Re: Huge data issue
mariejean
Newbie

I have had Comcast out and my internet is working fine and the router is very close to my daughter's bedroom. Verizon told me when my data was used so it wasn't about when it was reported. Their information is incorrect. There is obviously a mistake, which Verizon's reply was that we would figure it out. No one has gotten back to me. We have used around 2GBs since the 10th of this month. There is no way she used 7GBs in six hours no matter what she was doing.

As soon as I can figure out an alternative, I am cancelling my phone. I have been a loyal customer for over ten years but I truly feel as thought that doesn't matter to them. I am going to contact the attorney general about the issue and see if they are able to resolve it. I am fed up and done!

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Re: Huge data issue
mama23dogs
Legend

The best data meter for the iPhone is the phone itself.  If it said it used 7gbs a data that day, it did. 

IF your daughter hasnt reset the usage to hide it, you can look at which apps have high use since the last reset.

(see pictures below)

The data is REPORTED overnight.  It was not USED over night.  We get locked into the idea that data reported at 6 pm and 9 pm was actually used at that time.  Not the case.  Data is reported when we close an application or turn a phone off, or connect to wifi, effectively - stop connecting to cellular.

WIth that in mind, her phone use could be built up over a week before being reported.

Most of the time it turns out to be YouTube or other video, streamed while at school, on the bus, etc. 

Your TV doesn't have a cellular option, it will be prioritized over a cell phone.  If a cell phone detects a congested or unstable wifi, it will use cellular.

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Re: Huge data issue
mama23dogs
Legend

TO continue....

IT is frustrating to explain data use to someone with no idea how it is used and how it is reported back to the carrier.

I Compare it to driving a car, but not understanding why the gas guage goes down and uses up the gasoline.

Causes of high data use.

Faulty phone, faulty applications, upgrade to 4G LTE phone, kids/teens, social media, operator error, wifi problems.

Diagnose first:

2 things to look at, battery and data use.  Open settings, look at data/cellular usage.  Scroll down and note which apps are using the most data.  Do the same with battery use.  Anything using your data is likely to also show high battery use. 

Understanding second:

  There is a trend toward blaming the carrier if a customer doesn't understand the data use.  If your phone says it used the data, then it did.  If your phone shows substantially* less usage than is being reported, then take a screen shot for proof and call for tech support.  ( *a hundred mbs more or less is not substantial. )

How it works?

Data reporting is not done in real time.   The actual data use could have been hours, or days earlier.   Towers often report data back in 3 hour intervals during non peak hours. 

Towers note when a connection to a particular IMEI/ESN (which is unique to your phone and SIM card) opens, pass to a new tower and closes.  Once it closes, it sends data totals back. 

The connection closes when you leave a tower's area, connect to wifi, turn an app off, turn off your phone.  Think of each tower like a faucet with a measuring cup with your phones identification number on it.  It notes when you connect, when you pass on to another tower and disconnect because you are connected to wifi, turned apps off, or turned the phone off.  It is then that each tower can measure and starts sending back totals.  This is of course when you are home, on wifi, phone off and asleep.

Privacy

We use our phones for business, medical, financial, personal and even questionable uses.  The contents of your phone are personal and private.  Only you can see which apps are used or what websites are visited.  On your bill the carrier can only categorize use.  Example: "Audio" may be music, text to speech, notifications and ringtones. 

  Faulty phone.  Just to get the least likely, but most costly cause of data overage out of the way next; a faulty phone.  It doesn't happen often, but when it does, it can be a ridiculous amount of data is a very short time.  In some cases, customers have reported no applications open or in use, yet a phone continues to use many GBS of data.  If this happens, don't wait for your carrier to credit your account, or the Calvary to charge to your rescue.   It may be an app you downloaded, try running in safe mode.  A factory data reset may resolve the problem.  Restoring all data may also restore the problem.  Save essential information so it can be synced back to your phone.

If none of this has any effect, the phone must be replaced.

  A related cause can be an application running amok.   Running in safe mode can determine if it is an app, or the phone itself.  Downloading apps from unknown sources exposes your phone to this risk, so be careful.  I find free music downloaders are problematic.  If you use them, delete the App after you download.

  Android smartphone running version 4.0 or later you can check your data usage and set alerts and limits. Go to Settings and under Wireless & Networks tap on Data usage. You’ll see a table showing your data usage for a specific period of time. You can check the box that says "Set mobile data limit" and then move the black and red lines to set an alert usage amount (so you’ll get a warning when you’re closing in on your limit), and a hard limit (which will prevent you from going over).  The drawbacks are: As above, data is not reported in real time, set your limit slightly below your actual cap and the user can change this limit any time (kids may alter the setting). 

Common causes for an increase in data use

  Switch from an old 3G phone to a brand new 4G LTE device.   If you upgraded to a new phone and suddenly noticed it is using 2-3 times more data, it is not a faulty phone.   The newer, bigger phones use a lot more data to do the same tasks.  Video and images load in HD, tasks can be run faster, so you can do more.  The recommendation is 2 GBS of data for each 4G LTE smartphone, for normal use.

  Kids/Teenagers.   Gotta love them, but they do not always understand what uses data.  Personally, I taught my kids how to control and monitor their own data and hung the threat of turning it off on the account over their heads.  I feel if the child is old enough for a smartphone, he or she is old enough to keep to their allotted data.   The option to add a feature from the carrier may be preferred by some customers.  This shuts off a lines data when it reaches the limit.   This is a subscription service, so please check on the charges involved.  There have been reports it is flawed.  As described in the beginning of the article, data takes hours to report back, so your child's phone can reach and pass the limit before the computerized switch gets the message and shuts them off.

Also, in your child's defense, if their room is far from your router, and is not properly set up, it may connect to the superior, cellular connection rather than poor wifi.  (Please see iPhone note at the end)

  If a phone is working correctly, it switches to wifi when available.  Some customers are controlling data by manually turning mobile data and wifi on and off.  This is an unnecessary action if the phone and wifi are working as designed.   It can also backfire horribly if you forget the switch back to wifi at home.  However, if your wifi is not sufficient, you have no choice.

  Social media applications.  This may go hand in hand with Teenagers.  Instagram, Facebook, Twitter all use a lot of data for video and photos.  These applications have settings within the app to limit mobile data by turning video play off. 

YouTube, aka, "data drain extraordinaire" should be wifi only.

And email settings.... Email itself doesn't use a lot of data, but links to photos, video or websites increase use.  Settings are with email application to restrict attachments.

  Operator error.  Your smartphone is a little computer.  They no longer come with paper manuals because the software changes too often.  Please look up and read the online user manual for your device.  Updates to software may change your settings, please review them after an update to your phone. 

  Restrict applications in the background.  Path to follow: settings, data usage, select each app individually to restrict.  If your phone has a battery conservation option, it also restricts data use in the background. 

  An application running in the background.  This could be a nasty little surprise on anyone's phone.  I decided to test and see how this could happen.  I opened the app for my security camera and checked on my dogs while I was out.  Rather than logout and close the app correctly, I left it running in the background for 5-6 hours.  Later in the day , after I was home and on wifi for a while, I closed the application properly.  About 3 hours later, the towers all reported back a total of 5 GBS of data used.  My phone correctly reported the data use by the security camera application. 

  Wifi problems fall into 2 categories, (a)  faulty wifi antenna in the phone or (b) poor wifi service from your home equipment. 

If the fault is in the phone, it will have problems with many or all wifi.  Either refusing to connect, or dropping constantly.  If this is the problem, a reboot, battery pull, or reset of network settings may be the quick fix.  If not, a factory data reset may resolve the problem.  In some cases the phone must be replaced.

This is the tricky part in today's connected homes, but it may also be the culprit if you have massive overage on apps you insist are only used at home, on wifi.  Streaming devices, computers, smart TVs, tablets, cellphones all divide your incoming bandwidth into smaller and smaller portions.  Distance from the router is also a factor.  If your phone drops wifi, other devices are slow or drop connection, pages load slowly, the problem may be your router, modem, service, or a combination of the three.  Reconfiguring your router may resolve the problem.  This may require a service call, but if you have regular overage charges it's a bargain.  Poor wifi reception may sneak up on you unless you use a wifi only device regularly, which would make a reduction is service noticeable.  The faster and more capable smartphones become, the more intolerant they are of poor internet connections.  Run a speed test direct from your modem, upload, download and latency.   That last one is important.  If the graph looks like an EKG, you have a problem, Trouble shoot with your internet  provider.  I recommend a dual channel, 2.4 and 5.0 ghz router with extenders if needed.  My personal pick (after several high rated routers failed to deliver) is the Apple AirPort Extreme and or base station.   It is not the only excellent router out there, but it works well for me, and we are not a completely Apple house.

What can I do with 1 gigabyte (1024 MBs) of data?

Of course we don't use our phones for just one activity on this list, but a combination of these can easily add up to more than we expected.

Send 50,000 emails without attachments

Stream 33 hours of music

Browse 1,000 web pages

Post 2,800 pictures to Facebook

Watch 2-3 hours of YouTube

Watch 45-60 minutes of Netflix in HD

iMessage

iMessage uses data to send text messages.  It doesn't use a lot, unless you send as many text messages as the average teenager.  If your kid "talks with thumbs", you might want to turn iMessage to wifi only, or off.

Find out how much data iMessage has used since you last reset data totals, follow this path on your iPhone:  open settings > cellular data > system services > messaging services.

iPhone, iOS 9 wifi assist.   If you have an iPhone running iOS 9 the wifi assist is on by default.  This setting will default your phone to LTE if the LTE signal is stronger than your wifi signal.  Great for performance, but it will really take a chunk out of your data plan.  Best to just turn this off.

even prior to iOS 9 iPhones will connect to cellular when the phone is 'asleep' and not plugged in to charge.

both my sons have turned wifi off to save their battery while out, then forgot to turn it back on while at home (oops)