[RANT] I pay $70/mo for this privilege

itellyouhwhat@lemm.ee to Selfhosted@lemmy.world – 1039 points –
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I thought data caps for home internet were a thing of the past…

I’ve somewhat recently moved back to a very rural area of the Midwest. Small town. No stop lights. Biggest businesses other than the bars are Casey’s, Subway, and Dollar General.

And we have one ISP (not counting DSL) — Mediacom. When we first signed up, I had to go with the second service tier. But not because of speeds, but so I could have a reasonable 1 TB/mo data cap.

Lucky me, they increased the cap to 1.5 TB. 🙄

I hope that in my lifetime I can see ISPs regulated as a public utility.

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Data caps are everywhere, I'm not sure why you'd think they're a thing of the past. I believe the scenario is more like "you're lucky if your plan doesn't have caps" instead.

1.5T/month is uncomfortable though. One of my VPN services has a 1T/month softcap (speed drastically reduces after that) and it's usually fine for my household, but one person going crazy on YouTube rabbit holes or us binging something on Netflix, pushes that limit fast.

Terrible scenario, but unfortunately I think there's too much money involved for the right thing to be done and this kind of service getting the treatment it should have.

TF you smoking? I pay 25€/ mo. For gigabit connection with no data caps. The US is getting hosed because it’s a corporatocracy and the ISPs have acted like robber barons for the past three decades. Don’t normalize this blatantly anti consumer bullshit.

To add to this, my country has been rolling out 10Gbps U/D FTTH for 35€/Month for a while, and even rural areas usually have at least 500Mbps U/D, all of it uncapped.

Gotta say, more than a decade ago ISP's tried to implement data caps on home internet, and it failed spectacularly.

I weep for our American brethren, may they find a way out of the hole they're in...

I'm not normalizing anything and I didn't say there is nowhere you can get unlimited plans. I said it's not a thing of the past.

I too have uncapped broadband, but I know it's not something I should fall into the trap of taking for granted.

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£65 a month for gigabit for me. But no data caps. Not even noticed soft caps after multi terabytes download in a monthly period

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No Datacaps for landline in Europe yeah.. In many EU countries you can also buy a mobile flat without caps for like 40€.

The US just doesn't have a good consumer lobby.

The problem with the US is even if we had a consumer lobby, which I don’t think we do, we would be overrun by the big corporate lobbies in a matter of seconds.

The only people that get listened to by our government are those who have the big money to control members of congress. We are supposed to have a government for the people by the people but instead we have a government for the rich by the rich.

Those of us that don’t have billions of dollars don’t have a voice, even though they claim to listen, they don’t unless you can line their pockets with a few $100,000 thousand dollars a month.

Our government official don’t care about us, they care about money and how to get more of it.

Sorry if this is nitpicking but as far as I know, there is no such thing as unlimited mobile data plans.

In most contracts they will say that you have to use reasonably the data plan and you cannot for example constantly max out your connection. Like 24/7 constant max bandwidth used.

In most case it doesn't really matter but I really don't like the fact that ISPs get to say it's unlimited when it definitely isn't.

It's unlimited*

  • Some restrictions may apply.

I don't know where you live, but here in Austria you can get truly unlimited ones. People also use them instead of landline connections without any issues.

And depending where you live that might or might not work out well for you. If too many people in your neighbourhood use too much mobile data at the same time as you, speeds will decrease and unlimited data plans in particular will be throttled.

Never got into it that deep myself, I just know other people who never had issues. Prime-time streaming in full hd etc.

But I'm also pretty sure you can sue them, if they can't keep up the advertised speeds over longer time. Obv only when the infrastructure is actually available.

You can sue anyone for anything, but no one is advertising any guaranteed speeds for mobile broadband, so your chances will be fairly limited. Best you can do is withdrawing from your contract.

For unlimited data contracts you can usually pay different amounts for different speeds. They actively advertise with those maximum speeds and if you can never reach them, even tho they are available at your location, you can report them to a federal agency and take legally warranty claims.

Data caps are not everywhere. Especially on landlines.

Not true everywhere.

Here in Australia, while speeda are not amazing (gigabit is kind of the max for now) we have no contracts, no data caps, hundreds of ISPs and some even allow people to pay per day.

I can change ISP tomorrow and the switch over will take 10 minutes, because the physical network is common to all of them.

It's sort of sad to see how americans have only the freedom to get their kids shot and ass fucked by corporations.

Mate “speeds are not amazing” is a massive understatement. I pay $80 a month for 46Mbps down, 12Mbps up. Unlimited data thankfully, although realistically the most I’m going to be able to download is 5TB a month unless I leave devices on all day and night (and given our electricity prices that’s a whole different kettle of fish).

I am on FTTP and pay 99 for 500/50 and never seen a slowdown. It will take a while to get everyone off the old copper network, I know :(

For reference in not aware of any ISP providing data caps in the UK, except for mobile plans.

Everywhere on mobile sure but fiber then it's not a thing in the Nordics. Unsure about the rest of the EU but I'd be surprised if it was common.

Speeds can be iffy though. It's very much up to the landlord in the cities what fiber to install and when so there are large discrepancies. Some are still stuck on sub 100 MB/s though it's getting very rare. I'm rural as fuck and will get 1 GB/s in two weeks, have 300 MB/s currently.

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