Originally posted by: her209
Keep dreaming. They'll keep charging the same rates to the lower use customers and charge more money to the higher use customers.
BINGO!
It's a cash grab.
Originally posted by: her209
Keep dreaming. They'll keep charging the same rates to the lower use customers and charge more money to the higher use customers.
Just because its in the contract doesn't make it "legal".Originally posted by: ScottMac
For as much as I hate to defend the likes of Comcast, I think their contract & Terms of Use will succeed in court.
Originally posted by: her209
Just because its in the contract doesn't make it "legal".Originally posted by: ScottMac
For as much as I hate to defend the likes of Comcast, I think their contract & Terms of Use will succeed in court.
http://writ.news.findlaw.com/ramasastry/20070809.html
Originally posted by: her209
Keep dreaming. They'll keep charging the same rates to the lower use customers and charge more money to the higher use customers.Originally posted by: smack Down
Pay less for the internet.Originally posted by: ScottMac
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Yes, I can blame them for that. If they didn't want 5% to use 50% of the bandwidth, then they should have put a rate or total bandwidth cap in the contract. If 5% of people use 50% of the electricity, what happens? They get charged 50% of the costs. It's not exactly like business models to address this sort of thing aren't available in every other industry. The cable companies are just promising the moon when they know they can't (or won't) deliver, yet here you are sticking up for them.Originally posted by: charrison
Considering something like that 5% of the users generate over 50% of the net traffic, can you really blame them for shaping traffic so the other 95% get a good experience as a customer.
And giess what, if cable companies increased capacity without traffic shapping, those same 5% would still manage to generate more than 50% of the traffic.
Be careful what you wish for. This kind of billing is easily implemented on an ISP model.
What would you do if all ISPs went to this?
They are not capping the bandwidth, they are slowing it down, and only specific traffic types. If that's unacceptable to the user, they can move to something else.
Originally posted by: ScottMac
I think it really boils down to the Terms of Service.
Comcast Terms of Use
For example, this is item xiv:
run programs, equipment, or servers from the Premises that provide network content or any other services to anyone outside of your Premises LAN (Local Area Network), also commonly referred to as public services or servers. Examples of prohibited services and servers include, but are not limited to, e-mail, Web hosting, file sharing, and proxy services and servers;
and there are others that might apply as well.
Originally posted by: ScottMac
I dropped Comcast as an ISP about two years ago in favor of AT&T DSL. I'm looking forward to U-Verse when it becomes available in my neighborhood (suburban Chicago). U-Verse will be available with 10/1.5 Internet sometime in Feb / March (the current max is like 6M/512k).
Whatever
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: ScottMac
I think it really boils down to the Terms of Service.
Comcast Terms of Use
For example, this is item xiv:
run programs, equipment, or servers from the Premises that provide network content or any other services to anyone outside of your Premises LAN (Local Area Network), also commonly referred to as public services or servers. Examples of prohibited services and servers include, but are not limited to, e-mail, Web hosting, file sharing, and proxy services and servers;
and there are others that might apply as well.
So, am I to understand that Comcast is only targeting the file transfers of people who are eggregiously violating the terms of service?
Am I to understand that people wishing to provide "e-mail, Web hosting, file sharing, and proxy services and servers" must purchase some other level of service?
As far just dropping them and getting another company's product - where I live the cable company has a monoply. You want cable, you get it from them or you simply don't get it. There are no cable competitors. I think in return for this grant of monoply they should more regulated than a typical business.
Fern