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Unlimited wireless data is dead
By Suzanne Choney
It was just a matter of time: As more Americans have become smart phone users, their appetite for Web video, music downloads and other data-intense apps on those phones has increased. And now it's time for some who are the heaviest users to pay the heaviest price, be it a slowdown in their service, or extra dollars for data.
Starting Saturday, T-Mobile will reduce data speeds for those subscribers who exceed 5 gigabytes of data use in a billing cycle; previously that cap was 10 gigabytes. Officials with Verizon, the country's largest wireless carrier, have indicated repeatedly they're looking at implementing data caps and higher fees for those who exceed them. Last June, AT&T changed its data plans so that smart phone users pay $25 a month for 2 GB of data; each additional gigabyte is $10.
SOURCE
By Suzanne Choney
It was just a matter of time: As more Americans have become smart phone users, their appetite for Web video, music downloads and other data-intense apps on those phones has increased. And now it's time for some who are the heaviest users to pay the heaviest price, be it a slowdown in their service, or extra dollars for data.
Starting Saturday, T-Mobile will reduce data speeds for those subscribers who exceed 5 gigabytes of data use in a billing cycle; previously that cap was 10 gigabytes. Officials with Verizon, the country's largest wireless carrier, have indicated repeatedly they're looking at implementing data caps and higher fees for those who exceed them. Last June, AT&T changed its data plans so that smart phone users pay $25 a month for 2 GB of data; each additional gigabyte is $10.
SOURCE