Comcast Considering Hard Bandwidth Limits and Overage Charges
With cable companies trying to squeeze every penny out of their subscribers and to manage costs Comcast is strongly considering placing a hard limit on how much bandwidth a subscriber can use and charge overage fees if you go past that cap.
A Comcast insider tells me the company is considering implementing very clear monthly caps, and may begin charging overage fees for customers who cross them. While still in the early stages of development, the plan — as it stands now — would work like this: all users get a 250GB per month cap. Users would get one free “slip up” in a twelve month period, after which users would pay a $15 charge for each 10 GB over the cap they travel. According to the source, the plan has “a lot of momentum behind it,” and initial testing is slated to begin in a month or two.
“The intent appears to be to go after the people who consistently download far more than the typical user without hurting those who may have a really big month infrequently,” says an insider familiar with the project, who prefers to remain anonymous. “As far as I am aware, uploads are not affected, at least not initially.” According to this source, the new system should only impact some 14,000 customers out of Comcast’s 14.1 million users (i.e. the top 0.1%).
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The new cap will be coupled with plans to increase enforcement of DMCA letters sent to P2P pirates. “Up until now, letters sent out to account holders have not been tracked,” the source says. “This will change, with progressively increasing penalties, up to disconnection of the account after four letters within a 12 month period.” This will be one way Comcast can maintain their promise to be “protocol agnostic,” while still booting some high-consumption users.
How about before Comcast upgrades their billing and tracking system, they focus on better quality of service for their users.

