FCC Call For Comments on a la Carte Cable 18
The Importance of writes "A couple of weeks ago, Slashdot readers commented on the possibility of a la carte cable pricing. Now the FCC is officially seeking comments [PDF] on the issue. One commentator thinks bundling between content producers and the cable companies is more important than bundling between cable company and consumer."
But... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:But... (Score:2)
Re:But... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not saying it's a "Good thing", but bundling isn't as evil as you thought it was.
Disappearing channels (Score:3, Insightful)
If i were to ask you to list all the channels you would pay for, would you forget one that you like but only occasionally watch?
That's supply and demand at work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Disappearing channels (Score:5, Interesting)
You misunderstand. It's not going to be what stations you watch, but rather what stations you pay for.
If i were to ask you to list all the channels you would pay for, would you forget one that you like but only occasionally watch?
Not if I can get flags for TV shows, actors, wrtiers, and production houses.
"SciFi, The History Channel, Comedy Central, Cartoon Network, a news channel or two, and the channels that show Enterprise, Smallville, and whatever Joss Whedon does next" should be a valid choice.
Re:Disappearing channels (Score:1)
I'm more worried about how they'd accomplish this on analog cable. What, are you going to have 40 filters on your line? With digital, it's not so bad, it's just software. But then you need to pay more for digital...
Err.. I guess what I'm saying is this particular idea (I haven't read the
Oops.. (Score:3)
If the FCC is doing this... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:If the FCC is doing this... (Score:4, Informative)
I tend to agree unless it is written so that it make it so that all channels have access to all areas, so that a place that does not currently get the sci-fi or the food network can now get them. This solves the problem of smaller channels getting a market.
Then you just have to solve he problem cost, that is a different story unless you implement price fixing.
Overall I think anything at the federal level on this will fail, however it may force local governments which provide the monopoly to think and branch out.
Hey, Cowboy Neal: (Score:1)
This isn't new. (Score:5, Interesting)
I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:3, Interesting)
If they had any interest in "anti-competitive" practices, this would be the FIRST thing to go.
Once done, you could pick the provider that gives you the channels you want, or bundles, or even carries 24 hour Home Shopping and nothing else.
Personally, it's not which regulation I object to, it is the fact of regulation to which I object. I no more want to regulate other peoples business than I want to be regulated myself. I guess that's why I'm not rich.
Bob-
Re:I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:1)
TVoverIP is a long way off for the masses, and HDTVoverIP even farther off. We will be stuck with bandwidt limited cable plants for decades.
Now if the FCC forced the separation of cable plant ownershif from content provider ownership then your idea might have a chance of working.
But other than that, some things just naturally belong in a monopo
Re:I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:2)
Such a thing can only exist, without using force, so long as the service provider keeps their price low enough, or their service high enough, that any possible competition doesn't want to expend the investment required to undercut them.
Bob-
Re:I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:2)
Do you have separate wires into your house for AT&T vs. MCI service?
More pipes aren't needed for choice. I know of at least one town where you have a choice of providers of natural gas. All of them provide the same gas through the same pipe, and all drawn from the same source; they just charge different rates. You don't pay for a particular branded product; you pay for branded access to a common prod
Re:I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:1)
Building out an infrastructure like cable (or telephone service) requires easements and rights-of-way to string the copper. Do you want that we should surrender these to private interests without promises in return? You want to turn my neighborhood into a spiderweb of overhead cables, or dig up the streets to run them underground, you'd better make some promises in return.
Is several times the cable-hangin
Re:I care about MONOPOLY, not bundling (Score:2)
Your examples ignore perfectly viable competition methods. For instance, two-way satellite IP service has been around for years. You might know Earthlink.
You also say "you'd better make some promises in return." In what way is this not a factor in the free market? It is not the freedom of choice that bumps up aga