Re: COMCAST forcing digital cable boxes down suscribers' throats!!!
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
Satellite television didn't really take off until the 1990's, and is functionally different enough that it ceases to be an apples-to-apples comparison.
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That is not the case. It is functionally identical; the differences are in implementation
not in function. And
that's why cable and satellite are considered direct competitors, because function -- what the customer is purchasing (i.e., television entertainment) -- is the same.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
FiOS and AT&T's TV service are far more comparable, and the prices are far more competitive than markets where competition is locked out by franchising agreements.
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Nope. We have five competitors vying for our business here in Burlington, and we pay roughly the same as folks in areas where there are only three competitors, the legacy MSO plus Dish Network and DirecTV.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
Who decides what is really a matter of fairness?
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When it comes to what offerings companies can make in the mass-market, the government does.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
To my mind, the consumer is at least as entitled to "fair" treatment as the service provider being regulated.
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Fair, meaning you get what you are explicitly promised. Surely.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
I'm not saying that we as consumers have a right to free HD via a cable provider; only that advertising should make it clear what is being offered for free and what is not being offered for free.
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And in this case, it did, even though people who prefer the consumerist perspective don't believe that that is the case.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
In the case of the advertising claim in question, some very minor wording and punctuation changes would have totally eliminated the ambiguity.
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I doubt it. I think the complaints are driven by effect, not by punctuation. Sometimes, people are looking for reasons to complain, or more properly, looking for foundations for the complaints that they're going to make regardless - such complaints stem not from unfairness, but from dissatisfaction itself, and dissatisfaction due more to buyer's remorse than from actual victimization.
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Originally Posted by Adam Lenhardt
But the legacy MSOs have also historically reaped the benefits of the franchising authority system.
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No more so than they were promised. That's a red herring. If it is such a good deal going forward, why not have the state acquire the assets by eminent domain, paying the MSO the appraised value for the assets, and then operating the lucrative enterprise as a municipal agency, in the public interest? That way, they could feel free to use the vast profits to pay for imposing the desired consumer bias on the offerings. The reality is that there are profits but not windfall profits, and competition has already ripped into the ability for legacy providers to live up to the expectations imposed on them by the investor markets. Don't forget: The general public often speaks from both sides of their mouths: They want low prices as consumers, and high profits as investors.
