AT&T, Comcast relax net restrictions

Bloomberg

AT&T Inc. and Comcast Corp. are loosening up restrictions on internet plans as they deal with a surge in Americans working from home and pressure from regulators.
AT&T lifted some data caps on broadband services, while Comcast said it would make its Xfinity Wi-Fi hot spots free for everyone. Comcast, the biggest cable company, also said it was “pausing” its data plan, meaning customers will get unlimited data for no additional charge.
Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, a member of the Federal Communications Commission’s Democratic minority, said she was concerned that homebound consumers could be penalised for heavy internet use during the coronavirus crisis.
“It’s not fair for people to be told to go home, and work online or learn online, and find they have to pay a premium,” she said. It’s common for internet providers, including AT&T and Comcast, to charge more for heavy use.
“Many of our AT&T internet customers already have unlimited home internet access, and we are waiving internet data overage for the remaining customers,” AT&T said. “Additionally, through Access From AT&T we’ll continue to offer internet data to qualifying limited income households for $10 a month.”
Schools, sports leagues, law firms, the federal government and other organisations have all closed or encouraged employees to work from home as the US, like other nations, fights a pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus.
US carriers sell internet service with data allotments. Those plans come with added fees if customers exceed limits. Unlimited plans typically slow down when use exceeds certain allotments, but don’t impose a penalty.
To help students as schools close and classes move online, the FCC also should use its subsidy programs to supply schools with Wi-Fi hot spots so homebound pupils can connect to lessons and teachers, Rosenworcel said.
in an interview.
“We’re about to have a reckoning. We should do something,” Rosenworcel said. “We are going to rely on our networks like never before. We should apply policies that keep everybody connected.”
Rosenworcel’s proposal represents a challenge to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, because the Republican controls the agency’s agenda.
An FCC representative said in an emailed message that the agency “has already been coordinating closely with network operators.”
Regulators are “encouraged by the feedback we have received both regarding the ability of their networks to handle changes in usage patterns caused by the coronavirus outbreak and their plans to maintain their own operations during the outbreak,” the official said.
A spokeswoman for CTIA, a trade group for carriers, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The telecommuting boom also may has implications for mobile services since that’s how many Americans get online, even at home.
Verizon Communications Inc. hasn’t yet seen any decline in network performance as more customers log in to work from their homes, a company spokesman said. The company said it will increase its capital spending by about $500 million this year to expand network capacity and upgrade to 5G technology.
The carriers’ shares gained ground Friday along with the broader market, with Verizon up 5.8%, AT&T up 10% and Comcast up 13%.
Verizon is the largest US mobile provider. About half of its wireless customers are on plans with data limits, Matthew Ellis, chief financial officer, told investors in January. Verizon is trying to move customers to pricier unlimited plans as they need more data, Ellis said.
Verizon’s base unlimited plan starts at $70 a month and service is automatically slowed at times of network congestion. The company’s highest-priced unlimited plan is $90 a month and imposes speed limits after customers reach a 75-gigabyte allotment.
AT&T starts its unlimited plan at $65 a month and also slows the speed during times of heavy traffic. AT&T’s top tier plan starts at $85 a month and will throttle speeds after subscribers exceed 100 gigabytes of data within a month. For reference, Netflix Inc. says an hour of streaming uses about 1 gigabyte of data.
About 42 million of 144 million US workers could do their jobs at home in 2018, or just 29% of the workforce, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.
“We have to bring our nation’s broadband providers together and say we are going to have a collective problem,” Rosenworcel said. “It’s not just going to affect our households and communities, it’s going to affect our economy.”

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