Hey, did you notice yesterday at any point that T-Mobile said it's raising its prices? Well, that's because they never actually said it. They even got us - with all the talk of unlimited video streaming and double data, seemingly almost nobody noticed that the Uncarrier has raised prices on most of its Simple Choice data plans, and substantially if you want unlimited. While current customers won't see a rate increase per T-Mobile's promise of never raising your bill, new individual customers will be paying a fair bit more for data. Here's the breakdown.

$50 1GB plan becomes 2GB, price stays the same.

$60 3GB plan becomes 6GB, price now $65 .

. $70 5GB plan becomes 10GB, price now $80 .

. $80 Unlimited plan doubles to 14GB hotspot data, price now $95.

The price increases are $5, $10, and $15 for the 6GB, 10GB, and unlimited plans, respectively. That isn't to say these are bad prices, because with the doubled data, they still easily spank comparable individual plans from AT&T and Verizon. AT&T wants $75 a month for 5GB of data, while T-Mobile offers 10GB for just $80. Verizon will give you 6GB for $80, and 12GB for $100.

Fortunately, prices for T-Mobile's multi-line family plans will not be raised if you choose a "family match" option (even unlimited) - that is, everyone on your family plan (2 or more lines) must have the same amount of data. If you don't have the same amount of data on each line, you'll be hit with individual subscriber pricing for data on each line.

T-Mobile put up the following image during the Uncarrier presentation yesterday, but there's nothing on the slide about these prices being new or increased - kind of sneaky. But they did put it up, so the information was available. Happily, as T-Mobile probably fully intended, almost everyone covering the event ignored it. The new prices take effect on November 15th and, again, will only affect new customers or [presumably] those who change their data plan.

So, yep, there was a bit of less than fantastic news at yesterday's T-Mobile Uncarrier event; granted, they're still pretty easily the best value in the wireless business in America.