T-Mobile’s Newest Plan Saves Your Data For Later

T-Mobile’s Newest Plan Saves Your Data For Later


T-Mobile is going to start treating your data a lot more like rollover minutes.

In its Uncarrier 8.0 announcement today the wireless US carrier introduced Data Stash, the company’s name for data rollover.

Like rollover minutes, data rollover allows you to keep your unused data for use for up to one year. Data saved from March, for example, if unused, stays with you until next March.

“That data is rightfully yours,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “And, we’re putting an end to this appalling industry practice today. With Data Stash, when you buy additional high-speed data, there’s no need to lose what you don’t use.”

Legere has a history of positioning T-Mobile as a carrier that caters to consumer interests, framing the competition as companies more concerned with profits rather than consumer satisfaction.

T-Mobile’s “Uncarrier” campaign includes controversial tactics that collide with net neutrality proponents’ values.

T-Mobile’s Music Freedom service allows you to stream music from participating music streaming apps like Spotify and Beats, without counting against your data cap, essentially prioritizing certain types of data from certain companies, a tactic that violates net neutrality’s core concept.

Data Stash is launching by giving every qualifying line 10GB of free data. Qualifying plans include smartphone data plans equal to or larger than 3GB, and tablet data plans equal to or larger than 1GB.

Data Stash will launch January 2015, free of charge to every T-Mobile customer.


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