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Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
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Associated Press reports that an iPhone user in California has been awarded $850 in a small claims lawsuit filed against AT&T over throttling of data speeds. The user, who was on a grandfathered unlimited data plan, saw his data speeds drastically slashed once he reached 1.5-2 GB in a given month, even as other users on limited 3 GB plans at the same price see no similar restrictions at those levels.
Pro-tem Judge Russell Nadel found in favor of Matt Spaccarelli in Ventura Superior Court in Simi Valley. Spaccarelli filed a small claims case against AT&T last month, arguing the communications giant unfairly slows speeds on his iPhone 4's unlimited data plan.

Nadel's ruling could pave the way for others to follow suit. AT&T has some 17 million customers with "unlimited data" plans that can be subject to throttling, representing just under half of the company's smartphone users.
There is no word yet on whether AT&T will appeal the decision, but the sales manager representing AT&T in the case has argued that the carrier reserved the right to "modify or cancel" or cancel customer contracts if their usage is adversely affecting the company's network capabilities. The article notes that a class action suit might be the normal evolution of such a complaint, but AT&T's subscriber contract prohibits class action or jury trials, leaving arbitration and small claims as the options.

att_throttle_warning.jpg



AT&T began throttling unlimited data customers ranking in the top 5% of data users last October. But while early reports of throttling came mostly from high-volume users consuming in excess of 10 GB of data per month, reports of users being throttled at much lower levels in the neighborhood of 2 GB have been increasing. AT&T notes that the throttling is done on a case-by-case basis and only if there are network capacity issues in the customer's area, but for those who are affected, the throttled speeds are slow enough to make their devices nearly unusable.

Update: AT&T issued this statement to MacRumors: "This is a small claims matter. We are evaluating next steps, including appeal. But at the end of the day, our contract governs our relationship with our customers."

Article Link: iPhone User Awarded $850 in Judgment Against AT&T Over Throttling
 

kalex

macrumors 65816
Oct 1, 2007
1,336
56
Good for him. About time and hopefully this will get others to do the same. Enough is enough
 

AJH1993

macrumors regular
Oct 26, 2011
154
0
And people wonder why AT&T was rated worst carrier 2 years in a row. Because they are.
 

DerekRod

macrumors 6502a
Jan 18, 2012
820
0
NY
nice Im expecting to receive another class action settlement check in the near future
 

chrmjenkins

macrumors 603
Oct 29, 2007
5,325
158
MD
At $850, he's doing them a favor so they realize they need to stop doing this or lose customers.
 

rjohnstone

macrumors 68040
Dec 28, 2007
3,896
4,493
PHX, AZ.
Nice!
Glad to see a judge recognized the BS in how they choose to throttle.

I understand the need in some cases, but throttling unlimited users who are below 3GB but are paying the same price as someone on a 3GB limited plan was begging for a lawsuit.
 

tido2012

macrumors regular
Jul 20, 2010
144
0
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 5_0_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/534.46 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.1 Mobile/9A405 Safari/7534.48.3)

Can't wait
 

stisdal

macrumors 6502
Feb 28, 2010
320
1
USA
I can see this as the beginning of the end for us grandfathered "unlimited" folks. AT&T will use this loss as a reason to just do away with the grandfathered unlimited plans all together.
 

lozanoj83

macrumors 6502a
Mar 5, 2006
546
0
Southern California
Same issue with me. Los Angeles area, last month used around 1.25GB, got a message saying my speeds would be throttled. Pisses me off really, 1/2 of the data ATT sells in their tiered bucket, yet I'm in the top 5% of users?
 

Laird Knox

macrumors 68000
Jun 18, 2010
1,956
1,343
Clear does the same thing on their 4G service. How can throttling be considered "unlimited?"
 

DerekRod

macrumors 6502a
Jan 18, 2012
820
0
NY
Apparently AT&T's subscriber agreement prohibits class action suits. not sure if that's enforceable, but it's there.

arn

Hmm Ive recieved checks for them before,They've been hit with a couple of suits the last one I remember was funnily enough over sim locks
 

valkraider

macrumors 6502
Apr 22, 2004
352
234
When users get throttled - they should use the RootMetrics coverage app and start running tests.

When the throttled user's slow as molasses data speeds start bringing down the provider's scores then maybe the provider will care more.

Data speed wars are ramping up and having your scores hammered would hurt...
 

troop231

macrumors 603
Jan 20, 2010
5,822
553
I can see this as the beginning of the end for us grandfathered "unlimited" folks. AT&T will use this loss as a reason to just do away with the grandfathered unlimited plans all together.

It's inevitable, I mean could we really imagine ATT still allowing unlimited plans 10 years from now? Hell, they'll probably throttle at 1GB by then.
 

DerekRod

macrumors 6502a
Jan 18, 2012
820
0
NY
When users get throttled - they should use the RootMetrics coverage app and start running tests.

When the throttled user's slow as molasses data speeds start bringing down the provider's scores then maybe the provider will care more.

Data speed wars are ramping up and having your scores hammered would hurt...

THIS^^^^^ is an excellent idea,Though im afraid this may be the end of our unlimited data which I believe they have the right to do so in contract.
 

InuNacho

macrumors 68000
Apr 24, 2008
1,998
1,249
In that one place
AT&T is too cheap to install actual working antennas and stuff so they'll just point the finger at people using a measly 2GB and blame them for the general slowness.
 

rusty2192

macrumors 6502a
Oct 15, 2008
997
81
Kentucky
So where did the $850 value come from? Over a 24 month contract, that would be ~$35/month. The plan is $30/month and they have only been throttling for less than a year. Or can you get punitive damages in small claims court?

Edit: I see this now in the source link: "The customer contract specifies that those who win an award from the company in arbitration will get at least $10,000. Spaccarelli picked the same amount for his claim. Judge Nadel instead awarded him $85 for each of the 10 months left on his contract."
 
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