FCC Votes To Fight Cable's Reign Over Set-top Boxes (engadget.com) 186
Last month, reports surfaced that the FCC planned to pry set-top boxes out of hands of cable and satellite companies. Today, the Commission passed the 'Unlock the Box' plan that would do just that. The proposal aims to introduce more competition when it comes to the boxes users rent from television providers. Under the new rules, cable companies would have to give third-party device makers the information they'd need in order to build set-top boxes.
Fighting over horsewhip handle designs (Score:5, Insightful)
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Back in the mid 1990's, I went out to buy a new TV (Sharp 24" flat-screen CRT). They were advertised as "cable-ready". They had a built in decoder that could access free-to-air cable channels. just plug in the connector from the cable network and no need for a decoder box. When I paid for a basic subscription, the cable company were completely confused as to why I was able to get service without a cable box. They had to send an engineer round to check it out.
Today, we now have internet-ready TV sets that ca
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"Cable ready" means that it can control more channels than OTA VHS and UHF band regular channels. That is all it means; it can control the already-decoded channels. In those days, you could connect a regular "non-cable-ready" TV to the cable, through the antenna input, and view the low-numbered cable channels. It was common in the 80s for families to have 1 cable box, and maybe a second TV (the old one, probably B&W) in another room that got the low channels, which usually included news and the local ch
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Wait, you're claiming that cable set-top boxes stopped being used over 3 decades ago? Uhm... no, you're not really that splendid.
Newsflash: this device is still being manufactured today!
Re:Fighting over horsewhip handle designs (Score:5, Insightful)
Cable industry days are numbered.
No, they'll just jack up the prices for your internet service to make up for what you're not paying them for cable.
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Cable industry days are numbered.
No, they'll just jack up the prices for your internet service to make up for what you're not paying them for cable.
Only if the current price is based strictly on competition. If instead there is very little local competition between companies offering equivalent services to the same addresses, then the price is based on "what the market will bear" and not on cost. In that case, the price that the market can bear would not change, and they wouldn't be able to raise prices without losing customers.
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They are waaay ahead of you.
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How many on demand services can you subscribe to for the same price? I'm thinking about 5. Still nicer than cable when there is never anything on you want to watch when you have time to watch it.
Inevitable response (Score:4, Funny)
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By "free market," what they mean is that the market is free to give them campaign donations to ensure that they're free to fuck over consumers as much as they want.
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You mean Cue. As in cuing an actor for their lines. Not waiting in a queue. Because I'm pretty sure the members of Congress won't wait in line to give us this message
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They will have to wait in line, because it is Republicans at the FCC who opposed, and so it is mostly only Fox News that will have a queue for speaking against it, because it is the natural bottleneck.
All the other channels will only have one R and one D on the screen at a time, and the R's hate the FCC. D's in the trenches are used to the FCC being against freedom, and won't quickly jump to support them after just one or two good decisions. So it is mostly going to be one-way traffic; a line of R's queuing
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"Queue the various senators and congressmembers"
This would be a good first organization step before handing out indictments.
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I know right away that both my Senators support real competition and support this change.
Maybe you should just elect better Senators?
I'll bet there are a number of States where it is obvious both Senators will support this change. They might even have other things in common, maybe even the same colored lapel pins. Maybe even the same color lapel pins as the FCC members who voted for this change!
Granted, if your State's Senators have same-colored lapel pins as the FCC guys who voted against this change, then
Why? My Cable Card Tuner is great (Score:4, Insightful)
Didn't the FCC solve this with the Cable Card thing? I have a media server that emulates a cable box for my whole house. Works great.
The only real problem here is that with the demise of Windows Media Center and Windows 7 there isn't a viable fully vetted option for me to turn to that will allow me to watch and DVR protected content. Yes, Silicon Dust is working on a version, but it's not yet certified (as far as I know) for protected content.
The FCC already solved this issue. Why are they trying to solve it again?
Re:Why? My Cable Card Tuner is great (Score:5, Insightful)
Except you can never buy the cable card, the cable company "rents" it to you at the same price that a cable box would cost to rent.
Its money for old rope. Its just an artificial dependency who's only purpose is to scam you out of another $15/month or whatever.
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Exactly, I bought Tivos when I was younger, hoping to get better features and no monthly service fee for the boxes, ended up saving maybe $1 a month with the card over their boxes.
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>> You should do some new research.
eah OK last time I checked, Cox were charging $15/month, which is why I said what I did. I just checked now, its 1.99/month which is far more reasonable. I guess all the cable-cutters have had a real impact.
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Re: Why? My Cable Card Tuner is great (Score:2)
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Cablecards aren't regulated, Verizon charges $4/mo on top of their TV services.
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They are regulated [1], but the price isn't FIXED at an exact value. I have been paying Comcast $2/mo for mine since 2008, and my first card is now free since I don't have a Comcast STB (in my area, the first STB is included with service). This is substantially cheaper than both their STB and DVR.
[1] https://www.law.cornell.edu/cf... [cornell.edu]
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Except you can never buy the cable card, the cable company "rents" it to you at the same price that a cable box would cost to rent. .
In my case, this is not true. Your basic set top box on Verizon FIOS costs $12/month and the DVR box $25/month (as I remember). My cable card costs $5/month and I only need one card to watch/record on up to 3 programs at a time on as many screens as I can attach to my network.
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OK but my point is that you're still paying $5 a month for it.
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OK, but given the encryption part of how all this works, I'm not sure how else to protect the video content but though some scheme where you have some kind of physical token that cannot be modified and allows the cable company to manage the content you are allowed to see. My point is that the FCC has mandated this solution to be Cable Cards, which works fine.
Now if you are wanting to insist that we be allowed to purchase and own our own cable card from a provider and force providers to support customer
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They could always just provide the card as part of the service without an additional rental charge.
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No, I don't think so. CableCARDs fit into a lot of things, TV's, TiVo's and other Third party devices so there is some costs, both up front and monthly for the cable company with CableCARDs. If you could request 20 of them for free, this might not be fair to the cable company. Perhaps if you had some kind of limit on the number you can get for free or something... But even then, they will just roll the costs into their prices...
Right now, things work fine. For a very low monthly cost, they provide the c
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I don't know there... I was able to set up my Homerun Prime with Windows Media Center in an afternoon... Based on your other posts you don't consider me all that bright so it cannot be THAT hard. Had I purchased a TiVo, I'm sure they have excellent customer support for new users. It's not like this is rocket science.
Now if you cannot figure out how to make this work, you get to pay your provider for their turnkey solution and nothing the FCC can do will make that any different. The Cable Company isn't
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I didnt say it was hard, i said it was a half-assed compromise that no one wanted.
What else can I assume if you are unhappy and having difficulty making it work for you. IF you wanted a turnkey solution, call TiVo, if not, roll your own. I don't see any reason the FCC needs to do anything else beyond the CableCARD. We already have third party access to the STB market though CableCARD. Now if your provider is messing with you and that's why you are so unhappy with your CableCARD solution, I suggest you file a complaint with the FCC...
It may be that the CableCARD solution was unwanted,
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Completely untrue. Mine cost 1$ a month and is capable of decoding 4 streams at once.
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You only even claim that it is untrue once. How many times is it true? Completely untrue, or just it has a few exceptions that prove the rule?
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Except you can never buy the cable card, the cable company "rents" it to you at the same price that a cable box would cost to rent.
My cableCard from Comcast is free.
You can bet that any settop box solution that the FCC demands will have an encryption device that is not provided by the third party.
And thanks, slashdot, for stuffing ads onto the same page where the "disable advertising" checkbox is still checked.
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Yea, I've not used Verizon's STB's for almost 8 years. Prior to that, they where slow with lagging user interface updates and didn't have what I considered an intuitive user interface for things like parental controls and hiding content I didn't whish to see. My last STB would also spontaneously reboot multiple times a week and require that I unplug it about once a month. I sure hope they fixed that stuff.
But I don't want the STB anyway. It costs too much, It offers all that streaming on demand garbage
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That sounds like an oversight by Comcast in your case, not general policy:
https://www.reddit.com/r/cordc... [reddit.com]
Did you get your Tivo from them? Maybe it was an already used one that they forgot to remove the cablecard from.
I would keep quiet about it if I were you.
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It probably depends on the market. In my LCOL area, cable boxes were $10 each except for the first, which was $0. When I turned in my cable box in favor of a cable card, they started giving me a $2.50 bill credit. (That was a few years ago -- back when they were forcing me to bundle to get the cheapest price -- so YMMV.)
No, it isn't - not really (Score:3)
The problem is that there is near zero incentive for making these boxes. They need to prohibit cable manufacturers from supplying boxes - i.e. you can buy service from them, but you can't get a box. Nor can they carry a stake ownership in any manufacturer of a box.
Seriously, why would you compete with someone who can (and will) always undercut you on price and also make it impossible for you to implement all of the features (because they own the rights to the cards). You said it yourself - "there isn't a v
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But you can get a cable card from them, by law. If they cannot provide you a cable card, you complain to the FCC and force them to support them. It's the Cable Card that you need to decrypt the video stream and what your third party vendor needs to support. It's a known standard and it works.
So, the FCC has already solved this problem. You can already buy third party set top boxes and tuners that use the cable card standard.
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The point is set top boxes are another monopoly that they have that can use competition and reduce price. Something cable card does not do.
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Since those extra features are what will keep you with that company verse another they then require that you get a box as part of any discounted offer. You don't have to use it and the discount more than pays for the box but it is still something that kills off competition and 3rd party boxes.
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OK, so if the cable company offers streaming services, then the FCC has a point, but watching TV or having a DVR solution is already a solved problem. All they would really need to do here is mandate that the cable company provide a web interface for their streaming content which is available to customers on their networks. Something tells me though, the FCC won't go with the obvious solution....
BTW, most of this already IS standard's based, even at the video streaming level. I forget the exact RFC's inv
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Just do it with software. (Score:3)
Didn't the FCC solve this with the Cable Card thing? I have a media server that emulates a cable box for my whole house. Works great.
The only real problem here is that with the demise of Windows Media Center and Windows 7 there isn't a viable fully vetted option for me to turn to that will allow me to watch and DVR protected content. Yes, Silicon Dust is working on a version, but it's not yet certified (as far as I know) for protected content.
The FCC already solved this issue. Why are they trying to solve it again?
There is no reason they can't just do it with software and a protocol for key exchange.
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There is no reason they can't just do it with software and a protocol for key exchange.
Ah, yes, they are working on that, but security requires that there be some kind of physical token, a piece of hardware, there to validate stuff. Plus, having a program running in memory of a device you don't control just invites hacking so I don't think the cable companies will let that happen. More importantly, I don't think the content providers will be willing to let the cable companies put their content at risk like that.
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Cable card would have been a solution had the FCC not allowed the cable companies to create a certification laboratory that allowed them to throw red tape in front of any manufacturer. They also should have required that the Cable companies provide cable cards at no charge. The companies quickly figured out that charged a $10 rental fee for the card while only charging $12 for a full DVR quickly killed any market for the cards.
Unfortunately because of the mistakes the FCC made in the cable card specificatio
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All are available for CableCARD devices if you know where to look. I will admit that the schedule data is going to cost you.... But it costs you something when you use the Cable Company's version too.
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Try Google... Yahoo even has sources... Good luck, I think YOU might need it.
ClearQAM. (Score:3)
Why not provide the channels in clearQAM?
In town both cable providers still have a lot of channels on analog cable. Both still charge extra if you want any digital channels.
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I don't know where you get the higher quality from. They lossily compress the hell out of most cable channels.
OTA brodacasts are WAAAY better than anything over cable. The way they compress stuff currently, the only point of 4k via cable is so it looks good on paper to people who don't know any better.
Be like Canada where you can buy the box with no (Score:2)
Be like Canada where you can buy the box with no outlet fees (at lest up to 4 boxes on most systems)
and they are getting pick and play real soon as well.
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Bingo.
Truck rolls are technically the CableCo's problem, but in practice they made everyone's lives harder. Move to a location that was trapped? You couldn't get TV service until a truck roll was done. Signal strength is suddenly
I came up with a way to battle this myself. (Score:5, Interesting)
See, back in the day I built my own DVR with an NTSC tuner card and a Linux box. When they made it next to impossible to build your own DVR - I quit.
That's right, I haven't had cable or satellite in years.
I now watch whatever I think deserves my attention (not much) via Netflix, Amazon, occasionally the network/show website, or buy buying the disks when it comes out. Hulu was sort of in the mix for a while but I refuse to pay for commercials so it's off the list. I understand they may have a commercial free option now, I haven't bothered to look.
If you really want to send a signal to these companies that you don't like being manipulated into getting their unnecessary spy^H^H^H tuning equipment you can start by not accepting their tuning equipment and keeping the dollars they so desire.
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Its not only easy to build your own DVR, it gives you a great solution.
At home I have a linux-based media PC running mythtv with a Digital tuner card plugged into an antenna. and it works great. The picture quality is better than cable (OTA is much less agressive with the lossy compression), I can stream both live and pre-recorded TV, and (cough)ripped movies and music(/cough) all over the house, and anywhere in the world to my cell phone from it. Other than intiai setup costs, its totally free going forwa
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I've thought about this - I was actually a MythTV early adopter back when I was using an NTSC card, but there isn't much on over the air I want to see. Suppose Agents of Shield, Super Girl, and the occasional mini-series, but I've found I'm happier waiting for the no commercials version. Still, I've got my Kodi system setup in a gen 1 Intel Mac Pro, I could easily slap a card in and do the MythTV combo setup without it being too difficult. Just having a hard time convincing myself to mess with "real TV"
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Commercial free unless you want to watch: Grey's Anatomy, Once Upon a Time, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Scandal, Grimm, New Girl Or How To Get Away With Murder.
So no they still don't offer a commercial free plan.
Cable here is still analog unless you want to pay extra $$ for digital I don't know if a box is required for the digital service in this area or not If a box is required the cable service will be dropped immediately when they drop analog service.
Hoping they make digital standard soon catv looks
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In this area is it digital ONLY. You have to pay extra for HD, but SD digital is the norm.
I've been planning to put together a nice infographic explaining to HD subscribers how they're getting screwed with lower quality video due to the cable company doing a tiered system when they could better quality at HD and no difference on an SD set by making it all HD. I think there's an analog channel or two that basically tells you to go get a box if you don't have one and what you're missing without the box.
"unlock the box" is the wrong apprach (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems clear that the whole need for a set top box is artificial, and that it s actually just another mechanism to justify the cable company adding another fee to your cable bill.
All TVs already come with digital tuners, so serious question: Why can't they just legislate that cable companies have to supply standard QAM to the consumer, then we can do away with the whole stupid intermediate box thing entirely, and all the extra power/heat/cables/remotes that it requires and consumes too.
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This is 2016 - and
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Because that would negate all the cable companies agreements with content providers. They need a method so that the cable company isn't forced to do something that violates their existing contracts.
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This is basically saying the cable industry needs to provide something akin to DOCSIS for connection to a provider's system (you know, that '
Just so you know (Score:3)
This FCC vote broke down according to party lines, with the two Republicans voting against increased competition in regard to cable boxes and the three Democrats voting in favor.
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Thank you. Hope this shuts up some of the tools who claim it makes no difference whether you vote fopr Tweedledee or Tweedledum.
I Don't Get It? (Score:2)
This isn't the FCC's utopian future. I bought all this stuff last year. T
About Time (Score:2)
There is no excuse for a TV to require a separate set-top box. Every digital TV already has all the hardware it needs build in. With this ruling we might even finally get TVs with Tivo functionality built-in.
Honestly (Score:2)
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Too Late (Score:2)
I bought Tivo and am not switching back.
Cut the Cord (Score:2)
Why even have "cable" anymore? (Score:3)
Ok, I get it, not everyone lives where I do...
But I have gigabit fiber to the home now, in fact both Verizon and AT&T have run fiber to my house, so I have both choices.
If we would simply commit to deploying fiber to every home in the nation, removing all the old cable and phone lines, have you purchase your Internet connection from a regulated utility the way you buy power and water, then let the various companies (DirecTV, Comcast, Verizon, etc.) compete to sell you packs of channels, or channels by themselves, or better yet, programs and seasons, we'd all be better off.
The need for cable/sat existed when everyone was on dialup or DSL, but with high speed cable or fiber growing, I think the days of that are numbered.
Pot calling kettle, come in kettle... (Score:2)
"...and ensuring that what consumers watch on television remains none of Google's business."
So says an AT&T rep, now owners of direcTV which already has access to that info.
I firmly believe this is a step in the right direction, but more than anything I'd like ala-cart channel selection. I want my sports, which I can't get unless I pay for the upper tier package which include dozens of movie channels I never tune into, many music stations that again never see the like of day on my TV. The delivery servi
Wheeler (Score:3)
It's interesting that Thomas Wheeler's FCC seems to be much more consumer-friendly than its preceding incarnations.
I still remember the gloom-and-doom discussions here on /. when the ex Cable lobbyist was appointed by Obama... Fortunately, Wheeler seems to be a man of character, which is pretty rare these days.
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if they did that then they have to advertise the real cost of the service, and not the 100 megs for $50 *hidden $100 per month to rent modem
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Yea, I really hated the last time I went out to completive shop my two cable providers. Hidden fees and costs abound and many are not as obvious as the set top box stuff.
I found out the hard way that if you don't buy the bundle they pump up the price of the internet connection, sometimes by over 20%. I also discovered that the ad prices are ALWAYS lower than what you can actually purchase it for. In my case, I ditched the set top box and went for a Network Cable Card tuner solution, but they would have
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Suddenlink likes to send me these flyers that say they have internet 30X faster than dsl. The flyer doesn't say how fast that is but its $35/mo
They also like to send me flyers that say their speeds typically start at 50Mbps I bet they are laughing their asses off they don't offer anything over 15mbps anywhere near here.
After contacting sales the best plan we could get in town is 8mbps for $135/mo nice huh? At&t only charges us $45/mo for 12mbps.
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" Suddenlink likes to send me these flyers that say they have internet 30X faster than dsl. The flyer doesn't say how fast that is but its $35/mo"
It actually is blazingly fast. But there's a ridiculously low cap, which limits what you can do with that speed after about the first week of every month.
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Well, technically you don't need their box. You need a box. There are a few different solutions on the market that use CableCARD but unfortunately (AFAIK) they either have you pay for another service to use them (Tivo), or use the now discontinued Windows Media Center. They have basically eliminated all competition in this area, but technically there are still options available.
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And to add insult to injury, they also get to charge you a rental fee for CableCards. So even when you go for the one or two competitors out there (Tivo and....well, Tivo), you still have to pay the cableco's a rental fee to make the competing box work.
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Yea, but $5/month to "rent" their CableCARD isn't all that expensive given their boxes run in excess of $25/month.
I don't care what solution we end up with, the key and authorization management costs the cable company something and the customer is going to pay that cost regardless of what line items show up on your bill.
Personally, I wish they'd let me just buy the CableCARD hardware and provide my own if I wished, but $5/month is not that unreasonable either.
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I've yet to use a service where I was required to rent. Most services will give you the option to buy the equip for something like $299 up front if you want. Few years back Wildblue satellite service would even give you $50 if you sent in your modem after you canceled your service.
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And then if you move, you get to repeat the choice; rent a box, or buy another box for $299 because the one you bought for the last service didn't give kickbacks to the new service company, or did but they were in a different state, and so they won't add the product ID to the whitelist. That they use the same protocols and are totally compatible is irrelevant.
You seem to have been exposed to the system, but you didn't really understand the choices you were presented. Instead, you understood the parts the ca
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They can't just charge more per month for the cable and build the cost of the box into the fee?
No, because then they wouldn't be able to advertise a crazy-low price and hope no one notices the little asterisk that says "For a limited time only. Does not include cable box rental, DVR rental, HD service charge, fees, taxes, and whatever the fuck else we can get away with charging you extra for."
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Is this exclusive to digital tv? Because the cable at work is a standard analog CATV signal we have anywhere from 20 - 40 tv's running on it at the same time no box required.
There's almost enough tv's here to have one on every channel we get at the same time.
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the parties are exactly the same.
That's not quite right. They are the same as in they are both for sale to various industries. The industries that own them aren't the same. Right now I'd say republicans are owned by defense, telecom and are polluted the most with the interests of the independently wealthy. Democrats are owned by wall st., much high-tech, and are polluted with numerous single-issue things like environmental activists etc.
Both, of course, are entirely owned by Hollywood, whatever they may c
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Thats is the problem with cable card, they put in the idiotic copy once BS that you needed to be certified to use. VCR's were deemed fair use nearly 40 years ago and they keep trying to weasel out of it. I'm perfectly ok with them watermarking something traceable to stop your average joe from uploading to the net. Putting arbitrary restrictions beyond that is just an attempt to reverse that decision though administrative law.