LeoRex
Retired Moderator
- Nov 21, 2012
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Not saying they should be cutting people off, but are there really that many users who go over 100GB in one month? I still think thats a pretty generous
allotment. I figured being the control freak giant that they are that they would have made that cutoff point a lot lower. When I had UL data I ran all my home internet needs which included netflix and never went over about 50GB. I know different people do different things with their different needs regarding data but I still think 100 GB is pretty adequate. They could have said 50GB. A few years ago when a lot of this UL stuff started coming down Verizon was saying most of their data customers used less that 2GB. So I'm actually kind of surprised they went as high as 100GB.
Forgot about poke-me-man , everybody needs truck loads of data for that. LoL!
Well, they threw out a vague "significantly above 100GB"... now, everyone should realize that, unless you run a VPN the entire time, Verizon knows everything that you are passing through your phone. And if you ARE using a VPN and chowing down on 200GB+ a month, that's sketchy in and of itself. This announcement is basically a warning to people to are using UDP to provide internet for several devices... and to get up well into the triple digits of GBs, you gotta work at it.
How much data are they using? Well, economies of scale. A small number of users are using a rather substantial amount of data.... we're talking ratios of 1:100+ (vs the 'average customer'). 10 of these dudes can pull down enough data as 5000 regular customers. I am sure Verizon has the metrics and I wouldn't think it would be all that hard to tell the difference between a heavy single device user and one running a mini ISP.