Of the 160,000-plus brief comments to the FCC on Charter Communications' proposed takeovers of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable, Herring Networks is claiming credit for close to a third due to its campaign targeting its viewers and potential subscribers. Whether those submissions carry any weight is debatable. Attorneys told us such comments are largely whistling in the wind because the FCC mainly looks at substantive statements that add to the analysis, and brief comments almost always are anything but.
The video bundle either has long legs or is on its last legs, speakers said Monday at an FCC-hosted workshop on the state of the video market.
The video bundle either has long legs or is on its last legs, speakers said Monday at an FCC-hosted workshop on the state of the video market.
The video bundle either has long legs or is on its last legs, speakers said Monday at an FCC-hosted workshop on the state of the video market.
Canadian cable viewers now have increased cable programming choices with a la carte regulations -- which U.S. cable programmers had strongly opposed -- just taking effect there. A similar regulatory approach seems unlikely in the U.S., industry officials said.
One of the biggest challengers of Charter Communications' plans to buy Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable still hopes for conditions on the deals, amid indications the FCC could be nearing a decision. The Stop Mega Cable coalition said a report in the Wall Street Journal Tuesday night that Chairman Tom Wheeler is close to circulating a draft order on approval of the deals "gloss[es] over the difficult questions that still must be addressed." The group, which has made its case about harms of the deal before the FCC multiple times (see 1603110048, 1602240030 and 1602110045), said New Charter "profoundly threatens competition and choice in the cable-and-broadband marketplace. This FCC and DOJ have made clear that these problems are a top priority and have a track record to back it up. This all suggests that the deal will not be approved without strong, enforceable and long-lasting conditions that protect consumers. The Stop Mega Cable Coalition will continue its efforts to ensure that this deal does not get approved until its many harms are addressed." The FCC declined to comment Wednesday except to say the deals remained under review. The agency's unofficial 180-day shot clock for that review stood Wednesday at 172. Charter also didn't comment. In a statement Wednesday, David Segal, executive director of activist organization Demand Progress, said New Charter approval would mean "Big Cable will see even bigger profits while American consumers will be stuck with higher prices and fewer options. Chairman Wheeler has talked a good game about supporting competition in the broadband market, and whether he rejects the Charter merger will put his words to the test." Free Press President Craig Aaron said much the same when he called Charter/TWC/BHN "a waste" considering the costs involved. "This same money could be spent to build new competitive broadband options for tens of millions of people," he said. "If this deal gets approved, however, these billions won’t help build anything. They’ll merely be a payoff to Time Warner Cable’s shareholders and executives. CEO Rob Marcus will get a $100 million golden parachute for his troubles, while cable customers will be stuck with the tab." Aaron said New Charter and Comcast "would have unprecedented control over our cable and Internet connections," resulting in fewer choices, higher prices and lessened competition. "No conditions can mitigate this merger’s many public interest harms or lower the monthly bills for those who’ll be hit hardest by these rate hikes: people in low-income communities and on the wrong side of the digital divide," he said, adding that Wheeler "needs to block this disastrous deal and get back to protecting the public interest."
One of the biggest challengers of Charter Communications' plans to buy Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable still hopes for conditions on the deals, amid indications the FCC could be nearing a decision. The Stop Mega Cable coalition said a report in the Wall Street Journal Tuesday night that Chairman Tom Wheeler is close to circulating a draft order on approval of the deals "gloss[es] over the difficult questions that still must be addressed." The group, which has made its case about harms of the deal before the FCC multiple times (see 1603110048, 1602240030 and 1602110045), said New Charter "profoundly threatens competition and choice in the cable-and-broadband marketplace. This FCC and DOJ have made clear that these problems are a top priority and have a track record to back it up. This all suggests that the deal will not be approved without strong, enforceable and long-lasting conditions that protect consumers. The Stop Mega Cable Coalition will continue its efforts to ensure that this deal does not get approved until its many harms are addressed." The FCC declined to comment Wednesday except to say the deals remained under review. The agency's unofficial 180-day shot clock for that review stood Wednesday at 172. Charter also didn't comment. In a statement Wednesday, David Segal, executive director of activist organization Demand Progress, said New Charter approval would mean "Big Cable will see even bigger profits while American consumers will be stuck with higher prices and fewer options. Chairman Wheeler has talked a good game about supporting competition in the broadband market, and whether he rejects the Charter merger will put his words to the test." Free Press President Craig Aaron said much the same when he called Charter/TWC/BHN "a waste" considering the costs involved. "This same money could be spent to build new competitive broadband options for tens of millions of people," he said. "If this deal gets approved, however, these billions won’t help build anything. They’ll merely be a payoff to Time Warner Cable’s shareholders and executives. CEO Rob Marcus will get a $100 million golden parachute for his troubles, while cable customers will be stuck with the tab." Aaron said New Charter and Comcast "would have unprecedented control over our cable and Internet connections," resulting in fewer choices, higher prices and lessened competition. "No conditions can mitigate this merger’s many public interest harms or lower the monthly bills for those who’ll be hit hardest by these rate hikes: people in low-income communities and on the wrong side of the digital divide," he said, adding that Wheeler "needs to block this disastrous deal and get back to protecting the public interest."
Public Knowledge and Comcast are 180 degrees apart on whether Stream TV is a cable service or an over-the-top Internet service. Making that determination could be challenging given the hazy distinction between the two, legal experts told us. The statutes defining the two, and their differences, are vague enough that they could be read to indicate Comcast is in violation or the opposite, said Adam Candeub, director-Intellectual Property, Information & Communications Law Program at Michigan State University.
Public Knowledge and Comcast are 180 degrees apart on whether Stream TV is a cable service or an over-the-top Internet service. Making that determination could be challenging given the hazy distinction between the two, legal experts told us. The statutes defining the two, and their differences, are vague enough that they could be read to indicate Comcast is in violation or the opposite, said Adam Candeub, director-Intellectual Property, Information & Communications Law Program at Michigan State University.
Spectrum allocation disagreements between the satellite industry and terrestrial wireless providers will be the norm for the foreseeable future, satellite officials said Thursday on a Satellite 2016 panel on the future of the satellite broadcast industry. November's World Radiocommunication Conference deferred several decisions, and frequency allocation issues will likely be on the agenda for WRC-23, said Gary Thatcher, U.S. International Broadcasting Bureau associate director: "I can't imagine everything will be resolved at WRC-19."