TracFone/Straight Talk Fined $40 MIL by FCC

midwestfisherman

Diamond Member
Dec 6, 2003
3,564
8
81
In recent months, the Federal Trade Commission has taken a significant interest in carrier throttling practices and today handed down a ruling that could have future ramifications for carriers who throttle their unlimited customers.

As reported by Re/code, the FTC has ordered prepaid wireless carrier TracFone to pay $40 million to consumers who paid for unlimited service and were then throttled after reaching certain data limits.

TracFone advertised "unlimited text, talk, and data" for $45 a month under the brands Straight Talk, Net10, Simple Mobile, and Telcel America, and until September 2013, did not clearly disclose its throttling policies that saw customers experiencing data speeds that were cut by up to 90 percent, thereby violating the FTC Act.

While this ruling only affects TracFone at the current time, there are several other carriers that have similar practices for their unlimited customers. AT&T and Verizon no longer offer unlimited data plans, but continue to provide unlimited data for many people who remain on grandfathered plans. AT&T has engaged in throttling practices for years, often cutting off customers who exceed 5GB of LTE data usage.
"The issue here is simple: when you promise consumers 'unlimited,' that means unlimited," said Jessica Rich, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "This settlement means that Straight Talk, Net10, Simple Mobile, and Telcel America customers will be able to get money back from the company for services the company promised but didn't deliver."
Last year, Verizon planned to throttle its high-usage unlimited data LTE customers, sparking interest from FCC chairman Tom Wheeler, who said he was "deeply troubled" by the decision. Verizon ultimately reversed course and opted not to throttle its unlimited customers, but the FCC's attention was already roused, and the agency began questioning all carriers on their unlimited throttling practices.

The government's interest in carrier throttling practices led the FTC to file a federal complaint against AT&T in October of 2014, accusing the carrier of misleading its smartphone customers by charging them for unlimited data and then going on to reduce data speeds. Based on today's TracFone decision, AT&T may also be facing hefty fines in the future, and the FTC's ongoing involvement in carrier throttling of unlimited customers could finally put an end to the practice.

http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1842013
 

magomago

Lifer
Sep 28, 2002
10,973
14
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Why can't carriers change their policy? Those who are grandfathered should not even have an active contract.
If the contract has ended and it is month-to-month then they can easily notify a change of terms.

What are people going to do - jump ship to AT&T or Tmobile? AT&T wants to throttle just as badly, and Tmobile already states they throttle abusers of the network. Sprint in most markets is simply a dead horse that is waiting to be beat.

Verizon's speed and coverage still can't be beat. AT&T also has excellent coverage and speed. Their pricing is comparable.
Tmobile is cheap & has LOTS of feature, but 4G coverage is spotty in the boonies (driving LA to SF nets you 2G most of the way).

So again, why can't they change the TOS for everyone that is grandfathered and enjoying month to month payments for unlimited data? Its not like the competition can offer a better deal on ALL points if one jumps ship.

If I leave Tmobile, I'll pay more and get less features but I'll get more 4G everywhere.
If I leave AT&T or Verizon, I'll pay less and get more features but my 4G is more limited.
Worst case they lose customers who are satisfied with the coverage Tmobile provides, but considering all the Tmobile haters out there, but I'd bet most will resign with AT&T or Verizon anyways.
 

gmaster456

Golden Member
Sep 7, 2011
1,877
0
71
I've been using ST since Jan 2013. Does this mean I get a check?

I kid. I've been pretty happy with their service overall. ATT network has been reliable most places and building penetration gotten much better.