CRTC Enforced $25/mo Cable TV Is Now Available To Canadians, But With Caveats
Deathspawner writes: Last March, Canada's regulatory agency for all things broadcasting, CRTC, ruled that cable TV providers would soon be forced to offer $25/mo packages. With enforcement having kicked-off on March 1, these inexpensive packages have now been made available. As Techgage has discovered, though, the first packages out-of-the-gate pack a number of caveats, and in some cases, are outright misleading. And, despite a simple framework to worth with, the two largest providers in the country, Rogers and Bell, offer vastly different packages, and ultimately vastly different values to the consumer.
The government shouldn't enforce prices. It should ensure there's enough competition, and that the competition is fair. When that is done, prices should automatically fall.
Good idea, bad rules allowed the providers to fuck everyone over. In some cases, the packages are priced so high that if you want only some of what you had before it would cost you more. It needs to be fixed. There are a few exceptions like zazeen. But Bell, Rogers, Cogeco, Shaw, Vmedia and so on all went the "you have to get xyz or you can't have it at all." The biggest one is the "you must have your internet service through us, or you can't have the skinny bundle."
Om, nomnomnom...
Television has been keeping populations pacified and dumbed down since before WWII. Practically the modern counterpart of the Roman circus as in "panem et circences".
As another slashdotter so eloquently would put it: moooo.
Public channels are funded by the public and commercial channels should be paying cable and satellite providers to deliver their commercials to viewers, not the other way around.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
Yes, and this thing is legal. And you know why it is legal?
That's because you will get the bad trip of your life and you will never want to do it again.
There is no free lunch, all the good stuff is illegal. Legal alternatives are typically too dangerous / ineffective / not enjoyable.
Allow anyone to run competing cable so long as they obey some simple rules... just like driving etc... and the cable companies won't be able to dick with people.
offer them state backed monopolies and they'll fuck you. Every fucking time.
there is no reason why if I'm reasonable about it, that I shouldn't be able to run a fiber optic cable from my home to the trunk... and I wanted to stop off at every house between myself and the trunk and link up that house to my line... I still don't see the problem if every one of those houses wants to be linked to my line.
I could literally offer everyone along the way, high speed internet for peanuts. And as to obtaining "TV" from that... pretty fucking easy to throw the 20 TV stations someone might care about into a fiber cable.
If a jackhole like me could do it... as in I could do without a learning curve... then a mom and pop ISP could do it too.
But no... as usual. give it to a monopoly and then wait for them to fuck you.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
They're offering up these cheap packages, but they're mostly channels that nobody cares much about... and a lot of them do air broadcasts that you can (or at least used to be able to) pick up with an antenna. The pathetic thing is that once the government started to force everything to go digital, people using antennas started losing a lot of channels they once had access to... That's something the government should prevented.
with internet access: it generated a plan form a major cable company here (now with 2mbps speed, from 512Kbps on beginning [in 2009, I think...]) for R$ 39,90 (equivalent to ~US$10 now...)
The Justin Bieber Channel
The "Arrogant Asshole Speaking Archaic French" network.
"Great White North" with the one surviving McKenzie brother.
The "Mounties Going Full Monty" morning show
SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
I love to watch people who support all out capitalism squirm to solve problems like this.. The fact is, capitalism doesn't come close to solving anything. The only defense of it is that nothing better has been tried.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
The companies are charging an additional $3-$7 / month on top of it for the box.
You know, I've seen Canadian shows on Netflix. And for the most part, the ones that make it there are good. Let cable hang.
NET was not "the market first", but the market only in the case (and, I think, it only made the investments thinking this situation will persist up to now [but it changed, by government intervention: it causes the near-bankrupt of the company...])
If nobody can manage at the prices, then they will drop out of the market. Then either someone will come in who CAN do it profitably at that price, government will take it over and reduce overheads because they have no shareholders or stock options to hand out, or they'll raise the prices allowed until they DO get the service.
There's absolutely NO FUCKING REASON why the prices can't be enforced by government. Prices are enforced by them when they purchase goods or services: "We will pay this much". EVERY big buyer does that. THEY proffer a bid for how much they will spend and people either meed it or don't get the job.
The only way government could ensure competition is to own the lines themselves and make ISPs join up and pay for access to the wires and then compete on the services offered on that wire. And I guarantee you'd go librarian-poo if that were being done.
And who cares? This seems like a law that would have been relevant in 1993. But now the world has passed it by, and the Canadian government looks like a bunch of out of touch beaureaucrats.
Also, some have a $100 installation fee *only* for the basic cable package.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
Just checked out their $25 package.. Ripoff...
See they had broadcast analog TV here for 50+ years with 3 channels... CBC, ATV, Global(newer)... Then they ended analog TV and reduced digital coverage significantly...
The new $25/month package has government channels and all Bull $hit with the only watchable channels being... CBC, ATV, Global... So what this amounts to is, $25/month + $5+tuner RENTAL to get the 3 channels we had free since TV took to the airwaves...Oh and 15% HST sales tax on top of that... Yes netflix subscriber... Internet pricing has gone up nearly 50% in the last few years as well..
Crooks the lot of them, not just cable companies CRTC which serves THEM.
http://www.eastlink.ca/cabledi...
They can tweak all they like but it won't make any difference. The underlying business model is broken Changes in technology will do that.
I pulled the plug on cable years ago. When I look at what's on cable now it's not even the handful of channels I would watch, it's the handful of programs I would watch, since most of the content is garbage. An on-demand setup like Netflix is a much better fit for me.
...laura
.. and shooting the people trying to rip us off wouldn't send a clear message and get this stuff unf@cked ;)
Rogers charges $12.95 / mo for the "NextBox" rental. Also, having just spoken to a rep to change my account, switching to the "starter" plan also removes any promotional codes from your account, which will generally cause your package price to skyrocket.
The CRTC's mandate is to ensure fair use of spectrum and protect consumers from price collusion. In these mandates they have failed. It couldn't be more apparent that Bell and Rogers are colluding to keep the price of their services artificially high through tiered pricing models that require somebody to buy the farm to get fresh milk: these models require a consumer to purchase channel package(s) that consist of 10 - 15 channels that augment the "basic" package. The bs part of this setup is that the cable companies structure their packages as tiers and require that a consumer purchase the first tier to get the second tier, the second tier to get the third and so on. As I understand this is common practice in North America. What the CRTC was attempting to do was legislate an a la carte channel subscription service with a base package that would help the cable companies manage their overheads by offering said base package at a price set by the CRTC, and then breaking the packages into smaller chunks that would be easier to for consumers to swallow. This was in response to complaints that the CRTC was receiving from consumers who were interested in watching sports, but had to buy 30 additional channels just to get the sports they wanted and paying through the nose for those channels that they didn't watch. Under the CRTC plan consumers would be able to pay the $25 and then maybe $2.00 per channel or something to allow for a custom package. The cable companies, unhappy with the meddling of the CRTC in their monopolies have essentially thumbed their noses at the CRTC exposing it as a regulator without sufficient power to regulate. They said: "Here's your $25 cable package" which consisted of channels you can get for free over the air, and then jacked the price on their channel packages without offering the a la carte channel selection promised. On top of this they withheld any details of their plan until midnight on the day that they were mandated to provide this capability.
The whole thing is a joke and these companies currently have too much power over Canadian media. I say currently because their sun is setting - I've cut the cord and most people I know are contemplating it because it's simply too expensive. Not that the money is a problem, but it's the insulting reality TV programming, the idea of paying for advertisers to have access to me and my family and the frustration with 500 channels and nothing on. I can find vastly more entertaining, informative and tailored video-watching on a wide variety of other mediums, or maybe just not waste my precious time sitting in-front of the idiot box.
The worst part of all this is that they still have a Monopoly on media. Take Rogers for example: They own the Blue Jays, the Sports Channels that the Blue Jays are broadcast on, the stadium that the blue jays play in, the cable company that provides the channels, over 30 major Canadian magazines online and in print, over 30 radio stations, and 50% of the Toronto Maple Leafs, The Toronto Raptors and Toronto FC - who owns the other half? Bell.
I can watch individual shows by selecting them but I just want the same CBC broadcast I should get OTA if I wasn't behind a few mountains. Get a few stations doing this and all you need is an interface to let you select the channel/stream.
The only thing that would have come about from this going well would have been a slowdown of the death of the cable TV industry. But by overreaching with their greed, the customer bleed should continue apace.
They are offering $10/month + free STB for the first year provided you commit to one year. It comes with 35+ channels, received my STB one or two days later. Works flawlessly. There is also an app to watch on your tablet but support is limited. Nexus (Google) is out, Yoga 3 (Lenovo) is out, Galaxy (Samsung) is ok, Ipad (Apple) is okay.
"The hallmark of humanity is the ability to move beyond sensory inputs" - Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
Wondering if the channels are all still encrypted, requiring separate fees per-TV for a cable converter, or if Canada was wise enough to mandate they be ClearQAM or something else so people can just connect their set and watch.
The base package channels is utter crap, not a single interesting channel, then you have to pay $7-$10 per mini bundles for additional channels. And.. you can bet that all the popular ones are carefully spread around packages.. I voted with my $$ but not subbing. /Pass /EpicFail
Do it when ypu've got at least two days off to puke. The MDMA in nutmeg is pretty much indigestible and nobody I know who's had the desperation and or plain idiocy to actually quaff three or four tablespoons of it would EVER do it again. What an unbelievably foul taste and smell. ;-) Dig that mellow Yellow! And hey what about water intoxication? mmn Apparently a pretty strong high... Careful you don't overdo that one.. it's lethal...
Hey man have you heard about banana peels ?