Hughesnet Community

Data conscious people should avoid Walmart like the plague!

cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
GabeU
Distinguished Professor IV

Data conscious people should avoid Walmart like the plague!

I went to Walmart to look at a smart phone.  In under five minutes I had burned through over 105MB of data, and had I not noticed my modem going nuts and then looking in Glasswire, it would have been more.  WOW.  Just WOW!!! 

 

This was the host...   f4.shared.global.fastly.net

 

So, if you see something from the host fastly.net, and it's a lot of data, try to remember if you went to Walmart.  Simply unbelievable.  

 

I cleared my Glasswire data, then went back to the same Walmart page.  The following is what happened during the 35 seconds I spent on the same page before closing the window.  Absolutely unreal.  I'm sure it would eventually stop, but sheesh!!!!!

 

Capture.JPG

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Many web sites now use a ton of plugins, each requiring its own JavaScript module to be loaded. Many are internal to the site, some are external. The net result can literally be 100s of MB.

 

Usually those things are cached in the browser. The first time it will fully load and cache it for later. After that you just get a 304 'not modified' code, skips it, and moves on to the next instruction.

 

Possible that you cleared your cache or they updated their plugins at some point.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

View solution in original post

6 REPLIES 6
BirdDog
Assistant Professor

Personally haven't experienced that but hey, sure it is possible especially if some kind of background video is loading or even if something on the page is stuck in a loop.

 

In the end, the Internet is based on data going back and forth constantly, a relatively small glitch can cause lots of data use.

 

I still rely on my Networx throughput meter a lot and watch it regularly. One of my favaorite real time indicators for what is going on.

GabeU
Distinguished Professor IV

I just tried it again and it didn't do the same thing

 

I hadn't been to Walmart in quite some time, so it's possible that it's just not doing it now because whatever it was is in the cache, or, like you said, it could have been something getting caught in a loop.  Whatever the case, I'm going to be very careful from now on with Walmart.  

BirdDog
Assistant Professor


@GabeU wrote:

I just tried it again and it didn't do the same thing

 

I hadn't been to Walmart in quite some time, so it's possible that it's just not doing it now because whatever it was is in the cache, or, like you said, it could have been something getting caught in a loop.  Whatever the case, I'm going to be very careful from now on with Walmart.  


" Whatever the case, I'm going to be very careful from now on with Walmart." 

 

To be honest that should be the case with all sites. I routinely monitor background use although I do tend to be one who focuses a lot on such things. I've had other sites do the same here and there throughout my years on the Internet. I've always closed the page, gone back, and it magically has stopped using the data.

maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

"I went to Walmart to look at a smart phone.  In under five minutes I had burned through over 105MB of data, and had I not noticed my modem going nuts and then looking in Glasswire, it would have been more.  WOW.  Just WOW!!! "

 

@GabeU, Do you mean you went to Walmart.com?   I've gone there often and haven't experienced any large amounts of data being used.

Many web sites now use a ton of plugins, each requiring its own JavaScript module to be loaded. Many are internal to the site, some are external. The net result can literally be 100s of MB.

 

Usually those things are cached in the browser. The first time it will fully load and cache it for later. After that you just get a 304 'not modified' code, skips it, and moves on to the next instruction.

 

Possible that you cleared your cache or they updated their plugins at some point.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

I browse Walmart.com several times a week and daily during the holidays, and personally, I haven't experienced any significant impacts to my data allowance (I'm on a 10GB plan, so I would think it would be more noticeable if this particular site was a data hog)