| John Navas 2007-04-30, 10:33 pm |
| "Vodafone's new pricing model excludes VoIP and P2P"
<http://www.theregister.com/2007/04/..._tariff
/>
....
Vodafone's new pricing model (http://www.vodafone.co.uk/datapricing)
for data comes in on 1 June and at a glance seems fair enough - if
you use less than 0.5MB in a day you're charged at a penny for every
5KB you use (£2 a MB), go over that and the next 14.5MB is free, then
you're back to a penny for every 5KB used.
Most users should fall somewhere in below the 15MB limit, and the
current rate is £2.35 a MB, so everyone should be better off.
Well, not quite everyone.
Slipped in to the conditions of use is a clause stating that VoIP and
peer-to-peer services (P2P) are excluded from the offer, billed
separately at £2 a megabyte, with a minimum of 5 pence per session.
Skype is listed as an example of a VoIP service, but the definition
of P2P is much broader, including "instant messenger services, text
messaging clients, or file sharing".
Vodafone won't comment on how it's going to identify such traffic,
though there are concerns that anything other than web browsing might
be considered peer-to-peer and thus be subject to the separate
charge. Encrypted connections could well fall foul - it would be
impossible for Vodafone to identify the application being used,
leaving anyone regularly and securely checking email open to high
charges.
[MORE]
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Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/ Cingu...less_FA
Q>
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