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AT&T will lower the quality of most video on its network by default next year

AT&T President and CEO Randall Stephenson
AT&T President and CEO Randall Stephenson

(AT

AT&T on Friday announced Stream Saver, a new feature that caps "most" video streams on its network at the standard 480p resolution instead of presenting them in high definition.

AT&T says Stream Saver will go live in “early 2017,” and pitches it as a way of ensuring customers can get more video out of their data allowance before hitting their cap and having their data throttled.

The feature will be enabled by default for users of its wireless service, but the carrier says customers will be able to turn it off in the myAT&T app whenever they’d like, at no cost.

Still, the move means that AT&T users will have to take extra steps to ensure they can watch video the way they normally do today. Stream Saver itself appears similar to T-Mobile’s controversial "Binge On" and unlimited data programs, which also cap video at a lower quality, but allow users to stream various services at no cost to their data cap — an increasingly prevalent practice known as “zero-rating.”

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Stream Saver, as it stands now, will not do any zero-rating — users will still pay the same amount for their plans as they did before, and the standard definition video will still count against their data cap. It’ll just take up less, because that’s what lower resolution streams do by default.

AT&T also says you’ll only need to turn off Stream Saver once to keep it deactivated. That stands in contrast to T-Mobile’s recently revamped unlimited data plans, which force customers to activate HD video in the carrier’s app on a daily basis.

at&t customer
at&t customer

(A woman looks at her mobile next to AT

With a largely anti-regulation Trump administration on the way, though, a service like Stream Saver is worth watching, especially if it follows T-Mobile into some form of zero-rating. Zero-rating is a hot button issue among net neutrality proponents today — they say that enabling technical advantages for certain services and/or networks creates an unequal playing field for the internet as a whole.

AT&T currently zero-rates video from its DirecTV subsidiary, plans to do so with its DirecTV Now streaming service, and charges third-party content providers to be zero-rated through its “Sponsored Data” program. The last of those came under fire from the FCC on Thursday.

Nevertheless, none of that is in place today for Stream Saver, and the feature could prove beneficial to Netflix bingers who don’t mind watching in standard definition on a smaller phone screen. In fact, Netflix has voluntarily capped its mobile streams at 600 kilobits per second for over five years on some networks, to stop people from going over their data plans. But for some AT&T customers, Stream Saver could still be an annoyance.

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