Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Are Data Caps Really Necessary?”.
So, let’s be honest as much as it’s an ISPs job to provide us with a vital service. There are still businesses and not surprisingly, they’re, always looking for exciting and innovative ways to rake in dat paper. Some of you won’t remember this, but back in the dial-up era, they even charged for internet access by the hour, assuming you were some kind of rube who didn’t just ride from three three months, trial to three months trial by switching credit cards, all the time anywho Internet by the hour went the way of the dodo once broadband proliferated, but that didn’t stop their innovation. These days ISPs control the flow of that sweet, sweet data by placing data caps on your internet usage.
The concept here is very simple: when you sign up for Internet service, many ISPs will limit you to a certain amount of data each month, typically somewhere between a hundred gigabytes and one terabyte. If you exceed your cap, you can be charged extra. Have your speed throttle down or even have your service terminated and as high bandwidth use cases like streaming, HD video have become more and more common.
An increasing number of users find themselves tracking their megabytes as closely as their calories. So why exactly do the ISPs impose? These limits is there a legitimate reason, or is it just a scheme to squeeze more money out of us? Well, the most obvious technical explanation is that any given ISP has a maximum amount of bandwidth. It can handle it once.
Data caps theoretically help the pipes from getting clogged, but large ISPs. The ones who are most known for restricted data caps have so much bandwidth that network usage hardly ever approaches 100 % and us giant Comcast even tacitly admitted this in a leaked 2015 memo advising its customer service employees not to tell consumers their data cap policy was To help alleviate congestion, because it wasn’t combined with the fact that investing in more infrastructure to carry more data at once is much cheaper than it was a decade ago, and the number of households with a broadband subscription has at least in the u.s., stopped growing. The argument for data caps as a means to unclog the pipes seems pretty flimsy, especially as large ISPs tend to claim that the vast majority of their customers stay below their caps.
So what’s the real reason behind it? Well, at least one is P, has analogized the provision of Internet service to the availability of any other scarce good, pointing out that someone who buys 10 gallons of gas pays more than someone who buys only 5. This argument might be intrinsically appealing, but opponents say that, because bandwidth is so cheap and ISPs, profit margins are so high. Internet service can’t be thought of.
In the same way, add the fact that, due to regional appellees, many consumers don’t have a ton of choice when it comes to ISPs unreliable metering methods and the ability of ISPs to set their own prices free from the government rate regulation that you see on your Water or electric bill and many people have become convinced that data caps are actually just another way for the ISPs to collude with their puppet masters on the Trilateral Commission and squeeze more money out of you. But this is the part of the video where we say: that’s an overly simplistic and paranoid. You know what I just can’t do this yeah Europe’s got a much better system where ISPs are forced to provide service without data caps and actually can’t come up with a better explanation and, speaking of better explanations, do you still not have one for using your crappy Old earbuds well, then check out the new skull and eek rusher Wireless.
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