Author

Topic: Comcast rolling out higher charge for home internet users (Read 690 times)

legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1965
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
In my country the average fixed dataline cap = 50GB So this means that most people will lose their whole months data cap for just the first download of the Blockchain. It effectively keep some countries out of the game, with the guys in the big leagues.

I am one of the fortunate people with a uncapped account, but some throttling kicks in at about 300Gb. I have to pay premium fees for this service, because it's at the top end of the bandwidth option available here.  Shocked 
legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1010
Ad maiora!
Fuck comcast. Seriously. All of their monopolistic bullshit has to be put to an end sometime or the internet can never grow.

im not in the USA, but srsly... comcast has the WORST reputation of any ISP out there. They are known worldwide for it.

are there regions in the states where they are the only option? otherwise i cant see why anyone would use them.
hero member
Activity: 854
Merit: 658
rgbkey.github.io/pgp.txt
Fuck comcast. Seriously. All of their monopolistic bullshit has to be put to an end sometime or the internet can never grow.
legendary
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000

It looks like they are giving a 300 GB monthly allowance before the extra charges kick in. Since only the initial download of the bitcoin block-chain requires a ~50 GB download, I don't think this will impact Bitcoin users too much. The month to month additions to the block-chain only amount to around 1-2 GB a month, so this will only be a small fraction of the monthly allowance.

The quote at the end of the article probably sums it up best:
Quote
“And to put this all in perspective, our national median customer data use is 40 GB per month and 92 percent of our customers don’t consume more than 300 GB of data in a month.”

It seems like this will be a non-issue for most people, and even for those consuming more than 300 GB, it will only cost them an extra $10-$30/month.


only cost them $10-$30 extra? that's a lot considering home internet connections on average cost around $30-$40. 300gb per month is really nothing.

Well if 92% of their customers are using less than 300 GB per month, yes I say "only $10-$30 extra" for the 8% of their customers using all the bandwidth. Why should normal customers subsidize the 8% who are using all the data?

at that point you're right, it's not worth letting 92% of the custommers take a hit. it's sad to see that there are still limits on internet usage in 2015  Undecided
vip
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1145
Quote
Dear Bruno,

Consider this your second warning with only one left. You're once again over your 300GB limit. Either cut down on your Google-fuuing or stop visiting goat porn. Your call!

Thanks,

Comcast.

Fuck me! That's a tough call. I wonder since hamsters are smaller, would I be using less bandwidth replacing said in lieu of goats.

Comcast: How may I help you today?
Bruno: Would I be using less bandwidth if I visited hamster porn oppose to goat porn?
Comcast: Actually, the bandwidth would be the same.
Bruno: You sound like an expert. What goat porn channels do you frequent?
sr. member
Activity: 244
Merit: 250
I have actually gone over 300 gb twice. They give you 3 chances before they start charging the fee. We cut down on Netflix,hulu etc and it solved the issue.
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1011

It looks like they are giving a 300 GB monthly allowance before the extra charges kick in. Since only the initial download of the bitcoin block-chain requires a ~50 GB download, I don't think this will impact Bitcoin users too much. The month to month additions to the block-chain only amount to around 1-2 GB a month, so this will only be a small fraction of the monthly allowance.

The quote at the end of the article probably sums it up best:
Quote
“And to put this all in perspective, our national median customer data use is 40 GB per month and 92 percent of our customers don’t consume more than 300 GB of data in a month.”

It seems like this will be a non-issue for most people, and even for those consuming more than 300 GB, it will only cost them an extra $10-$30/month.


only cost them $10-$30 extra? that's a lot considering home internet connections on average cost around $30-$40. 300gb per month is really nothing.

Well if 92% of their customers are using less than 300 GB per month, yes I say "only $10-$30 extra" for the 8% of their customers using all the bandwidth. Why should normal customers subsidize the 8% who are using all the data?
legendary
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000

It looks like they are giving a 300 GB monthly allowance before the extra charges kick in. Since only the initial download of the bitcoin block-chain requires a ~50 GB download, I don't think this will impact Bitcoin users too much. The month to month additions to the block-chain only amount to around 1-2 GB a month, so this will only be a small fraction of the monthly allowance.

The quote at the end of the article probably sums it up best:
Quote
“And to put this all in perspective, our national median customer data use is 40 GB per month and 92 percent of our customers don’t consume more than 300 GB of data in a month.”

It seems like this will be a non-issue for most people, and even for those consuming more than 300 GB, it will only cost them an extra $10-$30/month.


only cost them $10-$30 extra? that's a lot considering home internet connections on average cost around $30-$40. 300gb per month is really nothing.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
Nexious.com Admin
If you are running a full node with more than stock connections (i.e more than Cool you may run into high bandwidth issues.

Unless you are downloading large amounts of data outside of Bitcoin I would not see this as an issue.
legendary
Activity: 950
Merit: 1000
As a normal bitcoin users, I don't think it has any impact on us. Comcast just want to charge us more.
donator
Activity: 1617
Merit: 1012
I have a well connected node with about 70-150 connections that serves around 600150GB of data a month outgoing. I don't run it at home though but in a datacenter.

For some reason my home node on Verizon FIOS only gets 30 connections max. I think it uses around 15GB/month. Verizon is unlimited for now so caps are not a problem at this time.

Edit: A few months ago my node was only sending out 150GB/month of data. I just checked and the last month it sent out 600GB of data. It must be getting popular with SPV clients Grin.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1012
Bitcoin user not affected because this has nothing to do with Bitcoin, even if you pay your fees in Bitcoin Cheesy As for node running... It might impact you if you do heavy usage and you node is well connected.

As for the plans themselves... We all knows that unlimited plans aren't unlimited for the most part. This is just an operator taking an extra advantage of limited "unlimited" plans...
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1011

It looks like they are giving a 300 GB monthly allowance before the extra charges kick in. Since only the initial download of the bitcoin block-chain requires a ~50 GB download, I don't think this will impact Bitcoin users too much. The month to month additions to the block-chain only amount to around 1-2 GB a month, so this will only be a small fraction of the monthly allowance.

The quote at the end of the article probably sums it up best:
Quote
“And to put this all in perspective, our national median customer data use is 40 GB per month and 92 percent of our customers don’t consume more than 300 GB of data in a month.”

It seems like this will be a non-issue for most people, and even for those consuming more than 300 GB, it will only cost them an extra $10-$30/month.
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