in

All streaming music services will now be free to stream on T-Mobile

T-Mobile has just announced at its “Uncarrier 5.0″ event that all streaming music services will now be free to stream on T-Mobile, including iTunes Radio. This also applies to Pandora, iHeartRadio, Slacker Radio, and Spotify. Any streaming you do will always be done over the company’s fastest available network, and won’t count towards your high-speed data limit. Customers can visit T-Mobile’s website to request new services to be added to the “music freedom” selection. As streaming services gain votes, they will be added to the program.

T-Mobile pulled something of a “One More Thing!” this evening, with a bit of a surprise announcement tacked onto the end of their Uncarrier 5.0 event. T-Mobile will no longer count data used on the “top music streaming services” (including Pandora, iTunes Radio, iHeartRadio, Slacker, Spotify, Samsung’s Milk service, and Rhapsody) against your data cap. As it stands, most of T-Mobile’s plans give you an allotment of data (1GB, 3GB, or 5GB) which will work at full speed. Go past that allotment, and your download/stream speeds tank down to 3G speeds. With this change, any data used on one of the aforementioned “top music streaming services” won’t count toward your cap. And if you’re already past your cap for the month? Data pulled from these services will continue to come down at the higher speed anyway. It’s certainly a good thing for any T-Mobile customers who might find themselves regularly blowing past their data caps, but… it’s a bit strange, from a net neutrality standpoint. By picking and choosing whose data does/doesn’t count, T-Mobile is — deliberately or not — giving certain streaming services a boost. Since they’re focusing on “top services”, it’s potentially a rich-gets-richer sort of thing.

What do you think?

Avatar of Carl Durrek

Written by Carl Durrek

Carl is a gaming fanatic, forever stuck on Reddit and all-around lover of food.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Amazon has finally unveiled the long-rumored Fire Phone

The iPhone 6 could have a barometer and air pressure sensors