Saturday, July 4, 2009
Business
Comment

Comcast's bandwidth limit irks some users

Published 09/07/08

MINNEAPOLIS - Comcast's plan to put a cap on consumer Internet use worries some customers who have come to take unfettered Web surfing for granted, even though most users won't be affected by the move.

Advertisement

Beginning Oct. 1, Comcast will limit use of Internet bandwidth - a measure of all a person's monthly downloads and uploads of text, graphics, music, movies, photos and other information. The company said it reserves the right to terminate any residential customer who disregards company warnings and twice violates a limit of 250 gigabytes per month. Previously, the company didn't have a specific limit.

The idea is to keep bandwidth hogs from ruining the Internet experience for other residential customers, because the cable network is a shared medium of limited bandwidth capacity, Comcast said.

But that has some Comcast customers worried. Comcast provides about 100,000 Anne Arundel County customers with telecommunications services.

"Your typical Comcast Internet user will not be affected, but the power users - people that watch movies or TV online, or that download a lot of video or software - will be hurt," said Ryan Coleman, a Comcast Internet customer in Minneapolis who edits photos for a college magazine and downloads 40 to 80 gigabytes of data every week. "I have a feeling that I might be dead in the water in October."

Others are concerned about what this means for the Internet's future.

"It's absolutely critical that the Internet remain a level playing field, and that no one have control over what runs over it," said Steve Borsch of Eden Prairie, Minn.

Mr. Borsch runs a business and blogs about technology using Comcast's Internet service. He said the bandwidth limit is a bad move because it hurts Internet video services while helping Comcast's cable TV service.

Some analysts agree.

"A bandwidth limit discourages consumers from downloading or streaming Internet video, particularly of high-definition video," said S. Derek Turner, research director for Free Press, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit public policy group dealing with Internet and media issues. "That helps preserve Comcast's traditional cable TV service."

Comcast said such concerns are overblown. The company's monthly bandwidth limit is so high - the equivalent of downloading about 62,500 songs - that fewer than 1 percent of its customers are likely to be affected, said spokesman Charlie Douglas at Comcast's Philadelphia headquarters. Today, the average Comcast customer uses only a tiny fraction of the limit, he said, or about 2 to 3 gigabytes a month.

But Mr. Turner said the bandwidth limit is likely to affect more Comcast Internet users in the near future because of products such as Apple TV that can transfer Internet video to television sets.

"Comcast's 250-gigabyte bandwidth cap, while very high now, won't be high in the future," Mr. Turner said. "The way the Olympics were viewed on the Internet signals that consumers are ready to embrace online content."

Even today, someone watching eight hours a day of a standard-definition video or four hours a day of high-definition video could run afoul of Comcast's bandwidth cap, Mr. Turner said.

Mr. Douglas said Comcast will periodically review the bandwidth limit as online video viewing increases, but he declined to say whether the company would increase it.

Comcast has said that the bandwidth cap is unrelated to a recent Federal Communications Commission finding that Comcast was improperly limiting the ability of its customers to use BitTorrent, a popular file-sharing program. On Thursday, Comcast said it was appealing the FCC's ruling.

YOUR COMMENTS

If you encounter other problems, please email ewiffin@capitalgazette.com and include your name, username, and any errors or messages that are displayed. The more information you can provide, the better able we will be to assist you.

In order to post or vote on a comment, you must be signed in with a hometownannapolis account.


Report Abuse or Vote In order to allow the user community the ability to collectively rank the value of comments posted on the Capital Gazette websites we have implemented a thumbs-up/down system. All logged-in users may participate by voting up/down each comment. If others vote on your comment, your individual score will go up/down depending on the votes. Initially, everyone starts with a score of zero, and must earn credits to have significant voting weight. Individuals with higher scores will have more voting weight. 0

why? - September 8, 2008

If the change effects less then one percent of there customers then why are they doing it at all? There logic dosent make sense unles it effects more people then they are admitting to.

unhide Comment hidden due to low ranking

K. Overman - arnold, MD - Karma: Bad

LOGIN TO POST A COMMENT

If you encounter other problems, please email ewiffin@capitalgazette.com and include your name, username, and any errors or messages that are displayed. The more information you can provide, the better able we will be to assist you.

Username: Password:
Sep 11 - Sep 13 - Top Dawg MC 1000 Bike Fest
video
video
Home of the Week: Maureen McCunn
video
video
Golf Tip 2: Chipping
video
video
Tea Party Protest
video
video
Project Funway
video
video
U.S. Naval Academy Oath of Office 2009
video
video
U.S. Naval Academy Induction Day 2009

• BUY PHOTOS & VIDEO>>

SPECIAL: Two-for-one 4x6 photo reprints

slideshow
slideshow
Photos of the Week Ending July 3 2009
slideshow
slideshow
Home of the Week: Maureen McCunn
slideshow
slideshow
Osprey banding
slideshow
slideshow
Naval Academy Induction Day 2009
slideshow
slideshow
Bill Burton anniversary celebration
slideshow
slideshow
Carr's Beach Historic Music Festival
#1 - Double murder suspect held without bail
#2 - Hundreds protest taxes at City Dock
#3 - Former SP insurance agent guilty of fraud
#4 - 2009 Kunta Kinte festival canceled
#5 - Police charge ex-boyfriend in double slaying
#6 - Employee fatally shot by county police described as erratic
#7 - Jones family to sue county, Board of Ed
#8 - Police arrest 4 in burglary spree
#9 - Man wounded in city shooting
#10 - Sources Say: It's an attack of the monster crab cake
#1 - Jones family to sue county, Board of Ed (30 comments)
#2 - Hitler comparison leads to call for GOP leader's resignation (21 comments)
#3 - Two shot dead in Admiral Heights home (15 comments)
#4 - Bike rider struck on West Street (13 comments)
#5 - Pharmacist accused of dealing drugs (11 comments)
HomesInAnnapolis.com

Baltimore

Edgewater
Advertise
Archive
Blogs
Calendar
Comments
Contact us
Cookbook
Slideshows
Video
AP Video
SUBMIT INFO:
Anniversary
Band info
Birth
Calendar event
Engagement
Letter
Obituary
Wedding