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this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2024
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xfinity will advertise 100 Tbps lines with the abysmal 1.5 TB/mo data cap anyway
"you can drive this super sport car for $ per month - but only for 10 miles"
I hate Comcast as much as the next guy but I feel like 1.5TB a month would be reasonable. Even at those speeds you probably wouldn't be downloading more, just downloading whatever you do now but faster.
E: I was gonna ask why this was so controversial but I just checked my routers stats and, oh yeah I've only downloaded around half a terabyte over 3 segregated VLANs in the past 2 months. I've uploaded almost double that which is baffling to me though. Even still I don't see why anyone would be downloading anything more that a terabyte in a month unless your one of those data hoarders, which fair but.. I'll stop my rambling.
Data caps are simply false advertising - if your infrastructure can only handle X Tb/s then sell lower client speeds or implement some clever QoS.
There are plenty of users for whom 1.5TB is quite or very restrictive - multi member households, video/photo editors working with raw data, scientists working with raw data, flatpak users with Nvidia GPU or people that selfhost their data or do frequent backups etc.
With the popularity of WFH and our dependence on online services the internet is virtually as vital as water or electricity, and you wouldn't want to be restricted to having no electricity until the end of the month just because you used the angle grinder for a few afternoons.