Posts Tagged ‘tether’
Apple and AT&T to release tethering application for the iPhone “soon”
I’ve witnessed the speed of the internet on a laptop using a jailbroken iPhone lately, and I must say…it’s fast. The iPhone 3G is connected to one of the quickest carrier networks out there (second only to Sprint’s WiMax I believe), and I’ve seen DSL rivaling speeds.
It’s been said that the carrier will also be likely to charge additional fees for the service or to use the application to cover costs. I’m sensing this idea of “double dipping” starting to pop up again. I posted about this a week ago with Verizon trying to do this with SMS messaging not originating from mobile devices.
Read: Verizon to stunt mobile growth for a few bucks?
I mean, they’re already billing you for so-called “unlimited” data. This has been discussed for many months in relation to various carriers (not just AT&T) and is starting to irritate the hell out of consumers. You have a sales guy in the retail store telling you it’s “unlimited data” and signage all over the store also stating the term “unlimited”, yet we have the carrier’s terms and conditions for service stating something like this…
If you are on a data plan that does not include a monthly megabyte allowance and additional data usage rates, the parties agree that AT&T has the right to impose additional charges if you use more than 5 GB in a month. Prior to the imposition of any additional charges, AT&T shall provide you with notice and you shall have the right to terminate your service.
Increasingly, Internet providers across the country are placing such limits on the amount of data users can upload and download each month, as a way to curb a small number of “bandwidth hogs” who use a lot of the network capacity. For instance, 5 percent of AT&T’s subscribers take up 50 percent of the capacity, spokesman Michael Coe said Tuesday.
To that I say: ”Why did you say it was unlimited, then?”. This screams false advertising, doesn’t it? Let’s just call it what it is. I sense a class action lawsuit coming of many.