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Virgin Media throttling while advertising unlimited bandwidth 
 
One of the largest ISP(Internet Service Provider) in the UK is Virgin Media, 
since it's acquisition of Virgin Media's internet services, and adoption of 
it's name, it is now called Virgin Media(Virgin Media Broadband for those on 
the cable network, and Virgin Media Beyond cable for those on ADSL), but it is 
in effect the same company that was called NtlFreedom and Ntlworld.

Ntlfreedom formerly Ntlworld Beyond broadband and broadband services are in the 
red to the tune of several millions, as with any acquired business with a very 
large deficit cutbacks have to be made to recoup that loss.

As of 2007 Virgin Media have started throttling its ADSL and cable users,
it claims that apparently 5% of its users use 95% of the resources, and
throttling its users speeds to some extent no better than dial-up is the best
case scenario for all involved.

As expected they have been an uproar that customers are paying for an unlimited
broadband service only to have it limited in usage, Virgin Media still claims
its broadband advertised is still unlimited, however that argument does not 
hold much
ground, in that dial-up is still unlimited, but what is the point of waiting a
week for a download, which is in effect what many Virgin ADSL customers that 
have undergone STM(Subscriber Traffic Management) are reduced to. It is the 
equivalent of having bought a top of the range
sports car, and you are told if you use that top of the range sports car between
the hours of 4pm and midnight on a week day, and between the hours of 10 in the
morning and midnight Saturdays and Sundays(which let's face it is the optimum 
time to use that sports car), you are going to be penalised by
having to walk for the rest of the entire week simply because you used what you
paid for.

What makes matters even more insulting is that for ADSL Virgin Media customers
on the up to 8MB ADSL package, it could take less than 20 mins to download 
350MB on a reasonably good day,
this apparently is the cut-off mark(albeit the exact clarification of when this 
cut-off mark is initiated is not clear, there is no official documentation on 
Virgin Media's terms of service or on their website to clarify what exactly is 
excessive usage) to determine whether you get throttled or
not.

So using your unlimited broadband pacckage for 20 mins a day means you are going
to be reduced to dial-up speeds for the rest of the following week. Unless 
ofcourse you
chose to do your downloads in the early hours and only download thereafter, and 
don't work during a
working day, because that apparently is the only time their throttling/bandwidth
STM (Subscriber Traffic Management) does not apply.

Could this possibly be a ploy to move all their ADSL subscribers to the fibre 
optic network(although being advertised as new it is the same old Telewest 
Cable that has been around for sometime, which apparently has the old coppoer 
wire connection from your street into your home)?

 
 Mr D Stevens is a reviewer at http://virgin-media-throttling.blogspot.com/  
Virgin Media have your say 
 Keywords: Virgin Media, bandwidth, isp, Subscriber traffic management, STM, 
throttling, Virgin media, Broadband speed test, Broadband, technology, 
internet, cable, dial-up, UK service provider, Internet Service Provider, ISP, 
broadband isp 
 Article contains 512 words

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