News:

This week IPhone 15 Pro winner is karn
You can be too a winner! Become the top poster of the week and win valuable prizes.  More details are You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login 

Main Menu

Verizon will throttle LTE for heavy users of unlimited data

Started by DP, July 27, 2014, 09:01:20 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

DP

Verizon will throttle LTE for heavy users of unlimited data

<img src="http://cdn.gsmarena.com/...This TV Show is available upon demand...This means if you want the download link for this show, you should  reply here and we will reply  for you the download link ASAP...So please if you want to download this please don't hesitate reply here and we will be more than happy to post it for you..../newsimg/14/07/verizon-unlimited-restrictions/thumb.jpg" width="70" height="92" hspace="3" alt="" border="0" align=left style="background:#333333;padding:0px;margin:0px 4px 0px 0px;border-style:solid;border-color:#aaaaaa;border-width:1px" /> <p>If you're still on an unlimited data plan from Verizon, there's some pretty bad news coming your way.

Your carrier of choice has decided it's time to take its efforts to get you off unlimited data to the next level. And that is throttling 4G LTE speeds for the heaviest data users.

The new policy will go into effect on October 1. From that date on, when the network gets crowded in any particular area, customers who pay for data buckets (no matter how big or small) will get priority over people who are still on the now-extinct unlimited data plans that Verizon used to offer a few years ago.

Those who will see slower speeds will only be the top 5% in terms of monthly data usage. Though when your allowance is truly unlimited, you're bound to use more data compared to people who are on the new plans that have a set amount of traffic in them.

Right now, these 'top 5%' are users who go through 4.7GB of data or more - each and every month. Obviously though, that number could change on a month by month basis.

Verizon has actually done the exact same thing back in 2011, yet so far the limitations have only applied to its 3G network. The carrier cutely calls this Network Optimization. And this fall it will apply to 4G data too.

This move may have something to do with how much more LTE is used nowadays, when 76% of the traffic that Verizon sees uses that high-speed network.

Source |...</p>

Source: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login