Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Also, I think I read that they cannot throttle on their 4G system because of restrictions when they bought the bandwidth.
) but if they do ever get the provisions overturned it will be a newsworthy item. I would not give up unlimited at this point if you live in a 4G area since you will likely end up paying more for the tiered plan each monthThis is true. Block C provisions prevent them from throttling the LTE portion of the network currently. If they do they would get in some major trouble with the FCC. Last I heard they are trying to get it changed (some arguement along the lines of why should we have limitations on how to use something we bought which I found very ironic) but if they do ever get the provisions overturned it will be a newsworthy item. I would not give up unlimited at this point if you live in a 4G area since you will likely end up paying more for the tiered plan each month

This is true. Block C provisions prevent them from throttling the LTE portion of the network currently. If they do they would get in some major trouble with the FCC. Last I heard they are trying to get it changed (some arguement along the lines of why should we have limitations on how to use something we bought which I found very ironic) but if they do ever get the provisions overturned it will be a newsworthy item. I would not give up unlimited at this point if you live in a 4G area since you will likely end up paying more for the tiered plan each month
I'm confused by this because I am not throttled by Verizon at all with my 4G smartphone. I use extremely high amounts of data (well into the double or even sometimes triple digits) and have never been affected in any way.
But I'm hearing that ATT is throttling all their unlimited data customers around the ~2gb mark, even those on their brand-new LTE network that's only a few months old. Are you saying they shouldn't be allowed to throttle their LTE customers?
AT&T is not held to the same provisions as VZW for LTE. When VZW purchased the right to use the part of the LTE spectrum they now use, back in 2008 IIRC, there were provisions put on it by Google that the buyer had to follow. One of those provisions state they must not hinder network speed based on how much data a customer uses. AT&T gets to do as they wish AFAIK so an LTE phone on AT&T could be subject to throttling just as any other phone would be.

Interesting. So when ATT got the right to use spectrum for their own LTE network, why weren't they held to the same provisions set by Google or anyone else?
If this is the case, then I will keep milking my grandfathered unlimited LTE data on Verizon for as long as possible until they pull it from my cold, dead hands! I'll happily buy phones off-contract as well to do it! I am happy to say that Verizon so far has never throttled me or done anything adverse with all the data I've sucked down!
Probably when they launch their LTE-Advanced network with "5G" phones, they will say my unlimited data plan isn't compatible with the new phones in their system and I'll have to move to a tiered plan.![]()
.If this is the case, then I will keep milking my grandfathered unlimited LTE data on Verizon for as long as possible until they pull it from my cold, dead hands! I'll happily buy phones off-contract as well to do it! I am happy to say that Verizon so far has never throttled me or done anything adverse with all the data I've sucked down!
![]()
