Starting tomorrow, new customers signing up for AT&T’s 100+ channel streaming television package will pay $60 a month, up from the $35 promotional price AT&T has been advertising during the holidays.
Today is the last day customers can lock in the $35/month price, and those willing to pay in advance will receive either an Amazon Fire TV Stick (prepay one month) or a 4th generation 32GB Apple TV (prepay three months).
Since launching, DirecTV Now has received mixed reviews. Many customers like the wide range of popular cable channels, and access to HBO and Cinemax for just $5 a month each. But early after launch technical glitches also proved frustrating for many subscribers. Among the most common are cryptic error messages that claim viewers are attempting to stream from outside the U.S. and another that claims customers have too many concurrent streams running. Several app updates have been released to deal with the problems, and complaints seem to be easing.
AT&T hasn’t reported how many customers convert from its free trial to become paying customers, but some analysts remain skeptical if customers without cable television care about a streaming package of linear TV, even at the $35 price point.
When it first launched, Sling TV seemed like it would be a big hit. That has not proven to be the case possibly because the cord-cutting audience has learned to live without cable and the cord-never folks (people who never had cable in the first place) perhaps don’t miss what they never had.
[…] By putting an end date on this promotion, AT&T can gauge whether enough interest exists in live-streaming television for the company to continue. These are products that seem like a good idea, that have so far been rejected by the marketplace.
That may be because even the top packages from the live-streaming services have holes compared to cable. In most cases they are missing at least some broadcast networks and their interfaces — while not bad for a digital product — are clunky compared to just flipping around with a remote control.
It’s also very possible that cord-cutters and cord-nevers are finding their entertainment elsewhere.
Rutledge: Not worried about the competition
The CEO of Charter Communications continues to consider “cable TV alternatives” like Sling TV and DirecTV Now not much of a threat, because customers appreciate the convenience of having local channels and DVR capability available, and cable operators claim they provide a better set-top box experience.
“I think there’s a lot of reasons why the packages, the big rich packages, will stay together, and why people will continue to pursue their historic [consumer] patterns,” CEO Thomas Rutledge told the annual Citi 2017 Internet, Media and Telecommunications Conference in Las Vegas.
For many ordinary cable TV customers, taking the final step of canceling cable TV has been more psychologically difficult than dropping services like a landline phone because the alternatives available in the marketplace do not yet match the quality and convenience of the cable package.
AT&T apparently also believes a-la-carte cable TV sounds better in theory than practice, considering its marketing efforts have focused on a cable television replacement that most closely resembles traditional cable’s bloated TV lineup. Sling TV’s slim package has not been as successful in the marketplace as some investors had hoped.
AT&T wants to see how 5G networks manage heavy video streaming traffic, according to a company news release. The development of 5G, which can achieve 14Gbps speeds in lab tests, could be critically important to AT&T’s plan to gradually decommission wired networks in its rural telephone service areas. Should AT&T be able to demonstrate 5G is a more robust replacement for traditional wired communications networks, it could bolster its argument to discontinue wired telephone and broadband service. But it could also mean the eventual end of DirecTV’s costly fleet of satellites in favor of broadband and wireless distribution.
When AT&T announced it would offer 100+ cable television and broadcast network channels under the DirecTV Now brand for $35 a month, Wall Street had a fit.
Craig Moffett, an analyst with Moffett-Nathanson, speculated that AT&T would make at most a profit margin of $5 a month for its $35 a month plan, once programming costs were covered. But then AT&T announced it would sweeten the deal with a free Apple TV Player or Amazon Fire Stick for those confident enough to prepay for the new service. That makes DirecTV Now a purposefully unprofitable service, creating considerable stress for both the cable and satellite industry and their investors.
Varietynotes the average DirecTV satellite subscriber delivers about $60 a month in profit to its owner, AT&T. That led the industry magazine to speculate DirecTV Now is a “loss leader” designed to sell its parent company’s AT&T-Time Warner, Inc. merger deal to regulators on the premise of increased competition delivering real savings to consumers.
Thankfully for Wall Street’s nerves, AT&T’s usual practice of marketing things with a lot of fine print emerged in the nick of time, and the $35 dollar price has now turned out to be an introductory offer for early adopters. In the not-too-distant future, AT&T will enroll new customers for its “Go Big” package at a much more profitable $60 a month. Customers who sign up at the $35 rate and stay customers will be able to keep that price as long as they make no changes to their account after the promotion ends.
Moffett
But Moffett warned investors that the traditional cable television model is still under serious threat, and AT&T’s less-promoted “Live a Little” package offering 60 popular cable networks for the everyday price of $35 is the equivalent of AT&T “running with scissors” because it alone could cause millions of cable and satellite customers to cut the cord and stay more than satisfied with a slimmed down cable package.
“Virtually all the channels that anyone would really want, save for regional sports networks” are included in the lighter “Live a Little” package, Moffett added. Customers who loathe watching sports but want a beefier package can also sign up for a $50, 80-channel “Just Right” package that primarily omits sports-oriented channels and a handful of spinoff cable networks few would miss.
Moffett and other Wall Street analysts were hoping AT&T would bloat its cheaper package with home shopping, religion, and other little-watched, low-cost cable networks and then entice customers to upgrade to unlock more popular cable channels. Instead, AT&T’s most premium package — “Gotta Have It” which costs $70 a month adds the “can live without” networks like Boomerang, Cloo, El Rey, Centric, and other little-known channels that typically live unnoticed in Channel Siberia on 500+ channel cable lineups. The highest premium priced package is attractive only for those looking for Starz/Encore channels and the basic cable network that gets no respect — Hallmark Movies & Mysteries (a/k/a the Dick van Dyke Permanent Employment Network.)
“By stacking their base package with all the best networks — likely a requirement for getting the programming contracts at all — they still have the same problem that was highlighted initially,” by Moffett. “Put simply, they aren’t going to make any money.”
That quest for profit is further challenged with subscriber acquisition programs that dole out free Apple TV units to customers willing to prepay for three months of service at the $35 rate or an Amazon Fire Stick (with Echo remote) in return for prepaying for one month of service. Anyone in the market for either device can sign up for DirecTV Now, get the equipment at an attractive price, and consider the 1-3 months of service a free extra bonus. Customers were reportedly lining up at AT&T’s owned and operated retail outlets (not authorized resellers) to pick up devices and sign up for service today.
At these prices and with these promotions, AT&T DirecTV Now could first decimate the subscriber base of its immediate competitors Sling TV and PlayStation Vue, either of which offer a much less compelling value. AT&T can afford to charge a lower price because it has deeper pockets and enormous volume discounts on the wholesale price of cable programming — combining millions of DirecTV and U-verse TV subscribers together to negotiate what industry insiders suspect are major discounts the smaller providers cannot get.
But there are issues likely to be deal-breakers for some would-be DirecTV Now subscribers:
Local broadcast stations are available only in a handful of selected cities and only a very few include all ABC, NBC, and FOX affiliates. CBS is not participating in DirecTV Now at this time, and that is a major omission;
There is a limit of two concurrent streams and although video quality is very good, it is not the 1080/HD experience AT&T’s marketing material would suggest. The quality of your internet connection will make a difference;
No DVR option at this time.
CNET compiled an excellent channel comparison chart to help consumers figure out which, if any, of these upstarts make sense as a cable TV replacement:
DirecTV Now vs. Sling TV vs. PlayStation Vue (top 169 channels, see notes below)
Channel
DirecTV Now Packages
Sling Package
Vue Package
A&E
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
ABC
Yes or VOD
Broadcast extra
Yes or VOD
AMC
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
American Heroes
Go Big
No
Elite
Animal Planet
Live a Little
No
Access
Audience
Live a Little
No
No
AXS TV
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
Baby TV
No
Kids extra
No
BBC America
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
BBC World News
Go Big
News extra
Elite
beIN Sports
No
Sports extra
Core
BET
Live a Little
Blue (Orange lifestyle extra)
No
Bloomberg TV
Live a Little
Base
No
Boomerang
Gotta Have It
Kids extra
Elite
Bravo
Live a Little
Blue
Access
BTN
Just Right
No
Core
Campus Insiders
No
Sports extra
No
Cartoon Network/Adult Swim
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
CBS
No
No
Yes or VOD
CBS Sports
No
No
No
Centric
Go Big
No
No
Cheddar
No
Orange, Blue
No
Chiller
Gotta Have It
No
Elite
Cinemax
PREMIUM ($5/month)
PREMIUM
No
Cloo
Gotta Have It
No
Elite
CMT
Live a Little
Comedy extra
No
CNBC
Live a Little
News extra Blue
Access
CNBC World
Just Right
No
Elite
CNN
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
Comedy Central
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
Comedy.TV
Just Right
No
No
Cooking Channel
Just Right
Lifestyle extra
Elite
CSPAN
Live a Little
No
No
Destination America
Go Big
No
Access
Discovery Channel
Live a Little
No
Access
Discovery Family
Go Big
No
Access
Discovery Life
Go Big
No
Elite
Disney Channel
Live a Little
Orange
Access
Disney Junior
Live a Little
Kids extra Orange
Access
Disney XD
Live a Little
Kids extra Orange
Access
DIY
Go Big
Lifestyle extra
Access
Duck TV
No
Kids extra
No
E!
Live a Little
Lifestyle extra Blue
Access
El Rey Network
Gotta Have It
Orange, Blue
No
Encore
Gotta Have It
No
No
EPIX
No
Hollywood extra
No
EPIX Drive-in
No
Hollywood extra
No
EPIX Hits
No
Hollywood extra
PREMIUM, Elite
EPIX2
No
Hollywood extra
No
ESPN
Live a Little
Orange
Access
ESPN 2
Live a Little
Orange
Access
ESPN Bases Loaded
No
Sports extra Orange
No
ESPN Buzzer Beater
No
Sports extra Orange
No
ESPN Deportes
No
Spanish TV extra Orange
Elite
ESPN Goal Line
No
Sports extra Orange
No
ESPNEWS
Just Right
Sports extra Orange
Core
ESPNU
Just Right
Sports extra Orange
Core
Esquire
No
No
Access
Euro News
No
World News Extra
No
Flama
No
Orange, Blue
No
Food Network
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
Fox
Yes or VOD
Blue
Yes or VOD
Fox Business
Live a Little
No
Access
Fox College Sports Atlantic
No
No
Elite
Fox College Sports Central
No
No
Elite
Fox College Sports Pacific
No
No
Elite
Fox News
Live a Little
No
Access
Fox Sports 1
Live a Little
Blue
Access
Fox Sports 2
Go Big
Blue
Access
Fox Sports Prime Ticket
Just Right
No
No
France 24
No
World News Extra
No
Freeform
Live a Little
Orange
Access
Fuse
Just Right
No
No
Fusion
Just Right
World News Extra
Elite
FX
Live a Little
Blue
Access
FXM
Go Big
No
Elite
FXX
Live a Little
Blue
Access
FYI
Go Big
Lifestyle extra
No
Galavision
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
Golf Channel
Go Big
Sports extra Blue
Core
GSN
Just Right
Comedy extra
No
Hallmark
Live a Little
Lifestyle extra
No
Hallmark Movies & Mysteries
No
LIfestyle extra
No
HBO
PREMIUM ($5/month)
PREMIUM
PREMIUM, Ultra
HDNet Movies
No
Hollywood extra
No
HGTV
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
Hi-Yah
No
No
Elite
History
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
HLN
Live a Little
News extra
Access
HSN
No
No
No
IFC
Just Right
Orange, Blue
Core
Ion
No
No
No
Impact
No
No
Elite
Investigation Discovery
Live a Little
No
Access
JusticeCentral.TV
Just Right
No
No
Lifetime
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
LMN
Just Right
Lifestyle extra
No
Local Now
No
Orange, Blue
No
LOGO
Go Big
Comedy extra
No
Longhorn Network
Just Right
No
No
Machinima
No
No
Elite
Maker
No
Orange, Blue
No
MGM-HD
No
No
Elite
MLB Network
Just Right
No
No
Motors TV
No
Sports extra
No
MSNBC
Live a Little
News extra Blue
Access
MTV
Live a Little
Comedy extra
No
MTV Classic
Go Big
No
No
MTV2
Live a Little
Comedy extra
No
Nat Geo Wild
Go Big
Blue
Elite
National Geographic
Live a Little
Blue
Access
NBA TV
Go Big
Sports extra
Core
NBC
Yes or VOD
Blue
Yes or VOD
NBC Sports Network
Just Right
Blue
Access
NDTV 24/7
No
World News Extra
No
News 18 India
No
World News Extra
No
Newsy
No
Orange, Blue
No
NFL Network
No
Blue
Core
NFL Red Zone
No
Sports extra (Blue)
PREMIUM (Core and up)
NHL Network
Go Big
Sports extra
No
Nick Jr.
Live a Little
Blue
No
Nickelodeon
Live a Little
No
No
Nicktoons
Live a Little
Kids Extra Blue
No
ONE World Sports
No
No
Elite
Outdoor Channel
No
No
No
Outside Television
No
Sports extra
Elite
OWN
Just Right
No
Access
Oxygen
Just Right
Lifestyle extra Blue
Access
Palladia
No
No
Elite
PBS
No
No
No
Poker Central
No
No
Elite
Polaris
No
Orange, Blue
Elite
POP
No
No
Access
QVC
No
No
No
Revolt
Go Big
No
No
RFD TV
Live a Little
No
No
Russia Today
No
World News Extra
No
Science
Just Right
No
Access
SEC Network
Just Right
Sports extra Orange
Core
Showtime
No
No
PREMIUM, Elite
Spike
Live a Little
Comedy extra
No
Sprout
Go Big
No
Elite
Starz
Gotta Have It
PREMIUM
No
Sundance TV
Go Big
Hollywood extra
Core
Syfy
Live a Little
Blue
Access
TBS
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
TCM
Live a Little
Hollywood extra
Core
Teen Knick
Live a Little
Kids extra Blue
Elite
Telemundo
Live a Little
No
No
Tennis Channel
Go Big
No
No
The Weather Channel
Live a Little
No
No
TLC
Live a Little
No
Access
TNT
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
Access
Travel Channel
Just Right
Orange, Blue
Access
truTV
Live a Little
Blue (Orange comedy extra)
Access
TV Land
Live a Little
Comedy extra
No
TVG
Go Big
No
No
Universal HD
No
No
Elite
Univision
Live a Little
Blue (Orange Broadcast extra)
No
Univision Deportes
Gotta Have It
Sports extra
No
Univision Mas
Just Right
Blue (Orange Broadcast Extra)
No
USA Network
Live a Little
Blue
Access
Velocity HD
Live a Little
No
Elite
VH1
Live a Little
Lifestyle extra
No
VH1 Classic
No
No
Elite
Vibrant TV
No
Lifestyle extra
No
Viceland
Live a Little
Orange, Blue
No
WE tv
Live a Little
Lifestyle extra
Access
WeatherNation
Live a Little
No
No
Notes
Broadcast networks including ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC are not available for live streaming in many cities, except where noted as “yes.” The term “VOD” means viewers can watch these shows on-demand 24 hours after airing.
Most RSNs (Regional Sports Networks) not listed; varies per locality
PREMIUM = Available for an additional monthly fee beyond base package
DirecTV Now package key: Live a Little = $35/month (Local ABC, Fox, NBC broadcasts included in select markets) Just Right = $50/month Go Big = $60/month ($35 / month introductory price) Gotta Have It = $70/month
Sling TV package key: Orange = $20/month Blue = $25/month other “”extras”” = another $5 /month each (Sports extra with Blue is $10) Broacast Extra: ABC, Univision and Univision Mas available to Sling Orange subscribers in select cities
PlayStation Vue package key: (for New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas, San Francisco, Miami ONLY) Access (Base) = $40/month Core = $45/month (includes Access channels, some Regional Sports Networks) Elite = $55/month (includes Access and Core channels) Ultra = $75/month (includes Access, Core and Elite channels, plus HBO and Showtime)
(for all other cities, where ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC are available via VOD only) Access Slim (Base) = $30/month Core Slim = $35/month (includes Access channels, some Regional Sports Networks) Elite Slim = $45/month (includes Core and Access channels) Ultra Slim = $65/month (includes Access, Core and Elite channels, plus HBO and Showtime)
$5 a month each for HBO and Cinemax.
Time Warner, Inc. did its part, offering a substantial deal to DirecTV Now to allow customers to add HBO and Cinemax for just $5 a month each, substantially less than what both networks charge customers signing up a-la-carte. This also unlocks access to streaming options on both networks’ websites.
In fact, as a DirecTV Now customer, you will also become an authenticated pay television subscriber, unlocking access on various cable network websites to extra streaming and on-demand options.
The implications of DirecTV Now depend on how long AT&T extends its $35 offer, which is going to be compelling for a lot of Americans. Moffett predicts DirecTV Now could sign up a staggering 11 million Americans — at least two million cannibalized from its own DirecTV satellite customer base, six million cutting the cord on their cable company (including AT&T U-verse) and another three million cord-cutters or “cable-nevers.” Most of the latter are Millennials, and research suggests $35 may be low enough of a price point to sign them up.
AT&T is also raising concerns among internet activists because online streaming of DirecTV Now will not count against an AT&T postpaid customer’s data allowance. This zero rating scheme is seen as an end run around Net Neutrality, particularly because AT&T is not as generous with its competitors. AT&T said it will offer other video streamers the possibility of being exempted from AT&T data allowances, if they pay AT&T for the privilege.
How It Works/Signing Up
AT&T DirecTV Now starts with the Google Chrome 50+, Safari 8+ or Internet Explorer 11+ (on Windows 8 and up) web browsers or the DirecTV Now app. AT&T recommends Chrome for desktop viewing. The service doesn’t work with Firefox, Microsoft Edge, or legacy browsers.
The first step is registering for a 7-day free trial. Before handing over your credit card number, if you scroll down you will find a small free preview option is also available that includes a largely useless streaming barker channel promoting the service and a respectable collection of video on demand options from basic cable networks. The free video streaming option will give you a clue about how the service is likely to perform on your internet connection and devices. For the record, DirecTV Now now supports:
Support for other devices like Roku is coming next year.
Customers must be within the United States to use the service. If you travel abroad or to any U.S. territories like Guam, the Virgin Islands, or Puerto Rico, DirecTV Now will stop working until you return. When you sign up, keep in mind your billing zip code will mean a lot when it comes to accessing regional sports and local broadcast channels. DirecTV Now uses your billing zip code and your actual location to determine whether you are qualified to access regional sports networks and local stations.
Score a Free Apple TV Player or Amazon Fire TV Stick
Apple TV (4th Generation): Effectively free after prepaying for three months of service.
If you are looking to score an Apple TV (4th generation) or an Amazon Fire TV Stick, you will want to skip the 7-day free trial and enroll in a paid plan immediately, which will allow you to select which player you want. If you want the Apple TV, you will prepay for three months at $35 a month ($105). The Amazon Fire TV Stick only requires you to prepay for the first month of service ($35). One device per email address, but you can sign up for multiple accounts (using individual email addresses) and get a device for each — especially useful for larger families that could run into DirecTV Now’s two-stream limit.
Consider your choices before enrolling. If you want to add premium channels or upgrade your plan, and you select the three-month prepay option to grab an Apple TV Player, adding premium channels like HBO and Cinemax or moving to a higher plan will result in three months of prepaid charges for those upgrades as well, billed automatically to your credit card on file — which amounts to a $30 charge if you select HBO and Cinemax. After your promotional prepaid term ends, your account will continue to be billed at the $35 (plus any add-ons) rate until you cancel. AT&T covers you for the forfeited first free week by extending your bill date out by seven days. Allow 2-3 weeks for the device(s) to be shipped to you.
You can also sign up at an AT&T owned and operated retail store, but be aware AT&T “authorized” reseller stores are not participating in this promotion. That may allow you to bring home a device today.
Don’t care about the device promotions? Take the 7-day free trial, but be aware that you are giving AT&T your credit card number and charges begin immediately after the free week ends unless you cancel. Here’s how:
From your User Account overview page, select Manage My Plan.
Select the Cancel Plan link.
Choose one of the listed reasons.
Select Cancel Nowto confirm cancellation.
Your subscription will continue until the end of the billing cycle. No refunds or credits are provided for partial months. Your account will revert to Freeview demo status after you cancel a subscription. You can add a subscription package back at any time.
Oddly, AT&T is not charging sales tax for New York, California, Maryland or Virginia residents. Customers in states like Tennessee where AT&T provides local phone service were most likely to face sales taxes. Those signing up early are in the best position to exploit what appears to be an oversight, or it represents the first time the New York Department of Taxation and Finance left money on the table.
Streaming from Your AT&T Wireless Device Does Not Count Against Your Data Allowance
If you’re a DirecTV Now and AT&T Wireless customer, streaming most DirecTV Now movies and programs over the AT&T wireless network won’t count against your data usage allowance, according to AT&T. But believe it or not, AT&T’s fine print indicates advertisements and non-streaming app activity do count! There are some other important disclosures to be aware of:
You must be on the AT&T Wireless network within the U.S. (U.S. territories are not qualified for zero rating);
You must be a postpaid, not a prepaid AT&T wireless customer to qualify and must not have “data block” on your mobile line;
If you are grandfathered on an unlimited data plan, using DirecTV Now will not count against the 22GB data threshold which subjects you to speed throttling;
This offer may disappear at any time and/or is subject to change.
DirecTV Now Qualifies You as an Authenticated Pay Television Subscriber
Many cable networks require customers enter their cable, satellite, or telco TV login credentials to unlock video streaming and on-demand features. DirecTV Now is a qualified provider for these websites (more coming):
Other networks are not yet enabled for DirecTV Now. CNN, for example, has a prompt for DirecTV satellite customers to log in, but DirecTV Now has its own account registration system.
Local Channels Are Very Spotty
Local over the air channels are very limited on DirecTV Now and are geographically restricted. You can access these channels only if you are located in or very near to the cities listed below and your billing zip code is in the same area. If you travel outside of the immediate area, live streaming will stop working until you return.
ABC* NBC** FOX and Telemundo are covered by DirecTV Now in selected cities. CBS is not available on the service at all at this time.
Atlanta, GA: WAGA-TV
Austin, TX: KTBC
Boston, MA: Telemundo East
Charlotte, NC: WJZY
Chicago, IL: WLS-TV, WMAQ, WFLD, Telemundo East
Dallas-Ft Worth, TX: KXAS, KDFW-TV, Telemundo East
Denver, CO: Telemundo East
Detroit, MI: WJBK
Fresno-Visalia, CA: KFSN-TV, Telemundo East
Gainesville, FL: WOGX
Hartford-New Haven, CT: WVIT
Houston, TX: KTRK-TV, Telemundo East
Las Vegas, NV: Telemundo East
Los Angeles, CA: KABC-TV, KNBC, KTTV, Telemundo East
Miami-Ft Lauderdale, FL: WTVJ, Telemundo East
Minneapolis, MN: KMSP-TV
New York, NY: WABC-TV, WNBC, WNYW, Telemundo East
Orlando-Daytona, FL: WOFL
Philadelphia, PA: WPVI-TV, WCAU, WTXF-TV, Telemundo East
Phoenix, AZ: KSAZ-TV, Telemundo East
Raleigh-Durham, NC: WTVD-TV
San Diego, CA: KNSD
San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose, CA: KGO-TV, KNTV, KTVU
Tampa-St Petersburg, FL: WTVT
Washington, D.C.: WRC, WTTG
*Not available on Internet Explorer 11 on Windows 7. **NBC live stream available on mobile and desktop devices only.
Giving the Service a Test
Stop the Cap! enrolled as an ordinary customer this morning and gave the service a rigorous test, including multiple streams over our 50/5Mbps internet connection. The service debuted today, and there is little doubt there is intense interest from consumers, so we expected some performance problems from the initial demand. We didn’t see any evidence of traffic congestion, however, and that is a good sign.
AT&T’s John Stankey explaining DirecTV Now.
A similar test of Sling TV did not perform as well during peak viewing times, when streaming problems emerged. DirecTV Now seems to be built to withstand intense demand.
One customer with a 6Mbps U-verse internet connection “in the boonies” was impressed the video quality of DirecTV Now was high even on a relatively slow DSL-like connection.
“This blows SlingTV away,” the person shared. “I only have U-verse 6Mbps internet service and it is not pixelated or buffering at all. Looks exactly like my regular DirecTV picture.”
AT&T published these recommendations for DirecTV Now customers regarding internet connection speeds:
150kbps – 2.5Mbps – Minimum broadband connection speed for Mobile devices
2.5 – 5.0Mbps – Recommended for HD quality
We’ve been led to believe DirecTV Now should perform equivalently to 1080i HDTV service (depending on the video source of course). We cannot say we agree it does right now. We noticed significant artifacts on high-motion video and picture graininess that left us feeling this was closer to a 720p HD experience. It isn’t possible to say whether the video player reduced playback quality because of internet traffic issues we were unaware of or if this is how the picture is supposed to look. It did not significantly detract from the viewing experience and the lack of buffering and pixelation was far more important to us.
AT&T store in NYC.
DirecTV Now would serve adequately as a cable TV replacement if it had local station coverage and some type of DVR. At present, DirecTV Now is limited to a “Restart” feature that allows you to restart shows already in progress on certain channels, but you cannot fast-forward or record a restarted show. Once AT&T introduces a cloud-based DVR and fills out the local station lineup, this service could be lethal to overpriced cable TV packages.
AT&T’s marketing attempts to undercut the powerful position of inertia by setting an unknown time limit for customers to enroll in the $35 a month video package. If you don’t sign up today, you may not get the “free” Apple TV or Amazon Fire Stick and a respectable cable TV package for just $35 a month — about half what cable operators are charging these days for their bloated video packages. AT&T doesn’t care if you stick with your current cable provider and signup for DirecTV Now, if only to grab free streaming video equipment while sampling the service. They get their money either way.
Had AT&T permanently kept the price at around $35, many consumers would likely sit back and wait for AT&T to sort out the streaming contract issues it has with the TV networks — CBS in particular, and come up with a DVR solution before those potential customers decided to sign up and make the change. Based on several “hot deals” websites, the mentality among many consumers is to “lock in” the $35 price now and wait for AT&T to build out the package while continuing to invest $35 a month on it. That doesn’t seem so bad when you get free electronics as part of the deal.
Our Final Take
AT&T’s DirecTV Now is a potential winner and worth signing up for because of the introductory price and free equipment offers. But if you decide not to disconnect your cable/satellite television service, it is probably safe to drop DirecTV Now after your prepayment expires and return to resume service a little later. There will probably be some warning when AT&T will end the introductory price for the service, and interested customers can hop back on board before that date arrives. DirecTV Now will be a formidable competitor, but it will fight against consumer resistance to confront the cable company and cut cable’s cord until it solves the local channels issue and has a credible DVR option. The service could also use an add-on to make adding additional concurrent streams possible and more affordable than just signing up for a second account.
Don’t count out Big Cable just yet. With data caps and other internet overcharging schemes, Comcast, Cox, Suddenlink, and others can play games with usage allowances to deter customers from streaming all of their video entertainment online at the risk of blowing past their allowance. DirecTV Now’s $35 price won’t mean much after overlimit fees begin appearing on your internet bill.
While AT&T argues its blockbuster merger with Time Warner, Inc., will not represent an increased risk of media consolidation and antitrust abuse, that same phone company is now facing time in court to answer a lawsuit filed today by the Justice Department accusing AT&T of unlawful collusion with cable operators over the pricing of a Southern California regional sports channel.
DirecTV — now owned by AT&T — is accused of being the ringleader of an illegal “information-sharing” scheme that traded confidential information between the satellite provider, AT&T, Cox Communications, and Charter Communications regarding carriage contract negotiations between SportsNet LA (now known as Spectrum SportsNet) and competing pay television companies.
SportsNet LA has been in the news since its launch. Owned by the Los Angeles Dodgers and initially distributed by Time Warner Cable, SportsNet LA was rejected by most of its pay TV rivals after they balked over the asking price.
Now the Justice Department is accusing DirecTV of a secretly coordinating the sharing of confidential information between the area’s cable operators and AT&T that “corrupted” negotiations with Time Warner Cable over the price to carry the channel.
With all of Southern California’s major cable companies and AT&T allegedly colluding with DirecTV, the providers could create a united front to demand a better price and terms for the sports channel. In the end, it didn’t work and Charter, Time Warner Cable’s new owner, remains the largest operator in the region to carry the network. Critics suggest Charter changed its mind about carrying the channel only to remove it as a potential issue in its merger with the larger Time Warner Cable.
“Dodgers fans were denied a fair competitive process when DirecTV orchestrated a series of information exchanges with direct competitors that ultimately made consumers less likely to be able to watch their hometown team,” said Justice Department lawyer Jonathan Sallet.
The Justice Department brought the case exclusively against DirecTV’s parent company — AT&T.
Cox was relieved not to be sued.
“We are gratified that we were not named as a defendant. We continue to be committed to making independent decisions on program content,” a Cox spokesperson said in a statement. Charter has refused to comment.
For now, AT&T plans a robust defense in court.
“The reason why no other major TV provider chose to carry this content was that no one wanted to force all of their customers to pay the inflated prices that Time Warner Cable was demanding for a channel devoted solely to LA Dodgers baseball,” AT&T said in a statement. “We make our carriage decisions independently, legally and only after thorough negotiations with the content owner. We look forward to presenting these facts in court.”
But the case highlights critics’ concerns that allowing AT&T to grow even larger with the acquisition of Time Warner, Inc., only increases the chances of more alleged antitrust violations and collusion between players in the increasingly concentrated pay television market. Since SportsNet LA launched in 2014, Charter Communications has merged with Time Warner Cable — changing the name of the sports channel to Spectrum SportsNet, Verizon Communications has sold its FiOS network to Frontier Communications, which already provides service in parts of California, and AT&T has purchased DirecTV outright. Only Cox remains untouched by the recent wave of consolidation, although many analysts expect a takeover bid from Altice USA sometime in 2017.
AT&T’s rivals are likely to cry foul over the company’s practice of “zero rating,” in which it exempts its own video services from data-cap usage. The Wall Street Journal’s Shalini Ramachandran explains how this could impact the proposed AT&T-Time Warner merger. (2:44)
Where competition predominates, prices fall and service improves. Where a handful of companies maintain a stranglehold on infrastructure and the marketplace, prices rise and you are forced to endure an abusive relationship with Comcast.
Nobody beats up your checking account better than the cable industry, which has retained its “Don’t Care Bear” attitude by continuing to raise rates (even as customers depart), do everything possible to avoid competition, and impose despised data caps that are favored by almost nobody other than cable executives.
A recent FCC report found that cable television prices have outpaced the U.S. rate of inflation annually for the last 20 years. A piece by Cordcutting.com notes nothing prods consumers into cutting the cord more than relentless rate increases. Computers have gotten less expensive, basic telephone service is almost free with services like Google Voice and Ooma, you can watch thousands of movies for around $10 a month with Netflix, but your cable bill has risen so much, it is now intruding on the ionosphere.
In 1995, cable television cost the average American $22.35 a month. Last year, it was $69.03 and if you are stuck with Comcast, Time Warner Cable, or certain other cable companies, your cable bill with mandatory set-top boxes is probably much higher than that.
Wall Street-sized revenue expectations and a desire by programmers to grab a piece of the profits have allowed cable prices to rise at about the same rate the Organ Mountains rise above the New Mexico horizon.
As the inflation rate dropped to a rock bottom 2.2% a year over the last two decades, your cable company jacked up prices an average of 5.8% annually just because they can.
Organ Mountains, N.M.
Despite “competition” from the phone companies and satellite providers, prices continue to rise, along with the sizes of the channel packages pushed on consumers. The “500 channel universe” predicted in the 1990s has more or less arrived, with a price tag to match. But consumers are ending up with networks featuring Sanford & Son rerun marathons or 16 hours of program length commercials coupled with a few hours of original cheap reality television.
The cable industry’s biggest threat is emerging over-the-top competition from the likes of Sling, Hulu, Sony, and starting later this week, AT&T’s DirecTV Now. But companies like Comcast have seen the writing on the wall for at least five years now, and have pre-empted the video revolution with the imposition of nonsensical data caps and usage allowances, accompanied by tissue-thin justification that simply doesn’t ring true on any level. AT&T itself saw fit to impose and enforce data caps on its DSL customers and have threatened their U-verse customers with a soft cap for several years. But when it is AT&T putting “bandwidth busting” online video down their pipes, they are doing it for free, thanks to zero rating, which doesn’t count against your cap.
That’s having your cake and eating it too. The very fact AT&T has seen fit to exempt their own content from mobile data caps shoots holes in their justification for imposing caps in the first place. ‘It’s a limited resource for everyone but us,’ AT&T effectively tells the marketplace.
Comcast: The Don’t Care Bears
Since Stop the Cap! started in 2008, we’ve seen the arguments for data caps and usage-based billing and the reality. Banning data caps, some providers claim, would force rate increases on consumers and discourage investment. But with data caps, these same companies continued to raise rates and investment decisions have never been made based on caps and allowances. In fact, some smaller providers like Armstrong Cable and Suddenlink have used stifling data caps to forestall responsible investments they should have made all along to manage customer expectations.
Suddenlink and Cablevision, both owned by Altice USA, are a case in point. Cablevision faces widespread Verizon FiOS competition and the company has not dared to impose data caps and has invested millions on service improvements. Suddenlink often faces competition from Windstream, CenturyLink, and Frontier — all widely criticized for offering substandard DSL service and providing only token competition to cable broadband. Suddenlink’s upgrades have been slow in coming as a result, and Altice has seen fit to leave the caps in place, despite the fact Cablevision customers use more data than Suddenlink customers do. The distinction that makes all the difference is a simple matter of competition.
Comcast treats data caps as a morality issue. Today, it imposed its “experimental” data cap on customers in 18 new markets. It’s a usual kind of market test for Comcast, because the customers scattered across 30 states don’t have a choice whether they want to be included in the “experiment” or not. Comcast is also infamous for not listening to their customers, who have realized the futility of sharing their views and have complained to elected officials and regulators instead. The results of the “experiment” are clear: consumers almost universally hate data caps. But that hasn’t changed a thing at Comcast. In fact, it’s full speed ahead. While capping internet usage, Comcast has not been timid about rate hikes either.
Internet on a leash
At Cox, customers in Cleveland were treated to rate hikes and a data cap with overlimit fees. That is the best of both worlds, if you run Cox.
Time Warner Cable, before being bought by Charter, was resigned to the fact that selling cable television was no longer going to be their major profit center — broadband was taking on that role. Executives realized customers will cancel cable TV and phone service, but not broadband. They priced the service accordingly, imposing a rapidly increasing modem rental fee the former CEO admitted was a hidden rate increase, and raised the price of broadband service as well.
These facts are all in evidence and have been put to the Federal Communications Commission, which has made vague promises about watching data caps for years but so far has done nothing to ban this practice for the anti-competitive protectionism it represents. While the agency dawdled, tens of thousands of complaints written by ordinary Americans have flooded the FCC, complaining about the fairness of data caps and the obscene and unjustified overlimit fees that can appear on cable bills if you ignore your internet rationing plan.
Americans have overspent for cable television for at least 20 years and despite clear pressure from the marketplace for a-la-carte cable, the anti-competitive cable cartel ignores the “free market” as they avoid significant competition. The same thing will happen with data caps, burdening consumers for no reason, restricting the growth of the digital economy, and once again ignoring the overwhelming consensus of consumers that data caps are bad. If the FCC continues its hands-off attitude, for the next 20 years an industry woefully in need of more competition will be able to avoid exactly that.
Be Sure to Read Part One: Astroturf Overload — Broadband for America = One Giant Industry Front Group for an important introduction to what this super-sized industry front group is all about. Members of Broadband for America Red: A company or group actively engaging in anti-consumer lobbying, opposes Net Neutrality, supports Internet Overcharging, belongs to […]
Astroturf: One of the underhanded tactics increasingly being used by telecom companies is “Astroturf lobbying” – creating front groups that try to mimic true grassroots, but that are all about corporate money, not citizen power. Astroturf lobbying is hardly a new approach. Senator Lloyd Bentsen is credited with coining the term in the 1980s to […]
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