[CA] Internet costs to rise


Recommended Posts

Surfing and downloading from the internet is about to get more expensive for many Canadians as internet companies Shaw and Primus have announced plans to impose new fees and caps on internet usage.

Over the past year, the CRTC, Canada's communication regulator, let Bell and Rogers start charging extra for customers who download a lot of data. The growing demand for live-streaming and online movies gobbles up huge chunks of bandwidth on the World Wide Web.

Primus and Shaw have said they will begin passing on higher fees to their customers beginning Feb. 1. Primus, for example, rents bandwidth on Bell's networks and said Bell is inflating the costs for everyone, including them.

http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2011/01/07/internet-expensive-surfing-canadians.html

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/966966-ca-internet-costs-to-rise/
Share on other sites

Welcome to Bhell! This is so backwards, with technology expanding so fast they shouldn't be imposing bandwidth caps now, very low caps at that. I'm with Bell and I have to pay an extra $10 so I can get an additional 80GB, making it 140GB. Yes, the normal bandwidth cap is 60GB, in 2011!

It's 75GB I believe for Fibe25 (25mbps), how crazy are they?

And let's not mention the overage fees. Want to use your internet for more than watching at 360p youtube videos and chatting on Facebook? Be ready to fork out $60 if you go over the limit.

3 years ago bandwidth caps was unheard of here. How low have we fallen.

Eastlink ftw.

No caps :)

Even though their 30mbit and 100mbit service is advertised with caps, at the moment there aren't any because they don't have a way to monitor usage lol.

wont last for long as is wholesale of bell.

same with teksavvy is wholesale of bell all dsl in ontario is owned by bell technically

This is why we will all be speaking Japanese some day.

My parents have DSL and are capped at 10 gigs per month. The DSL provider also advertises that you can watch all the netflix movies you want. In that ad the 10 gig cap is never mentioned.

It's such a shame that the bigger companies can call the shots. Right now, those big companies are Bell and Rogers. The smaller wholesale resellers like Primus and Teksavvy have no choice but to buckle under the pressure of Bell and Rogers. It's sad because the CRTC allows this. Fortunately, they're not all that bad. In fact, they've done some good for the little guys (see here and here). Personally though, it doesn't excuse the CRTC ruling that forced the wholesale resellers to enforce the bandwidth caps of whichever major ISP they were leasing from.

Up until 2004, Canada used to be among the top countries when it came to high speed Internet access and broadband penetration. Over the years, our broadband infrastructure gradually became stagnant and... never mind. I could go on and on but it won't change things. Instead, I leave you with this: '2011 Villain: Bandwidth Caps'

It's a good read.

wont last for long as is wholesale of bell.

same with teksavvy is wholesale of bell all dsl in ontario is owned by bell technically

There are places that aren't Ontatio you know.. And Eastlink, at least in Atlantic Canada, is a Cable company.

Exactly. And they do have a way to monitor. Every ISP does.

Not according to the people I know that work for them.. They have never cared in the past about usage, thus they never implemented a system to accurately track customers usage.

They do their traffic shaping during the day, to keep people from killing the network, but aside from that they really don't care..

I live in windsor ontario and i pay $50 a month for a 14mb line unlimited BW. I get it from Kelcom. They rent the lines from Cogeco cable but they dont monitor the BW so i get unlimited for the same price and speed i would have to pay cogeco for 60gb a month.

The latest CRTC decision allows Cogeco to tell Kelcom to charge you for your actual bandwidth. That means that your "unlimited" internet will be soon given a limit.

The day Brighthouse Networks starts limiting the internet by putting caps on it I will quit using it. That is stupid and ridiculous because then you won't be able to play any online games as you will use all that bandwidth in a heartbeat.

There are places that aren't Ontatio you know.. And Eastlink, at least in Atlantic Canada, is a Cable company.

Bell only really provides internet in Ontario and Quebec so this is only really effecting us. For now, it will effect you guys too.

I really don't see cable companies doing this. They tried having caps here a long time ago, it failed as everyone just went someplace else so now we have none. All of our cable goes through Eastlink, who has no caps.

I think this will really only affect DSL customers in the short term. Who knows what cable will do later on, but for now we are safe (except if you are with Rogers I guess).

Q1: Why is it the case that there are ONLY 2 ISPs in Ontario BELL/Rogers (everyone else rents the pipes from them) ...

-----This is monopoly as Bell has DSL and Rogers Cable, hence if you'd like to go to another ISP say Tecksavvy you still get capped (which theoretically and practically still counts as BELL) hence monopoly

Q2: Why is it the case that there does not exist any other company that provides internet other than BELL/Rogers that is NOT rented from them? where is the competition?!

Q1: Why is it the case that there are ONLY 2 ISPs in Ontario BELL/Rogers (everyone else rents the pipes from them) ...

-----This is monopoly as Bell has DSL and Rogers Cable, hence if you'd like to go to another ISP say Tecksavvy you still get capped (which theoretically and practically still counts as BELL) hence monopoly

Q2: Why is it the case that there does not exist any other company that provides internet other than BELL/Rogers that is NOT rented from them? where is the competition?!

bell owns the last mile to 255front street so no one can touch the lines from 255 front to your house other then bell. thanks to the CRTC thus eliminating competition

Q1: Why is it the case that there are ONLY 2 ISPs in Ontario BELL/Rogers (everyone else rents the pipes from them) ...

-----This is monopoly as Bell has DSL and Rogers Cable, hence if you'd like to go to another ISP say Tecksavvy you still get capped (which theoretically and practically still counts as BELL) hence monopoly

Q2: Why is it the case that there does not exist any other company that provides internet other than BELL/Rogers that is NOT rented from them? where is the competition?!

This isn't accurate. We have an ISP in our town that ran its own cables to everything and now is it's own ISP. I know in places like Toronto this can't happen but it did here. I do realize it does have to connect to something outside of us but I'm not sure who they use ... it might be Ontera or something.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • JetBrains launches Rider 2026.2 EAP 5, bringing several AI improvements by David Uzondu JetBrains has released the fifth EAP version of Rider 2026.2, bringing a faster startup flow with the new non-modal startup screen and quality-check hooks for Claude Code and Codex. In the latest EAP release, Rider now has newly bundled "quality-check" hooks that run background tests on code edits before the external agent proceeds. For example, after Claude Code rewrites a class, Rider immediately triggers a PostToolUse hook that analyzes the code for syntax errors and formatting warnings. It then passes those findings back to the model as feedback, allowing the agent to fix its own output before finalizing the task. If Rider detects compilation errors, the IDE prevents the agent from treating the task as complete, while minor formatting warnings simply help guide the model toward better output. The "Explain with AI" feature can now tackle tricky build errors directly from the console, helping .NET developers who frequently wrestle with multi-targeting failures and MSBuild errors. JetBrains introduced Explain with AI back in the 2024.1 release cycle. With this feature, instead of forcing developers to copy long diagnostics into a separate chat window, Rider now lets you trigger these explanations directly from the error source. In similar EAP news, JetBrains recently opened the first EAP for IntelliJ IDEA 2026.2, with features that appeal to both those who are into AI-assisted coding and those who prefer "classic" manual development. For manual developers, the release adds revamped dependency completion for Maven and Gradle build scripts, which pulls data directly from the local cache to suggest relevant versions. It also brings the Spring Debugger update, displaying security indicators next to endpoints to visualize secured routes during runtime. In addition to database migration tools for Flyway and Liquibase, this build introduces a Hibernate debugger that shows the exact SQL or HQL queries that the framework plans to execute, letting developers jump directly to the Java code that triggered them.
    • I have updated my Series 9 Watch so I assume there is either a mistake in what was said, or as suggested - the new AI feature set isn’t supported on anything other than those listed above.
    • WhatsApp slams Isreali firm, NSO Group, for trying to spy on its users by David Uzondu WhatsApp has come out accusing Israeli cyber-intelligence firm, NSO Group, of deploying a fresh wave of highly targeted "spear phishing" attacks against users, which its security teams successfully thwarted. The Israeli firm, according to WhatsApp, ran this operation like its usual one-click phishing campaigns, trying to get people to click malicious links that lead them to external sites. To coordinate the campaign, the spyware vendor created fake test accounts and groups on the messaging app. WhatsApp said it is sharing the specific malicious domains, ikhwancast[.]com, ghazacast[.]com, and fr24cast[.]com, because potential victims need this data to check if they were targeted across other messaging systems or email platforms. The NSO Group is infamous for creating and selling Pegasus, a military-grade commercial spyware capable of silently compromising smartphones simply by sending a message or placing a missed call via apps like WhatsApp or iMessage. Users do not even have to interact with the incoming notification before the infection takes hold. Once Pegasus manages to break in, the spyware harvests private data, letting operators read private messages, emails, photos, and documents. It also tracks precise GPS locations, records keystrokes, activates the device's camera, and monitors live microphone audio. Independent investigations by cybersecurity watchdogs like The Citizen Lab and human rights organizations like Amnesty International have proven that governments use this software to track humanitarian workers, journalists, diplomats, and political dissidents. These findings directly contradict NSO Group claims that clients use the technology to spy on criminals and terrorists only. In late 2021, the U.S. Department of Commerce added the firm to its Entity List, effectively banning the vendor from buying hardware and software from American tech companies. WhatsApp said in its blog post that the spyware vendor violated a permanent court injunction with this new spear-phishing campaign. This injunction, which took effect in 2025, strictly prohibited NSO Group from targeting WhatsApp and its users. The platform is now asking a federal court to hold the firm in contempt.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      225
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      87
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      82
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      80
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!