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Cable Contractor Crime Wave: Comcast Cable Guy Allegedly Steals $10K in Jewelry

Phillip Dampier July 30, 2012 Comcast/Xfinity, Consumer News, Video Comments Off on Cable Contractor Crime Wave: Comcast Cable Guy Allegedly Steals $10K in Jewelry

Randolph (Chesterfield Township Police booking photo)

Even with proper identification, the cable guy who comes to install or repair your cable service may not be trustworthy.

Maureen Sharp of Chesterfield Township, Mich. discovered that for herself when she called Comcast to help fix a problem with a phone line.

The cable company sent Lequentin Ahmad Randolph, 22, who told the family to leave their own bedroom while he “checked for a problem.”

Instead, he allegedly checked out Laureen’s armoire and emptied it of its contents — $10,000 worth of sentimental jewelry including her wedding ring.

Randolph, a Detroit resident, was found nearby by local authorities and was pulled over still in his cable truck. Chesterfield Township police found two pieces of gold jewelry on the driver’s seat, the rest in a bag hidden behind a panel in the truck.

Comcast immediately declared they were not responsible and had no comment regarding the alleged actions of the cable repairman because he was an employee working for LE Com Communications, a contractor hired by Comcast to handle routine installation and repair work.

Randolph was booked for felony larceny and was scheduled for a preliminary hearing today.

[flv width=”360″ height=”290″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WXYZ Detroit Cable Guy Allegedly Steals Jewel From Womans Home 7-24-12.mp4[/flv]

WXYZ in Detroit says one Chesterfield Township family’s trust has been shaken after welcoming a cable repairman into their home that allegedly robbed them of $10,000 in sentimental jewelry.  (2 minutes)

Time Warner Cable May Face Prosecution for Sidewalk Graffiti/Vandalism in Redondo Beach

Time Warner Cable is facing possible prosecution for vandalism over sidewalk graffiti the company used in Redondo Beach, Calif. to advertise its Wi-Fi network — a service the city claims the company has no authorization to provide.

Redondo Beach officials immediately began receiving complaints the morning of July 5 when Time Warner Cable’s blue chalk advertising messages began appearing all over the city’s sidewalks.

City councilman Steve Aspel told the cable operator’s director of government relations that constituents were upset about the large promotional messages.

Time Warner’s Wi-Fi equipment (City of Redondo Beach)

“It really pissed me off and everybody in the neighborhood too,” Aspel told Time Warner’s Steven Sawyer. “Please have your company never do that again.”

Aspel told Sawyer nobody knew the messages were written in chalk, which will likely dissipate in a few days or sooner in any significant rain storm. The thought the cable company might have used blue paint on public sidewalks enraged several local residents.

But city officials were even more concerned about the fact Time Warner Cable has a Wi-Fi service up and running in Redondo Beach, without any permission from city officials to either install or operate it.

Assistant City Manager Marissa Christiansen told the council Time Warner was not allowed to operate any Wi-Fi network inside the city without explicit permission from the council. The city had been negotiating with the cable operator to grant permission to install the necessary Wi-Fi hotspots in the city’s right of way, but the cable company went ahead and installed them anyway, according to city manager Bill Workman.

“When we actually saw the markings on the sidewalk and put two and two together that it had all gone on without all the things we had discussed in those meetings, we, too, were very upset,” Workman said. “Very clearly, this is outside of their state franchise.”

Cable operators also require a building permit to install new equipment on public property.

Sawyer told the city council Time Warner apologized for the sidewalk markings, and the company moved quickly to remove them.

“We’ve done these markings in other cities and have never had an issue,” Sawyer said.

City attorney Mike Webb said there is an active criminal investigation underway to determine if the sidewalk messages are criminal graffiti, and was not in a position to elaborate as to if or when the cable operator would be prosecuted for violating the city’s municipal code.

Discussions about the Wi-Fi service itself are reportedly ongoing.

Time Warner Cable is planning major expansion of its network of Wi-Fi hotspots across southern California and into other service areas nationwide in the coming years.

Cablevision Going All-Digital in New Jersey; $6.95/Mo Cable Boxes Offered Free… for Now

Phillip Dampier July 19, 2012 Cablevision (see Altice USA), Consumer News Comments Off on Cablevision Going All-Digital in New Jersey; $6.95/Mo Cable Boxes Offered Free… for Now

If you are a Cablevision customer in New Jersey, your cable company wants you to use a set top box on all of your televisions, and eventually pay $6.95 a month for each of them.

Cablevision is beginning a conversion of its cable lineup to digital in a transition that is expected to last until October. After that, customers will need to use a box or CableCARD for each of their televisions hooked to cable.

The change is upsetting customers who do not want the hassle and expense of a converter box, especially those using third party equipment to record and watch favorite shows.

Cablevision does not yet offer a cheaper alternative – a digital transport adapter (DTA), which can turn digital signals into analog ones and allow customers rudimentary access to certain digital services on older sets. Instead, the company will offer customers several extra traditional set top boxes or CableCARDs for between one and two years before charging the usual monthly rental fee.

The cable operator says the majority of its customers already watch with a set top box as the company has gradually reduced its lineup of analog signals. Cablevision customers in New York and Connecticut have already made the transition to the digital lineup.

But some customers are upset enough about the change that they are threatening to switch to Verizon FiOS, although that service also requires customers to use set top boxes.

Comcast subscribers in other parts of the state have also been experiencing a transition to all-digital lineups.

Cable operators are moving video services to digital to make room for additional offerings, including more HD channels, faster Internet speeds, and new product lines like home security and automation. Many inside the industry also predict it is part of a greater transition towards an IP-based delivery system that will provide one large digital pipe through which television, phone, broadband and other services will all travel together.

Cablevision Digital Conversion Details:

  • Those currently paying for set top box(es) will continue to do so. But customers can request additional boxes or CableCARDs for every remaining television in the home and receive them free for one year;
  • Those who have no digital set top boxes in their homes now can receive a free box or CableCARD for every set for two years. In all instances, after the free promotion ends, customers will pay $6.95/mo for each device;
  • Newer televisions equipped with a QAM tuner can watch Cablevision’s broadcast basic tier, consisting primarily of local over the air stations, without any extra equipment. Basic cable networks and premium channels will require a box or CableCARD;
  • Broadband customers can use Cablevision’s app for iOS or a personal computer to watch the company’s cable lineup within the home;
  • DTA boxes will be available from Cablevision within a year;
  • Equipment installation is free. Do-it-yourself customers can have the necessary equipment mailed to them for free or can pick equipment up at any Optimum Store location.

Google Fiber Launches Next Week in Kansas City

A Stop the Cap! reader working for a Kansas City non-profit group dropped us a note this morning indicating she has received an invitation from Google to join the company at a special event Thursday, July 26 which will be Google Fiber’s formal launch announcement.

“There is buzz all over town about Google launching the fiber service on a limited basis in certain Kansas City neighborhoods next week,” Cathy writes us. “The local media has definitely been invited and encouraged to attend and several non-profit groups are going together in a group to also informally meet with some Google officials at the conclusion of the event regarding access and pricing issues. We have already been told this will be a formal launch event.”

Google has kept its pricing and exact service availability information tightly under wraps, but the company is inviting local residents to sign up for e-mail invitations and additional information as it is released.

The anticipated launch has not been missed by Time Warner Cable, which has taken to placing signs around the workplace offering $50 “rewards” for insider tips about Google Fiber’s launch and marketing plans. Although some in the tech press have characterized this as “fear” of Google Fiber, a Time Warner employee tells Stop the Cap! the “reward” program is not unprecedented and the cable company has occasionally offered goodies to employees who can deliver tips about competitors like Verizon FiOS and community fiber broadband networks for years.

Courtesy: Gigaom

Kansas City residents will certainly have a choice when Google Fiber launches its gigabit network. In addition to fiber broadband from the search engine giant, customers in different parts of the area can also get cable from Time Warner Cable or Charter and U-verse from AT&T.

Google will join Chattanooga’s EPB Fiber as America’s gigabit residential broadband providers. Cable operators and phone companies are expected to downplay Google’s fiber introduction — likely telling customers they do not need gigabit speeds and chastising its likely monthly cost.

Google’s competitors may have to prepare to deliver that message beyond Kansas City, however.

Dow Drukker, senior vice president of CapStone Investments, believes Google is in the mood to grow:

Initial Indications Google Fiber Is Likely Expanding Beyond Kansas City.

We saw an ad for an Inside Sales position in Mountain View, CA for selling Google Fiber to small businesses. The ad said the position would be tasked to build a team to sell a national broadband network indicating Google likely plans to build a fiber-optic network in additional cities.

This was the ad Drukker saw, which can be vaguely interpreted to indicate the company has plans to place Google Fiber in more cities (underlining ours), although we see nothing that specifically mentions a “national” broadband network:

The area: New Business Development

At Google, we set ourselves goals we know we can’t reach yet. Our New Business Development team works on game-changing ideas, from technological experiments to the expansion of existing businesses into new territories. We’re a team of technologists, entrepreneurs and leaders with an eye for what’s next, working across Google to develop products and ideas that revolutionize the way people connect with information.

The role: Sales Manager, Inside Sales, Google Fiber

Does winning new business get your adrenaline pumping? Drive growth for Google’s Online Sales Group as part of the Inside Sales Organization, the sole acquisition engine at Google. You collaborate with our Account Management teams to devise strategies to acquire specific segments of your market. Work independently, travel to trade shows, visit large prospective clients–it’s all part of this role. Be rewarded for being an overachiever while driving incremental growth in your market. You prescribe the right marketing mix based on Google’s core advertising products through acquisition of predefined mid-and up-market clients. You are product-and industry-savvy, and your energetic drive propels you toward new acquisitions and building and managing your own book of business.

If you want the opportunity to work on a state-of-the-art high-profile program, look no further than the opportunity to frame the future of broadband. The Fiber Sales Manager will build a team to evangelizes Google Fiber services to small and medium business and multi unit dwellings. Fiber Sales manager will develop a plan for our approach in the market including multi unit dwellings, small business, restaurants, and hotels. Inside Sales Representative, you reach out proactively to both small businesses, while articulating how Google Fiber Solutions can help make their work more productive. (And then, you seal the deal!) You excel at product pitching, cultivating a strong base of new clients and working with fellow technical Googlers to devise solutions and support for your clients.

One of the most potentially valuable lessons Google may teach with its new gigabit broadband network is one for Washington lawmakers. To date, cable and telephone companies have portrayed gigabit fiber broadband as unnecessary, unwanted, and too difficult and expensive to offer residential customers. Google’s performance in Kansas City could prove those arguments wrong.

Charter’s Bottom of the Barrel Customer Ratings Didn’t Hurt Ex-CEO’s $20 Million Payday

Lovett – Paid nearly double his 2010 salary for even worse results.

The man hired specifically to improve dismal customer satisfaction ratings for Charter Communications has walked away from the company with more than $20 million in pay in 2011 after just over two years at the helm, even as the company’s ratings grew worse.

Michael Lovett assumed the CEO position at Charter after the company emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in November, 2009. Lovett was charged with cleaning up the company’s lousy reputation for customer service, service quality, and pricing.

He resigned this past February leaving Charter with an even poorer customer satisfaction rating. Now a filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission discloses he walked away with $1.3 million in salary and $19.24 million in bonuses, golden parachutes, stock awards, and other resignation-related benefits — almost double the pay he received in 2010.

Charter is legendary for billing errors, disinterested customer service representatives, Internet Overcharging schemes that limit broadband consumption, poor quality repair and installation work, and inadequate infrastructure.

In July, 2011 Atlantic magazine named Charter the 5th most-hated company in America, and only received a satisfaction rating of 59/100 in the American Customer Satisfaction Index.

This year, the “don’t care bears” of cable did even worse — achieving the rank of 3rd most-hated company in America, stiffing customers with bait and switch promotions customers never received, even shoddier customer service and dodgy billing practices.

“I’d rather have AT&T, and that should tell you something,” shares Thom, a Charter customer in St. Louis. “You can’t believe how bad a cable company can be until you’ve dealt with Charter. You have a better chance of being dealt with fairly in a mob-run casino.”

“Shareholders must be among the dumbest people in America to watch this company flush more than $30 million down Lovett’s bank account for two years and accomplishing the amazing task of actually making things worse,” Thom writes. “He’s proof that throwing money at a problem does not work, no matter how many press releases Charter puts out.”

Charter is now being run by an ex-executive from Cablevision Industries, who has spent his tenure luring other Cablevision mid and high level executives to join him at Charter. President and CEO Tom Rutledge, chief operating officer John Bickham, and chief marketing officer Jonathan Hargis — former Cablevision executives now show up for work at a New York office Charter opened specifically for them.

“Nothing ever changes at Charter,” says Thom. “Instead of spending money actually improving service, they’re opening new executive suites in expensive New York just so the top brass need not slum it here in St. Louis. It’s good to know they have their priorities straight.”

The Better Business Bureau has processed more than 5,000 customer complaints against Charter in the past three years, most eventually resolved through Charter’s executive escalation office in Simpsonville, S.C.

Charter Communications reported a net loss of $94 million in the first quarter ended March 31.

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