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AT&T Communications Media Entertainment

AT&T Removes HBO From an Unlimited Data Plan After Buying Time Warner (arstechnica.com) 103

AT&T revamped its two unlimited mobile plans this week, and in the process it raised the price for the entry-level plan by $5 a month while removing the free HBO perk. The entry-level unlimited plan now starts at $70 instead of $65. ArsTechnica adds: Existing customers can keep their old plan and the free HBO, but new customers or those who switch plans will have to buy the more expensive unlimited plan to get HBO at no added cost. AT&T did add some video options to both plans, however. Both unlimited plans get AT&T's new "WatchTV" streaming service that comes with more than 30 channels, and buyers of the more expensive unlimited plan can choose to get HBO or another premium add-on. While "HBO is no longer included on the lower-priced plan," "customers who remain on their existing plan won't see any change and will keep the HBO benefit for as long as they remain on their current plan," AT&T told Ars. Further reading: AT&T Is Screwing Customers By Almost Tripling a Bogus Fee.
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AT&T Removes HBO From an Unlimited Data Plan After Buying Time Warner

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  • by Bryansix ( 761547 ) on Thursday June 28, 2018 @02:30PM (#56861130) Homepage
    So basically all the things people were worried about came true? Reduce competition for one of the most evil an unethical corporations out there and they raise prices and remove perks. Who could have seen this coming?
    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by Train0987 ( 1059246 )

      Just as soon as you can explain what the heck this has to do with net neutrality.

      • It doesn't. It has to do with the Mergers.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Aww, so adorable. You were primed and ready to defend Trump, weren't you. Poor sweet pea.

      • by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Thursday June 28, 2018 @02:57PM (#56861304) Homepage

        Corporations will always act as anti-competitive as they can legally get away with, because it improves profits.
        Corporations will make the net as anti-competitive as a lack of net neutrality allows them to do, regardless of any "pledges" or "promises" they make now.

      • HBO's parent is Time Warner. Now that AT&T owns Time Warner they can call the shots on the access to the service. So you have the following options.

        (1) AT&T non-unlimited whatever standard service (~$45/mo). You not only pay AT&T, since they own Time Warner, for the HBO sub ($9.95/mo), but you're also paying them for being your ISP. Additionally, watching HBO (even though they have the servers literally on their fiber now, but that's beside the point) will cost you GB in bandwidth. Which th

        • by Anonymous Coward

          HBO's parent is Time Warner. Now that AT&T owns Time Warner they can call the shots on the access to the service. So you have the following options.

          (1) AT&T non-unlimited whatever standard service (~$45/mo). You not only pay AT&T, since they own Time Warner, for the HBO sub ($9.95/mo), but you're also paying them for being your ISP. Additionally, watching HBO (even though they have the servers literally on their fiber now, but that's beside the point) will cost you GB in bandwidth. Which then leads you to ask...

          (2) Why not just pay the $70/mo (used to be $65/mo) to get HBO sub plus you don't use your data plan GB when watching.

          (3) You're not an AT&T customer, so screw you, you can pay the $9.95/mo for HBO and you deal. However, if your ISP doesn't pay AT&T a priority fee, you only get 720p and if you're on T-Mobile, they're going to send it to you in something that is less that 720p, because T-Mobile blows. That's okay though because Verizon does pay and that's pretty much your only other alternative.

          (4) Let HBO die on the vine. AT&T sits confused as their TW purchase starts losing value because they artificially reduced demand by increasing cost past the balance point.

        • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
          I think there is some confusion there. AT&T has been offering free HBO before all this. The $65 plan USED to offer HBO. They're raising the cost to $70 and removing HBO. They did the opposite of what you're talking about here
    • by khandom08 ( 1319863 ) on Thursday June 28, 2018 @02:36PM (#56861154)

      I love this line:

      but new customers or those who switch plans will have to buy the more expensive unlimited plan to get HBO at no added cost

    • by mi ( 197448 )

      Yes, how dare a merchant change his offerings and prices!

    • So basically all the things people were worried about came true?

      I came here specifically to find a post like yours and laugh at it. Happily I was not disappointed!

      This is just a slight alteration of what they were ALREADY DOING under the existing FCC regulations.

      You are a greta illustration of the fundamental problem, Network Neutrality advocates by and large knew fuck-all about (A) what the regulations actually did, and even (B) what the hell "network neutrality" even is. This charging extra for access t

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        In turn we all get to laugh at you now since this is about the merger being permitted, not what has apparently become your favorite hobby horse.

    • AT&T has also been slowly increasing its invented "administrative fee". It is now 2.6x about what it used to be. Classy company.
      • Well then don't use AT&T for cellular. There's no shortage of competition in the cell space, just switch carriers.

        • I haven't used them since they bought up Cingular. However, obviously they don't think they will lose very many customers with this change so maybe competition isn't as robust as you think.
    • All those people who thought net neutrality was some new regulation that Obama invented. Rubes.
    • So basically all the things people were worried about came true? Reduce competition for one of the most evil an unethical corporations out there and they raise prices and remove perks. Who could have seen this coming?

      By providing HBO at no additional cost, AT&T was favoring one premium channel over all the others, a clear violation of Network Neutrality principles. How is, say, STARZ supposed to complete with "free"? By replacing it with 30 channels no one wants, they've leveled the playing field.

      Why aren't all Net Neutrality proponents cheering this development? You're winning!

    • by piojo ( 995934 )

      What makes you think the deal wasn't simply underpriced? Hell, this could be the whole reason AT&T bought Time Warner! Imagine they saw Time Warner was leaving a ton of money on the table with this deal, and was consequently the whole company was undervalued. AT&T buys the company, fixes the problem, and they've increased the value of their new investment. (Of course, the whole story must be more complicated than that.)

      So how should we feel? I don't like it. A big grocery chain bought a mom and pop

    • Yup. The ink's not even dry on the kangaroo court ruling, and already it's bad for consumers.

      I wonder how much AT&T had to pay in lawful-bribes to make that court sell out the citizens it pretends to protect?

  • ... new customers ... will have to buy the more expensive unlimited plan to get HBO at no added cost.

    i.e. it's free if you pay more!

  • I always wonder why people use AT&T as their mobile operator in the first place. It is consistently more expensive, and doesn't have the best coverage either. There must be something I am missing.
    • I always wonder why people use AT&T as their mobile operator in the first place. It is consistently more expensive, and doesn't have the best coverage either. There must be something I am missing.

      I agree it's expensive, I disagree about coverage.
      I consistently get a better signal with AT&T than with T-Mobile or Sprint - whether I'm in the city or in a rural area. I'm typically opposed to mega-corporations getting bigger, but so far with AT&T I haven't had any BOHICA situations.

      • by sconeu ( 64226 )

        YMMV. I dropped AT&T because I couldn't get signal at my house. [Disclaimer, I live inside the Los Angeles City Limits]

      • Definitely true. But even Verizon has better (or same) coverage and is cheaper.
    • I always wonder why people use AT&T as their mobile operator in the first place. It is consistently more expensive, and doesn't have the best coverage either. There must be something I am missing.

      Coverage varies by your geographical location. Yeeears ago when I first started with cell phones and was under my parents' AT&T plan, I would notice that I had signal in places my friends didn't (and we all used the same Nokia phone so it wasn't the antenna), so I stuck to AT&T. These days I use Cricket, and I read a review of a guy saying that he had better signal and signal in more places with AT&T/Cricket than with T-Mobile/MetroPCS, so I'm sticking with Cricket. I may switch to the AT&T

  • by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Thursday June 28, 2018 @03:00PM (#56861328)
    I have the old "grandfathered" unlimited plan and was looking to switch to the new one as, I was told (from various articles/reviews on the internet) that it's better with unlimited calling and text too.

    Not quite...
    The cheaper plan throttles earlier. To get the numbers from my old plan I'd have to get the more expensive plan for $5 more a month than I'm currently playing. Not a bad trade-off but there's ONE more gotcha
    The NEW unlimited plans will NOT allow the use of any corporate discounts. These are given out to companies that work closely with the phone company or provide a lot of customers. I get 12% off my grandfathered unlimited calling plan with it. But NOT the new one. So that $5 more becomes ~$15 more!
    Pass.
    • I have the old "grandfathered" unlimited plan

      I have to say, I admire the people who have managed to resist various temptations and keep the ember of earlier unlimited plans alive...

      I myself have hopped around carriers like a cricket in a prairie fire.

      • Ehh - what can I say, I'm a luddite!

        Frankly it was that unlimited plan that kept me on AT&T. I only call distant family about twice a month and, even then, I'm texting them daily - so the "phone" portion of my plan has less and less worth to me. (I use iMessage in about 90% of my texting so I'm even on a "limited" texting plan of 200 messages at $5/month. Even if I go over - at .10/text I can do another 150 messages before I can justify the "unlimited" text package for $20/month!
        I looked into drop
  • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Thursday June 28, 2018 @03:16PM (#56861428) Journal

    Wow. Ignoring the so-called HBO perk (I "cut the cord" precisely to stop paying for bundled media), this is a heavily limited plan. From the details of the $45/month "unlimited" level:

    Data Restrictions: For all data usage, AT&T may temporarily slow data speeds during times of network congestion. Plan is not eligible for Stream Saver. For content we can identify as video, wireless streaming speed will be slowed to a max of 1.5Mbps, Standard Definition quality (about 480p). Video speed is capped at this amount, regardless of network device is on (for example 4G LTE). Ability to stream, video resolution, and other data usage (including speed) are not guaranteed, may vary, and be aected by a variety of other factors. Other restrictions apply. Tethering/mobile hotspot use prohibited (except Connected Cars).

    So, basically, at any point in time they may lower speeds when some undefined level of "network congestion" has been met. What do you reckon the chances are that that won't be an almost always condition? But video from any known provider will be limited to 1.5Mbps and 480p at ALL times. And tethering is completely disabled.

    Given that video and tethering are likely the two biggest reasons to get unlimited data on a phone, this seems like a pretty useless "unlimited" service. If you don't ever watch video or tether, you'll very likely stay within a 2GB or so limit on a cheaper plan with no problem, especially if you use WiFi for data where available.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      I use 480p on a 17" desktop monitor and it's almost good enough. Are you telling me anything over 480p on a freakin' 5" phone display makes any difference?

      • heh - muh iPhone Retina 'splay!
      • by Anonymous Coward

        It does. 1080p looks fantastic on a decent phone.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by satcat ( 5331051 )

        What.. It absolutely does!

        Not as much for say a TV show or movie, but anything with fine text (say a video game steam or lecture of some sort) can be unwatchable at 480p. Faces and expressions in panel discussions can be difficult to see.

      • The human eye can fully resolve a 6" 1080p display at about 9.5" assuming you don't have uncorrected presbyopia or farsightedness. This is about where most people I see watching video naturally place the phone and is equivalent to a 55" 1080p TV at the proper viewing distance of about 7 ft. Few hold it at arm's length while watching video. The display will also occupy a reasonable viewing angle at that point though you should pull it in to about 8" for a 30 degree field of view equivalent-to-theatre experie

      • If the content is 1080p, 480p isn't good enough. Full Stop.

    • And tethering is completely disabled.

      This is still so foreign to me. I've never found a provider outside america that actually tells me where my final packets are allowed to end up. Trying this shit in Australia would likely get the company majorly slapped down by the ombudsman.

      (note I haven't been in Australia for a long time. Can any Aussies confirm if the telecom companies down there are still somewhat good? NBN / Telstra excepted of course).

      • by Lurks ( 526137 )

        I've never heard of blocking tethering in Australia, certainly none of my providers ever had (about half a dozen different ones). I don't even know how they'd do it... I mean it's a standard feature in Android at least.

  • In what universe would you need free traffic to any site if you have an unlimited plan? Someone needs to institute an "unlimited unlimited plan" just to show how disingenuous ISP marketing has become.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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