Japanese ISP Limits Uploads to 30GB per Day
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from ZeroPaid.com
Japanese ISP Limits Uploads to 30GB per Day
Targets customers using their connections as file-sharing servers.
Data caps seem to be where ISPs are heading these days in lieu of interfering with certain types of traffic, notably BitTorrent, since the practice understandably raises questions about privacy and network neutrality.
Here in the US Comcast is reported to be looking at consumption-based billing plans similar to what Time Warner began testing out a few week ago in Beaumont, Texas. There customers must choose from packages that range from $29.95 p/month for a 768kbps connection and a 5GB monthly cap to $54.90 p/month for a 15mbps connection and a 40GB cap. They are also charged an additional $1 for each GB that exceeds their limit.
It's not nearly as dramatic as a 5GB monthly cap, but nonetheless NTT Communications, one of Japan's largest ISPs, has announced that starting August 1st its carriers will soon impose a daily upload limit of 30GB. Downloads will continue to be unlimited.
At an average of 700MB per XVID movie on file-sharing sites that equates to a max upload of around 42 movies per day!
It isn't possible to really even come close to that sort of data cap here in the US. My connection, for example, sports the best available residential plan of 12Mbps DL and 1Mbps UL. Japan, on the other hand, has been busy laying fiber optic network connections that allow NTT and other ISPs to offer DL and UL speeds at an incredible 100Mbps for a measly $46 USD per month.
Sickening isn't it?
NTT's data cap is obviously a response to file-sharers daring to actually use purchased bandwidth, but with connection speeds of 100Mbps($#@%?!!) it's hard to feel sympathetic.
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It took me 14 hours to upload 33GB.
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I would move. Immediately. If not sooner.