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Cox Customers Pushed Into New Set-Top Boxes Or Else They Lose Channels

Phillip Dampier September 22, 2016 Consumer News, Cox 2 Comments

COX_RES_RGBCox Communications is requiring cable customers to add a cable box to their television set(s) or they will start losing channels as the company continues its nationwide effort to digitally encrypt all of its television services.

Customers in Las Vegas are the latest to be pushed to add a digital adapter, dubbed a “minibox” by Sept. 27 or they will start losing channels. By Nov. 9, all cable channels are expected to be encrypted and on Dec. 6, local stations will also be encrypted and viewable only with a cable box or similar equipment.

Cox calls the move a customer-pleasing “upgrade.”

“It will enable us to implement more advanced services down the road,” Cox spokesman Juergen Barbusca told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “We deployed home automation in the last couple of years and home security. We are trying to get as much bandwidth out of your cable potential as possible and one way to do that is to go completely digital.”

cox-miniboxCox customers with a basic Starter package of more than 40 channels at $24.99 a month will get two miniboxes free for two years. Those with the second tier Essential package ($75.99) with more than 90 channels will get two miniboxes free for one year. You read that right. If you pay Cox more, you get free boxes for half the time lower-paying customers do. Each additional box is $2.99 a month. A traditional HD-capable set-top box from Cox rents for $8.50 a month.

Cox’s miniboxes are more advanced that traditional digital adapters provided by some other cable companies, supporting service like Music Choice, HDTV, parental controls and an on-screen program guide.

Customers are generally okay with getting the boxes for free, but are convinced it will cause their cable bills to rise in the years ahead.

“I’m not happy with that. That’s more money and I’m only getting basic service. I’m already at $146 a month for cable, internet and phone,” Cox customer Monique Patton said. “Not everybody can afford that. It’s too expensive now. They’re not giving us what they should for our money.”

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LG
LG
7 years ago

customers with a basic Starter package of more than 40 channels at $24.99 a month…. -10 Home shopping channels (HSN) -6 Ad-channels with constant airing of “Shark Vacuum” ads. -5 Christian religion channels. -5 Spanish channels when I don’t speak Spanish, and didn’t ask for them. -14 “Pay per View” placeholder channels. Then with “taxes and fees”, such as the “technology fee” or whatever they changed it to when the public started asking what it’s for and the government joined in to ask why it’s framed as a tax in the tax section… And set top box rental fees… And… Read more »

Cocks Subscriber
Cocks Subscriber
7 years ago

Very well worded.

It’s plain and simple here folks antenna or their contour service. Their contour service is way too much. So Internet only for cox in the future. They have priced themselves out of my business #stopfeedingthepig

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