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AT&T 'Throttles' Customers' Phones To Cut Data Speeds...

Analog

Lifer
[FONT=Verdana,Sans-serif] NEW YORK (AP) - Mike Trang likes to use his iPhone 4 as a GPS device, helping him get around in his job. Now and then, his younger cousins get ahold of it, and play some YouTube videos and games.
But in the past few weeks, there has been none of that, because AT&T Inc. (T) put a virtual wheel clamp on his phone. Web pages wouldn't load and maps wouldn't render. Forget about YouTube videos - Trang's data speeds were reduced to dial-up levels.
"It basically makes my phone useless," said Trang, an Orange County, Calif. property manager.
The reason: AT&T considers Trang to be among the top 5 percent of the heaviest cellular data users in his area. Under a new policy, AT&T has started cutting their data speeds as part of an attempt to manage data usage on its network.
So last month, AT&T "throttled" Trang's iPhone, slowing downloads by roughly 99 percent. That means a Web page that would normally take a second to load instead took almost two minutes.
AT&T has some 17 million customers with "unlimited data" plans that can be subject to throttling, representing just under half of its smartphone users. It stopped signing up new customers for those plans in 2010, and warned last year that it would start slowing speeds for people who consume the most data.
What's surprising people like Trang is how little data use it takes to reach that level - sometimes less that AT&T gives people on its "limited" plans.
Trang's iPhone was throttled just two weeks into his billing cycle, after he'd consumed 2.3 gigabytes of data. He pays $30 per month for "unlimited" data. Meanwhile, Dallas-based AT&T now sells a limited, or "tiered," plan that provides 3 gigabytes of data for the same price.
Users report that if they call the company to ask or complain about the throttling, AT&T customer support representatives suggest they switch to the limited plan.
"They're coaxing you toward the tiered plan," said Gregory Tallman in Hopatcong, N.J. He hasn't had his iPhone 4S throttled yet, but he's gotten text-messages from AT&T, warning that he's approaching the limit. This came after he had used just 1.5 gigabytes of data in that billing cycle.
John Cozen, a Web and mobile applications designer in San Diego, hasn't been throttled yet either, but he's been so disturbed by a warning that he's "almost scared to use the phone," he said. Complaining to AT&T got him nowhere, and now he's looking to switch to another carrier.
"I don't think two to three gigabytes is an exorbitant amount," he said. "Really, I'm just looking at pictures and text once in a while."
AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel said that as of last summer, the top 5 percent of data users were using 2 gigabytes of data per month.
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LOL @ AT&T. I left 'em back in the iPhone 3G days and I've never once regretted that decision. As much as I don't like some of Verizon's business practices, they offer way better service (in my experience).
 
Why do I get the feeling technology is going backwards?

Not so much technology, just the billing for consuming technology products. You'd think we could consume twice the amount of data for the same price every year or so. The way it goes now, you need to consume the same amount and pay twice as much every year.
 
Not so much technology, just the billing for consuming technology products. You'd think we could consume twice the amount of data for the same price every year or so. The way it goes now, you need to consume the same amount and pay twice as much every year.

Yep. Greed greed greed.
 
Here is your new iPhone sir, and your 100 dollar a month plan...but oh by the way DON'T USE IT or WE WON'T LET YOU....remember you signed...
 
I can't imagine wtf he is doing that would require 2.3gb in 2 weeks. I don't mind the throttling so normal users don't get screwed over because a few people want to stream video over 3g
 
I can't imagine wtf he is doing that would require 2.3gb in 2 weeks. I don't mind the throttling so normal users don't get screwed over because a few people want to stream video over 3g

streaming the 24x7 skyrim/CoD youtube streams? and wifi is off because it's not cool
 
AT&T are just greedy. I'm glad I'm not on them.

They cut off my off network data because I used too much when traveling, however the phone never said when you were off network (until they banned me from using it and added the tag so it told me when I was off network)

I use strait talk now and it runs off of At&t's towers however it's cheaper and no bs.
 
John Cozen, a Web and mobile applications designer in San Diego, hasn't been throttled yet either, but he's been so disturbed by a warning that he's "almost scared to use the phone," he said. Complaining to AT&T got him nowhere, and now he's looking to switch to another carrier.
"I don't think two to three gigabytes is an exorbitant amount," he said. "Really, I'm just looking at pictures and text once in a while."
AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel said that as of last summer, the top 5 percent of data users were using 2 gigabytes of data per month.

If by "looking at pictures and text" he's talking about looking at 30 pictures per second, some of which contain text displaying the name of the people who were involved in the creation of said pictures, yeah, I suppose a couple gigs isn't very much.

What the hell are people doing with their phones to generate that kind of traffic? I don't feel like I can't use my phone, I use it for the web and Youtube or maps and everything else, and I only use a couple hundred MB per month.
 
This is such a surprise ...

There was actually a time when people lived (and were happy) without cell phones.
 
I can't imagine wtf he is doing that would require 2.3gb in 2 weeks. I don't mind the throttling so normal users don't get screwed over because a few people want to stream video over 3g

Tethering a laptop because of no cable modem or dsl service.
 
I'm sorry, but 3g bandwidth is NOT in such a bad place that the heavy users can't just continue to be heavy users. There is NO reason people can't routinely use 10+gb a month. None.

I will never use AT&T (or Sprint, because LOLsprint).
 
[FONT=Verdana,Sans-serif] NEW YORK (AP) - Mike Trang likes to use his iPhone 4 as a GPS device, helping him get around in his job. Now and then, his younger cousins get ahold of it, and play some YouTube videos and games.
But in the past few weeks, there has been none of that, because AT&T Inc. (T) put a virtual wheel clamp on his phone. Web pages wouldn't load and maps wouldn't render. Forget about YouTube videos - Trang's data speeds were reduced to dial-up levels.
"It basically makes my phone useless," said Trang, an Orange County, Calif. property manager.
The reason: AT&T considers Trang to be among the top 5 percent of the heaviest cellular data users in his area. Under a new policy, AT&T has started cutting their data speeds as part of an attempt to manage data usage on its network.
So last month, AT&T "throttled" Trang's iPhone, slowing downloads by roughly 99 percent. That means a Web page that would normally take a second to load instead took almost two minutes.
AT&T has some 17 million customers with "unlimited data" plans that can be subject to throttling, representing just under half of its smartphone users. It stopped signing up new customers for those plans in 2010, and warned last year that it would start slowing speeds for people who consume the most data.
What's surprising people like Trang is how little data use it takes to reach that level - sometimes less that AT&T gives people on its "limited" plans.
Trang's iPhone was throttled just two weeks into his billing cycle, after he'd consumed 2.3 gigabytes of data. He pays $30 per month for "unlimited" data. Meanwhile, Dallas-based AT&T now sells a limited, or "tiered," plan that provides 3 gigabytes of data for the same price.
Users report that if they call the company to ask or complain about the throttling, AT&T customer support representatives suggest they switch to the limited plan.
"They're coaxing you toward the tiered plan," said Gregory Tallman in Hopatcong, N.J. He hasn't had his iPhone 4S throttled yet, but he's gotten text-messages from AT&T, warning that he's approaching the limit. This came after he had used just 1.5 gigabytes of data in that billing cycle.
John Cozen, a Web and mobile applications designer in San Diego, hasn't been throttled yet either, but he's been so disturbed by a warning that he's "almost scared to use the phone," he said. Complaining to AT&T got him nowhere, and now he's looking to switch to another carrier.
"I don't think two to three gigabytes is an exorbitant amount," he said. "Really, I'm just looking at pictures and text once in a while."
AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel said that as of last summer, the top 5 percent of data users were using 2 gigabytes of data per month.
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So AT&T starts throttling at 2GB data/month for their $30/month unlimited data plan?
Besides family plans and cheap corp discounts, why the heck are people still using AT&T and not ST? You might as well be with ST and know you have 2GB data limit and only pay $45/month.
Gosh, people are stupid.
 
I have no problem with this. If you want to spend hours a day watching streaming movies over a 3g network, which puts you in the minority, then pay for it. The whole network suffers because a small minority of users consume a vastly disproportionate amount of data, and feel like it is their god given right to do so while paying the same as everyone else. The guy in the article saying he consumed 2.3gb in 2 weeks looking at a few "pictures and stuff", is FOS.
 
Glad to see yet another thread about this. It is in fact an outrage!

File a bbc or fcc complaint and let AT&T know that you want them to provide you with the unlimited service that you're contracted to them to receive in exchange for the money they get from you every month.
 
Umm... I only used 290 MB of data this month (ending 2/19), and that includes Pandora, GPS, and YouTube usage over 3G along with a few MP3 Podcast downloads.

What on earth was this guy doing with his phone to cause him to use that much data?
 
VERIZON ftw. And a warning after 1.5GB of use? Fail, just fail.

Problem w\ verizon is that they have more expensive data plans. So AT&T's "Good luck switching service" attitude is in a sense correct if they were upholding their unlimited data plans.
 
But this thread is about the unlimited plans no? AFAIK the cost was the same for both AT&T and Verizon on these now extinct plans.
 
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