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Merzalof

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ISP Usage Based Billing in Canada

 Most of you probably don't know, but a group in Canada (CRTC - Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunication Commission) is implementing ISP Usage Based Billing in Canada, starting March 1.  

 
Here is some background reading to inform you on the topic
 
Official Decision and Statement
Some consumer backlash
Group and Petition against the cap
 
What does this mean?
 
This means that if you go over your bandwidth cap (usually 25-50 gigs) in a month you have to pay the ridiculous amount of 1-2 dollars PER GIG that you go over.  
 
I don't think it will affect things like gaming (XBL, PSN, Wii, etc....) but it really will hurt when you buy something off STEAM and have a 20 Gig download sitting there and you get charged for downloading something you purchased.
Steam is going to get killed, OnLive is going to get smoked, as well as my new favorite toy - Netflix.  
I know that Canada is a big place and to set up the infrastructure across the country costs a bunch and we don't have the population density to pay for it.  But honestly, in this day and age where technology is so prevalent and I use the internet from the time I wake up until the time I go to sleep, I am just really upset about how this turned out. 
Some of the only options now are to talk to the MP (gov't rep) and get a voice heard, but even that seems like a drop in the bucket.  
 
Anyways - just curious to see what people's thoughts were and if anyone else has experienced UBB and caps in their country.    
57 Comments

57 Comments

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Fajita_Jim

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Edited By Fajita_Jim

I don't think limiting usage by how many GB you download is really productive. Someones line can sit idle all month and then they burst while downloading a Steam weekend deal or something for one night. That person is not detrimental to the network; it's the people who run P2P 24/7 or who have to download (illegally) every new movie that gets leaked and are constantly draining the pipe that need to be dealt with.
 
But taking into consideration  things like Hulu and Netflix produces a completely different argument.

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ShadowSkill11

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Edited By ShadowSkill11

SUcks for you Canadian types. Here in Washington I get about 30 MBps down and 20 MBps up on my home line with no data caps for about $50 a month. Hell my smartphone can give me 3.5 MBps down and be used as a hotspot.

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deactivated-5a1a3d3c6820c

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gike987

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Edited By gike987

This is why I would never be able to live in a country like US or Canada. Without my 100mbps and no cap I would probaly go insane.

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CoverlessTech

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Edited By CoverlessTech
@ShadowSkill11 said:
" SUcks for you Canadian types. Here in Washington I get about 30 MBps down and 20 MBps up on my home line with no data caps for about $50 a month. Hell my smartphone can give me 3.5 MBps down and be used as a hotspot. "
I think you mean Mbs. If you get 30MB at $50 then jesus h christ. 
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Azteck

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Edited By Azteck
@TheSeductiveMoose said:
" I've never even heard of bandwitdth caps over here. "
If they introduce that here I will burn down the head office of my ISP, which happens to be Com Hem right now.
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Darkraven

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Edited By Darkraven

this was a problem in portugal a few years ago. imagine a 10GB limit on a month or even worse, earlier than that there were connections that had a 1GB limit per month of international traffic lol.
 
Nowadays its better, if you live in a small city (mine is around 25000 people) you can get 100Mbps fiber connection for around 50€ a month which is pretty sweet
edit: forgot to say its unlimited traffic :p