Speaking of quality, T-Mobile also announced today that it would give content providers the option to bypass Binge On. If a company prefers for its video to stream at a native resolution, it can choose to do so. However, it will count against customers' data allotment and won't be included the data-free streaming push. The carrier is also giving content providers the ability to optimize content themselves for Binge On, rather than having T-Mobile do it for them. In fact, YouTube, which was added today, will be one of the first to leverage the new option. This makes a lot of sense considering the video hosting site was critical of the carrier "throttling" video quality without permission late last year.