Throttling unlimited data plans is pointless, study finds

mobile

AT&T’s questionable policy with regard to unlimited smartphone data plan holders recently found its way back into the limelight following a new wave of subscriber complaints. The nation’s No.2 carrier no longer offers an unlimited data plan to smartphone users, though many subscribers on its network still have grandfathered plans that provide an unlimited amount of smartphone data each month. Subscribers who approach the top 5% of unlimited data users in a single billing period see their data speeds throttled, however, and countless users have found that AT&T is now beginning to throttle users after less than 2GB of data usage in a billing period. According to a new study, subscribers are right to be furious at AT&T because throttling does nothing to alleviate network bandwidth issues. Read on for more.

Wireless bill analysis firm Validas extracted data from more than 55,000 cell phone bills belonging to AT&T and Verizon Wireless subscribers from 2011, and the firm sought to determine whether or not data throttling is necessary. According to Validas’s findings, throttling may indeed simply be a ploy to push unlimited users into newer tiered plans.

“When we look at the top 5% of data users, there is virtually no difference in data consumption between those on unlimited and those on tiered plans—and yet the unlimited consumers are the ones at risk of getting their service turned off,” Validas wrote in its report. “So it’s curious that anyone would think the throttling here represents a serious effort at alleviating network bandwidth issues. After all, Sprint does seemingly fine maintaining non-throttled unlimited data for its customers.”

Verizon Wireless subscribers on unlimited smartphone data plans actually used less data on average than those with tiered plans according to Validas’s data. The opposite was the case at AT&T, however the difference was 0.78GB on average and median data usage varied by 0.53GB.

AT&T is not the only wireless carrier in the U.S. that throttles smartphone data speeds for unlimited data plan holders, of course. Verizon throttles the top 5% of unlimited data users and T-Mobile throttles its smartphone subscribers after 5GB of data usage in a single billing period. AT&T has drawn the most attention of late because it has been throttling unlimited data plan holders after less than 2GB of usage in many cases. AT&T offers a 3GB tiered plan for the same $30 per month that unlimited plan holders pay for 2GB of full-speed data or less, however the tiered plan offers 3GB of full-speed data.

20 Comments
  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=14817227 Max Martinelli

    Very interesting. This makes me reconsider my perspective.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003002618462 Kris Kane

    SERIOUSLY PEOPLE! Stop using AT&T! Even T-Mobile is far better than ATT.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=753788298 Mike Buck

    oh jesus. 3 gigs is a lot? I run 2 computers off my device, I stream at least 5-6 hours of music and 1-2 hours of 1080p video a day. in addition to full speed torrenting movies occasionally and eve online. must suck to live in amurrica.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001091635371 Danny Glispie

    Look, If I paid for unlimited data damn it, that what I’m going to get and if At&T don’t have enouoght roon at the table than they need to make room or stop letting people at the table. So don’t what to hear about the crying of AT&T about using data on their network. just fix it period….

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1210651328 Allan Lazcano

    If I just checked my email or casually used a map application, I would probably be fine with a 200mb plan. But I do much more than that and that is exactly why I got the unlimited plan except that’s not what I’m getting. I wonder if they would cut my service off if I used too many minutes on my unlimited plan? Impossible. I drop calls too often.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=775299145 Supak Lailert

    Remember that the reason they can’t let users do stuffs like BitTorrent freely is that the spectrum is limited. If you run out of bandwidth in landline, you can add Gbits or even Tbits per sec of bandwidth by adding a fibre. For 3G, it involves new towers and re-optimization of the cell coverage and the additional bandwidth is not that much.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002297585542 Ray Soto

    And do what? Network management is in your contract you signed, as is the inability to sue them. Arbitration only. The Supreme Court sided with AT&T on this arbitration matter. The best you could do is hound them to release them out of your contract without an ETF.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1119480885 Sean Hughes

    Correct. Also have my account credited

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002297585542 Ray Soto

    Yes

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=25406995 Eric Hulse

    Using 1.8 this month did it for me.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=25406995 Eric Hulse

    Kevin Carlyle Why would it be logarithmic? That doesn’t make sense.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1481562710 Randy Silva

    Yup, very easy to do if you stream music/talk radio while on daily commutes. I use to do this everyday (before throttling), and I’d hit ~3GB.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1366851224 Christopher William Louis Hickok

    in america, cell carriers decide how we use our phones for us!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=702296342 Scott Pressman

    First thing…tethering is NOT illegal. AT&T just wants you to pay for the “privilege” of using your data as you see fit. They sold unlimited plans. Its not up to me or you for that matter to determine what someone else should do. This isn’t about congestion or they would be throttling those in the tiered plans as well. They aren’t doing that.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=651297223 Brandon Richards

    I am doing absolutely nothing “illegal” (do you really honestly think tethering is illegal? lol) with my phone, but yes I tether AND stream pandora, or google music 4-5 hours a day at work (I’m a computer programmer). Is that not a completely LEGITIMATE use of my phone?? Should I be throttled for using my phone THE WAY THE DAMN THING WAS MEANT TO BE USED???? I do pay extra for the “Unlimited” plan, and I’m on t-mobile so that means I’m throttled at 5gb, just a little more than I typically use each month. Does this somehow affect your experience enough to warrant your opinion? Do you really care enough to say that I “SHOULD” be throttled, when it is pretty much guaranteed that I paid more for my phone, and pay more for my service plan than you do?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1210651328 Allan Lazcano

    Luke McNabney Yeah except fuck contracts and fuck early adopters and fuck the fact that AT&T is lying to it’s customers making up bullshit just to Jew them out of a contract. Did you not read the article? There was hardly a difference in data usage between tiered and unlimited meaning throttling fixes nothing and serves a different purpose. The first shit storm was caused by the initial throttling. This second coming is because they’re throttling people after 2gb of data which is less than the 3gb plan of the same price. You can’t deny that’s unethical.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=668159544 Adam Guss

    Kevin Carlyle interestingly enough we do know and aren’t guessing.
    Featured articles and ping tracing is commonly done to test network integrity.
    If large packet diagnostics are slowed, they are simply capping you artificially, but that doesn’t grant additional bandwidth to others. AT&T and other networks are squeezing in as many new customers onto the same old networks day in and day out and using this to avoid upgrading and maintenance costs.

    And all these companies are posting record quarterly profits. Nothing wrong with that. I’m pro capitalist. But, to advertise as unlimited is just getting ridiculous. In all fairness, it should be one shoe to all feet, unlimited should not have died, and they already charge way over what a real market value for the service would be if it wasn’t for the high barriers of entry.

    Here’s waiting on Free-IP Project launch for massive wifi for cellular usage.
    I look forward the day my phone goes wifi all day every day and doesn’t touch a cell phone tower.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002259255464 Ron Lunsford

    Kris Kane Having just spent some time shopping all 4 majors, I have to admit that T-Mobile has more plans that fit more people’s needs, but the coverage isn’t there. IF you live in an area with good coverage from T-Mo, it’s the best value around. I just finished a speed test of all four major networks in our area and found the following:

    AT&T (7.2Mbps 3G), Sprint (9.4Mpbs 4G – .35Mbps 3G), T-Mobile (6.5Mbps 4G) & Verizon (22.3Mpbs 4G – .9Mbps 3G)

    As you can see, just about any of the 4G coverage is amazing on a cell, and the AT&T/T-Mobile race is a dead heat. The most intriguing one is going to be taking RedPocket Mobile out for a spin in our area. They run off the AT&T network at an unlimited price starting at $49.99… You can check out some details here if you want.

    http://www.getsmartphones.info/prepaid/refill/RedPocketMobile.htm

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1098480394 Paul Sandler

    Luke McNabney Well I appreciate that. I will never leave Verizon so long as I have my unlimited data, which is exactly what you guys want, I’m sure! :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1098480394 Paul Sandler

    Luke McNabney Well I appreciate that. I will never leave Verizon so long as I have my unlimited data, which is exactly what you guys want, I’m sure! :)

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