Welcome to the first annual wireless carrier Hunger Games
T-Mobile just announced what I’d argue is the best
thing the company has done since it put on a magenta jacket in 2013 and
launched its “Uncarrier” brand: a mobile plan that offers unlimited high-speed access to the internet at a very good price.
The promotion gives new and existing customers three unlimited data
lines for $100 a month, which works out to roughly $33 per line. For all
of the company’s gimmicks over the past four years, this move really
stands out because it’s exactly what the goal of competition in internet
service should be: giving people the highest quality access to the
network at fair and accessible rates. That’s the only thing that
matters, and suddenly wireless carriers are competing to provide it.
Given the trend in recent years toward eliminating unlimited
data plans and inventing things like “HD” data, I never thought I would
see what happened this month — at least not anytime soon, since we’re
staring down the barrel of a hostile FCC.
But in the span of a few days in mid-February, the major US wireless
carriers made a series of truly competitive moves: Verizon announced it
would offer unlimited data again, then T-Mobile made a competitive
change, and then Sprint and AT&T followed with changes in prices and
services. (Just today, AT&T further improved its unlimited deal.) My colleague Chaim Gartenberg wrote a good rundown of the changes, explaining why all of the US carriers have a new unlimited plan.
Are the plans perfect? No — far from it. Verizon and
AT&T are still too expensive, and Sprint has lots of dumb
restrictions that discriminate between things like data used for gaming
and listening to music. But with the top four carriers now behaving like
they’re ready to really compete on speed and price, there’s some hope
that the dark path toward cableization of the internet will be diminished or deferred.
There’s still a risk that the internet will be carved up
or deemphasized as ISPs gobble up television companies and start to act
like them. I scratched my head last night as I watched an internet
stream for the Oscars that was almost two minutes behind the live
broadcast. There’s still a bizarre lack of respect for the power of the
internet — the one truly universal network we have — and its importance.
That’s one of the reasons it’s so frustrating to have an incoming
administration that wants to kill common sense rules like net
neutrality.
(Surprise! All of this month’s competitive actions in the
wireless space took place under net neutrality rules. Turns out
“government regulation of the internet” isn’t so bad.)
Hopefully this trend will continue, and companies like
T-Mobile should keep leading the way. The most “uncarrier” thing
T-Mobile could ever do is compete fiercely on price and speed. Carriers
should quickly forget about “BingeOn,” “HD data,” zero rating, and all
of the other bullshit that obfuscates the real product people want and
deserve: cheap, reliable, high-quality access to the internet. We should
expect no less of our public utilities.
The article was published on : theverge
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