Comments on: Cable wins Supreme Court battle
Court sides with FCC, cable companies in case that could have changed the competitive landscape in the broadband market.
Court sides with FCC, cable companies in case that could have changed the competitive landscape in the broadband market.
November 23, 2009 5:45 PM PST
November 23, 2009 5:17 PM PST
November 23, 2009 5:02 PM PST
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companies like Cox Communications and Mediacom have been
gouging the general public for some time now.
Buy not letting the little guys in you are essentially allowing the
cable companies owner to become little Microsofts. Little
companies that pillage the average human being for a cable
service that is essentially a great big commecial wrapped with
very little content.
It used to be back in the day that we got cable service because
they claimed to have less commerials, yada, yada, yada. Today
it's a commecail every 3 minutes and then the content in
between. Some place are even forced to do this because
broadcast reception is so crappy where they reside.
This move has just given the cable companies the go ahead to
charge more for what is already a waste of bandwidth and
money. It makes you wonder if the courts have there own
vested interest or if they are really here for the people.
This decision was not based on the people. The internet is like a
highway with no Cops or State Troopers to pull you over and
reprimand you for going too fast, or too slow, or for showing
your bussoms out the window. Right now you can do anything
on the web without reprocussion.
Maybe that is where the focus should lay, on the people, what is
best for us, not the cable service provider', let alone the
competition that want's the bandwidth. This issue is trivial
compared the one's that need to be addressed on the net.
Justin
-Remo
monopoly.
I currently subscribe to Cable broadband with Earthlink as my
ISP going over Time Warner Cable. I pay $44.95/mo. If this
rulling will have an immediate effect, TWC will likely disallow
both Earthlink and AOL as ISPs that provide alternative Cable
broadband running over their same coax at a lower price point.
I will be forced to subscribe to Time Warner Cable's Road Runner
service at $59.95, yes thats an extra $15 a month or $180 a
year on the same service I have now. Just great and all we have
to do is thank the MAN.
Phone service and cable TV are as similar and different as cats and dogs. The Internet is as a bird would be to cats and dogs, still sharing some similarities, but needing to be classified as a new animal altogether, and needing to be defined and treated as such.
Access to public information via the Internet should be universal, and network infrastructure should be accessible by everyone, including multiple providers (the only thing the infrastructure owners will lose is a percentage of their already-significant profits).
Internet services already provided by the Cable company.
- You obviously have no clue
- by tanis143 December 23, 2005 9:23 AM PST
- For those that are crying foul about this decision, I suggest you educate yourselfs on the huge differences between phone and cable before you make yourself look like an idiot again. Phone shoots its signal down the line only when needed, say when you make a phone call. Cable however, has a constant signal going to ALL the lines at once, with only data and phone service being burst signals (as needed). The video portion though is the same very every line, every subscriber, with only filters of some sort (rf filters and addressable converter boxes) to block out what the customer does not subscribe to.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(10 Comments)Now to force cable companies to share their lines, it would be a headache because they would have to balance frequencies that they are not using vs what the other companies can use. Its not as simple as using a switch on a telco line to allow competition to use the same line. THis ruling just saved cable subscribers a ton of money.