Cox won't play ball with AT&T
The word of the day is "irony." AT&T has sued Cox Communications for anti-competitive behavior at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Specifically, AT&T wants access to Cox's Cable channel 4, a regional cable station in San Diego created by Cox over 12 years ago that shows upwards of 150 San Diego Padres baseball games.
The issue is likely to be hard fought, and is in many ways a unique question the FCC has not fully addressed. On the one hand, Cox will argue that Channel 4 is not the type of "satellite-delivered" content the FCC compels cable companies to share with competitors. Cox will argue that Channel 4 is "terestrially" delivered station specifically exempted from forced sharing with competitors.
That said, the FCC has previously identified local sports programming as "must-have" type of programming, and could justifiably compel licensing of the Padres games to avoid giving Cox an unfair competitive advantage. It is interesting to note that Cox licenses the channel 4 content and baseball games to Time Warner, which simply exists in other areas of San Diego County than Cox, as opposed to being a direct competitor. AT&T U-Verse competes with both Time Warner and Cox directly, and in its suits identifies the lack of Padres games as a documented reason for customers leaving U-Verse or being slow to adopt the new fiber-optic offering.
The irony of the suit by America's classic anti-competitive company is not lost on Cox. Cox's position in various media reports is that Channel 4 is similar to AT&T's monopoly over the Iphone, and DirecTV's monopoly over NFL Sunday Ticket. The problem is these analogies really don't work that well. While its true the Iphone is limited to AT&T's network (unless you engage in various widely publicized hacks that void your warranty), consumers can still go out and get voice and data service, and even have some competing touch screen phones available on other carriers. As to NFL Sunday Ticket, unlike channel 4, this service is all about out-of-market games, not so much local sports. Indeed, you can use a $7 rabbit ears antenna and watch most of the chargers games (perhaps not those on ESPN), whereas if you don't get Time Warner or Cox, you simply don't get the Padres. Believe it or not, the Padres are irreplaceable when you look at it that way.
The decision is likely to be quite interesting, and could increase competition regionally by making satellite and fiber optic options more competitive in offering access to the Padres games.
Of course if you're tech savvy enough, the day seems to be coming where you can largely dump your cable, satellite, or fiber optic programming and use the web entirely as your entertainment, news, and multimedia outlet.
For some, a laptop, proper tv connector cable, and hulu.com, youtube.com, and other video service websites are already an adequate replacement. With higher bandwidths and wider HD video offerings on the web arriving, the Internet itself can be traditional cable & satellite television's biggest competitor in the years to come.
You can read more about the FCC complaint here, or watch my interview with NBC here.
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AT&T Sues Cox For Padres Games
There are (5) FCC Commissioners. The incumbent President of the United States is permitted to appoint (3) of them, giving the political party occupying the White House a majority of voting-members of the Federal Trade Commission. This is another issue UCAN members and others should keep in mind when casting their vote for President on November 4, 2008.
When he was Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, John McCain often whined about consumer abuses and price gouging by the cable monopolies but nonetheless allowed the deregulation of cable TV rates on April 1, 1999 to proceed even though the vast majority of cable subscribers nationwide had no effective competitor to turn to.
AT&T offers a head-to-head cable competitor to Cox and Time Warner Cable for the first time ever in San Diego. The FCC needs to quickly rule that Regional Sports Networks such as Channel 4 which carries the San Diego Padres must be offered to all takers in the name of competition.
Skype calls out major carriers & FCC on open networks
Skype's Christopher Bertinelli called called out major carriers & the FCC on open networks. In a letter to the FCC, Skype sums up the major carriers forked tongue approach to open networks, and questions why the FCC can't approach wireless network openness more like broader Internet regulation.
http://lists.fiercemarkets.com/c.html?rtr=on&s=69l,11zoc,8mg,2vzp,fn1m,8...
AT&T sues Cox for Padres Games
Cable TV operators such as Cox use franchising agreements to carve out their mini-monopolies. These mini-monopolies have allowed them to raise their rates through the proverbial roof as they had virtually no competition. That was until AT&T and Verizon entered the video provider arena.
In San Diego, Cox has relied on monopolizing the local broadcasts of Padre games to keep customers. The poison pill. You had to keep their crummy service and high rates to watch local Padre games. If the ruling is in AT&T's favor, it will bring more competition in San Diego and that should equate to lower rates for consumers.
As for dumping both cable and phone and watching the games over the internet, well, one of the two are still needed for their internet connection. U-verse, not to be confused with typical DSL is far superior to cable's broadband offering. To the casual internet user, there isn't much difference between 1.5 mb and 10 mb. Fast is fast. U-verse offers speeds up to 10 mb downstream and 1.5 upstream with a potential to offer even higher speeds. Cable companies typically advertise speeds that they really can't deliver.
Soon, Cox won't just be worrying about being forced to license Padre games. They will be forced to compete with other cable companies just as the phone companies had to do. Then we should see a serious drop in their outrageous rates.
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