Simply text '6 MONTH WEB' to '441' on T-mobile PAYG and for £20 you can have 6 months unlimited internet access. (Fair use policy 1GB per month). Works out at only £3.33 per month.
All comments (41)
zurich
3 Sep 10#1
i think its fair usage of 500mb of data per month as far as i can make out from below but still pretty good.
marsh5000
4 Sep 10#2
if it says unlimited then thats what it should be no bs about fair use policy or anything else,it should say max 2gb per month for 6 months for £20
haq
4 Sep 10#3
'unlimited' is used by all service providers, even when it is not unlimited
callum9999 to haq
4 Sep 10#12
It's not used by Vodafone, O2 or 3 - they all give you your limit.
manonfire238
4 Sep 10#4
Ofcom or whoever should really take a look at the whole 'fair usage policy' nonsense, it's not unlimited if they, you know, impose a limit! Waaayyy too many providers using that terminology at the moment.
Ofcom will probably take 5 years to decide about it though, such is their ineptitude.
PR1
4 Sep 10#5
I'd say it's fair to say "unlimited (fair usage)" only if there is no charge for exceeding it, and no impact beyond perhaps "we think your use is excessive so wish to terminate your service unless you agree to reduce usage - would you like 30 days notice or to decrease your data use?" (with of course no charge for the cessation as it's their call)
fishmaster to PR1
4 Sep 10#9
Unlimited means just that, unlimited (fair usage) is ridiculous and an oxymoron.
Unlimited (fair usage) - Which is it then Unlimited or Limited? I'm confused. It's either one or the other it can't be both. They should rename it the Heisenberg uncertainty tariff or the Quantum tariff.
I doubt (they really aren't reading this I have no illusions lol) the providers are reading this but perhaps they'd like to look at the definitions of the words they are using as shown above. They must have used politicians to compose the tariff descriptions. The use of the word unlimited should be banned unless the service is unlimited.
Unlimited (fair usage) - Which is it then Unlimited or Limited? I'm confused. It's either one or the other it can't be both. They should call it the Heisenberg Uncertainty Tariff or the Quantum tariff maybe.
MajorCockUp
4 Sep 10#6
good deal
shopping_guy
4 Sep 10#7
Does anyone know more about which selected phones this includes. I just got a blackberry 8900 and this would be great. Also is it for new customers as well?
Inactive
4 Sep 10#8
Why can't they just be honest and say " limited "?
Opening post
All comments (41)
Ofcom will probably take 5 years to decide about it though, such is their ineptitude.
Unlimited (fair usage) - Which is it then Unlimited or Limited? I'm confused. It's either one or the other it can't be both. They should rename it the Heisenberg uncertainty tariff or the Quantum tariff.
http://define.com/unlimited
So what they mean is it's an unrestricted service which is restricted.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/oxymoron
I doubt (they really aren't reading this I have no illusions lol) the providers are reading this but perhaps they'd like to look at the definitions of the words they are using as shown above. They must have used politicians to compose the tariff descriptions. The use of the word unlimited should be banned unless the service is unlimited.
Unlimited (fair usage) - Which is it then Unlimited or Limited? I'm confused. It's either one or the other it can't be both. They should call it the Heisenberg Uncertainty Tariff or the Quantum tariff maybe.
Unlimited, should mean exactly that.