Comcast’s 1TB data caps rolling out nationwide

thismybgolname

Rising Star
OG Investor
Most internet users will probably not be affected by Comcast’s decision to roll out its data caps to more markets. But those people who consume a lot of media of the high-definition streaming variety and console games may find ways to surpass that 1TB monthly cap.

It sounds like a lot of monthly traffic, and for the average user, it probably is. But households with multiple internet users who do a lot of streaming of 4K video and PlayStation/Xbox game may feel the burn.



What happens if you go over that cap? For the first two times in a period of 12 months, there will be no overages. But the third time you go over your allowance, you’re going to be charged $10 for an additional 50GB of data to a maximum of 200GB of extra data. You will be able to monitor your data consumption and set alerts to tell you when you reach a certain threshold.

Comcast says that you can do a log with a terabyte of data each month — that’s what its press release is about. The company says that more than 99% of its subscribers do not use 1TB of data in any given month and that its data plans are based on a “principle of fairness.” There are many Comcast users who will probably not agree with the company’s definition of fairness.



That said, if you’re a Xfinity subscriber in the following markets, you’re already on a capped data plan: Alabama (excluding the Dothan market); Arizona; Arkansas; Florida (Fort Lauderdale, the Keys, and Miami); Georgia (excluding Southeastern Georgia); Illinois; Northern Indiana; Kentucky; Louisiana; Maine; Southwestern Michigan; Mississippi; Tennessee; Eastern Texas; South Carolina; and Southwest Virginia.

On November 1st, the 1TB data cap is hitting the following markets: Alabama (Dothan); California; Colorado; Florida (North Florida, Southwest Florida and West Palm); Southeastern Georgia; Idaho; Indiana (Indianapolis and Central Indiana; Fort Wayne and Eastern Indiana); Kansas; Michigan (Grand Rapids/Lansing, Detroit, and Eastern Michigan); Minnesota; Missouri; New Mexico; Western Ohio; Oregon; Texas (Houston); Utah; Washington; and Wisconsin.
 
that wouldnt cut it for me. just in the last 30 days alone i used over 12tb worth of data. comcast needs to get rid of that data cap crap. i can understand it for mobile internet but a home connection shouldnt be restricted by such nonsense.
 
If 99% of users use less than a TB why is this even necessary?
They say that every fucking time that they roll out a cap. Years a go, it was :eek: 99 percent of are users don't use 300 GB.

It's just a money grab. 300 gb for a family hasn't been shit for quite some time now. They know in a few years when games are over 100 gigs and 4k streaming is common they will make money with overages for a TB -- at least for a short period of time until they raise it to a new number that 99 percent supposedly don't use.
 
that wouldnt cut it for me. just in the last 30 days alone i used over 12tb worth of data. comcast needs to get rid of that data cap crap. i can understand it for mobile internet but a home connection shouldnt be restricted by such nonsense.
Fuck u doing??? 12 tb??? Ive had my 4tb hd for 3 years now and still havent filled it up. U do 12 in 1 month? I call bullshit.
 
I got two home servers and one of them is a weather machine that collects data literally every 5 minutes, daily.
 
at&t been digging up my neighborhood for about a month..i wonder what they got up their sleeve
i hope it's at&t gigapower
 
Probably, I know at&t techs and word is they are trying to get people to switch to directv...saying uverse Tv uses too much bandwidth and not able to offer fast internet speed. Comcast is already gearing up for metro e, already training for it now. Mainly for business customers.
comcast switching to metro e?? didn't know that....that is a big switch for them
 
I'm glad I don't pay shit for internet. Fuck comcast and their caps. Those bastards where robbing me for 10 years straight. My guy got me a comcast router and I haven't paid nothing all year.
 
This is mainly for people who got Comcast home security, the security systems eats the data alive.

No it isn't. Just like their public wifi, iptv and phone services they treat that data as separate. What throws a lot of people off is that they count upload in the cap. Mess up and seed a torrent too long and there goes your cap.
 
I'm glad I don't pay shit for internet. Fuck comcast and their caps. Those bastards where robbing me for 10 years straight. My guy got me a comcast router and I haven't paid nothing all year.
dude!
 
Most internet users will probably not be affected by Comcast’s decision to roll out its data caps to more markets. But those people who consume a lot of media of the high-definition streaming variety and console games may find ways to surpass that 1TB monthly cap.

It sounds like a lot of monthly traffic, and for the average user, it probably is. But households with multiple internet users who do a lot of streaming of 4K video and PlayStation/Xbox game may feel the burn.



What happens if you go over that cap? For the first two times in a period of 12 months, there will be no overages. But the third time you go over your allowance, you’re going to be charged $10 for an additional 50GB of data to a maximum of 200GB of extra data. You will be able to monitor your data consumption and set alerts to tell you when you reach a certain threshold.

Comcast says that you can do a log with a terabyte of data each month — that’s what its press release is about. The company says that more than 99% of its subscribers do not use 1TB of data in any given month and that its data plans are based on a “principle of fairness.” There are many Comcast users who will probably not agree with the company’s definition of fairness.



That said, if you’re a Xfinity subscriber in the following markets, you’re already on a capped data plan: Alabama (excluding the Dothan market); Arizona; Arkansas; Florida (Fort Lauderdale, the Keys, and Miami); Georgia (excluding Southeastern Georgia); Illinois; Northern Indiana; Kentucky; Louisiana; Maine; Southwestern Michigan; Mississippi; Tennessee; Eastern Texas; South Carolina; and Southwest Virginia.

On November 1st, the 1TB data cap is hitting the following markets: Alabama (Dothan); California; Colorado; Florida (North Florida, Southwest Florida and West Palm); Southeastern Georgia; Idaho; Indiana (Indianapolis and Central Indiana; Fort Wayne and Eastern Indiana); Kansas; Michigan (Grand Rapids/Lansing, Detroit, and Eastern Michigan); Minnesota; Missouri; New Mexico; Western Ohio; Oregon; Texas (Houston); Utah; Washington; and Wisconsin.



I tried to warn people... That shit is brutal. What people don't get is that there are tons of things that count against the CAP that you don't even think about automatic updating of apps, backing up your iphone to the cloud, streaming, automatic updating of game patches. That last one is fucking killing me. Fucking Deus Ex has already required two 8gb patches and then you have Call of Duty coming out soon and they are talking about that bitch hitting 130 gbs and you know there is going to be a Day one patch for that shit.

I'm seriously thinking about going back to just buying disks.
 
at&t been digging up my neighborhood for about a month..i wonder what they got up their sleeve
i hope it's at&t gigapower
Probably, I know at&t techs and word is they are trying to get people to switch to directv...saying uverse Tv uses too much bandwidth and not able to offer fast internet speed. Comcast is already gearing up for metro e, already training for it now. Mainly for business customers.


They were digging up in my neighborhood and I was going to call them up. They were only doing upgrades, not gigapower the homes.
Then I found like above that they want you to get directv so I said fuck that.
 
This is mainly for people who got Comcast home security, the security systems eats the data alive.
What they don't tell you is if you never use the internet the camera system will use up atleast50 to 100 gigs of bandwidth which is bullshit because that should count towards your limit.
 
i download and upload alot thats why i used 12tb. 11 of that amount is uploading. the other terabyte is me downloading. i dont care to stream so i download everything i watch. so when i download movies i get the remux bluray rips which can be anywhere from 20 to 30gb a piece alone. and im not even counting all the phones and tablets that use my wifi too so i might be closer to 13tb really
 
I tried to warn people... That shit is brutal. What people don't get is that there are tons of things that count against the CAP that you don't even think about automatic updating of apps, backing up your iphone to the cloud, streaming, automatic updating of game patches. That last one is fucking killing me. Fucking Deus Ex has already required two 8gb patches and then you have Call of Duty coming out soon and they are talking about that bitch hitting 130 gbs and you know there is going to be a Day one patch for that shit.

I'm seriously thinking about going back to just buying disks.
Those fucking patches are brutal. Just the other day, Mortal Kombat automatically patched itself with 23 gigs. :eek: Mind you, the patch had to be downloaded for each instance of the fucking game here. :eek: :eek: Mafia 3 is another 50 gigs. Gears of war in a few days. How much did watching Luke Cage 4k cost in gigs?
 
Those fucking patches are brutal. Just the other day, Mortal Kombat automatically patched itself with 23 gigs. :eek: Mind you, the patch had to be downloaded for each instance of the fucking game here. :eek: :eek: Mafia 3 is another 50 gigs. Gears of war in a few days. How much did watching Luke Cage 4k cost in gigs?

23 gbs for mortal Kombat---- gawd damn.

Man i didn't even try to watch Luke cage in 4K...

But yeah the first thing that I did when Comcast put the data caps on me was turn off all automatic updating and downloading.
 
Probably, I know at&t techs and word is they are trying to get people to switch to directv...saying uverse Tv uses too much bandwidth and not able to offer fast internet speed.

This isn't exactly or should I say that is not the primary reason.

The main issues with offering U-verse TV is the co$t / profit margin. As was posted in another thread per their agreements with cable channels DirecTV costs less to operate each month, is easier to install / repair and is usually available in more markets/ neighborhoods than U-verse is. All that adds up to more $$$$ more good Ole AT&T. But yes removing video from their lines would help keep data speeds higher and constant. AT&T's real world experience with U-verse vastly differed from their lab results. Bonded pairs was supposed to be the solution to a lot of their early problems 8 years ago... But dealing with mother nature, real world science and zoning/community agreements has cost them a lot. More so in wasted man hours than anything else
 
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