I went over often enough that it was easier (and cheaper) to just give them an extra $30/month for unlimited.

I also cancelled other Comcast services at the same time that were costing me more than $30/month, so for me,
It was a net gain and for Comcast, a net loss. I did this immediately when they started charging for overages
in the hopes it would send the correct message.

Owen


On Jun 15, 2023, at 22:41, Crist Clark <cjc+nanog@pumpky.net> wrote:

Comcast still has data caps. My service is 1.2 TB per month. If we get close, we get a warning email. If we were to go over (hasn’t happened yet), we get billed per additional 500 MB.

However, I just looked at my account usage for the first time for a few months, and somehow have had zero usage since March of this year.


On Thu, Jun 15, 2023 at 5:48 PM Michael Thomas <mike@mtcc.com> wrote:

On 6/15/23 3:19 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
> While a lot of ISPs gave up on data caps, the language is still
> lurking in many Terms Of Service.
>
>
>
> https://www.fcc.gov/document/chair-rosenworcel-proposes-investigate-impact-data-caps
>
>
> proposed Notice of Inquiry to learn more about how broadband providers
> use data caps on consumer plans. Data caps, or usage limits, are a
> common practice where an internet service provider (ISP) restricts how
> much bandwidth or data a consumer uses, though many broadband ISPs
> temporarily or permanently refrained from enforcing or imposing data
> caps in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, the agency
> would like to better understand the current state of data caps, their
> impact on consumers, and whether the Commission should consider taking
> action to ensure that data caps do not cause harm to competition or
> consumers’ ability to access
> broadband Internet services.

So why did they back off? Cost too much in support calls with pissed
people? Bad publicity? People can't meaningfully use the offered
bandwidth these days? Something else?

Mike