The change was made to protect users, "because many Canadian Internet service providers unfortunately enforce monthly caps on the total amount of data consumed."
Subscribers can only breach their monthly cap by agreement with the network.
Starting Jan. 1, however, the monthly cap on that public transportation contribution may be cut roughly in half to $125.
Kindergeld, which has been distributed in western Germany since 1955, can reach a monthly cap of $420 for a family of four.
Prescriptions are 50% subsidised, subject to a complex means-tested (sliding scale) monthly cap per family.
But with speeds this slow the monthly cap is basically 50GB.
They're only supposed to be sort of six monthly caps.
But there are monthly caps to costs, and low-income people are heavily subsidized.
Has the author even read Ars' article discussing how monthly caps make no impact on congestion?
I agree that monthly caps make no sense at all.