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Comcast decided to enforce the announced restrictions on its
service usage and starting with October 1 anyone exceeding 250 Giga Bytes of
data a month will first be warned and if caught doing it again, their service
will be suspended for one year.
The company explained that it will not provide any sort of
tool to monitor the bandwidth usage and users will have to search for one
online.
The explanation for such a move was offered in the official
announcement: "250 GB/month is an extremely large amount of data, much
more than a typical residential customer uses on a monthly basis. Currently,
the median monthly data usage by our residential customers is approximately 2 -
3 GB." Looking to make things even clearer, the company’s officials gave
examples of things that users could do with their 250 GB: they could send 50
million e-mails, download 62,500 songs, download 125 standard-definition movies
or upload 25,000 hi-resolution digital photos.
According to Comcast’s estimations, about 99 percent of its
14 million user base will not be affected by the new rules and the rest will
have to find a way of better calculating their actions. The move is expected to
ensure a better Internet delivery among all of the company’s Internet
subscribers which until now was degraded at times by the minority of heavy
users.
These rules are being considered by all the cable and phone
companies, with activities such as photo-sharing, watching on-line videos and
music downloads becoming more and more popular, constantly and significantly
increasing the usage.
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