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Sinclair-Time Warner Cable Reach Non-Aggression Pact; No More Boorish Screen Crawls

Phillip Dampier January 17, 2011 Consumer News 2 Comments

Hours before a two-week extension on contract talks was set to expire, Time Warner Cable and Sinclair Broadcasting announced they had a deal to avert the loss of dozens of Sinclair-owned stations on Time Warner Cable.

No terms were disclosed, but industry watchers predicted Sinclair held the weaker hand and probably made some concessions to the cable company, especially on issues related to Time Warner’s focus on expanding cable programming to portable devices and allowing more shows to be “started over” or made available on-demand.

The length of the new agreement was also not disclosed, but many believe a 12-24 month extension was likely.

Time Warner Cable also negotiates programming deals on behalf of Bright House Networks, and a separate, similar agreement was anticipated to be reached sometime this week.

Despite hours of threatening video crawls on several Sinclair-owned stations and full page ads purchased in local newspapers by the cable company, no programming was ultimately impacted by the threatened blackout.

This most recent retransmission consent battle could be among the last if the Federal Communications Commission manages to write new rules to keep customers out of the middle of such disputes.

The FCC plans to consider drafting reforms to current regulations as early as next month.  The Commission seems to be leaning towards the cable, satellite, and phone companies’ view that would leave stations and networks on the cable dial while negotiations are underway, preventing the kinds of blackouts that left suburban New York Cablevision subscribers without access to Fox programming for two weeks in 2010.

Charter Cable Leaves Greenville Customer Hanging: Low Dangling Cable Lines in South Carolina

Phillip Dampier August 5, 2010 Charter Spectrum, Consumer News, Video 1 Comment

We present a week of cable companies acting badly….  They charge you top dollar and leave their cables hanging all over the place.  Learn how homeowners turn in frustration to the media to correct sometimes dangerous installations that are accidents waiting to happen.  Cable Week on Stop the Cap!

Norman Sullivan in Greenville, S.C.,  has lived with low hanging Charter Cable wires for nearly a year.  Despite making at least 10 calls to the cable company with no response, the cable line just keeps drooping lower and lower in his backyard, and Sullivan isn’t even a Charter Cable customer.

Sullivan’s neighbor, Joyce Kirskey, has the same problem and she -is- a Charter Cable customer, but her repeated calls to the cable company didn’t bring a response either.

“If I’m gonna be paying them every month, they’re looking for their money, I want some good service,” Kirksey told WSPA-TV’s Problem Solver.

Even worse than the low-hanging lines is the terrible reception she’s getting in her home.

“My TV has been going in and out, just blinking on and off all the time,” Kirksey said.

When WSPA notified Charter it was about to be featured on the 6 ‘o clock local news, the cable company finally got moving.

By that afternoon, a Charter crew was wandering the neighborhood fixing a variety of cable issues.  Charter apologized to all concerned, claiming it was an isolated incident and would continue working on the problem until it was resolved.

But Sullivan told Channel 7’s Problem Solver they wished Charter had taken care of the problem sooner.

“They are supposed to come out here and do their job, it’s what they’re getting paid for,” Sullivan said.

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSPA Greenville Dangling Cable Line Worries Residents In Greenville 7-12-10.flv[/flv]

WSPA-TV in Greenville, S.C., has a Problem Solver segment to help viewers with stubborn problems they can’t resolve themselves.  Watch how the station managed to get Charter Cable out to fix a problem it ignored for nearly a year, despite more than 10 calls to the cable company requesting assistance.  (1 minute)

Shaw Cable Technical Support Wants to Know If You’re Alone or Not

Phillip Dampier June 10, 2010 Canada, Shaw Comments Off on Shaw Cable Technical Support Wants to Know If You’re Alone or Not

An encounter with Shaw Cable’s technical support was chronicled by a Shaw broadband customer trying to reinstate service.  It seems her ‘roommate’ moved out, taking the modem with him.  That left her on the line with Shaw’s technical support trying to reinstate service with an older modem she still owned.  It wasn’t going well:

Edward [Shaw Technical Support]: Is there is splitter on this line?

Me: Um, yes but it worked with the previous modem…

Ed: Take the splitter off and plug the cable directly into the wall.

Me: Oh ok. (Grunting, tries to remove the splitter but it’s really on there good) Hey, Eddy, I can’t get this thing off. It’s totally stuck on there tight.

Ed: Don’t you have any tools?

Me: I have a hammer.

Ed: That’s not going to work.

Me: Yes, I’m aware of that.

Ed: Isn’t there anyone there that can help you?

Me: No.

Ed: So, nobody else is there? You’re alone?

Cole’s notes:
Yes, a hammer is my only tool.
Yes, I am single. And alone. Again.
Technically that’s not very supportive, Edward.

Copper Thieves Plague Southwestern Pennsylvania – Verizon Offers $50K Reward To Stop An Epidemic

Phillip Dampier May 24, 2010 AT&T, Consumer News, Verizon, Video Comments Off on Copper Thieves Plague Southwestern Pennsylvania – Verizon Offers $50K Reward To Stop An Epidemic

Fayette County, Pennsylvania

Brazen copper thieves have taken to ripping phone cable right off the poles in an effort to cash in on resurgent copper pricing, usually to feed expensive drug habits like the ones discussed when you visit this web-site.

In southwestern Pennsylvania, repeated thefts have gotten so bad Verizon announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to the prosecution of those involved.

The epidemic of copper theft in Fayette County has reached an all-time-high as Verizon finds large sections of working cable stripped right from telephone poles.  When the cables come down, phone and broadband service goes out.

“These thefts are incomprehensible because they put people’s lives in danger and can cost thousands of dollars to repair,” said Michael Wagner, director of construction for Verizon Pennsylvania.  “We will not tolerate these deliberate and malicious acts against our telephone network and our customers.”

As a result of these crimes, hundreds of Verizon local phone customers have unnecessarily experienced telephone service delays – up to several days in some cases – and endured risks to their personal safety.

“They’re putting people who rely on phone service out of service,” Verizon spokesman Richard Young explained. “They’re putting customers who need service in danger in the event of an emergency to call an ambulance, to call the fire department. This person is putting the lives of people at risk.”

Verizon has suffered nine losses across the county in just a month:

  • April 22 in Uniontown – A 360-foot section of copper cable was cut and stolen.
  • April 25 in Farmington – A 600-foot section of copper cable was cut and stolen.
  • April 26 in White House – Nearly 400 feet of copper cable and a fiber-optic cable were cut and stolen.
  • May 5 in White House – A 290-foot section of a copper cable and a fiber-optic cable were cut and stolen.
  • May 11 in Shoaf – A 300-foot section of cable was cut and stolen.
  • May 11 in Smithfield – A 230-foot section of cable was cut and stolen.
  • May 12 in Haydentown – More than 1,200 feet of copper cable and a fiber-optic cable were cut and stolen.
  • May 14 in McClellandtown – Two sections of copper cable totaling 500 feet were cut and stolen.
  • May 17 in Gates – A 350-foot section of copper cable was cut and stolen.

Southwestern Pennsylvania is by no means alone in confronting copper theft.  Across the country, thieves are stealing copper wiring from every utility.  Thieves also steal copper pipes from homes, and in a new trend, are stripping copper coils from air conditioning units.

The reason for the interest in copper is its ever-increasing value.  Copper prices exploded a few years ago, and have trended upwards ever since.

Copper price trends

In January 2009, copper was bringing “just over a dollar a pound,” according to Lee Swann, a security contractor who works with Georgia Transmission Corporation. Today — “depending on what type of copper it is” — the metal is bringing $2.80-$3.10 per pound — an all-time high for many recyclers, even as prices have recently declined on the spot market.

At those prices, the incentives are there for theft.  Recovering and recycling copper has been a growth business for years, and many companies aggressively advertise “top dollar paid for recovered metals” promotions in newspapers and circulars.

Some recycling facilities are vigilant for suspicious truckloads of “recovered” copper while others are less so.  But as law enforcement confronts the growing trend in copper theft and utility companies begin offering rewards to stop it, many facilities are now regularly cooperating with local police.

Most of the proceeds from stolen copper likely go towards illegal drugs, particularly methamphetamine, believes the Coalition Against Cable Theft, a Washington-based advocacy group funded by home builders, contractors, and utility companies who are usually the victims of copper theft.  The Coalition wants strengthened laws to deter recyclers from accepting and paying for questionable sources of recovered copper.

Perhaps copper theft would be just one more reason why providers should dump copper wire for fiber optic networks, but many of the thieves are stupid — indiscriminately cutting and tearing down cables of all kinds, only later to find they were stuck with fiber optic cable, which most immediately discard at the base of poles, deemed worthless.

Anyone with information about the Pennsylvania copper capers can contact Verizon Security at 412-633-4902 or the Pennsylvania State Police at 724-439-7111.  In other areas, if you discover suspicious activity, call 911.

The money and utility service you save may be your own.

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KDKA Pittsburgh WALA Mobile Copper Thieves 5-10.flv[/flv]

KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh covered an earlier copper theft of Verizon wiring and WALA in Mobile ran a very similar story about copper thieves plaguing AT&T.  (4 minutes)

Our Cable Bill Is Like a Car Payment — Continuing the Discussion on Cord-Cutting Cable TV

Phillip Dampier April 18, 2010 Online Video, Video 5 Comments

The implications of cable-TV cord cutting continue to be discussed on several newscasts airing around the country, prompted by an Arbitron study showing Americans are more willing to give up their televisions than forgo the Internet.

In Providence, Rhode Island WNAC-TV spent five minutes pondering life without cable, noticing younger people are increasingly not even bothering to sign up, preferring the convenience… and price of watching everything online for free.

WNAC-TV’s The Buzz suspects the days of “free” might be numbered, however.

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WNAC Providence Cut the cable cord 4-15-10.flv[/flv]

Make no mistake: The big cable, satellite, and telco carriers are still sitting pretty with more than 100 million TV subscribers. Nevertheless, a new report claims that more and more viewers are “cutting the cord” in favor of watching their favorite shows via over-the-air antennas (remember those?), Netflix, or the Web. (5 minutes)

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