fix the problem...
get field tech out, and within 10 seconds of entering house and seeing modem lights, says, your modem is shot... no shit... replaces modem and DSL works fine... (GREAT field tech, by the way) in fact, replaces it with a combo modem/wireless router, so I TAKE THE SamKnows MODEM COMPLETELY OUT OF THE LOOP SITTING IN A DRAWER DEAD AS A DOORNAIL...
BUT, SamKnows -even with THEIR ROUTER NOT CONNECTED reports i'm having normal connection and speeds WHEN THEIR ROUTER IS NOT EVEN HOOKED UP, and during a period of time THE PHONE LINE WAS NOT CONNECTED...
now, not 2-3 days after this, we get a storm and a lightning strike not 100 feet from the house (which struck a live oak which afterwards looked like it had been raked down the trunk by a huge bear), and blew up laptop, blew out new modem, blew out Ethernet port on desktop, and some other stuff...
service was OUT/DEAD/NOTHING for about 3-4 days before the tech could get back out, BUT SamKnows report says we had complete connection and normal speeds during that outage ! ! !
now, it appears SamKnows finally knew, because they stopped sending me reports... didn't send an email saying, 'hey, what's up, we aren't getting any more readings from you, is the router broken, etc ?' NOTHING like that, just stopped sending reports...
VERY SUSPICIOUS SamKnows was/is a scam either to extort money out of ISPs, or simply as their lapdog to ERRONEOUSLY report connections and speeds WRONGLY to benefit the ISP's stats...
fuckers
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
Now, people are increasing their streaming, downloading and other services by not only accessing perfectly legal service that they also pay for - but they're doing so on multiple devices. It's no longer one kid on one PC accessing things in his bedroom. It's an entire family streaming multiple HD channels while they game & listen to music and use video chat services - all at once, all bandwidth intensive.
You can argue that most aren't quite at that stage yet, but it's becoming more common... and every one of those services is perfectly legal & paid for. Hopefully enough people will realise the truth rather than being fooled into thinking it's Netflix's fault.
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Data Caps Are Meant To Steer Viewers To Cable Television Channels
Of course, above the level of the local loop, economies of scale crank in, the same as they would for a telephone network. The customer's pro-rata share of upstream cables becomes small compared to the distance between houses.
Comcast's attitude about high-bandwidth internet is that it is for watching video, which to them, means television shows, or movies, or sports, and that tends to cannibalize their existing cable television market. Cable television executives simply cannot grasp the idea of someone pulling down a set of videos of lectures on, say, Calculus of Variations or Partial Differential Equations, from MIT or Caltech. Of course, the next step up is bi-directional communication, participating in a class rather than merely watching videos. The executives find this threatening, because they don't even have the pre-requisites of the pre-requisites for such a course. They are in no position to decide which school's course the viewer should watch. Their demand to make the product sufficiently comprehensible that they can buy and sell it forces them to go for the lowest-common-denominator.
The cable television executives' definition of high-value product is football games. Everyone in the city is supposed to sit and watch the same football game at the same time. In some cases there are direct linkages-- media moguls who also own football teams. The subject of shared interest is a game which is played most exuberantly by six-year-olds, a game which does not really call upon the mental qualities of adults.
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Re:
Let this be a lesson to the municipalities that are allowing the monopolies to hold firm in exchange for pocket cash: the real money lies in investment in your city's future. Taking the money now in exchange for impeding progress is only going to suffocate your budgets and keep the townsfolk in the dark ages.
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Re: Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
That was the point of the original remark...Comcast claims to be answering a question about the mean by citing the median. In statistics, that's called "a lie."
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Re: Re: Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
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posted this on G+ - F you and your ads then bitches
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Do this to us in Southern Maine and I hope that people would then all be willing to donate money for the setup of a real public network so we can tell the Slime Warner where to go.
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Re: Comcast compared to a hooker!
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Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
I use online services (primarily Netflix) rather than any TV services, but I apparently exceed their average number in the first three days of each month.
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Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
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Re: Fair is Fair...
That way it's simple, use more and pay more, use less and pay less.
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Re: Re: Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
Suck it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: CC Won't Even Answer Honestly...
From the Wikipedia article on "average":
In colloquial language average usually refers to the sum of a list of numbers divided by the size of the list, in other words the arithmetic mean. However, the word "average" can be used to refer to the median, the mode, or some other central or typical value. In statistics, these are all known as measures of central tendency. Thus the concept of an average can be extended in various ways in mathematics, but in those contexts it is usually referred to as a mean (for example the mean of a function).
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Saying goodbye to ComcasT/Xfinity is looking sweeter by the day.
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Re: Re: Fair is Fair...
That way it's simple, use more and pay more, use less and pay less.
If your goal is to get people to stop using the internet and kill off any chance of new streaming services, that is a great idea.
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Re: posted this on G+ - F you and your ads then bitches
You would lose that badly, because when you get an ad it's because your browser requested it. Comcast would be out of line if they *didn't* deliver the ad. The only way you might have a chance is if Comcast is intercepting your requests and injecting additional advertisements that also count against your cap. I've never heard anyone claim that.
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Re: Re: Re: Fair is Fair...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Fair is Fair...
Most customers would find themselves thinking "is it really worth the extra money to download/stream this?" every time they thought about using the internet. It becomes easier to just not do it at all rather than go through the mental arithmetic to arrive at a decision every single time.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Fair is Fair...
I think perhaps your missing my point. I'm not advocating paying by the Gig, I'm advocating that if i have to pay more for using more, then i should pay less for using less. I'm pointing out how one sided the deal is.
But to address your point... "Most customers would find themselves thinking "is it really worth the extra money to download/stream this?"
I spend quite a bit of time out of town on work. I would love to have a plan that pays by the Gig, and not by the month... why should i have to pay the same as the guy next door when i'm only home a week or less every month?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Fair is Fair...
But I originally replied to Anonymous Coward, who is advocating paying by the GB.
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Re: Re: Comcast compared to a hooker!
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Comcast sucks
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Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
Citation: "XFINITY Internet customers' MEDIAN monthly data usage is 20 - 25 GB per month."
Conclusion: It is trivial to imagine a distribution of usage wherein the median usage is 25 GB a month while the mode is 310 GB; Cited data, by definition, does not support (or, to be fair, contradict) the contention.
Grade: Fail
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Re: Re: Re: customers hate it
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comcast
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So what do we do? We allow corporate monopolies to create roadblocks and toll gates and limits on this amazing technology in the name of maximizing monopolist profit.
Tiny strands of easily run fiber can bring almost endless bandwidth to everybody. But we can't have that because despicable companies like Comcast can make more profit from choking the internet than expanding it.
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I hope they do put data caps
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Re: I hope they do put data caps
You work for an ISP then? Either way, "buy what we want to sell you, not what you really want" only works in an uncompetitive environment. If your employer had to compete for customers, you would probably also be better off (assuming you're a good employee) because they would have to offer competitive customer service, which means attracting good customer service employees, which means paying them well. That was a long sentence.
ISPs are getting monopoly rents, but most of them probably aren't passing those on to employees like you - they go to the owners. Your customers are not the enemy here, and even if they were, "quit complaining and just send us your money" isn't going to solve anything anyway.
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