This week has seen SK Telecom announce the pricing scheme for its national LoRa network, with the cheapest plan clocking in at $0.30 for 100KB of data per month, for metering apps, and the most expensive priced at $1.75 for 100MB. This got us thinking – on what method is the IoT going to settle for charging for the data it consumes? The IoT is a digital construct – the sum of components made in silicon foundries and hashed out in labs. Consequently, the IoT is essentially data, generated by the things that are connected in labyrinthine manners. And so, the heart of the matter, the crux of the problem becomes moving data from one point to another. The networking…