AT&T’s plan to thwart big data users
If you're one of the 17 million people who use AT&T for your mobile phone service, there will be no more unlimited data for you, even if that's what you signed up for.
Jeremy Hobson: If you’re one of the 17 million people who use AT&T for your mobile phone service, there will be no more unlimited data for you — even if that’s what you signed up for. AT&T says it will slow down the connection speeds of people who use more than 3 gigabytes of data — like email, web browsing and apps — within a month.
Marketplace Tech Report host John Moe joins us now with the details. Hi John.
John Moe: Good morning.
Hobson: So, why is AT&T doing this?
Moe: Well, the company line is that they want to slow down the people who are consuming a lot of data — the datahogs, as they’re commonly referred to — but doing this thing called “throttling,” which is to slow down the data after a certain point to ease up work on the network.
The other argument is they’re trying to move people out of this unlimited, all-you-can-eat plan, and into a tiered plan where they can make a little bit more money off those same people.
Hobson: Why don’t they just add more capacity?
Moe: They tried, but the broadcast spectrum is a tricky thing, and they tried to do that with the acquisition of T-Mobile, and obviously, that didn’t work out.
Hobson: Are the other phone companies going to do the same thing as AT&T’s doing?
Moe: T-Mobile already is, and they’ve made no secret about that. There’s been some speculation — some independent testing — that Verizon slows down unlimited customers after they reach a certain data point, while not slowing down customers who use just as much data on a tiered plan.
But you can see, if you turn on the TV lately, Sprint is running a bunch of ads saying: unlimited means unlimited; come over here to Big Yellow; it’s all going to be fine. But one wonders how long even Sprint can keep that up.
Hobson: All right, well I guess the big question, John: Is this going to actually cause any AT&T customers to leave?
Moe: I think it could cause a lot of confusion and frustration if you don’t know why it’s slowing down. You can just say: Well, this network isn’t any good, I’m going to leave and go somewhere else. And so, it might cause a lot of people to leave, but it might cause people to run into the same problem if they go somewhere else.
In the meantime, I think a lot of people are just going to say: Eh, I’ll just use wi-fi instead to do what I need to do.
Hobson: John Moe, host of Marketplace Tech Report, thanks so much.
Moe: Thanks Jeremy.