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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.

194 comments

  1. wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:wrong solution by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Canada operates as semi-protectionist. Meaning you're never going to see enough competition here, especially for the landmass and number of people(more people live in California then Canada last I looked). That means the government is left with the option of imposing things when stuff gets out of whack, which it is in Canada right now. Most people I know who had cable up until a few years ago was paying $90/mo for 55 channels. Many dropped cable for netflix and so on. Hell even my parents are considering it, because the only stuff that they see is: Reality TV, reality TV, reality TV, reality TV and more reality TV. Most of what is watched in their house is AMC. What most of my friends watch was sports(which they can pay for online).

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:wrong solution by gmack · · Score: 3, Informative

      Both you and TFA are both missing the point of what's going on here. It just doesn't matter if the basic package sucks because the cable providers must now offer "a la carte" pricing for the rest of the channels instead of forcing you into bundles. The upshot of this is that basic cable is now $25 and if you only watch 5 or 6 stations, you buy them one at a time without having to get a package that includes 20 channels you can't be bothered to watch.

    3. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell does a government ensure there's enough competition, if there aren't competitors to go around in the first place?

      "When that is done, prices should automatically fall"
      Should and should, but that is not always the reality.

    4. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This might be good for the cable companies. The free market would have reached a tipping point where everybody decided to go Netflix all at once and these guys would have seen their revenue pull a Houdini. Now their life support will take a while longer to fail. I live in the UK and I have a hard time understanding why others pay for satellite or cable TV. They're not even watching it that much. They just pay for it.

    5. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 0

      The size of the country and the population density shouldn't stop the market from determining a fair price, though.

    6. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      How the hell does a government ensure there's enough competition, if there aren't competitors to go around in the first place?

      So why don't more competitors enter the market ? Find the barrier to entry, and then remove it.

    7. Re:wrong solution by Coisiche · · Score: 1

      The government ... should ensure there's enough competition

      Not sure how they can do that. It's going to happen anyway in some arenas but not in ones that require large infrastructure.

      and that the competition is fair

      All I can say is, it's funny how politicians in government seem to have investments in companies that get "fortunate" breaks.

    8. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funniest thing I've heard all day!

    9. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      So then the government should rip out the last mile of cable to everyone's home and install it themselves? And it would be considered a fairer market if the government owned that?

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    10. Re:wrong solution by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      What if the barrier is that you need a couple of 10s of millions of dollars to buy and install infrastructure just to get started?

      I'd do it, but I don't think I have that much change lost between the sofa cushions. In fact, probably 99% of the people you ask will say the same.

    11. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Then they just gouge for high speed internet access.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    12. Re:wrong solution by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      So what's the barrier to entry here... oh that's right extremely high initial capital investment coupled with very low per-unit margins resulting in a very long time to make your initial investment back and start earning profits.

      Hey wait a second... that's the textbook definition of a natural monopoly.

      These kind of industries will never HAVE a "free" market, it's literally economically impossible - a natural monopoly is itself a textbook example of a market failure - a situation where a free and efficient market simply cannot ever exist. In those situations government intervention is not only warranted and justified but REQUIRED.

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      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    13. Re:wrong solution by valnar · · Score: 1

      When there are only a couple providers (like with cell phone companies), it's easy for them to all keep their prices high.

    14. Re: wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupid capitalist shill

    15. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      What if the barrier is that you need a couple of 10s of millions of dollars to buy and install infrastructure just to get started?

      Be creative. There's no need to buy the infrastructure, if you can lease it from the current providers.

    16. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      So then the government should rip out the last mile of cable to everyone's home and install it themselves?

      No, and I never said that.

    17. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Yes you did, that's a big part of the barrier to entry.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    18. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      Hey wait a second... that's the textbook definition of a natural monopoly.

      So, break it up. Decouple the maintenance of the infrastructure from the cable providers. Have one company (or part of a company) manage the infrastructure, and let other companies provide the content, lease the infrastructure and provide content/bandwidth to subscribers.

    19. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      It is indeed part of the barrier to entry, but having the state buy it is not the only solution.

    20. Re:wrong solution by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      When that is done, prices should automatically fall.{/blockquote> not always...

    21. Re:wrong solution by dskoll · · Score: 1

      You can't really have much competition in the cable and landline phone markets. That's because the entrenched players have been granted access to run their wires on poles and underground; it's not feasible to open up that market and it's way too expensive for new entrants.

      Bell and Rogers are regulated (as they should be) because they are duopolies with control over critical infrastructure that needs to be managed for the national interest.

    22. Re:wrong solution by dskoll · · Score: 1

      The barriers to entry are Canada's huge size and low population density. You can't just "remove" them.

    23. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...And that's exactly how the big telecoms are fucking Canadians. Thanks for doing your research. Leased carrier, subscription and services for cheap? Sure! But you pay 25c/min for phone and 10$/Gb data.

    24. Re:wrong solution by dskoll · · Score: 2

      Bell and Rogers are forced to lease some of their infrastructure to others, but that still puts newcomers at a disadvantage because Bell and Rogers, as owners of the infrastructure, can undercut them.

      I'm sorry, even though I'm basically a free-market capitalist, it's obvious to me that in this case pure free-market capitalism is not going to work. Be pragmatic, not dogmatically ideological.

    25. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      So the $25/month price is below fair market value and the government is forcing companies to subsidize their customers ?

    26. Re: wrong solution by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      That would be government intervention. And it would include siezing property. We can debate whether its a better solution or not but its definitely still intervention and arguably a greater intrusion on liberty.

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      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    27. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

      Exactly.. as long as someone owns the infrastructure, either A) that someone will have the advantage, or B) that someone will bitch and whine about that advantage being taken away, That's how capitalism sets things up to work.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    28. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Except you can't just take something away from a company that owns it. Capitalists tend to bitch and moan about that until they get their way.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    29. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      Just take away their advantage, and ignore the bitching and whining. That's how I dealt with my kids when they were growing up.

    30. Re:wrong solution by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      something like it happened here, in Brazil: NET, a private company (owned by the largest TV Broadcaster here), made large investments in cable distributing lines (and nearly bankrupted) - this kind of thing can only be done by near-monopolies (because near-all the return of the investment will be captured from this only company...), which was the case here (and, as a private thing, the cable distribution don't cover small and non profitable markets [which is also the main goal in public investments]) The "invisible hand" don't helps, always :/

    31. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Well you can remove them, but then the service shrinks to just the largest cities. Something the Canadian government has fought very hard against, and rightfully so.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    32. Re: wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      That would be government intervention

      Obviously yes. You can't have a fair market without intervention. However, the intervention should be limited to playing the part of "referee", making sure the playing field is level, and everybody sticks to the same fair rules.

      And it would include siezing property

      Splitting it up doesn't mean it's seized. It just means that you tell companies what they can and cannot do with their property.

      and arguably a greater intrusion on liberty

      I don't consider the liberty to exploit monopolies very worthy of protecting.

    33. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      But then Canadians have people calling them communist.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    34. Re:wrong solution by slashping · · Score: 1

      Except you can't just take something away from a company that owns it.

      Not "just", but if companies are violating anti trust laws, you can enforce regulation. It's been done before.

    35. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >When that is done, prices should automatically fall.

      And after decades of collusion between operators where that never, ever happens, what then? Just keep on hoping that the invisible hand of the market will fix the problem?

      In a way, I guess that is what has happened. People are abandoning their cable service and picking up Netflix for a few dollars per month .... on top of the exorbitant fees they pay to their ISPs for network connectivity ... which are the same companies selling cable services. And if you think that's better off you have no idea how pricey and monopolistic the deals for ISPs are in Canada. You're lucky to have 2 choices, both effectively at the same price.

      Competition? They all set the same ridiculously high price. Not because there's no way to deliver the product more cheaply, but because they all like their profit margins and it's too expensive for another company to get into a modest-sized market by laying their own cable. The pattern of the last couple of decades has been even more consolidation.

    36. Re:wrong solution by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      The size of the country and the population density shouldn't stop the market from determining a fair price, though.

      If Rogers, Bell, Telus or Shaw weren't under the eye of the CRTC like they are now. And after they tried to piss around with GAS(aggregated service for internet), it would cost $150/mo for 60GB and they'd still be charging you $20 to rent a modem to boot. The CRTC kicked them in the balls when they tried that BS before.

      The problem in Canada, is while indeed 70% of our population lives within 100km of the US border there's still a whole pile of empty space. Lots of talk over the last 15 years though of building and nationalizing a internet backbone here in Canada though.

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    37. Re:wrong solution by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget that they can take their sweet time fixing problems when it's not one of their customers. Last I heard, the only way for the resellers to communicate with Rogers to fix an issue was to send them an email. There was no tracking system set up, and problems would often take over a week to resolve if it had something to do with the lines. If they really want to shake things up and make things fair, they should force service requirements and deadlines for resolving problems.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    38. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They only have to offer some pick and pay and the requirement to offer pick and pay doesn't start until December. If the current pick and pay offerings are any indication, nobody will be able to pick say AMC, Space and FX, they will still only come in a bundle. By the end of the year they have to offer all channels for pick and pay but right now, it's just unwanted crap.

    39. Re:wrong solution by Mashiki · · Score: 2

      The thing you're missing is that to get those "a la carte" channels, a lot of those companies are pulling a "and you need to have xyz" service from us too! Internet is the popular one. So, that $25 is now $90 and those 3 or 5 channels you want? Well you might not be able to get them separately, so you might have to buy them in bundle packs. Which could cost you $9-25 per bundle, you're looking at $150+ now...

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      Om, nomnomnom...
    40. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Sure, and that might work.. but let's not pretend that it is free market. It is just another brand of government intervention.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    41. Re: wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "However, the intervention should be limited to playing the part of "referee", making sure the playing field is level, and everybody sticks to the same fair rules."

      We do have fair/consistent rules, which allows each member of the duopoly in a given region gets to carefully set their price to a high number that corresponds closely to their competition, and everybody wins except the customer. Any new customer has the same fair/consistent rules, but faces the natural obstacle of a huge amount of infrastructure cost and a huge amount of customer inertia before they make any profit. The barriers to entry are innate. The only way you'd get around them would be to skew the rules greatly to favour new entries, which wouldn't be fair to the established ones. And thus we have the sucktastic status quo.

    42. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Right, but the proposal of this thread is to let a free market handle it, and that is not a free market solution. Furthermore, it is quite likely that the government is afraid of pissing everyone off and have companies leave the market.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    43. Re:wrong solution by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      I didn't understood the "government intervention" in this case: can you explain it to me?

    44. Re:wrong solution by fche · · Score: 1

      "Find the barrier to entry, and then remove it."

      What if the barrier to entry is the very agent that wields the legal power?

    45. Re:wrong solution by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      You really don't understand how business operates today do you. You don't understand how government interacts with business. I have a suggestion: DO SOME FUCKING RESEARCH before you post asinine comments. Then you may actually have fruitful discussions.

    46. Re:wrong solution by Luthair · · Score: 2

      Markets don't actually work like this in capital intensive industries with individual consumers. Individuals don't have the power to negotiate and corporations decline to compete. This is why the US and Canada have very expensive TV, internet (also slow) and phone.

    47. Re: wrong solution by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Tell that to AT&T where in Tennessee where the local community passed a measure to allow a competitor like Google Fiber come into the area and run their wires using the same poles and allow them to move AT&T's equipment. AT&T's claimed they couldn't do that because they would be touching their property. AT&T said the community does not have the authority for that type of legislation and said the state laws of Tennessee forbids that.

      Again, DO SOME RESEARCH. Understand how the industry works before commenting.

    48. Re:wrong solution by gmack · · Score: 1

      Come December, they will be forced to offer each channel as it's own option instead of in bundles. This is only stage 1 of that plan.

      Mind you, I can't be bothered.,. It's been a good 13 years since I've paid for any service that offers me TV in "channel" form..

    49. Re:wrong solution by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      But their are no anti-trust violations as the government allows this. The courts have re-interpreted anti-trust laws http://www.thenation.com/artic... You are woefully uninformed.

    50. Re:wrong solution by Luthair · · Score: 2

      The vast majority of the empty space doesn't have access to internet or cellular however. As a Canadian I've never heard it suggested we would build or nationalize internet, I'm not sure where you're hearing that. The city of Ottawa used to own a fiber network supplying hospitals and government buildings with internet access, unfortunately that was sold to Rogers.

      The real solution here is to breakup Telus, Bell & Rogers - disallow companies from owning infrastructure and dealing directly with consumers. This would provide competing infrastructure as well as make it less expensive for new consumer players to enter the market.

    51. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The free market stops working when you can fit all the competitors in a single room. There's three major cable companies in Canada. It is not that hard to collude.

    52. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Most of the issue has nothing to do with the number of people living in Canada, as most people in Canada live in a very small strip of land near the US border.

      The issue has to do with the fact that many cities in Canada sold their souls to the cable company and nobody else is allowed to compete. The correct method would have been for the city to install the cables and then lease access to anyone who is interested in using them, with preferably multiple interconnects offered in each distribution panel.

      Throw in also that the CRTC makes it illegal to have any satellite service competition (It is a crime in Canada to view any unauthorized signals, this even includes Canadian signals if they have not received CRTC authorization!) and you have a perfect storm for what is happening now.

      The cable issue is presently unfixable. If the CRTC would delete the rules regarding satellite competition, DirecTV/Dishnetwork would destroy Bell/Shaw in seconds.

      Yes, it's bad enough DirecTV is a saviour compared to Bell. It's like wishing Mussolini would move run your country because the current leader is just *that* bad.

      If you keep trusting the CRTC to force the competition on Bell and Rogers, I have a bridge to sell you... One that, like the CRTC, is indirectly operated by Bell and Rogers.

    53. Re:wrong solution by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      When a company is profiting mainly from being in the market first and being able to build their own infrastructure, and then the government comes along and tells them that they have to split up, that is called government intervention. They are not likely to want to, because upon being forced to split up, a case will inevitably be made that the government is costing them money because the two parts that remain are not as valuable as the whole.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    54. Re:wrong solution by alvinrod · · Score: 2

      The real problem with the US is that local governments grant monopoly rights for those services to single companies. There is no one to negotiate with because you either get your cable from Company X or you put up with DSL assuming there's a provider in your area. The towns that have kicked out the cable companies are the ones that are seeing better service for lower prices. If you want to have an open market, the city itself needs to own the infrastructure and allow anyone to provide service on top of it.

    55. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The media and content holders own the lines and the distribution. So unfortunately there is no competition thus the regulations have to trickle into the system.

    56. Re:wrong solution by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This sounds good in (soft-libertarian) theory, but it doesn't work in practice in many cases. For many cases, yes, it's absolutely the right approach; it's effective in a market where there's competition to be had, and is less overbearing than price regulation.

      However, this is about cable TV, which is a natural monopoly as it's a utility service. The barrier to entry is ridiculously high (you have to string cable to every residential home, and worse you have to deal with right-of-way issues, plus sabotage by your competitor). It just isn't something where you can decree that competition must exist. I suppose you could try to make it easier for other cable operators to compete in the same place, but with all the issues of dealing with local governments, easements, pole access, etc., it gets messy really fast. A national law banning any kind of contracts between municipalities and cablecos granting them explicit monopolies would probably be a good start though, but that's still a "build it and they will come" situation which usually doesn't work.

      However, I will say I think this case is basically a waste of time, because cable TV is not only a completely unnecessary luxury service, but it's also woefully obsolete. The government absolutely should be taking strong steps to ensure competition and low prices for high-speed internet service, but for TV? Nope. We already have OTA broadcasts and that's good enough. Regulating the pricing of cable TV seems to me like regulating the pricing of lattes or tickets for sporting events.

    57. Re:wrong solution by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      That means the government is left with the option of imposing things when stuff gets out of whack, which it is in Canada right now. Most people I know who had cable up until a few years ago was paying $90/mo for 55 channels. Many dropped cable for netflix and so on.

      I'm sorry, I don't see what the problem here is. Why does the pricing need to be regulated? Obviously, some smarter (ex-)customers have figured out the obvious solution to overpriced cable TV, as you noted here yourself. This doesn't need any government interference.

      What *does* need government interference is high-speed internet access. That's a basic utility, just as important as telephony and electricity in modern society. Cable TV is not; it's a luxury. If you don't want to spend $90/month for it, then don't. I have no desire to spend thousands of dollars for a box seat at a sports arena, so I don't: I go find something better to do with my time.

    58. Re: wrong solution by dave420 · · Score: 1

      The property can be bought - it doesn't have to be seized. If it was paid for by the country in the first place this wouldn't even be an issue.

    59. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vote for me, I'll give you free x. Hasn't this always been problems with democracies?

    60. Re:wrong solution by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      And who is going to provide the competition for the current providers? That's a recursive answer at best.

    61. Re:wrong solution by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      We are part of the way there in that they are forced to open up their infrastructure for the last mile (kilometer?) to competitors. I haven't been with Bell or Rogers for Internet access in over 15 years.

      Cell phone service is a different matter. Seems like anytime a competitor comes along it stays around for a few years and then gets bought up by one of the big three. It then gets kept around to show that there's some competition even if there isn't. The problem is that there is only two national cell networks in the country (Bell and Telus share one) and the cost to build a competing one is so large. It's hard to see were a third one would come from. I had looked into Wind before they were bought out and their network in Ottawa was so poor I was going to pay roaming charges at my house because it's near the greenbelt.

    62. Re: wrong solution by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      And if Donald Trump was an intelligent, thoughtful, decent person the GOP primaries wouldn't be a complete joke.

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      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    63. Re:wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Bell and Telus don't actually share one network (it's a common myth.) They share some of the same equipment/antenna locations, but ever since they switched from 2G CDMA to 2G GSM based networks like Rogers did a decade earlier (from TDMA to GSM) all the carriers in Canada now operate using the same technology, and unlike the US, aren't stuck with legacy equipment.

      Wind was bought by Shaw, and Mobilicity was bought by Telus. Oh look now all 4 primary cable/television/phone companies own all the new entrants. Well so much for prices ever going down. Prepare to see a huge spike in basic service costs (which are already 80$/mo)

    64. Re:wrong solution by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      It get even better when you have a sane modern infrastructure like a single strand a fiber to each home from the CO. Layer a muni based L3 network on top on one pair of wavelengths you still easily have room for 7 more per home and smaller players can choose to use the muni's L3 network till it makes sense to build out their own for the town. The muni gains a network for emergency services, school librarys etc, businesses in town can layer on top for their own infrastructure needs at l2 or at l3. If the cost of an interconnect and space is well known and uniform you have a fair playing field.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    65. Re:wrong solution by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      extremely high initial capital investment coupled with very low per-unit margins

      Meanwhile in the real world, companies like Google wouldnt be erecting fiber to the home isp businesses if the margins were very low. Google literally couldn't come up with anything better to invest the money in.

      The communities in which Google is throwing down fiber didnt have any rules in place to stop Google from doing so. Full stop.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    66. Re: wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention spectrum fees

    67. Re: wrong solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm currently in a Bellus headend room configuring nodes, they share ran back to the core and rbs hardware

    68. Re:wrong solution by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Google, however, did not start that as their first business - they were already very rich, and have always had a habit of being willing to take huge investment risks with long-term returns.

      That is an extraordinarily rare business model - and you don't get to cite a rare exception like that as a model because we can't base policies on one in a million events, we need to base them on what the other million do.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    69. Re:wrong solution by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      It's technically termed "the last mile" even in CRTC documents. Those TPIA's(Third Party Internet Access) are also trying to get the CRTC to allow it to happen with fiber as well. But Bell, Rogers, Telus are all trying to say "nononononono we want it to be ours and ours alone." Right at the time time that they tried pushing in TPIA rates that would price the competition right out of business. If I remember right, Teksavvy for example pays around $22/mo to bell and rogers, not sure on cogeco or telus. But it's probably around there.

      I've got Wind and was quite happy with it, especially the "local calls in your zone" stuff. Since I live and work in southern ontario, it worked out well for me. But I sure can't say for sure on how this is going to shake out now that they've been bought out.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    70. Re:wrong solution by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I don't see what the problem here is. Why does the pricing need to be regulated?

      Because Canadians told them to and , according to one poll last year, 64% of Canadians explicitly support the pick'n'pay policy and 25% are undecided, and that only leaves 11% against it.

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      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    71. Re:wrong solution by tbannist · · Score: 1

      The thing you're missing is that to get those "a la carte" channels, a lot of those companies are pulling a "and you need to have xyz" service from us too! Internet is the popular one. So, that $25 is now $90 and those 3 or 5 channels you want? Well you might not be able to get them separately, so you might have to buy them in bundle packs. Which could cost you $9-25 per bundle, you're looking at $150+ now...

      So... you're saying prices are going to go down? Because seriously, $150 sounds like less than what you have paid to get some individual channels last year, and you wouldn't have been getting internet service included in that price...

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    72. Re:wrong solution by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 2

      Yes, I know the term is last mile but I put kilometre in as a joke since I'm in Canada and it should be metric.

      I've been with TekSavvy for a couple of years now and they have been pretty good. The CRTC says that the independent ISPs pay a rate that allows Bell or Rogers to recover their costs plus make a specified percentage of profit (at least that's how it was). I do wish that the physical network was split from the service side of the companies. It would make an independent company to provide what's required for ISPs. But the incumbents have too much political capital for that to happen so I'm thankful that I'm at least able to have a choice at all. The problem is that too many people aren't aware that such a choice exists. If the other ISPs could actually start making a dent into the subscriber numbers then we might see some pricing changes.

    73. Re:wrong solution by Viewsonic · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, even in the USA, there is not enough competition. The companies collude with each other for the most part, and bring stuff like this on themselves. It's what happens in a Capitalist economy, sadly.

    74. Re:wrong solution by dskoll · · Score: 1

      I dunno. I don't subscribe to cable, so for me a fair market value is $0. (Actually negative; you'd have to pay me to watch that crap...)

      Yes, in away the big Canadian telcos were subsidized. But it was the only way to get telecommunications infrastructure going in a country like Canada.

    75. Re:wrong solution by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer to see a free-market solution to this. That's what we're doing here in the US, to a good extent, and it's working: cable companies keep jacking up their prices for TV service, so smart people "cut the cord" in response while TV-addicted morons get stuck paying the higher prices. Eventually, this should result in the cablecos going out of business, or turning into internet-only utilities (which absolutely should be regulated as I said before).

    76. Re:wrong solution by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Google, however, did not start that as their first business - they were already very rich,

      ..and you also cant build a street-legal car without a lot of money, and good luck getting approval for that new medicine you invented while poor.

      You are just waving your hands, declaring irrelevant facts as relevant when they are not. You clearly don't know the how and why of business. Google is building ISP's because it has nothing better to do with the money, which means lots of folks also have nothing better to do with large amounts of money. The inevitable competition for which there is currently a demand is prevented by the State. The Statists have created your cable monopoly and now the Statists are saying that only the State can solve the problem that they created.

      Are you following along?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    77. Re:wrong solution by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      If you believe the definition of a natural monopoly is somehow fatally flawed - don't waste your time arguing that on slashdot, write a paper - it's GUARANTEED to win the nobel prize if you can prove it, seriously. And that's a *lot* of money you're due.

      Can't do it ?

      Then I'll stick to the proven economic theories until there is actual proof they are wrong.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    78. Re:wrong solution by Shaman · · Score: 1

      Tens of millions won't get you very far. Maybe a small city, say 20,000 people.

      --
      ...Steve
  2. It was a good idea... by Mashiki · · Score: 2

    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...
    1. Re:It was a good idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I pirate and or don't watch tv.... if i can only pick 5 channels without it costing more than my internet connection i would be happy.

    2. Re:It was a good idea... by Luthair · · Score: 1

      For IPTV its pretty understandable that they would need you to use their own network

    3. Re:It was a good idea... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Except in a lot of cases, that's not what's happening. The CRTC are apparently investigating this already, both Bell and Rogers offer TV services that are not IPTV based.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  3. Television is for cows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  4. Cost should be $0 by EzInKy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    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.
    1. Re:Cost should be $0 by Luthair · · Score: 3, Informative

      Unfortunately at least in Canada, the satellite/cable companies also own most of the channels. Then on top of that they also own the sports teams for complete vertical integration.

  5. Re:Wanna get high for cheap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  6. Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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.

    --
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    1. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Anyone can run competing cable, but who is going to run more cable when there isn't enough market to support it? They'll already be at a huge disadvantage as a new entrant to the market, and be caught fighting for table scraps. The current carries would just swat them like a fly.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    2. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      No you can't. Try it.

      Try to run competing cable. Right now. See if you can run cable between point A and point B and connect houses and businesses along that line.

      You'll suddenly run into "problems"... mostly that they won't let you run it or more importantly connect houses to the line. Not unless you agree to a franchise agreement which will require you to do other fun things like provide internet service to the ENTIRE city.

      That's a bit like saying if I want to open ONE sandwich shop for ONE neighborhood... I have to open up hundreds so the whole city can get it. This puts any sort of franchise agreement out of the means of anything but a major corporation.

      And even then there are other elements and they add up to a giant "go fuck yourself with a rake sideways".

      So no. Anyone cannot run cable. Unless what you mean is that anyone can run cable if they can agree to and comply with a franchise agreement designed to lock them out of the market.

      And even if they could... we've seen Google and a few other ISPs have serious trouble actually getting cities to issue franchise licenses EVEN if they are willing to comply.

      Its a shitshow and anyone that knows anything about the issue already knows that.

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    3. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      No they can't. Not without signing agreements with existing companies. Communities sign franchise agreements that give exclusive rights to that company. You are very ignorant of how this works. http://www.theverge.com/2016/2...

    4. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are plenty of anecdotal claims of "government defending cable monopolies" but little to actually back up the notion. Can you provide us with a specific example of this happening? You claim that you cannot run cable (of whatever type you wish to discuss) in a given town; can you show us where someone applied to do that and was denied for reasons that are clearly in the interest of defending someone's monopoly? I'd be really interested in seeing that.

    5. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Ok so I stand corrected, but that makes the problem even worse than I thought, not better.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    6. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      What would you accept as evidence?...

      I'm very skeptical of requests for information from ACs on Slashdot because it tends to be followed by ENDLESS goalpost moving if I should actually provide the evidence.

      Most ACs when asked what they would accept get very vague or change the subject. This leads me to believe that they were intending to goalpost move and my request for specific qualified information made them uncomfortable.

      I do not cite this to you to say that I "know" you were going to do that. Merely that I must protect myself from this possibility by requesting elements of the type of information you would accept so that if I go to the effort to find the information you will either be forced to accept it or contradict yourself.

      This is not meant as an insult to you, merely as what I see as a reasonable precaution to either stop people from jerking me around in topics or to filter out asshats.

      Here is one link that popped up after about 2 seconds of internet searches...
      http://arstechnica.com/tech-po...

      I am almost positive you're not going to accept it which is fine... I don't really care. But if you want me to get some specific bit of magic bullet info... I want to know before hand that you'll concede the point if I do it.

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    7. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they can't. Not without signing agreements with existing companies. Communities sign franchise agreements that give exclusive rights to that company. You are very ignorant of how this works. http://www.theverge.com/2016/2...

      You're ignorant of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 (1992).

      It bans exclusive agreements.

    8. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ars technica is a good source, but is that really the article you meant to link to? the article is discussing municipal broadband - as in, run by the municipality (ie city or town). if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even). it seems rather unlikely that you ever aspired to run municipal broadband yourself, unless you are yourself the mayor of whatever town you live in and you wanted to start by building it out from your own home.

    9. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Anyone can run competing cable, but who is going to run more cable when there isn't enough market to support it?

      Why are you worried about running cables to places the market can't support? Are you imagining some sort of fundamental "right" to cable television?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    10. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted? Consider if you will the "military industrial complex"... or the obviously endless series of businesses and contracts where in the government pays someone to do something and that someone makes a profit doing that.

      Now... that silliness out of the way. Did you have parameters you would lead to your concession on this point or am I correct that spending my valuable time to find something you could find if you spent any effort on the matter would be a waste of my time?

      You asked for evidence. I counter challenged by asking what you would accept. If you do not meet that challenge your information challenge fails and I will ignore it.

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    11. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      No, I'm talking about major metropolitan areas. Run cables for $100 million when you can only realistically attract $50 million from companies that are already established.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    12. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      if you run cable for a municipal broadband, you are not running the operation once the cable is in. otherwise it would not be a municipal operation. you can make money from the install, and maybe even contract money on the support, but it is not your resource and you don't have control over it. a municipality blocking the installation of a municipal broadband install is not in any reasonable way similar to a municipality blocking a company from running their own cable.

      so keep trying. maybe you can provide better-than-anecdotal evidence for your claim that municipalities are intentionally preventing companies from installing broadband, but you haven't done it yet. hell i've seen municipalities in very blue states that have allowed 3, 4, or even 5 companies to all run their broadband installations through some or all of the community, and that's obviously not including various option some have with satellite internet.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    13. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      So what would you accept as evidence? Anecdotal evidence is acceptable? Really? Lock yourself down to what you'll accept. I am tired going through the effort only to have someone arbitrarily change the standards so that the last reference doesn't work. Cite the terms.

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    14. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted?

      The fuckwitted person here seems to be you, since what the above said is clearly quite different.

      Here, read their sentence again:

      . if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even)

      You know, you'd probably have better conversations if you could show a remote grasp of what the other person is saying.

      Which in this case, was that they, as in the municipality, was ostensibly not needing to make a profit, which as such, means they can absorb losses that a private competitor couldn't. It's a common argument brought forth by luminaries at AT&T and Comcast, if you don't know.

      Has nothing to do with whether or not Adelphi or G4S or anybody else can make a profit on their own as a contractor.

      Really, try sparing everyone your silliness for once. Resist the temptation to let the noise dribble out of your mouth.

    15. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      So, as predicted, the fuckwit ACs won't offer an type of source they'd accept.

      Your bad faith in the discussion was predicted and your behavior has validated my wisdom in this matter.

      You morons are so predictable... Suck it.

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    16. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Anecdotal evidence is acceptable? Really?

      no. i asked for better-than-anecdotal. so far all you have offered is anecdotal. i already stated why your example of municipal broadband does not in any way support your earlier argument of people being unfairly prevented from starting their own isps.

      if you want terms, let's just start with the major news networks. no editorials from them, just news. i'll even let you call fox news a news network if it helps you out. no chat sites though, this has to be something that was actually reported as news. can you do it? hell i would have even been happy with the ars technica article if it had actually supported your argument; unfortunately for you it instead refuted it.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    17. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The previous comment points out your lack of reading comprehension, that you completely failed to grasp an earlier comment and totally whiffed on your response, and your conclusion is that your "wisdom" has been "validated"?

      It is as if you are not even in the same discussion thread as everyone else.

    18. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh no, my objection was to your ability to comprehend a sentence.

      Instead of acknowledging that error, you just fume and think nobody notices.

      But they do.

    19. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      So anything better than anecdotal evidence would be accepted?

      Define what that means. Do you need a scientific study or would merely a lot of anecdotes be acceptable?

      See, anecdotes are generally rejected because they're cherry picked and a few outliers can be misrepresented as the norm. However, a lot of them all at once are generally considered more valid because its harder to cherry pick with lots of examples.

      I'm just trying to nail down what you're going to accept. Because my experience is that when people are wrong... like you are... that requests for evidence are very frequently a stalling tactic. I'm not wasting my time finding evidence for you if you're just going to come up with a bullshit reason to reject it. So... I want to know, that if I go to the effort to actually prove you wrong... that you're going to eat your sword on this issue.

      if you won't... then there's really no point in me going to any trouble at all.

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    20. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Quote yourself to show where you told me what type of source you'd accept and I'll admit you're right.

      If you don't... I'm going to rack up one more point for me.

      Hit me with your best shot, chump.

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    21. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Actually I didn't.

      He said he was okay with that link, but it was conveniently not relevant to the discussion so his validation of it doesn't really matter.

      I then asked for specific parameters that could be applied to other sources and he didn't respond.

      So... no. You just whiffed.

      What is more, the nature of your comments to me is further validating my hypothesis that you were not seriously asking for questions but just being a trollish contrarian. Which is okay... I spotted you instantly and you thus far have wasted none of my time getting sources that you'll just ignore because what you really want to do is sit there like a jackass and say "nuh uh!"... which is fine. I'll respond with as much energy to say "uh huh"...

      Suck it, troll. Suck it long and suck it hard.

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    22. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please read this comment again.

      Nobody is arguing with you about what sources have been "validated." The point was that you completely failed to understand the most recent on-topic comments in this discussion about municipal broadband. Re-read the comment and try again.

    23. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      If you're not arguing with me, then you agree with me.

      So why did you start arguing with me in the first place?

      And as to citations, I asked you cite what you'd accept.

      But whatever. I saw everything you wrote and I am not going to be derailed.

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    24. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're not arguing with me, then you agree with me. So why did you start arguing with me in the first place? And as to citations, I asked you cite what you'd accept.

      But whatever. I saw everything you wrote and I am not going to be derailed.

      Once again, you're blathering.

      This particular thread is about your ability to read a sentence accurately.

      Namely this one:

      . if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even)

      Did you forget how you misread it?

      I'll remind you:

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted?

      Your reading comprehension is being challenged, since your response demonstrated no comprehension of what was actually said.

      Try to follow a conversation for once.

    25. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the fact that you keep avoiding providing any evidence to support your claims suggests that you don't have any. you've been given a list of acceptable sources when you asked for one and now you can't provide any evidence from those sources so you're trying to blame everyone else for your failure. you're not doing anything for your argument when you can't provide even the slightest shred of evidence to support it.

    26. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I don't care if I have a market solution or not. What I want is right of way of cables. I want to run my own cable or for anyone else to run their own cable. This is something you couldn't have known. You assumed what I wanted and went with it. You never asked me.

      As to reading comprehension... we've already addressed your lack of it... and its sort of funny that you don't realize how badly you've lost on that point.

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    27. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care if I have a market solution or not. What I want is right of way of cables. I want to run my own cable or for anyone else to run their own cable. This is something you couldn't have known. You assumed what I wanted and went with it. You never asked me.

      As to reading comprehension... we've already addressed your lack of it... and its sort of funny that you don't realize how badly you've lost on that point.

      What you obviously don't care about is your lack of comprehension. All your insult did was show its applicability to you.

      That you can't do anything but prattle on further about it just emphasizes the point. I get it, you wanted to make some claim about how one can profit from a government contract, but you chose the wrong method to use to make that point. If you'd simply noted the ability to make a profit from a contract with a government entity, you'd have been fine, but no, you chose to make your response disparaging.

      But keep on protesting, it just keeps on emphasizing how fuckwitted you choose to be.

      Why you make that choice, I don't know. I would ask, but you'd never be able to figure it out without a lot of help.

    28. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Your rebuttal is a nonsequitor.

      I asked for criteria for a source and you dodged. Then you dodged again. Then you dodged again.

      THEN I insulted you because you keep dodging.

      Then you started strawmanning to this free market vs municipal argument which is irrelevant because I didn't advocate for either.

      You're a clown.

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    29. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dodging what? I'm not even standing where you are aiming, and no, the problem is your original remark as follows:

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted?

      But no such implication was made, making you fuckwitted for insulting somebody when you couldn't even practice enough comprehension to respond coherently.

      You can keep on spewing out the insults, and running away from your own words, but it won't make a difference.

    30. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember this comment that you made way back on Friday, early in the thread? Where you provided an article talking about attempts to outlaw municipal broadband? And this comment, where you tried to extend your argument about municipal broadband?

      Go ahead and take a few minutes to re-read those.

      Good. Now you should remember that you are the one who introduced municipal broadband into this conversation, you are the one who attempted to use it to support your initial thesis, and you are the one who failed to grasp why the article you presented failed to support your thesis. That is what we have been talking about. Considering that you brought this all up, it's odd that you now consider it "irrelevant". I guess if you now think that your supporting evidence is actually irrelevant, then we are all in agreement here.

    31. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a clown.

      At least a professional clown would get paid to be funny, you're just a laughingstock.

    32. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I didn't. That was your strawman.

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    33. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Actually that was a reply to your statements about government owned broadband standing in the way of me as an ISP making money. The assumption on your part that was erroneous was that government ownership or control means companies can't make money in the industry. Often as not, the government uses industry partners, consultants, and contractors to do a lot of the work to say nothing of provide the equipment etc. So while I would prefer to have private ISPs as an option for anyone to use, and I would prefer people be able to bypass the ISPs entirely by running their own cable, saying that "MY" argument is all about money or that municipal ISPs which you think I'm advocating has anything to do with anything... I can't help you.

      You're so busy crafting strawmen that we're not even having the same discussion anymore.

      I think I'm just going tell you to give me back my jacket and then tell you to fuck off.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

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    34. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you replied to this:

      if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even)

      But your remark:

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted?

      Serves only as a fuckwitted response, since it doesn't actually recognize what was being said, but instead represents your own conceptual bias, combined with an insult that only makes you look fuckwitted since you didn't grasp what was being said.

      But it seems that you still don't get how fuckwitted your response is, since this:

      The assumption on your part that was erroneous was that government ownership or control means companies can't make money in the industry

      Indicates that you still don't recognize that your response was fuckwitted.

      I get it, you can't comprehend the meaning of this:

      if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even)

      Even after it has been explained to you multiple times.

      But that doesn't make your response any less fuckwitted, it just means you continue to be fuckwitted.

      Why you choose to continue being fuckwitted, I don't know. Maybe you are too fuckwitted to recognize when you're being fuckwitted.

      Or do you just like being fuckwitted?

    35. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      To the contrary, I'm very happy to provide evidence. I just want YOU to commit to accepting valid data prior to presenting it. And I want that commitment in the form of you agreeing to accept a given type of information.

      I know how people like you operate. If I offer evidence of any kind, you'll goal post move to invalidate the data. I want you to commit to a given type of information. And when I present it... I want to get what I deserve... which is to win.

      If you won't commit to accept valid information, then any request on your part for information is insincere and a waste of my time.

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    36. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      You didn't know what kind of solution I wanted when you said "if you really want a market solution". That was strike one.

      Second, I never said anything in advocacy of municipal broadband. That was strike two.

      Third, whether the government providing services makes a profit or not often doesn't stop competition IF that competition is allowed to exist. Look at the private healthcare companies in England and Canada. They exist despite being more expensive than walking in and paying nothing which is their competition. Strike three.

      And you're gone right there. I know you want to sputtering on about something else as stupid and pathetic as your last comment. But you really should just stop embarrassing yourself. You're an idiot. You don't need to prove me any more right than you already did by continuing to be a dumb AC that proves that my position on ACs is generally fucking gold. Trust me. The case is about as solid as the laws of motion at this point.

      Enough.

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    37. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but your response of

      First, implying that you can't make a profit by working for or contracting for the government is... I don't know... Fuckwitted?

      to

      if you really want a market solution, you should be opposed to municipal broadband as well as that is more stifling to competition than anything else as the municipality generally does not need to make a profit (often they don't even need to break even)

      is what is fuckwitted. You just need to admit that. It's not hard. For anyone who isn't fuckwitted, they would be able to recognize that no such implication was made, if you'd asked about it, perhaps it wouldn't have seemed so fuckwitted, but you instead chose to make a remark about it. Which because you said it, well, that makes your reply even more fuckwitted.

      Besides, if you just wanted to say whatever you actually wanted instead, you could have done that without being fuckwitted. But no, you had to be fuckwitted and claim something that was not implied in a sentence was fuckwitted. So not only were you wrong about the implication, you were fuckwitted enough to judge somebody. Which made you out to be the fuckwitted one, because you were too fuckwitted to comprehend the sentence enough to get past your own desire to claim another person was fuckwitted.

      And then you followed it up by continuing to believe your fuckwitted implication even long after, for some reason that must also be fuckwitted. You've committed yourself to being fuckwitted. Why you wanted to do that, I don't know. Perhaps being fuckwitted is how you want to appear to the world. It may be perceived to be an honor when you're fuckwitted to appear fuckwitted. Or can you give me another reason why you continue to be fuckwitted?

    38. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you won't commit to accept valid information

      Several comments have been written to you in this thread committing to accept valid information. So far you have not provided any valid information whatsoever to support your argument. Instead you provided a link to an article that you likely did not read as it did not support your argument. Then when asked repeatedly to provide evidence to support the argument that you claim to want to make, you keep dodging all such requests. Being as you have done this repeatedly for some time this very strongly supports the notion that you have no evidence to support your argument as certainly you could have provided it before now.

      In other words we all know you're full of shit. Your argument is second-hand bullshit that you are echoing just because you want it to be true even though you don't have any reason to believe it to be true.

    39. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Actually none of them specified what they'd accept.

      I heard one say that ars technica was okay... does that mean only ars technica is okay or what? they did not commit to anything beyond that.

      I heard another say that anything that wasn't anacotal would be acceptable. I then pointed out that the line between anacotal and non-anacotal is literally the number of citations. Something that is anacotal as a single example becomes data and evidence if you have lots of the same report. And then you have other issues with that.

      But I got no framework for what was and was not acceptable actually despite asking for that repeatedly. And until I get that, I'm not going to waste my time to get evidence because you can still goal post move.

      You've missed the point.

      I want YOU to be FORCED by your own words to accept my data when I present it. No IFs ANDS or BUTs.

      And that's what you're going to do if I don't lock you down before I do it. I know it. You know it. So you've failed to fool me.

      Here are your options.

      1. Present a framework of acceptance and then lose when I fill it.

      2. Keep pretending you provided one even though both of us know that is a lie.

      3. Have the discussion without asking for information you won't accept.

      Choose. You will not get me to waste even two seconds of my time getting information without a framework. Period.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    40. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's clear you wanted to FORCE somebody to accept something before you presented it.

      Which means even if it said nothing like what you claimed, you'd go on and on about it in circles about the other side, rather than defending your own evidence.

      It was quite apparent from the start what you wanted to do.

      Either undertake to produce some evidence, or don't. But don't expect others to try to play into your game.

      It's as dumb as forcing somebody to provide a yes/no answer to an unspecified question, then phrasing it in a manipulative way.

      A common enough ploy, but a transparent one. You might as well park a big wooden horse outside somebody's gates.

    41. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine. You want specifics, how about this. Your claim is that only one (or maybe a few) companies are allowed to run cable in U.S. cities. So, show us evidence that is a legal stipulation in at least 90% of U.S. cities with populations (or metro area populations) greater than 100,000. Is that specific enough for you?

    42. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Nah, I'm just showing that your request for proof was insincere and a waste of time. I proved that by showing that you'd not agree to any standards of evidence. And that freed me of any obligation to provide any.

      The above is obvious and sustained. Good day.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    43. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Several comments here have explicitly given you lists of sources they would accept. We've seen CNN, CBS, ABC, NBC, even Fox News and Ars Technica. I think someone else gave NY Times and Wall Street Journal. You haven't been able to come up a single piece from any of those that supports your claim. Do you have any sources at all that support it? So far the answer seems most likely no.

    44. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except by failing to produce any evidence, the only demonstration has been your character, as the reaction has been your unwillingness to do so.

      Which if you wanted to avoid wasting time, you could have been far more efficient for your purposes in declaring your victory from the start. Not that your character is particularly unclear, it has been demonstrated many times over and even were it not, it would be obvious as it is quite apparent with only a quick look.

      You don't have hidden depths.

    45. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Several comments here have explicitly given you lists of sources they would accept. We've seen CNN, CBS, ABC, NBC, even Fox News and Ars Technica. I think someone else gave NY Times and Wall Street Journal. You haven't been able to come up a single piece from any of those that supports your claim. Do you have any sources at all that support it? So far the answer seems most likely no.

      Several comments here have explicitly given you lists of sources they would accept. We've seen CNN, CBS, ABC, NBC, even Fox News and Ars Technica. I think someone else gave NY Times and Wall Street Journal.

      Yep. And there was also this comment, which established reasonable, objective criteria for Karmashock to prove his claim if he didn't want to use one of the suggested sources.

      In spite of multiple comments answering his demand for defining acceptable evidence, he's failed to produce a single shred of evidence. Karmashock has nothing here. It is clear that he has "lost" this one (since, per his comments, Karmashock seems to view this as some sort of competition). This exchange seems to be typical of much of what he posts here. Lots of bluster and derision to those who disagree with him, but very little critical thinking or evidence to back up his strongly stated opinions.

      I expect that now, rather than admit any sort of mistake, he'll simply disappear from this thread and instead go look for other Slashdot arguments to try to "win".

    46. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I didn't fail to provide evidence. I negated the requirement by proving that your request was an insincere ploy.

      As to efficiency, that's not the point. I simply refuse to be trolled into taking people seriously that are not taking the discussion seriously or lack the intellectual integrity to be worthy of my effort.

      What you did was make it clear that this is an insult and shit talking thread. I queried you to see if you wanted a real discussion or shit talking. You opted for shittalking. So that's what you get.

      I am quite happy to continue the discussion on the basis that your mother is fat. However, i will not be baited into a discussion where you regard the discussion as a shit talking discussion and I am expected to do research and argue logically. I will regard YOU as you regard this discussion. And that means this is what you get.

      You chose this. If you want something else next time, then choose otherwise.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    47. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      So you'll accept any major news outlet that supports my position? And that is what we consider to be valid information? Mainstream news? I'm just confirming your commitment to accept ANYTHING I provide from such a source.

      Also Ars Technica is apparently fine as well. Excellent. So can we assume any alternative tech media is also acceptable? You're making this very easy. I will provide evidence that is mainstream news etc... and then by your statement you'll be obligated to concede.

      Press the button. Give me an easy win.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    48. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've failed to provide evidence.

      Notice the lack of it. Hence your failure. I'm sure you've got all sorts of concocted excuses for it, but ultimately, your contention is unsupported by evidence.

      Thus failure.

      That you've only demonstrated your lack of character and integrity is your own business. You've failed to provide the evidence, so the discussion went where you chose to take it.

      It was your choice, actually, from the start.

      But if you wanted to be efficient, or at least, quick, you could have just started from the beginning with your declaration of victory and other assertions, it'd have made for a shorter thread anyway.

    49. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      That's a strawman, I didn't say it is codified that only specific companies are allowed to run cable. I said that the system is set up in such a way that that happens. But that isn't explicitly stated.

      Here you'll say that I then have no argument ignoring that we have many other situations where things are not directly codified yet result in those situations. Such as the Jim Crow laws which didn't forbid black people from voting but did create a situation where it was very hard for them to vote which made it statistically unlikely for them to vote.

      What I can show you in franchise agreements is that they tend to require that anyone that offers ISP services must service the ENTIRE city to serve ANY portion of the city. That is pretty common. And it means that only the largest companies are well capitalized enough to compete. This does all by itself restrict competition to a handful of companies and it akin to saying someone can't open a sandwich shop anywhere in a city unless they are willing to commit to open hundreds all over the city serving the entire population.

      Its not a reasonable requirement. And there are many other unreasonable requirements. Often as not you have to provide free or subsidized access for example which is hard to do if you're a small company. Then there is a regulatory burden which is difficult for anyone that doesn't have a dedicated legal team to handle. And it just goes on and on and on and on.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    50. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you'll accept any major news outlet that supports my position? And that is what we consider to be valid information? Mainstream news? I'm just confirming your commitment to accept ANYTHING I provide from such a source.

      Accept "ANYTHING" you "provide from such a source"? No, that's absurd. For instance, editorial commentary is usually low-quality evidence. This comment provided clear, objective criteria for you to support your claim. If you don't think the criteria are fair, then offer your own counter criteria, and we'll talk about them. For now, you have done absolutely nothing to convince anyone that your original assertion was anywhere near the truth.

      For a long time now, you seem to be doing nothing but stalling -- you repeatedly talk about how easy it would be for you to provide evidence, yet you never do it, allegedly to avoid "wasting your time". That excuse now seems incredibly lame, because you've surely wasted far more time bickering about this then you would have wasted just delivering us your evidence at the very beginning. All signs suggest that you have nothing.

    51. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, then let's modify the criteria accordingly. Show us evidence that at least 90% of U.S. cities with populations (or metro area populations) greater than 100,000 require that any ISP must serve the ENTIRE city in order to operate in the city.

    52. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      likely the kid realized a while ago that these threads indeed expire and get closed down after a while, regardless of comment volume or frequency. he's just running down the clock in the hopes that nobody will remember him making himself look this ridiculous the next time he makes a grand sweeping statement that he knows he cannot support. go back through his comment history and you'll see he does this all the time.
       
      he's able to avoid ever having to admit he's wrong this way, by always playing the same card about nobody being willing to accept his imaginary source.

    53. Re:Franchise monopolies... don't give them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he's able to avoid ever having to admit he's wrong this way, by always playing the same card about nobody being willing to accept his imaginary source.

      Don't you realize, Karmashock is the VICTIM here? A martyr, sacrificed to the unreasonable demands of others, who do not realize the shining wisdom being offered? It's all persecution, persecution of the worst kind.

      Karmashock only talks in circles, makes hysterical accusations, and otherwise behaves so oafishly because everybody else makes it necessary.

      It's our fault, of course.

  7. Waste of $25 by wardrich86 · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Waste of $25 by wardrich86 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Rogers pack is practically what I grew up with for free with an antenna...

      -ABC
      -CBS
      -NBC
      -CBC
      -CTV
      -PBS
      -TVO
      -Some French channel I never watched
      -Fox
      -CHCH
      -WB
      -City

    2. Re:Waste of $25 by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      I don't think people in Canada can get all those for free.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    3. Re:Waste of $25 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think people in Canada can get all those for free.

      Broadcast signals don't stop at the border, plenty of Canadians close enough to said border can easily pick up US network broadcasts and vice versa.

    4. Re:Waste of $25 by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Depends on where you live. Lot of places in Southern Ontario you can get all those channels OTA. Seeing people getting 30-50 channels OTA isn't uncommon if you're in say Toronto or Kitchener/Waterloo, or people living along Lake Erie/Michigan/Ontario. Live in northern alberta though? Nope.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    5. Re:Waste of $25 by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I guess it depends how close you live to a major US City. There's no way somebody in Edmonton is going to pick up ABC over the air. Compare that with Windsor where there's always been a problem getting people to pay for cable because of all the freely available US networks. I'm in Ottawa and most people can't get any US networks unless you get a lot of extra equipment.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    6. Re:Waste of $25 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As OP said,

      I live in Quebec and the 25$ basically give you the channels that used to be free on rabbit antennas because a lot of
      peoples in Canada can't even pick up more than 2-3 channels anymore due to the change to digital. So basically we
      are still being defrauded by the CRTC cartel and their cronies but now it's a bit less expensive - 25$ compared to the 45$
      it used to be.

    7. Re:Waste of $25 by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm Canadian, and that's what I grew up with. I can confirm that at least up until 2008, I had all of those channels. Also for a while I could get channel 3 to come in... it was called VR.

    8. Re:Waste of $25 by Luthair · · Score: 1

      Living in Ottawa my OTA antenna gets 3 channels (Global, TVO & CBC). Growing up in a rural community 20-years ago we had twice that. Unfortunately since Bell & Rogers own most of the TV stations they've pulled back on broadcasting.

    9. Re:Waste of $25 by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      Twenty years ago, we got CKVR, CHCO, and TVO over the air. Channels 3, 11 and 2, as I recall. The antenna was connected to a dial that physically rotated it.

      At some point, we got Global TV on channel 7.

      Ah, growing up watching Robotech, Thundersub, Star Trek and Captain Power....

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    10. Re:Waste of $25 by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you were in Toronto, which is very close to the US border. Most of Canada is not in Toronto.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    11. Re:Waste of $25 by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      That's true. My cottage further north had Chex and Global.

    12. Re:Waste of $25 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get all of those channels with a 40 year old antenna and I live 80 km north of downtown Toronto. Stop whining and get an antenna.

    13. Re:Waste of $25 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it didn't have the big fucking array of channels you started your fucking argument with, moron.

      If you are going to make an argument, stick with and stop twisting to fit the scenarios where your argument fails, ok?

  8. Brazilian government made it some years ago... by fbobraga · · Score: 1

    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...)

    1. Re:Brazilian government made it some years ago... by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      it was part of PNBL (in Portuguese, or National Broadband Plan, in English)

  9. What you get for your 25 loonies by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

    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.
  10. Capitalism by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    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.
    1. Re:Capitalism by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It screams government intervention. Unfortunately these are government sanctioned monopolies with exclusivity agreements. Government will need to regulate on two fronts: content and infrastructure. From the content perspective demand unbundling and force a la carte. This actually will cause channel prices to drop. More people watch QVC than ESPN yet ESPN changes several times more. ESPN is guaranteed revenue from people who don't watch the channel. Remove the captive audience and ESPN is forced to compete on price. Then you will see the true nature of pricing. Cost might go up, because ESPN throw money are programming because they can pass the cost onto the customer. So they might rethink their 10 year $15 Billion dollar deal with the NFL to carry Monday Night football. Customer might balk and a massive price increase - since now you have a smaller customer base - and ESPN might go back to the NFL and actually negotiate on what they can afford.

      If government runs infrastructure - like they're suppose to do - then they can lease out the lines to companies to provide the service. Like the way the FCC licenses the air waves for TV and Radio transmissions.

      There are ways forward but the industry opposes it and politicians aren't interested in upsetting their donors.

    2. Re:Capitalism by aicrules · · Score: 1

      Capitalism solves it perfectly. You don't want $50 a month TV, don't buy it. DONE! If enough people DO want $50 a month TV then it will stay $50 a month. DONE! If the problem you're referring to is some people can't afford cable TV, that's not actually a problem, that's just a fact. Not everyone can afford an car, so they have to figure out other methods of transportation. Not everyone can afford cable TV, so they have to figure out other methods of entertainment.

    3. Re:Capitalism by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      That sounds like a great solution for large corporations, but it sucks for the individual.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    4. Re:Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capitalism doesn't work for problems that are too small, or too big. It works amazingly well for everything in between though.

    5. Re:Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "perfectly"
      That's a weird way to spell "stupidly."

      Your kind never learn anything though. You need a binary situation like pay or no pay, because you can't figure out more complicated factors like price, or quality, or availability, or reliability, or, well, absolutely anything else. You simply conclude "dur hur nobody wants TV" and go off to cry for a bailout from mommy government.

    6. Re:Capitalism by nvm_my_comment · · Score: 1
      That's what I do but it seem there a fair amount f**ktards who don't really value their money... So nothing change.

      Not everyone can afford cable TV, so they have to figure out other methods of entertainment.

      Well I can afford it but as mentionned in the article, 25 = 40 a month because of hiddent fee, and the amount of profit they make is disgusting. Not enough competition it's true.

    7. Re:Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capitalism works because capitalism gets to define what it means to work. Socialism failed because millions of people starved to death and the point of socialism was to give everyone what they needed. Millions of people starving under capitalism? Working As Designed.

      Look forward to that as demand for labor continues to slide to zero due to automation.

  11. Even $25/month isn't true. It's more than that. by uniquegeek · · Score: 1

    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.

  12. Monopoly by fbobraga · · Score: 1

    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...])

    1. Re:Monopoly by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      (it was a reply to http://slashdot.org/comments.p... - I think I've fucked up things here! sorry)

  13. Investments by monopoly? by fbobraga · · Score: 1

    NET was not "the market first", but the market-only in the case (and, I think, it only made the investments [several years ago] thinking this situation will persist up to now [but it changed, by government intervention [some years ago]: it causes the near-bankrupt of the company...])

  14. Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  15. What is cable TV? by Bartles · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:What is cable TV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a system wherein you pay to get advertisements served directly to your home. Sometimes they interrupt the ad stream but never long enough that your ADHD starts to itch.

  16. Re:Even $25/month isn't true. It's more than that. by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    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.
  17. From Nova Scotia/Eastlink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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...
     

  18. Broken business model by spaceyhackerlady · · Score: 1

    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

  19. Sometimes I wonder if the CRTC just taking out.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. and shooting the people trying to rip us off wouldn't send a clear message and get this stuff unf@cked ;)

  20. Re:Even $25/month isn't true. It's more than that. by bjohnso5 · · Score: 1

    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.

  21. Dismantle These Monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  22. Where's the online stream? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  23. I am so happy they screwed this up by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    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.

  24. Zazeen is an exception by JigJag · · Score: 1

    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
  25. $25... do you still need a cable box? by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:$25... do you still need a cable box? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. No ClearQAM mandate. Not even a CableCard (or some other equivalent that allows me to go to wal-mart and by whatever cable-box I want).

      Instead you get to pay hundreds of dollars for a cable box that is a big fucking paper weight if you are done with cable.

  26. The base package channels is utter crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  27. Re:Wanna get high for cheap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.
    Hey man have you heard about banana peels ? ;-) 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...