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I can't believe that so many people are seemingly outraged that an ISP does not have readily available detailled records of your browsing activity! Are you people serious? You actually WANT your ISP to log every website you visit and what you transfer on the Internet? ISPs should only ever have usage records available, that is to say connection times and how much traffic you sent and received.
Do you not realise that it is PUNISHABLE by up to 10 years in jail to intercept and monitor your actual traffic without a court order? They generally do have global logs available somewhere securely that could be used for forensic purposes but these do not feed into their billing services and are not identified directly by user but by the ip address of your session which means that they would have to extract your session ip's. Normally, only a handful of people would have access to these logs and would never look at them normally, and if they did they wouldn't have much meaning as they would not be identifiable to a specific user. These logs will normally be compressed and rotated periodically and often discarded after six months anyway.
Please think about what you are complaining about, people. Do you really want some anonymous helpdesk or billing person to have access to your browsing activity and even packet level data including what actual data you sent and received (including passwords and credit card numbers)??? Dumb. Dumb. Dumb.
How can they not give you information regarding YOUR browsing?, But why if you download something you shouldn't...hehe, they can send you a detailed email with exactly what you downloaded etc etc?.
BS, If they expect you to pay a sheit load of money for internet, You would think that you would get some sort of "service" from them.
So if I can see the sites accessed eg. updates.microsoft.com then I will know that it was updates or if it is a dodgy site then I will know it is a virus...
@Pavan - nope, I don't think I did:
And rapidx also seems to think they should be keeping your detailed browsing history as well..
@R2 a meg an anti-virus update will cost you two months' salary with Vodascum and Empty N. Cell C ftw
Why not? If its the clients data - isn't it the same as providing them with an itemised billing listing the numbers they called?
Welcome to the wild world of unlimited credit for post paid contract users. Convert yourself to a top-up contract or go pre-paid.
I believe there should be a case for reckless lending in all these situations, but someone with deep pockets will have to prove that in court.
Obviously you dont want anyone to monitor your every move, so all the ISP can really do is monitor your connection times and overall usage per connection right. So in the case of the ISP vs. You, the ISP will always win as even if their 'logs' are incorrect, it's the only information they have! So essentially, ISP's can bill you whatever they like and back their case up with THEIR logs? Yaasis...
I'm in the process of trying to sort out a problem with Vodacom, whereby they have billed us over R14,000 for our monthly data usage. We know that this is completely impossible*.
On mentioning it to some friends via Facebook, it seems that we are far from alone with this situation - one mentioned she had to pay R6k when Vodacom "proved" that she had overused on her data allowance, another paid over R2k, another R17k (I think that might have been voice roaming rather than data). All three dispute that they used the data/made the calls, but Vodacom insisted that they must have either had a virus or someone else had used the data/phone. My friends gave up and paid.
I'm not going to give up because I KNOW I'm right. But I'm worried now - has anyone ever taken Vodacom on about something like this and WON?
* Proof that it's not possible:
We are a wireless internet provider. It's a MyMeg500 contract and we only use it rarely as a backup when all the ADSL lines go down (it's attached to our load balancer as a failover). Last month, the ADSL lines all went down for approximately approximately 20 minutes on one day. Only one of our customers is configured to use the failover and they are aware they must only use it for email - they were alerted to this at the time as a reminder. The rest of the time, the 3G modem was not in use - we have logs to show the data usage was less than 100Mb during the ADSL outage. Nobody has removed the 3G modem and borrowed it - it would be a sackable offence. According to Vodacom, it was used for around 2 hours on a Saturday (this is BS - it hasn't been used at all at a weekend) and 9Gb was downloaded in that time. Again this is BS - where we live it isn't physically possible to squash 9Gb down the line within 2 hours - and there is no record of this kind of throughput on our logs.
Despite all this I'm worried that Vodacom will force us to pay to retain the service - pay now and we'll sort it out later, that kind of tactic. But more than that, I'm outraged that Vodacom can bully customers into paying for something they didn't use. If we were not a service provider, we wouldn't have the means to prove our innocence. I am a freelance writer and I'm seriously considering writing an exposé on this. Stories and perspectives welcome...
Hi Wordhog
I had a look at the history of the data usage and found that the connection started just before the night owl period on the 25th Feb. The connection than ran into 27th and stopped at around 8pm. That particular connection used over 12gigs of data.
Agreed!! my view exactly..and my understanding of ECT act is they HAVE to maintain that database for 5 years...same as SMS communication logs! - care to comment VodacomREP.
Hi Wordhog
I had a look at the history of the data usage and found that the connection started just before the night owl period on the 25th Feb. The connection than ran into 27th and stopped at around 8pm. That particular connection used over 12gigs of data.
I think Vodacom needs really work on an automatic cap on data usage on postpaid unless the user explicitly raises it. This happens so frequently.
Even when people try to be aware of their data usage, they can get caught out.
How's this for a gotcha scenario? With iPhone tethering users often go out to meetings, coffee shops, airports, etc with their laptops and browse with their iphone on USB using tethering. Unless you specifically switch off tethering on the iPhone it STAYS ON. They get home, plug the iPhone back into the laptop to charge/sync itunes and happily surf for hours not realising that their primary internet connection is now the iPhone tether using 3G and not their normal local connectivity. In fact, for those with 384kbps ADSL or slow connections they suddenly think their internet connection is so much faster (because it's actually on 3G) so they download way more than normal... and then a month later the bill arrives for that 2GB internet session...
Agreed!! my view exactly..and my understanding of ECT act is they HAVE to maintain that database for 5 years...same as SMS communication logs! - care to comment VodacomREP.
this happened to you ?