Walk me through it. Seems a lil complicated.![]()
I choose the Wireless telephone option, followed by billing and service and filled out the form and sent my complaint.
Walk me through it. Seems a lil complicated.![]()
See, you're not getting it. Verizon can fight back in court and say whatever they want and that text gives them years of ability in court. Like I already said, Verizon may even lose in court(I don't believe they will)...but who gives a crap when it will take 10-15 years to get to the end of the case??That loophole isn't really a loophole, as was explained on howardforums
It's usually customary to wait until someone is uncivil and then say to keep it civil. Nobody has attacked anyone here.Keep it civil.
See, you're not getting it. Verizon can fight back in court and say whatever they want and that text gives them years of ability in court. Like I already said, Verizon may even lose in court(I don't believe they will)...but who gives a crap when it will take 10-15 years to get to the end of the case??
You and someone and HF can say whatever you want but the courts are the only ones that mater and they don't/won't say crap for a very long time. In the meantime Verizon WILL DO WHATEVER THEY WANT. Most people on forums worried about this issue want sanctioned free unlimited tethering right now, not 10 years from now.
You guys want to believe you found some golden ticket to free tethering, go for it. Maybe you believe in unicorns too.
I don't.
in your opinionhowever the definition of network management is already fully and clearly defined.
in your opinion
unfortunately the only opinion that will matter will be a court's. Like I said, believe what you want..... meanwhile, Verizon has begun blocking tethering apps in the market....and will begin charging for tethering on the 15th on the TBolt. But hey, you have your text in the first post. Maybe if you copy it and put it under your pillow the tooth fairy will grant you free sanctioned tethering.
This is a noob question and I really don't know the answer, but how do they know the difference between tethering and just phone use?
Say I download a movie from Amazon. What's the difference if I download it on the phone to watch it on the phone or just use the phone to download it to the computer?
Dude I'm not defending anyone, I'm telling you how it is, and you're telling me how you want it to be.Why are you so quick to defend corporations lining their pockets with your money?
There's a pretty darn clear definition of reasonable network management there.
Let's think of it this way, if it'll help--the FCC sells licenses to spectrum with clauses. The clauses are there, built on the assumption that airwaves are a public good, and with the sale of a public good, like spectrum (or whatever, there are of course any number of public goods), certain rules should apply to protect the public for the use of their own spectrum. Verizon doesn't own the spectrum, they lease it from the public. So the way in which they get to use it is circumscribed by how the FCC understands the public good, and its best interests which in this case is laid out in the contract Verizon agreed to when they bought the spectrum. Make sense?
Dude I'm not defending anyone, I'm telling you how it is, and you're telling me how you want it to be.
You are interpreting the text in the first post, but the only interpretation is the one that any court might eventually make.
EVEN THEN it will be appealed! So not even any single judge's interpretation will matter, much less yours or mine.
What I keep saying, which some don't want to admit, is that Verizon is RIGHT NOW blocking free tethering apps, and is going to charge for tethering on the TBolt starting on the 15th. That is the only FACT right now.
The rest is smoke blowing.
I, just like everyone else here, would rejoice if Verizon announced free tethering on the TBolt.
And just for the record, this corporation(Verizon) is lining it's pocket with money that I freely give them under conditions I KNEW going in. I do not feel taken advantage of or ripped off in any way. In fact, between AT&T and Verizon I have tethered for 3 years at no charge, all the while they have had tethering plans I was supposed to be paying for, so if anything I have been ripping THEM off. Eventually they were going to crack down and we all knew that. I'm just not one of the ones crying about it. You want to save the world, file an FCC complaint...see how far you get...but I don't see why you have to get all pissy at those of us who think whole exercise is one of futility.
Don't forget: Verizon has more lobbyists in DC that you or I do. if you think anyone is going to order Verizon to give away free tethering you're not seeing clearly, and even if they do, Verizon will find a way around it.
Hey man I hope you're right in the end. I just am a glass half empty kind of person, and I don't see anything changing any time soon.Alright, you're totally right there--I agree. But I think this is a huge start for us, especially given how bitterly Verizon fought it from the getgo.
This is a noob question and I really don't know the answer, but how do they know the difference between tethering and just phone use?
Say I download a movie from Amazon. What's the difference if I download it on the phone to watch it on the phone or just use the phone to download it to the computer?
some of that stuff they can see just by what browser your using. say your tethering your mac to your phone and all the requests come from safari or firefox to full feature rich site and not mobile versions. it's not that hard to track that stuff and see whats going on.
some of that stuff they can see just by what browser your using. say your tethering your mac to your phone and all the requests come from safari or firefox to full feature rich site and not mobile versions. it's not that hard to track that stuff and see whats going on.