figmentPez
Staff member
No, it can't boil down to that. There's no reaching the fine print only to shrug and say "guess that's what the contract said". Someone approved this plan when they shouldn't have. Any plan that can result in throttling is unacceptable for emergency services. No matter how common such clauses are for contracts, someone screwed up by having terms that result in throttling for emergency services.I’m expecting this to boil down to a T&C issue where the plan said it would have been enough to meet their needs unless they wanted to use more than 20GB per day or some other secret surcharge-y sort of thing.
Hopefully every single emergency service in the US will be reviewing their contracts right now.