Bandwidth caps explained, NTC endorsed

A recent draft memorandum by the NTC indicates some sort of service level agreement where ISPs are required to provide a minimum guaranteed speed on subscriptions as well as allow for daily bandwidth capping on subscribers.

The circular requires ISPs to deliver a minimum average of 80% of the subscribed plan for regular broadband/dial-up lines and 99% for leased lines.

The NTC defines this accordingly:

… service reliability is measured over a period of one month and is derived by dividing the number of hours used in a day into the difference between hours used in a day and hours used below minimum connection speed in a day.

On the other hand, the NTC also endorsed recommendations by ISPs to put a daily cap on bandwidth usage. This clarifies the bandwidth caps already being imposed by telcos which we reported earlier.

While many would look at the “bandwidth caps” and cry foul, I’d look at the other provision that requires a minimum guaranteed speed based on the subscribed speed. This means if you subscribe to a 1Mbps plan, your average internet speed over a period of 1 month should not be under 800Kbps. If that’s the case, I’d gladly agree to be capped at 25GB per month (see Globe’s Broadband Internet bandwidth caps here).

I recently talked to a network engineer who’s a supplier of one of the telcos mentioned above and he explained how they arrived on the bandwidth caps imposed by the carriers.

What they do is they look at network traffic and determine how much bandwidth is used on a monthly basis. It turns out that over 99% of the users consume less than 1.5GB of bandwidth on their mobile phones.

The less than 1% who exceed are very few and inconsistent — meaning, they don’t consistently exceed 1.5GB on a month to month basis. Btw, this 1.5GB cap of Smart is for mobile 3G internet only.

In order to avoid regular users from being affected by the heavy users, the heavy users (those who exceed the 1.5GB cap) are isolated and transferred to a different network segment or bucket. The allocation for that small group in the segment is then limited. Hence, only the heavy users will be competing for the limited bandwidth in their bucket while all the regular users remain on the regular, uncongested network.

The rationale behind this policy has been studied and compared with other carriers in other countries worldwide. Of course, there are other factors that come into play.

I personally own several servers and re-sell bandwidth so I have a lot of experiences with system abuses. It’s the same reason why Cabalen imposes a double-the-price penalty to diners who put more food on their plate than they can finish. Same goes with Mang Inasal’s unlimited rice — just go try and ask for 100 cups of rice in one go. Or why the MMDA imposes number coding and restricts which car you can drive on a given day.

Apparently, in the Philippines, regular consumers don’t fully understand the “bucket system” so telcos resorted to time-based servicing. Remember that standard mobile internet used to be priced on a per KB basis back in the days? That did not work out well (the bucket system) so they shifted to the time-based billing system.

However, the time-based system is very prone to abuse (a problem which don’t exist if they imposed the bucket system). The throttling and capping of bandwidth to supplement time-based services allows the service providers to regulate the network and separate the heavy users from the regular users.

I don’t like the idea of putting caps but I’m okay with it as long as it’s a reasonable one. Just give me that 1Mbps speed I actually subscribed to. I hope this draft memorandum gets pushed thru so we can all get that 80% minimum guarantee on subscribed internet speeds.

Addendum: I think the issue here is the use of the word “unlimited” in the subscription plans when in fact it’s actually just a modified form of “bucket plans”. What if the NTC orders all the telcos to shift to “bucket plans” and sell internet connection on a pay per use basis? Say if you consume 15GB a month, you only pay Php500 but if you use 50GB in a month, your bill goes up accordingly (say Php1,500). I think that would have been a more straight-forward approach. Never mind if most of the consumers could not quantify what a gigabyte is. At least it’s not false advertising.

We’re not really that alien to caps. Even the MMDA has capped how many days you can drive your car in a week. We seem to be okay with that since everyone is experiencing how congested EDSA is.

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Avatar for Abe Olandres

Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines. He is also a technology consultant, a tech columnist with several national publications, resource speaker and mentor/advisor to several start-up companies.

216 Responses

  1. Avatar for Roy Roy says:

    Let’s stop it with the Mang Inasal and the unlimited rice example. Let’s all read and understand the NTC draft again and not get mislead. The service reliability (as quoted by Yuga himslef) is computed from the the number of hours in a day where the bandwidth was at the “acceptable” minimum bandwidth level divided by number of hours in a day the connection was used.

    If I am connected or trying to connect through what’s supposed to be my 1 Mbps broadband connection for 8 hours a day, going through some on-line video learning course and downloading instructional material. However, with in those 8 hours, what’s supposed to be a 1 Mbps connection is only able to provide me 512 kbps for 7 hours. And that 1 remaining hour, my connection was completely down.

    If the NTC declares that the “minimum accepatable bandwidth for my 1 Mbps connection is in fact 512 kbps, THEN THE SERVICE RELIABILITY I HAVE EXPERIENCED WITH IN THOSE 8 HOURS IS 87.5% ( 7 out of the 8 hours I was supposed to be connected, with all 7 of those hours I was being “serviced” acceptably by my provider).

    Computing for the average bandwidth provided to me by the telco though:

    ((512 kbps x 7 hours) + ( 0 kbps x 1 hour))/ 8 hours

    = 448 kbps average connection speed over 8 hours, and again according to the NTC, IT’S STILL ACCEPTABLE.

    I just hope people would see what kind of BS these telcos and the NTC are trying to give us.

  2. Avatar for lolipown lolipown says:

    @vince
    haha spot on analogy :)

    @Jeric
    To sum it up, once you reach your BW cap, your download speeds will get shot to oblivion.

  3. Avatar for vince vince says:

    customer: pabili ng isang litrong premium gas. eto ang 51 pesos ko

    gas attendant: sorry ser, madami kaming customer and ayaw namain gumastos para mag hire ng mas madaming tanker trucks and mag tayo ng bagong gas storage tank so sa 51 pesos, mabibigyan ko kayo ng 0.6 liters

    customer : #$!@$@ you!!!

  4. Avatar for vince vince says:

    dapat i cap ang pag kuha ng new subscribers

    no new subscribers if you dont have the infra to handle them

  5. Avatar for Jeric Jeric says:

    Sir yuga, mejo naguluhan lang ako. Am i correct na once i reached my cap, i am moving to a lower speed since i am being transfer to another line? Unlimited but but get lower speeds when i reached my cap similar to what wi-tribe implements? Thanks!

  6. Avatar for husky husky says:

    it seems that the philippines will not see the future of cloud computing anymore with this bandwidth caps…

    these telcos offer their services horribly in some areas and yet they have the guts to make bandwidth caps happen…shame to those telcos!

    “god knows who does not pay.”

  7. Avatar for lolipown lolipown says:

    @gg
    “OUR TELCOS AT THE MOMENT DON’T HAVE THE ENOUGH FACILITIES TO CATER ALL THE DEMANDS FOR THE SERVICES,”

    It’s unethical to sell something you can provide. If they have not the capacity why are they still selling?

  8. Avatar for Jazon Jazon says:

    For an MMORPG player, streaming media user and Linux distro tester, this is most unwelcome. Look at our broadband speeds: they’re already capped and I might say handicapped. It’s slow for the price we pay.

  9. Avatar for gg gg says:

    IMAGINE KUNG UNLIMITED YUNG BANDWIDTH, TINGIN NIYO LAHAT MAKAKAGAMIT? HINDI RIN DIBA..

    it all equates to this: OUR TELCOS AT THE MOMENT DON’T HAVE THE ENOUGH FACILITIES TO CATER ALL THE DEMANDS FOR THE SERVICES, SO THEY DON’T HAVE A CHOICE LEFT BUT TO IMPLEMENT THE CAPPING SYSTEM.

    THERE ARE SOME THINGS THEY HAVE TO ADJUST THOUGH, LIKE THE FLAWS IN ADVERTISEMENTS AND CUSTOMER EDUCATION, BUT MORE THAN THAT, I CANT THINK OF ALTERNATIVES..

    BUT JUST TO IMPROVE THEIR FACILITIES.
    OR LOWERING THE PRICES MAY DO..

  10. Avatar for gg gg says:

    again be realistic. they cant really provide a virtually unlimited service! they are thinking of how to make the service distribution more effective and fair for all. it is already given that we lack the facilities to cater all the demand, but while on the process of development, they have to balance everything.

    the 1mbps tag is more of speed. it does not represent the bandwidth allocation for the service you subscribed in. at the moment, I dont think it make sense if telco’s would ask customers upon registration kung heavy users sila o hindi. kasi bandwidth is subjective, at depende sa current congestion.

  11. Avatar for Dude Dude says:

    I only have one question.
    Why would any of you give our ISP’s more control?

  12. Avatar for lolipown lolipown says:

    @gg
    yes it’s hard to expect 99.9% stable, reliable unlimited service but even with caps, it’s harder to put your faith on telcos that oversell already congested lines.

    I lol’d at yugabehonest tho :)

  13. Avatar for MikeM MikeM says:

    Teka nga–why should the telcos care about how much data I receive per month, if the data comes in at the rate I subscribed to? I pay for 1mbps so my speed is capped. Now they wanna cap how much I use my account, too? No way. This misguided policy is a godsend for congressmen and senators who want to strike a populist stand & I think I’ll write some of them.

  14. Avatar for Pao Pao says:

    theoretically maganda sana, kaso sa experience ng mga tao, paano magtitiwala sa mga telco na mabibigyan nila ng better service yung subscribers nila kung maiimplement itong cap na ito. from the point of view of a subscriber, panay kabig ang nangyayari kasi. kabig ng kabig mga telco, dehado parati mga subscribers who pay good money for crappy service.

  15. Avatar for kyflo kyflo says:

    I oppose this capping MO. As a heavy internet user, how can I watch or download my favorite games,movies and music (either legit or pirated).

    There are alot of YouTube users and a single 15min video in 360p will be like up to 100MB (depends on compression). Imagine if we only have up to 800MB per day or 25GB per month? The MO of having a p2p tracking system would be good but you need to get btguard or similar services for you to enjoy P2P downloading.

    I hope that this will not be implemented and Filipinos will enjoy using the internet that they want. NTC should stick to bigger projects that would help the telecommunications industry.

  16. Avatar for gg gg says:

    open ur eyes guys, sa panahon ngayon, can u really expect a credible unlimited service? kahit sang bansa naman sa buong mundo, lahat ng mga services offered eh may loopholes. lalo na sa mga terms na unlimited. problema kasi sa mga tao they are expecting way more than what they are paying for!

  17. Avatar for gg gg says:

    common sense. ang paggamit nila ng word na unlimited eh sa time base. hindi siya limited ng 20 pesos per 1 hour, like sa mga rine-register na promo. o sa mga shop.. ung unlimited internet, like surf anytime u want at the same price.

    ibang usapin ung sa bandwidth. hindi applicable sa bandwidth ung term ng mga telco na unlimited. so technically, may false advertising issue nga d2.

    but u cant expect regular non-techie people na maintindihan ang bandwidth. so pwede isama nalang sya sa terms and conditions. I dont think effective syang ilagay sa main advertising lines.

    but who know. like wi-tribe, very honest sila sa capping. they even include it sa mga flyers nila.it might sound awkward, pero atleast walang pwedeng masumbat sa kanila.

  18. Avatar for yugabehonest yugabehonest says:

    Yuga simple math lng ha.

    1Mbps plan = 100KBps on actual
    so…80% of it is 80KBps

    80KBps * 3600sec[1hr] = 288000KB per hour
    288000KB per hour * 24hr[1day] = 6912000KB per day
    6912000KB per day * 30days[1mo] = 207360000KB per mo

    or 207.36GB per month if unlimited internet ka. that is if 80% lng ang ibibigay ng ISP. GETS? 100GB is not enough man!

  19. Avatar for yugabehonest yugabehonest says:

    Hoi Yuga! try mo mg.work sa mga Telcos natin. Para malaman mo gaano ka congested ang servers ng ISP. Binayaran ka ba ng mga ISPs? You can’t fool us fool!

  20. Avatar for yugabehonest yugabehonest says:

    Yuga, man do you know what you are talking about?
    Man this move by the NTC is clearly not for the people’s good. Man! NTC should have pass a bill that will make our ISPs better. Not letting them use their crapping “technology”. If you can still consider it a technology. Come on. Don’t ack like is OK if the ISPs are putting bandwidth cap. Come on, 25GB per month? That’s BULL CRAP! Ask your “network engineer” friend if you can even reach your 15th day of the month if you’re an online gamer or a freelance worker on oDesk.

    To all the Gamers, oDesk workers and Facebook addicts…GOOD LUCK TO US ALL

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