Comcast goes after Internet hogs - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Comcast goes after Internet hogs

Posted Aug 29 2008, 05:15 PM by Kim Peterson
Rating:
Filed under:

Comcast is rolling out a new policy to keep people from hogging the Internet. And while the new restrictions seem pretty generous, I'm on high alert for what I call the Comcast gotcha. That's the sticker shock that happens when the cheapo trial period ends, and suddenly the bill comes and I'm paying how much for cable and Internet?

The new policy goes like this: Starting next month, customers will be limited to 250 gigabytes of downloaded content per month. If someone goes above that limit, their account could be suspended.

The good news? It's very tough to hit that limit. Comcast says that people can still download 50 high-definition movies, 250 standard-definition movies or 6,000 songs every month. So most people won't be affected by the new rules.

The bad news? Comcast doesn't make it easy to measure how much data you've downloaded. It's developing a bandwidth meter, but for now you have to find one on your own and figure out how to use it.

The worst news? Comcast could change its allowance at any time. It and other Internet providers could slowly tighten the restrictions, to the point where anything beyond simple e-mail and Web surfing will come at a cost. 

This is a significant change. The days of all-you-can-download are over.

Comcast shares fell 2% Friday to close at $21.18.

On one hand, I can see where Comcast is coming from. A very small percentage of its customers use more than their share of Internet capacity, usually by illegally downloading lots of movies and albums. That can cause problems for everyone, particularly as it gets easier to find and download those super-large files.

But Comcast might not be as innocent in all this as it wants you to think. You can buy (or rent) high-definition movies from several companies online. And that competes with Comcast's own video-on-demand offering.

By placing caps on the movies someone can download, Comcast is making it harder for competitors to sell competing content.

As I said, the allowance seems generous for now. If Comcast leaves that 250 GB cap alone, most customers will be fine. But excuse me while I wait for the gotcha.

Here's what others are saying about the news:

Wired: "While usage caps may help Comcast out of a jam, they're not the best long-term solution for users or for the market -- it could slow broadband adoption and stall innovation. Here's a novel suggestion: If supply is a problem, why not increase capacity?"

Om Malik: "The caps are a move to ensure that the gouging scheme put in place by Comcast and other cable providers stays intact and they can continue to sell their video-on-demand services."

Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett: "Usage-based pricing would be a welcome development for broadband providers, and would be the simplest manifestation yet of what we believe is still the primary truth of the broadband market; that is that demand is rising at a time when relevant supply is actually shrinking." (Via Wired)

TechCrunch: "Comcast’s cap will be seen not as the start of a decline but rather the flowering of the Golden Age of Streaming."

Related reading:

Comcast to make life easier for rival Vonage

Cable companies eyeing nationwide wireless network

Cable continues to sucker us

Comments

 

Ever since Comcast took over Insight's business, service has been problematic.

Their phone service is over-rated and the cable goes out during perfect weather. Never had many problems with satellite.

It seems fine to me.  Those that consume more pay more.  Why should some old lady who uses the internet merely for emailing and exchanging pictures with her granchildren pay the same rate (subsidize) as someone who downloads and uploads more than 250 gbs per month.  Its a little like the water or power company in that respect.

Comcast can take it's increased income and use that money to expand its capacity faster, benefitting everyone.

I was one of the folks that Comcast turned off service on.  They would not tell me a number so I went over 300GB in a month and they switched me off.

Thank goodness that they did - I now have Verizon Fios and love it - faster , cheaper and NO LIMITS on downloading - Thank you Comcast!

That 250 Gig cap a month - does the un-used 'gigs' roll-over to the next month?  

When does this cap take effect?  Is there any notice being sent out to its subscribers members?

Comcast's customer "service" has already messed me over so badly I refuse to do business with them.  This is just another nail in their coffin as far as I'm concerned.  I'm all about satellite from here on out.

Well if you are running a business then I think you should be using the business package that comcast offers which I am pretty sure has different guidelines. as for personal use I can deal with a 250 gig bandwidth cap.

I just wish there were more choices so that competition could keep the prices down and not have to worry about this monopoly that is in play.

It seems like Comcast people don't understand what "bandwidth" is. Whether they are genuinely trying to reduce congestion & save their infrastructure or whether they are cynically trying to discourage competing VOD services - this approach will not work.

The bandwidth usage varies by time of day. During peak times too many people are watching Netflix, Apple TV, etc. or downloading things as part of thei evening entertainment. If Comcast want to reduce this congestion OR behave anti-competitively they need to restrict net usage during this peak time. The "net hogs" make up a small percentage of total users and will have minimal effect on this peak time congestion. The net hogs use file downloading software that sucks large files over the net at off-peak times - that's when they get uncongested bandwidth.

It would be like trying to fix city congestion by limiting the annual mileage allowed to 100k/year. A few drivers make coast-coast trips & rack up lots of miles, those drivers aren't the ones causing commute time congestion.

I don't have any opinion on whether Comcast should be restricting usage - either to avoid more investment or to reduce competition. All I can say is that this won't work, if they are serious they should think about the problem BEFORE they act.

At a hearing about this issue comcast PAID people to occupy seats so that you and I couldn't have access to the hearing. In many cases the people paid to sit in the seats were not even aware of the subject of the hearing. I wonder if there is an "exception" if you Down Load from comcast's movie site as opposed to the competition like NetFlix?

no wonder i've been going linkdead every 5 minutes playing my online game, Darkageofcamelot. Good thing im switching to Verizon  DSL.

Internet was given to the world for free by the US Govt and every other country of the world has faster speeds and adequate servers. Rather than add servers as required, U.S. companies want to limit service to allow them to charge you more to use the same inadequate servers. It is time that we Americans STOP this NOW. U.S. companies must be compelled to add the needed servers and drop this additional monopolizing profit scheme before they become the targets of a group like those saving whales or PETA or some of those type terrorist peoples. I abhor violence but would not be sad if these companies were vandalized out of business.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):