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difenbaker
05-22-2007, 01:04 AM
For Texting Teens, an OMG Moment When the Phone Bill Arrives
By Margaret Webb Pressler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, May 20, 2007

Sofia Rubenstein, 17, got in trouble the way a lot of teens do these days.Her incessant text-messaging racked up a huge phone bill on the family's wireless plan.

http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2007/05/19/PH2007051901285.jpg

Last month, Sofia Rubenstein, 17, used 6,807 text messages, which pushed her family's wireless bill to more than $1,100 for the month. She couldn't believe the "incredible" number she hit.

Tech-savvy young people are finding ever more inventive ways to use text messages, and wireless communication companies are paying attention, introducing cellphones, such as the Sidekick 3, designed to simplify the process.

"It's whatever pops into my head. There's no stopping it," she said. "Sometimes I'll be on the phone with someone and I get texted, and then I'm having two conversations at once."

Last month the Washington high school junior used 6,807 text messages, which, at a rate of 15 cents apiece for most of them, pushed the family's Verizon Wireless bill to more than $1,100 for the month. Sofia knew she'd been texting a lot but couldn't believe the "incredible" number she hit. "I just thought, oh my God, my life is over," she said.

Indeed. Sofia will be working in her parents' retail store this summer to pay off her debt -- but she definitely won't be the only teenager paying for text abuse. Minutes? Forget minutes. It's all about the text allowance. It needs to be supersized, now that instant messaging has leapt from the desktop to the mobile.

Families who carefully researched their wireless plans to cover calls with no extra fees are discovering, to their horror, that their thumb-tapping teens have found a new way to blow the budget. In Sofia's case, her parents' plan included only 100 free text messages a month -- fewer than half of what she was using every day "at all points of the day" -- and she racked up massive per-message fees fast.

Teenagers elsewhere in the world have been texting furiously for years, using the cheap technology to evade government controls on dating in Saudi Arabia and to foment revolution in the Philippines. Now that texting has exploded in America, it's regarded as one of the current teen generation's inexplicable behaviors, like instant-messaging or spending hours on Facebook.

"What we have to see is that connections are very different than when we were growing up," said Lilli Friedland, a Los Angeles psychologist who also does consulting for the entertainment industry. Text-messaging, she said, is how kids feel comfortable communicating today. Think it, text it, keep it short, have to have it.

Parents seem to accept this new reality and are switching to wireless plans that allow unlimited text messages, which pile $10 to $30 a month on top of an already hefty expense that didn't even exist a decade ago. Janet Boyd, a lobbyist for Dow Chemical, said she and her husband "nearly died" when they got a $70 charge for their 20-year-old daughter's text-messaging. They went to an unlimited plan. "Seventy dollars is a lot more than 20," she said.

Wireless companies, meanwhile, are rolling out new packages to meet demand. "For a teenager to send thousands of text messages a month is not unusual," said John Johnson, a spokesman for Verizon Wireless. Last month the company introduced an unlimited texting plan because even its highest bundle of free text messages -- 5,000 a month -- wasn't enough.

Market research indicates the consumers mostly likely to send and receive text messages are those between the ages of 13 and 24. Last year, 158 billion text messages were sent nationwide, nearly double the number in 2005, according to CTIA, the Wireless Association. With that kind of growth, texting will continue to be very profitable for wireless companies, said Roger Entner, senior vice president for the communication sector at IAG Research, even with bundling plans to lower consumer cost.

The strife this popularity is causing with family phone bills is on display in a popular television commercial for AT&T Wireless to promote its new unlimited plan. A young girl is confronted by her mother for her text-messaging charges, and the girl answers in "text," saying "o-m-g, i-n-b-d." Subtitles provide the translation: "Oh my gosh, it's no big deal."

more here:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/19/AR2007051901284.html


cheers!

problematic
05-22-2007, 03:57 AM
I think that texting in the US and canada will never, I repeat never, overtake that of asian or european countries.

Not as long as they charge you for incoming text.

carcomptoy
05-22-2007, 03:48 PM
Yes but see we have cheap unlimited plans as well. Only time will tell...just because we're behind doesn't mean we can't catch up or overpass ;)

hotzigetty
06-03-2007, 09:10 AM
how much would you pay for an unlimited or if not unlimited may be 1000 sms a month on t-mobile?

carcomptoy
06-03-2007, 12:09 PM
Individual 1000 is $9.99, whereas unlimited is $14.99.

With Family plans, there's available unlimited $19.99 which covers the entire family...which if you have the maximum 5 people, is only $4 per person. It used to be $9.99, which we have, so between the 4 of us in our family, we pay $2.50 per person for unlimited ANY kind of messaging (text, picture, voice, and video).

Oh right...with T-Mobile (and AT&T) the unlimited messaging covers all types of messaging available.

hotzigetty
06-05-2007, 08:00 AM
cool..

Box215
06-05-2007, 01:03 PM
I think that texting in the US and canada will never, I repeat never, overtake that of asian or european countries.

Not as long as they charge you for incoming text.

well incoming text messages wont matter if you have an unlimited plan, as car said. and also, if you have an allowance of 1000 text messages a month, including incoming, thats more of an incentive for people to switch to unlimited plans. My gf has this happen to her all the time (although its partly her fault, always sending the same message twice when i dont respond lol). Ive had unlimited for over 2 years now, glad to see it catching on

666joe
06-06-2007, 08:16 AM
I think that texting in the US and canada will never, I repeat never, overtake that of asian or european countries.

Not as long as they charge you for incoming text.

Yes but see we have cheap unlimited plans as well. Only time will tell...just because we're behind doesn't mean we can't catch up or overpass ;)

SMS will not catch on as much as in UK as the US has alternatives, IM on t-mob, PTT etc - SMS was/is the first mass messaging medium in Europe/UK and the figures keep growing.

After reading that story two things came to mind -

1 - Shouldn't the service provider put a reasonable stop limit in place as thats unusual activity

2 - put her on pay as you talk

problematic
06-06-2007, 08:48 AM
well incoming text messages wont matter if you have an unlimited plan, as car said. and also, if you have an allowance of 1000 text messages a month, including incoming, thats more of an incentive for people to switch to unlimited plans. My gf has this happen to her all the time (although its partly her fault, always sending the same message twice when i dont respond lol). Ive had unlimited for over 2 years now, glad to see it catching on

True. A car said, having an unlimited plan solves this problem. But you have to consider 2 things still. First is that an unlimited plan costs more than the 'normal' plan. Second, an unlimited plan is still a plan, meaning that you still have to have a contract of some sort, what about those prepaid subs?

Here in Manila, all the phones has unlimited free incoming by default. Whether postpaid (contract/plan) or prepaid (pay-as-you-go) - all the incoming texts are free. One telco, Sun telecoms, even has unlimited voice calls and texting (outgoing and incoming) - for only 6.80 to around 7 USD a month.

And I hear that it's not only here, it's the same as in other asian countries, have unlimited free incoming. That's why I think that until such a scheme is adopted in north am - people there will still have to pay more, or they end up texting less, than here in asia.

hotzigetty
06-07-2007, 12:14 AM
Yeah.. Incoming (calls and sms) are free here..

ishaanranderia
06-07-2007, 03:39 AM
I dont think it gets any cheaper than india, with outgoing messaging and call rates(for 1 min) being lower than 1 cent...depending upon the plan. Though the outgoing unlimited is no longer available, atleast not in my city (as far as i am aware:p )