Comcast Thinking About Overage Fees And Tiered Usage

from the please-don't-use-our-broadband dept

Following Time Warner’s recent plans to test broadband caps and overage fees, Broadband Reports has the scoop that Comcast is very strongly considering the same thing. Unlike Time Warner Cable’s plans to test super low caps, Comcast is looking at 250GB/month — which it claims will only impact 0.1% of users. Overage fees will be pretty high, however: $15 charge for each 10 GB over the cap. Comcast will also give users one free “slip up” month per year, for those who go over just for that one month.

There are some good and bad things to this news. On the good side, it would represent a big step up for Comcast in terms of actually being transparent. The company has always had caps, but they’ve been totally secret “fuzzy caps.” Users would have no idea if they had gone over until Comcast sent them a nasty letter telling them to cut down on usage — or they would lose their account. That said, the problem with tiered broadband is that it can serve to hold back innovation. It puts a limit on what people can do online, just as ISPs should be encouraging more innovative uses. As higher bandwidth applications are coming, limiting the value of an internet connection doesn’t seem particularly wise. Providers who embrace innovation and supply the bandwidth to support it will be rewarded with happy customers.

Filed Under: , , , ,
Companies: comcast

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Comcast Thinking About Overage Fees And Tiered Usage”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
55 Comments
Chronno S. Trigger says:

Comcast

I’ve never really had a problem with Comcast (except their support/billing people). They have always given me more than what I pay for. I pay for about 20 channels I get about 200 (really good digital TV). I pay for up to 8Mbps I get 24Mbps. With all that I will still dump their asses if they put this in place.

Matt says:

Re: Comcast - what about when they give you less?

See, the whole problem is, they still aren’t getting it. 4-8 years later where people are trumpeting their idiocy, they still aren’t getting it.

Also, if getting what you pay for means you get less than before, for that same money, how do you like that?

I hate comcast. However, there are no other providers that come even close on speed out here for download and even upload, as sad as that is (thanks for locking us in chicago)

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Comcast

I’m curious: if you have no trouble with Comcast except for their billing and support folks, why is it you need to talk to their billing or support folks?

I’m also skeptical of the “pay for 20 channels, get 200.” I mean, are they giving you anything of value, or do you find you only ever watch 8 stations? I can’t find more than a dozen shows spread over three channels that I care to watch.

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: Re: Comcast

Support: Internet went down once (so far). Had to call support and he asked for the IP address of my computer even after I told him that I had a router. My internal network was fine. Turns out the modem likes to overheat.

Billing: Wanted to get Discovery HD. Got an ad that said the HD service was free and so was the box. Confirmed with the sales person that I would be paying around $60 for everything that I wanted. (had to add standard cable to get HD). The first bill came and it was over $250. The billing people were not nice and the only reason I still have comcast is because the “customer loyalty department” were actually able to explain (the sales person lied) and fix my bill. I don’t have standard cable nor HD any more.

Jim B. says:

Seen from another side

the other side of this coin, however, is that there is a limited amount of bandwidth from the head end downstream to each house. Even if you have a terabit backbone, you still are limited by the cable head end. So the question is, should I have to suffer slow internet connections just because there are a couple of neighbors with teenagers who are maxing out bandwidth downloading movies and music 24×7?

If you need full time high bandwidth, pay the freight for a dedicated T1 and then max it to your heart’s content. If you are going to benefit from the reduced price of a shared connection, be prepared to accept limitations.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Seen from another side

Until now, though, those connections were sold as unlimited. I will not accept a limit if I’ve bought unlimited service.

Should you have to suffer from slower service because you’re on a shared line? Well, I guess you have to be prepared to accept the limitations if you’re benefitting from the reduced price — you are only paying for *up to* certain speeds — but if it were *me* I would want some kind of assurance from my provider of a minimum amount of service. That shouldn’t be so hard to implement, should it? And it’s better, I think, to tier minimum service rather than maximum, so that I pay for better quality rather than paying for fewer restrictions.

Just a thought.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Seen from another side

If you need full time high bandwidth, pay the freight for a dedicated T1 and then max it to your heart’s content. If you are going to benefit from the reduced price of a shared connection, be prepared to accept limitations.

Perhaps you should take your own advice. If you are going to benefit from the reduced price of a shared connection, be prepared to accept limitations. If not, pay the freight for a dedicated T1 and avoid the inconvenience of sharing.

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: Re:

I live in the city of Pittsburgh. It’s probably the “in the city” part that gets me the good connection.

The two numbers you gave are actually less different that what you think. Comcast advertises (up to) 10Mbps (little B) and you are downloading at 750KBps (Big B). A B (byte) is 8 times the size of a b (bit). So when we get everything down to a common denominator your downloading at 5.8Mbps.

Try this, go to http://www.ati.com and download their catalyst software. I found that when I did this I got 3MBps (Big B) download. This douse all depend on what the website you’re downloading from can push out.

or you can try the speakeasy speed test and get some numbers that my look familiar.

Matt says:

Re: Re: math?

Okay, many things are off here this time.

1: Catalyst is video card drivers for windows; unless you have a conflict between the video card and the network card (very highly unlikely), it’s not going to affect your speed. There were problems with Nvidia Nforce motherboards previously, but nothing from ATI graphics cards.

Comcast doesn’t offer 750KBps anywhere. If they did, people would jump on it like FOS, including myself. Not only that, but that would be a competitive upstream value for the US market. Simple math of 10Mbps down = divide by 8, and thats the cap in KB. so 800kbps = 100KBps. Use KB because its realworld. 100KBpbs = 1MB every 10 seconds= 6MB/minute downloaded, since computer storage keeps track in Bytes and not bits.

Comcast’s powerboost is 100% intended to make the speakeasy test look good. Comcast’s powerboost basically ups your download/upload caps for a period of 30secs to about a minute at the beginning of any HTTP download. It does make sense, but that is the real purpose behind it. You will never see the speeds you test at in real world usage of anything larger than 10-20MB in size.

Your statement of 5.8Mbps comes out to about (5800/8 = 725KB/s)….is basic comcast cable, but you’ll never see that speed either outside of the speedtest and Linux distros.

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: Re: Re: math?

1) The catalyst download is just a 60M file that can be downloaded from one of the fastest servers I’ve seen. It’s just a test. I’m sorry if I didn’t make that clear. It’s not to install.

2) He is downloading at 750KB. That is in the download window. Not a speed test. Compleatly diffrent numbers.

3) Vary Possible. The speakeasy speed test just tests burst speeds not consistent download. Hence the ATI test. Plus speakeasy measures in Mb where as the ATI test would measure in MB.

4) 750KBps * 8 = 6000Kbps / 1024 (1024K per M) = 5.859375Mbps.

martdi says:

Those limits ain't that bad

If you check Videotron in the province of Quebec (Canada), you are limited to 20GB down, 10 GB up and it costs an extra $8 per extra GB.

The only other real company that offers broadband here is Bell Canada (Sympatico), which uses bandwith throttling for their customers and all resellers.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Limits...

yes… use a router and then set up a box with MRTG to log your traffic usage. I use that to know what I’m pushing and pulling. MRTG does much more.

At my Data Center I use Ubersmith to watch customer ports and bill them for usage. THey can also log in and watch their usage so they can change their commit rates to avoid overage charges.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Glad I've got FiOS

/jealous

Seriously, in parts of southern Washington you have two choices: Qwest DSL or Comcast Cable.

Qwest DSL has people at every node every day tweaking things. Internet service is not 24/7 because your node may go down, and then your speeds are crap anyways.

Comcast has great speeds and so far hasn’t been too bad for the bills. They still suck a bit and lie a lot. For example, we were told the second box was free. It isn’t.

Still have it because the only channels we watch require it, but if it was easier to mvoe it from TV to TV (depending if we’re upstairs in the bedroom or downstairs in the living room) I’d rather do that than pay for the ‘convienience.’

BTW, when I say Comcast sucks I mean my downloads start out fast, eg at advertised speeds, and then drop to half that. Still twice as fast as Qwest, but shitty.

If you have the option to switch to something better be greatful. Large spats of the country are essentially vendor locked for an ISP. Only a handful of mini-Bells own the cable.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Yeah, cause that works.

Sorry, jaded. It’s better than nothing, it’ll keep most people out, but if someone wants your wireless they can get it. The point being “that doesn’t answer the question of what if someone’s stealing your access” rather than “don’t bother securing your network.”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Sorry, jaded. It’s better than nothing, it’ll keep most people out, but if someone wants your wireless they can get it.

Not likely with WPA.

The point being “that doesn’t answer the question of what if someone’s stealing your access” rather than “don’t bother securing your network.”

What if a gang of “internets thieves” breaks into your house, ties your family up and “steals your access”? Same difference and about as likely.

John Doe says:

Matt is correct, I max out on DL around the high 6xxkB (that’s big B).

Altho I don’t like the idea of a limit, when you’re under the impression of paying for unlimited internet. If you think about it. 250gb a month is about 300 700MB divx movies, or 56 DVDs. I myself, who is a big BT-er for all my TV shows that i miss do not reach amounts like that a month…

Another point is, lets say we are back in the 56k ages of dial up. How piss would you be if they limit your usage to 1gb a month when you’re paying for unlimited vs the 10 hours a month plan i remember some companies used to advertise.

JLJ says:

Bandwidth

I actually work for an IPTV service that is currently avaible nationwide. My desk is near our call center and I am constantly hearing issues with people hitting “unstated” caps or having to deal with “fair access” policies. There is also an ISP provider in Florida that is notorious for blocking ports that are necessary for our company’s services to work.

I can’t wait for the day that a major ISP decides that we are a competor to their services and to just completely block us.

With so much money being invested by many different companies in severices that are provided over broadband, something is going to have to change. M$ and their movie services through the 360 and a future potential set top box, the various IPTV services that are currently on market or coming to market, there is just too much being thrown at the ISP’s now.

With our IPTV service hitting homes across America, we are seeing people’s usage jumping massivly in just one day.

I wonder what Comcast is going to say to our customers?

JLJ

inc says:

250GB per month is nothing. I get 1.5TB a month on my server with a 100Mbps Full Duplex connection in a big air conditioned room for $99. Still my provider manages to make a profit why can’t comcast? To pay upwards of $50, in addition to your cable bill, a month for 6Mbps down with only 250GB is crazy. They should lower their prices and give customers that pay $50 at least 1TB if so, but you know that will never happen.

Clueby4 says:

Metering Responsibilities

The current users ARE paying for their access, its just that, much like AOL in the 90s, they are defrauding their customers by not investing in infrastructure. So this current suggested “tiered” solution does not resolve or address that issue.

Additionally, implementing a cap should address content that should not be applied to the cap.
– isp generated false reset packets
– email/spam
– dns queries
– popups/ads
– failed downloads
– troubleshooting (ie test downloads, internal speedcheck pages, etc.

evgen says:

Innovation comes from limits, not abundance

Contrary to the claim made here, innovation is not driven by unlimited resources, it is driven by attempts to get around limits. We use mp3s because there was not enough bandwidth the push around lossless copies of music tracks. We move to better and faster video codecs so that we can squeeze more content down narrow pipes. Current generation p2p systems were developed because it was impossible to distribute a large payload through a single narrow upstream pipe to multiple endpoints and sharing the workload was the best way to work around the problem.

All packets should be subject to the cap. This will push application developers and tcp/ip stack maintainers to work smarter solutions into their products. If caps are explicitly stated by providers then customers can vote with their wallets and select the plans or providers that are most appropriate for how they intend to use the connection.

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: Comcast pay for overages

Or you could realise that your Internet connection is slow because of all the little kids coming home from and jumping on youtube and myspace, not from the less than 0.1% (BS) that would be affected by this.

This is just Comcast being to lazy and greedy to update their connections to meet the demand of the Internet 2.0.

Mike Hammett says:

The problem here is that the consumer (most of you here) has no idea what is involved in providing these services and what they cost.

Broadband was, is, an always will be limited, no matter what they in big letters on TV. If you ant dedicated bandwidth, purchase it. Many if not all large MSOs provide a dedicated fiber service. You can get a T1 or T3 from Ma Bell. There are thousands of independent DSL and wireless ISPs out there that can offer you a tailor made solution, with a cost appropriate to what you’re asking for.

You can’t expect to leave the faucet on or the AC on 24/7/365 and not get billed for the extra usage. Why should broadband be any different?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

You can’t expect to leave the faucet on or the AC on 24/7/365 and not get billed for the extra usage. Why should broadband be any different?

Yeah, and just because you’re paying for unlimited cable TV that doesn’t mean you can watch your TV on 24/7/365 either does it? Bull.
And if I was paying for unlimited utilities then I would expect unlimited utilities too.

MrScott says:

I’m SO happy that I dumped Comcast right before the whole “BitTorrent” story went public. I’m now on fiber optic (not FIOS though) and my speeds are faster up and downstream than before the switch, and for less money. I get IPTV and internet for $15 less per month than the other place charged.

Now, I wonder about one thing. What about the people on Comcast that have an online movie rental service? By what I understand, they won’t be able to “rent” many movies because of a cap on their bandwidth, and if they go over that cap (God forbid) they’re gonna get charged MORE for this “one time slip-up” per year?? What brilliant employee of Comcast came up with that idea?

Um…Comcast…WAKE UP!! The internet is NOT static web pages and text to read, anymore. It’s filled with online services, live video, applications, online meetings, MMORPG, streaming movie rentals, IPTV, and a multitude of programs that require some bandwidth. Isn’t it time to change your infrastructure to handle the demand, instead of punishing your customers who need bandwidth?

Like an old saying that goes….you can’t make money, if you don’t SPEND money. In Leiman’s terms, that means if you can’t keep the customer happy, he’ll go elsewhere. And pissing off the customer sure won’t keep him, and won’t make you any more money if he goes elsewhere.

I know that some of you CAN’T switch to another ISP, because there is none. I’ve heard that argument many times. I’m not debating that. What I AM debating is that the first chance you get to get away from Comcast, do it! I switched a while back, and I’m certainly more happy with fiber optic than with cable. I’m not limited in ANY way as far as a bandwidth cap, or my torrents. There simply are none. …And for less money per month, to boot!

Gimme a break says:

All,
It’s a pretty simple concept really. Make more money. Comcast is looking for ways to improve their margin and wealth to shareholders.

If you don’t like it, drop their service. Go somewhere else. Cell phone companies have used this method for years. There are people out there that will pay.

inc says:

Re: Re:

the problem is that there are tons of cell phone companies all wanting your business. There are not a lot of broadband providers that you could call it competition. What they should to to increase their margin is figure out how to make bandwidth cheaper so they can deliver on their “unlimited” marketing instead of trying to figure out way to fuck people.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...