| > As a Spotify competitor, you can't just sign up for Binge On, unless perhaps you have connections with people who work at T-Mobile. Binge On is video. The zero-rating program for music is Music Freedom. If you are a Spotify competitor and want to get included in Music Freedom, you contact T-Mobile at the email address documented in the Music Freedom. You don't need any inside connections. T-Mobile's stated policy is to get as many music streaming services as possible covered. For video providers who want to be included in Binge On, there is a different T-Mobile address to mail to, also documented on the T-Mobile site. For Binge On, the video service can actually choose one of four ways to participate: 1. Do nothing. Their content will not be zero-rated. If a T-Mobile customer has enabled Binge On T-Mobile will try to optimize the bandwidth usage if it can detect the video. 2. Be zero-rated. T-Mobile detects and optimized bandwidth usage. 3. Be zero-rated. The video service detects when the customer is on T-Mobile and handle optimizing bandwidth. 4. Disallow Binge On. Their content will not be zero-rated, and T-Mobile will not try to optimize its bandwidth use for customers who have Binge On enabled. Here are the technical details: https://www.t-mobile.com/content/dam/tmo/en-g/pdf/BingeOn-Vi... |
4 weeks before I make any changes to any service I run via Stream On, I need to inform T-Mobile, and they have to approve the changes, or can end Stream On immediately.
All Stream On content needs to run via separate hostnames, and has to transmit the hostname in cleartext.
I have to be using forms of adaptive streaming, the bandwidth will be limited during this so that the user at most will be able to watch 480p videos.
50'000 EUR fine for each violation from my side, no fines if T-Mobile just kicks me out.
And so on and so on. It’s ridiculous.
Give me a single form where I enter a URL, and it’ll be zero-rated – or don’t zero-rate anything.