Auteur Sujet: Altice USA Optimum réduit l'upload câble de 35 à 5 Mb/s  (Lu 1293 fois)

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alain_p

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On peut tout se permettre aux US, faute de concurrence. Ars Technica écrit en effet que la filiale Optimum d'Altice USA va réduire l'uplink de ses offres câble de 35 Mb/s à 5 Mb/s, pour les nouveaux abonnés, pour ... s'aligner sur les offres des concurrents. Ce n'est pas pour un problème réseau quelconque, c'est pour faire plus d'argent, car les offres à 10, 15 ou 20 Mb/s seront facturées plus cher. Il n'y a pas de petit bénéfice, car aucun concurrent ne viendra faire de promo à 50 Mb/s ou plus d'upload. On n'imaginerait pas cela en France...

Et bien sûr, Optimum justifie cette augmentation parce que les pauvres, le développement du FTTH leur coûte cher, alors qu'il est très peu déployé...

Citer

Cable company goes backwards —
Altice is reducing cable-Internet upload speeds by up to 86% next month
Altice cuts uploads from 35Mbps to 5Mbps to bring them "in line with other ISPs."

Jon Brodkin - 6/23/2021, 9:08 PM

Altice is slashing its cable-Internet upload speeds by up to 86 percent starting on July 12. Altice Optimum Online plans that currently have advertised upload speeds of 35Mbps will be reduced to uploads of either 5Mbps, 10Mbps, or 20Mbps, depending on the plan. Altice did not announce any immediate price changes on the plans that are getting upload-speed cuts.

The only good news for users is that the change will not affect existing customers as long as they stay on their current service plans, an Altice spokesperson told Ars. But new customers will have to accept the lower upload speeds, and existing customers would have to take the lower upload speeds whenever they upgrade, downgrade, or change service, Altice said.

Altice claimed that its cable network isn't having any trouble offering its current advertised speeds. "Our network continues to perform very well despite the significant data usage increases during the pandemic and the speed tiers we offer," the company said. The upload-speed change is apparently being implemented not to solve any network problem but to match the slower upload speeds offered by other cable ISPs. Altice told Ars that it is changing its cable upload speeds to bring them "in line with other ISPs and aligned with the industry."

Altice's 100Mbps download plan currently comes with 35Mbps uploads. But those uploads will be dropped to 5Mbps, an 86 percent cut. The 200Mbps plan with 35Mbps uploads today will get only 10Mbps uploads after the July 12 changeover date. The 300Mbps and 500Mbps-download plans that currently have 35Mbps uploads will be cut to 20Mbps on the upload side. Download speeds will remain the same.

Additionally, Altice's 400Mbps-download plan is being cut from 40Mbps uploads to 20Mbps, while the gigabit-download plan's upload speeds are being cut from 50Mbps to 35Mbps. As a Stop the Cap article on Monday noted, Altice listed the upcoming changes in a chart on its website:

Altice touts fiber but is still mostly cable-only

Altice notes that its fiber-to-the-home service provides symmetrical speeds, with uploads as high as downloads. When asked why it isn't raising cable-upload speeds instead of lowering them, Altice told Ars, "Over the last few years, we have been investing in building a 100 percent fiber network. We are hyper-focused on our fiber expansion, which is currently available to over 1 million homes—and growing quickly—and offers symmetrical speeds up to 1Gbps."

But "a 100 percent fiber network" doesn't mean that Altice will upgrade all or even most of its cable customers to fiber. It's "100 percent fiber" in the sense that customers who are in the fiber footprint won't be limited by old cable wires.

Those 1 million homes with fiber are reportedly just 20 percent of Altice's footprint, so most of its customers can't get symmetrical speeds. Altice told investors that it will add 500,000 more homes to its fiber network this year. Including cable and fiber, Altice offers service in 21 states and had 4.4 million Internet customers at the end of Q1 2021.

Altice purchased Suddenlink in 2015 and Cablevision in 2016, becoming the fourth-largest US cable operator after Comcast, Charter, and Cox. The upload-speed changes will be rolled out to all parts of Altice's network, as the company told Ars that it is "aligning speed tiers across our footprint."

Cable keeps teasing higher uploads without delivering

For years, the cable industry has been teasing future upgrades that would let cable networks deliver symmetrical download and upload speeds just as fiber networks do. But despite upgrades to DOCSIS, the Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification, major cable providers generally still do not provide upload speeds higher than 35Mbps.

Altice cutting its cable upload speeds while building out symmetrical-speed fiber is another indication that fiber will maintain its superiority over cable networks for the foreseeable future. A year ago, Cox lowered upload speeds in some entire neighborhoods due to congestion, and no cable network appears close to delivering an upload-speed breakthrough to customers.

Comcast recently touted a lab test in which it used DOCSIS 4.0 to deliver 4Gbps uploads and downloads over cable, but the company gave no indication of when it will raise its commercially available cable-upload speeds. Like Altice, Comcast only offers symmetrical speeds on its fiber network, which isn't as widespread as its cable footprint.

Comcast and Charter's advertised upload speeds on their cable networks still max out at 35Mbps, and customers have to buy the gigabit-download plan to get that 35Mbps upload rate. Comcast's slowest plan has only 3Mbps uploads, and Charter's slowest plan has 4Mbps uploads.

Disclosure: The Advance/Newhouse Partnership, which owns 13 percent of Charter, is part of Advance Publications. Advance Publications owns Condé Nast, which owns Ars Technica.


alain_p

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Altice USA Optimum réduit l'upload câble de 35 à 5 Mb/s
« Réponse #1 le: 28 juin 2021 à 22:37:43 »
C'est au tour du site 'vice' de reprendre la news en soulignant le manque de concurrence aux US, et les monopoles régionaux des câblo-opérateurs. Et aussi le manque de régulation aux US qui a permis le maintien de ces monopoles.

Citer
Cable Provider Altice Cuts Upload Speeds by 86%...Just Because It Can
The country’s fourth-largest cable provider will be offering slower broadband speeds for the same price in the face of limited competition.

by Karl Bode June 28, 2021, 6:20pm

French-owned U.S. cable company Altice has announced it will soon be offering its users 86 percent slower broadband service—for the same price. It’s the latest example of a U.S. broadband market that sees little incentive to compete on price or performance in the face of limited competition and flimsy oversight.
...
In short, Altice intends to take full advantage of limited competition and feckless government oversight by charging users more money for a worse product.

“This is jaw-droppingly perverse logic—and a neat parable about the problems of market-based service provision without competition,” activist and author Cory Doctorow said of the company’s plans. “It’s not always the case that competition sends corporations on a race to the top — but for-profit monopolies always race to the bottom.”

Up to 42 million Americans lack access to broadband. 83 million currently live under a broadband monopoly where they have the choice of just one ISP—usually Comcast. Millions more live under a duopoly, where their only choice consists of a cable giant or a phone company that has often neglected its DSL lines and aging infrastructure.

With virtually no competition at faster speeds, entrenched cable providers have little incentive to compete on price, shore up spotty coverage, or improve what is historically terrible customer service. And with regulators and lawmakers heavily lobbied by the same companies, US leaders routinely turn a blind eye to this very profitable dysfunction.
...

https://www.vice.com/en/article/5db5ja/cable-provider-altice-cuts-upload-speeds-by-86just-because-it-can

thedark

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Altice USA Optimum réduit l'upload câble de 35 à 5 Mb/s
« Réponse #2 le: 28 juin 2021 à 23:11:55 »
Meilleur pays pour Altice. Manque de concurrence.
Heureusement qu'en France on a une grosse concurrence.