The dream of broadband without data limits is set to slip through Australians' fingers, as countries like the UK start to wave goodbye to their own uncapped plans.
The days of unlimited plans -- standard in the UK -- will soon come to a close, according to Michael Philpott, principal analyst at research firm Ovum. Such offers are likely to disappear "quite soon actually -- I would say within 12 months, simply because you hear it more and more", he told ZDNet.com.au sister site ZDNet.co.uk.
The emergence of data intensive content such as IP television has made the plans unfeasible, according to a spokesperson for UK ISP PlusNet. "It's not just a single-price, all-you-can-eat market any more," the spokesperson said.
While the UK get to grips with data caps for the first time, Australians are seeing their caps get ever larger. According to a recent report by the Internet Industry Association (IIA), while prices are remaining static, users' data caps are increasing, driven by competition between ISPs.
The reason Australia is heading towards offering more data while the UK and other countries want to offer less is Australia's broadband history, according to David Kennedy, research director at Ovum. In the '90s, a bandwidth shortage coupled with Australian users' fondness for US content meant data was expensive, Kennedy said. "Telstra and other ISPs reacted by capping data," he said.
Want to know more?
For all the latest news, analysis and opinion on broadband, click here
Currently, according to OECD statistics released in October, Australia is one of only very few countries to continue with data caps.
Kennedy said he does think such caps are set to become a thing of the past, as international markets begin to consider implementing them. "There is very little chance we will be going the other way," he said.
Research firm Market Clarity CEO Shara Evans agreed: "I wouldn’t be holding my breath for the holy grail of unlimited Internet access for a normal plan price."
"Content is growing, and growing in a symmetrical manner," she said, as users not only access Web sites, but also produce content themselves.
There are some ISPs who cater for heavy users such as file sharers or graphic game players by offering plans without data caps, Ovum's Kennedy said, but there has been a "bit of pulling back over the last 12 months" from service providers, with moves including the introduction of traffic shaping for P2P.
"In effect the other users have been subsidising these guys [P2P users] for a long time," Kennedy said. "If you want to use the network that intensively you should pay more for it."
Although the unlimited dream may have slipped from its grasp, Australia will avoid disruption as the international market reverts to caps, Kennedy said. "We're used to it, and it's not that hard to get data allocation caps that easily meet the needs of the user."
David Meyer of ZDNet.co.uk contributed to this article


Daniel Gara
18/03/2008 09:10 AM
This is a bit scary, isn't it?
Report offensive content
garry
18/03/2008 11:34 AM
every thing should be unlimited you should only pay for speed. ppl who use p2p only do about 40 gb or so a month if you caped the out goin .... think about it
Report offensive content
bas
18/03/2008 01:56 PM
I think it should be unlimited as well, but any data passing through p2p should have an additional cost. That way the network is clogged up and gaming is possible. And some of the revenue can be fed back to copyright owners.
Report offensive content
Matt
02/04/2008 05:21 PM
Having a go at P2P in such a way doesn't improve matters. Some popular game delivery systems use P2P, so it'll burden irregular P2P users too. Be protocol agnostic: if there's a source draining the network, for whatever reason, consider shaping that. In the long run, such an approach would be more effective, as P2P wouldn't be tempted to pretend to be other protocols, and real drains on a network are identified.
Report offensive content
Beanie
07/05/2008 12:47 PM
If you have a cap then it shouldn't matter what you use it for. ISPs shouldn't offer outrageous caps on the basis that they dont expect people to use them and then cry when they do.
Report offensive content
Slam
14/05/2008 04:50 PM
Today only Optus and Telstra seem to include uploads as part of the usage. Be prepared to see the rest of the market change to this type of measurement in response to P2P traffic.
Report offensive content
dan_rox77
09/06/2008 04:31 PM
Hmph, whatever - Australia's broadband sucks. Full stop.
Report offensive content