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Cellphones United States Wireless Networking

Americans Used Record 100 Trillion Megabytes of Wireless Data In 2023 (reuters.com) 81

A new survey released on Tuesday found that Americans used over 100 trillion megabytes of wireless data last year -- a 36% increase from the previous year and the largest single-year increase in the history of wireless data consumption. Reuters reports: The increase -- 26 trillion MBs over 2022 -- comes as a growing number of 5G wireless devices are being used, said wireless industry association CTIA that represents major wireless carriers like Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and technology firms. The total number of wireless connections rose to 558 million last year, up 6% over 2022, the survey found.

Demand for spectrum use is soaring, driven in part by more wireless use in advancements including drones, self-driving vehicles, space missions and precision agriculture. The survey said the number of minutes Americans spent talking on the phone fell slightly from 2.5 trillion in 2022 to 2.4 trillion in 2023 and text messages were about the same at 2.1 trillion in 2023 over the prior year.

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Americans Used Record 100 Trillion Megabytes of Wireless Data In 2023

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  • Data Consumption (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 11, 2024 @07:53PM (#64782009)

    .... in the history of wireless data consumption

    There is no such thing as "data use" or "data consumption". Nothing is being "used". Nothing is being "consumed". The term "data consumption" is the bullshit lie used by the telecom oligopoly to justify their obscenely high prices.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      ...was transmitted.

    • by darkain ( 749283 )

      I guess you're perfectly content with dialup then? Since nothing is "used" when bandwidth comes into question.

    • Actually that is it not true. To send data you have to remove entropy to create the signal, so you are creating more entropy somewhere else.

      As for data consumption, the term bandwidth consumption is probably more accurate. You can only send so much data over a given system, so that capacity is the limit they are talking about.

    • ... is silverfish in an old government-data-repository library full of old books containing old records.

    • They used that amount of network capacity, which is a finite resource distributed over space, time and frequency.
    • There is no such thing as "data use" or "data consumption". Nothing is being "used". Nothing is being "consumed".

      Tell that to my Netflix stream. The data comes all the way over the line and then what? It isn't saved anywhere.

      consume:
      verb
      1. Use up a resource.
      though number 2 here also applies:
      2. Buy goods or services.

      So really data is being consumed in 2 different ways.

    • In unrelated news, NSA stored 100 Trillion Megabytes of new Data In 2023

      • More like they stored the metadata generated by 100 Trillion Megabytes of wireless transmissions in 2023. The vast majority of that data is publicly available, and thus already archived by the NSA. No need to waste additional space.

        Also for those that don't know, 100 Trillion Megabytes is playing with the decimal point. It's 100 Terabytes.
        • by stooo ( 2202012 )

          >> 100 Trillion Megabytes is playing with the decimal point. It's 100 Terabytes.
          Nope. It just is not.

          10^12 * 10^6 = 10^18 -> 100 Exabytes
          And that is assumming Trillion = 10^12

    • by flink ( 18449 )

      Bandwidth is a finite resource. There is an amount of data above which you would not be able to transmit in a single year given the current network's capabilities. 100T MB is some fraction of that capacity, thus the bandwidth was "consumed".

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Wednesday September 11, 2024 @07:53PM (#64782013) Homepage

    Like how many Olympic sized swimming pools, or Eiffel towers end to end, or elephants stacked on top of each other. But no, just trillions of megabytes. How am I ever going to visualize such a number???

  • by Radagast ( 2416 ) on Wednesday September 11, 2024 @07:58PM (#64782017) Homepage

    Trillions of megabytes, huh? Too bad there isn't a more convenient unit we could use.

    • I guess 100,000 terabytes didn't sound as impressive. IMO it really doesn't when you consider the number of devices and the 5G home internet offerings.

      • 100,000,000 terabytes that is (not 100,000)
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I guess 100,000 terabytes didn't sound as impressive. IMO it really doesn't when you consider the number of devices and the 5G home internet offerings.

        Definitely not as impressive sounding as 100 exabytes, literally and figuratively.

      • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

        Yeap, and using bytes or bits would have probably made the title too long like "millions of trillions of bytes" or something so they settled for MB for maximum efficiency while retaining maximum click baity and using a unit (trillion) which most users are used to hear about and which sounds really big.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Shag ( 3737 )

      Trillions of megabytes, huh? Too bad there isn't a more convenient unit we could use.

      Exabyte Corporation's founders were waaaay ahead of the curve on metric prefixes back in 1985.
      I guess they figured "Hey, an exabyte should be enough for anybody."
      Of course, they never got anywhere close to 1 EB capacity on a tape.

      100 EB of wireless data compares well, though, to the ~150 EB (compressed) total capacity of all storage tapes shipped last year.

    • Would you prefer the number of 140 Kb Apple II floppy disks? Or 1.44 Mb 3.5" floppy disks? The capacity of hard disks is too variable to make a good measure.

      Earth masses of 3.5 floppy disks, there is a neat unit.

    • Jizz's, most used for porn.

    • Hyaku Mega Shock!
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by sk999 ( 846068 ) on Wednesday September 11, 2024 @08:11PM (#64782039)

    Subtract that off and we get a better measure of "useful" data.

    • Useful to whom?
    • Funny joke, but the reality is virtually none of it. All the ads sent to you over the internet are a tiny pittance in comparison to you watching a single movie on Netflix.

    • by eepok ( 545733 )

      This is marked funny, but the question makes a damn fine point. Examples:

      If I'm watching a TV show on Amazon Prime or a long-form educational video (45 min), I expect at least 4 commercial breaks of at a max. of 3 minutes each for a total of 12 minutes of ads per selected video. That's a significant amount of data and usually for ads that I don't actually care about.

      The Google News smartphone app used to be the super-light smartphone app to serve news without paywalls or a ton of ads, but now there are high

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Best Funny but not funny.

  • How much of that data is things like full (vs differential) app/OS upgrades?

    How much is from downloading apps that are built in a non-space-efficient way?

    How much is from downloading entire suites of apps when I just needed one part?

    How much is from downloading full games with the entire media content when large parts of that content are only seen by a small fraction of players?

    How much is streaming media that is downloaded at a resolution/quality far higher than the receiving device - or average listener's

    • For all of your queries, probably a small portion is downloaded over the "wireless" (ie cellular/mobile/4G/5G) described in the article. Default configuration on most/all devices will avoid downloading app/OS updates, games, full-resolution video, etc. when not on wi-fi. Maybe that'll change as more and more rely on a "fast-enough" mobile connection as opposed to a landline.
    • How much is malware spreading itself or doing whatever its bad thing is?

      (My household 2-cellphone plan is 20G per month. My wife's android phone has been using nearly all of it. This month it ran through it in two weeks. WTF?)

  • calls to three different Javascript frameworks bouncing back and forth a dozen times just to load each menu item...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Sorry about that. I left the Netflix preview screen looping since the pandemic.

  • Gotta feed the AI and keep the advertisers advertising.

  • Just counting how many MB in total is meaningless. What is useful are metrics like these:

    Number of Americans having a mobile plan, breakdown by 2/3/4/5G.
    Average data usage per customer, aggregate and also grouped by 2/3/4/5G.
    Average data cap of 2/3/4/5G plans.

    And then compare these metrics with other countries.

  • sounds less thrilling I suppose. 100 million trillion bytes though - this is what I would have gone with!
  • I can understand this. I rarely bother myself to switch mt phone from mobile data to Wi-Fi, even at home. Not even if I have to update a few apps. And as an European, not even when traveling to other EU countries. This while my subscription is 2€/month.

  • 100 Exabytes or a 100 Million TBs /terrabytes

    so 100 Mn of 1 TB SSDs for 400 Mn people. Each is using 250 GB. Over the whole year. So basically 1 GB per day per person?

    Not had coffee yet so it could be off by several magnitudes i guess

  • or around 1GB per person per day, to be a relatable number
  • Honestly? The #1 biggest reason they'd see a surge in cellular data usage in recent years, IMO, is the proliferation of home broadband solutions using the cellular LTE or 5G network.

    In my city, for example? It used to be, unless you wanted absolutely terrible 6mbit DSL service, your only option besides satellite for high-speed Internet was Spectrum cable. With them having 2 full day long outages in the entire city in just the last couple weeks? A lot of people are fed up with their high prices and unreliabi

  • Based on the 90% Bullshit Rule of the Internet, 90 trillion of it is garbage.

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