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Verizon Quietly Tests Video Throttling

· Written by Susan Strickland

Families looking to meticulously manage their monthly budgets have a major, highly impactful new development to consider today. Users across the country noticed a sudden drop in streaming video quality this week. Verizon later confirmed they were running 'network tests' that capped video streams at 10Mbps. Verizon representatives confirmed in an email statement, the company claimed the test was temporary, but it clearly signals their intent to begin managing video traffic more aggressively on unlimited plans.

Managing a household budget is all about sweating the small details. If you don't know exactly what hardware and service compatibility your family actually needs, the carrier will happily let you pay a massive premium for the wrong setup. A plan that looks perfectly tailored for a single power user can become a financial nightmare when multiplied across four different smartphones, a tablet, and a connected smartwatch.

Stepping back to analyze the broader market context, 2017 is proving to be the year of the 'Unlimited' war. After years of trying to force consumers into strict data buckets, the major carriers have completely capitulated, largely driven by T-Mobile's relentless marketing pressure. However, this new era of unlimited data is littered with heavy restrictions, including hotspot caps and optimized video streams, proving that true unlimited no longer exists.

The concept of shared data was initially pitched years ago as a way to simplify family billing, but it quickly became a source of intense household anxiety. Now, as the industry pivots aggressively back toward 'unlimited' tiers in 2017, that anxiety hasn't disappeared; it has merely changed shape. Instead of worrying about massive overage fees at the end of the month, parents are now forced to navigate the complexities of data deprioritization and strict video resolution throttling.

Another massive factor at play this year is the looming shadow of the 5G transition. While actual 5G deployment is still years away from widespread consumer adoption, carriers are aggressively hoarding capital and spectrum. They need billions of dollars for the next-generation hardware rollout, and the easiest place to find that capital is by slightly tweaking the profit margins on current LTE plans under the guise of network upgrades.

We are also seeing the explosive rise of the cable MVNOs. With Comcast and Charter entering the wireless space by piggybacking on Verizon's network, the traditional telecom operators are facing a completely new type of threat. These cable giants are bundling wireless service with home internet, creating incredibly sticky ecosystems that drastically lower consumer churn rates.

The competitive gap in actual, real-world network performance has narrowed to an almost indistinguishable margin in most urban and suburban areas. Independent testing firms routinely show that the difference between the 'best' network and the 'worst' network is often just a few megabits per second. Because the engineering battle is largely a stalemate, the war has shifted entirely to aggressive, confusing marketing bundles.

We also absolutely cannot ignore the highly volatile regulatory environment at the FCC right now under Chairman Ajit Pai. With heated debates over the impending repeal of net neutrality rules making daily headlines, carriers are rushing headlong to implement zero-rating programs and targeted advertising networks, stress-testing the boundaries of what is legally permissible before the rules officially change.

So, what does this mean for your bottom line? Always painstakingly read the 'Data Deprioritization' threshold in the fine print of the plan details. If your teenagers are heavy video streamers, they might hit that 22GB or 50GB limit incredibly quickly, resulting in frustratingly slow speeds.

At the end of the day, ultimate clarity is your absolute best financial tool. Understand precisely what you are paying for, and don't ever hesitate to downgrade your service if the plan exceeds your actual daily needs.

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