Apparently.
[quote]Home broadband in the US costs far more than elsewhere. At high speeds, it costs nearly three times as much as in the UK and France, and more than five times as much as in South Korea. Why?
Men's haircuts, loaves of bread... it is surprising how much more expensive some things are in the US than the UK. Now home broadband can be added to that list.
The price of basic broadband, TV and phone packages - or bundles as they are known - is much higher in American cities than elsewhere, suggests the New America Foundation think tank, which compared hundreds of available packages worldwide.
Looking at some of the cheaper ones available in certain cities, at lower to mid download speeds, San Francisco ($99/£61), New York ($70) and Washington DC ($68) dwarf London ($38), Paris ($35) and Seoul ($15)[/quote]
I already knew you paid a lot for your Mobile Phone tariffs, but the internet thing surprised me. I never realised that you were all in the grips of local monopolies.
My parents just upgraded their line to 30+ MB Fibre Optic connection (including phone line rental and unlimited calls) and I think they're paying something like £30 ($45) a month. I'm on £20 (£30) for a land-line and 8 MB.
How much are all of you paying, do you have much local choice and are you happy withyour situation?
Some of you are mentioning capped plans - here in the UK, unlimited broadband is almost expected. You poor, poor colonials.
XD
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GB has much less air space to cover which means fewer towers and weaker signals. US is much larger so we require more towers (being built) and more power for a stronger signal (partical accelerator being built in central US).
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Australia, paying $70 a month for unlimited 22mbps down and about 3mbps up.
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Edited by Fruit: 10/28/2013 8:05:41 AMI live in New Zealand, and I'm paying $110 a month for a 100mbps download/10mbps upload speed along with 150GB of data a month >.> Data caps are awful!
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We are paying around $150 a month for a mid-level cable and internet(20 or 30 mbps IIRC) package. I'm in Southern California dealing with Time Warner Cable. I don't believe we have any data caps.
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It is because of local monopolies. Here in the Midlands (SC) Windstream and Time Warner Cable have us all by the balls.
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Try living in Australia, Telstra charges through the roof (I know some friends who get charged well over $100 for capped plans) and we still get inherently slower connections by virtue of our distance from the majority of hosts.
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Ah, have you seen Alaska's prices? the rest of the nation is spending nothing in comparison.