Home » Altice USA »Cablevision (see Altice USA) »Charter Spectrum »Comcast/Xfinity »Consumer News »Cox »Wireless Broadband » Currently Reading:

Cablevision, Time Warner Cable, Bright House Customers Can Keep Wi-Fi Roaming

cablewifiComcast has confirmed new Altice USA and Charter Communications customers that used to subscribe to Cablevision, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House Networks will be able to continue accessing the free nationwide Cable WiFi roaming service, even though Altice and Charter are not members of the consortium that runs it.

“The Cable WiFi consortium remains in place following the recent merger and acquisitions activity,” a Comcast spokesperson told FierceCable. “Subscribers of each [company] that were previously entitled to use the CableWiFi hotspots continue to enjoy access. Access points that were made available by each [affected cable operator] continue to provide CableWiFi service.”

The network allows any Comcast, Cablevision/Altice USA, Charter/Time Warner Cable, Charter/Bright House Networks, and Cox Communications broadband customer to access a network of 500,000 nationwide Wi-Fi hotspots run by the five cable operators. Customers will know if they are in range of a hotspot by finding CableWiFi as an available connection. Broadband subscribers can log in using the same credentials they use when logging into their cable operator’s website.

It is unknown if Charter Communications or Altice USA will join the consortium directly, which would expand the network to cover legacy Charter customers and those signed up with Suddenlink, another Altice-owned operator.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Ian Littman
Ian Littman
7 years ago

One catch here is that Comcast’s own xfinitywifi network is *not* available to CableWiFi customers; you have to have a Comcast account to use it or pay steep access charges beyond the hour or two free trial.

Hopefully Charter and Altice expand the CableWiFi network, or at the very least don’t ditch what they currently have; it’s pretty widely available in Austin and is rather useful in high-traffic areas where cell service isn’t necessarily the best.

Search This Site:

Contributions:

Recent Comments:

Your Account:

Stop the Cap!