Some people use the Internet simply to check e-mail and look up phone numbers. Others are online all day, downloading big video and music files. For years, both kinds of Web surfers have paid the same price for access. But now three of the country’s largest Internet service providers are threatening to clamp down on their most active subscribers by placing monthly limits on their online activity. One of them, Time Warner Cable, began a trial of ‘Internet metering’ in one Texas city early this month, asking customers to select a monthly plan and pay surcharges when they exceed their bandwidth limit. The idea is that people who use the network more heavily should pay more, the way they do for water, electricity, or, in many cases, cellphone minutes. That same week, Comcast said that it would expand on a strategy it uses to manage Internet traffic: slowing down the connections of the heaviest users, so-called bandwidth hogs, at peak times. AT&T also said Thursday that limits on heavy use were inevitable and that it was considering pricing based on data volume. ‘Based on current trends, total bandwidth in the AT&T network will increase by four […]
Sunday, June 15th, 2008
Charging by the Byte to Curb Internet Traffic
Author: BRIAN STELTER
Source: biz.yahoo.com
Publication Date: Saturday June 14, 11:35 pm ET
Link: Charging by the Byte to Curb Internet Traffic
Source: biz.yahoo.com
Publication Date: Saturday June 14, 11:35 pm ET
Link: Charging by the Byte to Curb Internet Traffic
Stephan: