Unlimited 3G services are… eh, not so much.

Recently here on BoingBoing, I've posted threads in which Glenn Fleishman and others analyze the surprisingly restrictive legalese that accompanies some cellular data service agreements. Glenn has a great piece in CMP's Mobile Pipeline newsletter summing up the issues:

If you're tempted by what some cellular operators are calling "unlimited" 3G cellular data service, read the fine print.

Three U.S. cellular operators that currently offer fixed-price 3G service — Verizon Wireless, Cingular and Sprint — typically use terms like "unlimited" in their marketing material to describe the nature of your access. However, a close look at the fine print makes it clear that the cellular operators are putting significant limits on their so-called unlimited service.

These limits are stated in the terms of use documents that the operators apply to their 3G service, documents that strictly spell out what you can — and can't — use 3G service for. Reading those documents, it is obvious that the operators are imposing these limitations to make sure you don't use too much 3G service or use 3G to replace existing wired broadband and Wi-Fi hotspot services.

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