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Time Warner Cable’s National Channel Realignment Reaches Upstate New York, Mass. Next Month

Phillip Dampier September 5, 2013 Consumer News, Video 1 Comment

channel changesTime Warner Cable’s nationwide channel realignment, gradually rolling out across all Time Warner Cable systems, arrives in Albany and Rochester in New York and western Massachusetts next month. It is the cable company’s biggest channel numbering change in over a decade.

Time Warner is realigning almost every channel numbered over 100 into new theme-based categories to help customers find programming more easily. When the changes are complete, customers across the country will find most of the same networks on the same channel numbers regardless of where they live. Channels numbered 1-99 are not changing.

The new national unified lineup could mean more channels for some. For example, customers in Rochester will begin to receive several time-shifted west coast feeds of premium movie channels, the addition of Chinese Central State Television’s English language news network, Esquire TV, QVC Plus, Women’s Entertainment SD/HD (We), and the reintroduction of the Game Show Network. ESPN 3D is being dropped.

timewarner twcThe channel changes are causing some controversy in Albany because Time Warner is moving adult networks including Hustler TV, Penthouse On Demand, Manhandle, and Outrageous TV to channel positions that will soon be vacated by Albany’s local broadcast stations.

The changes take effect:

    • Oct. 8: Albany, Amsterdam, Canajoharie, Cobleskill, Gloversville, Kinderhook, Rensselaer, and Schenectady, N.Y.
    • Oct. 10: Battenkill, Clifton Park, Crown Point, Glens Falls, Hague, Hoosick, Port Henry, Putnam, Queensbury, Saratoga Springs, Schroon Lake, Ticonderoga, and Troy, N.Y.
    • Oct. 10: Great Barrington, Lee, Lenox, North Adams, Pittsfield, Sheffield, and Stockbridge, Mass.
    • Oct. 15: Rochester and its nearby suburbs across most of Monroe County, N.Y.
    • Oct. 17: Cayuga, Erie (East), Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Ontario, Orleans, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, Wayne, Wyoming and Yates Counties, N.Y.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/TWC Navigating Your Channel Lineup 9-13.flv[/flv]

Time Warner Cable introduces customers to their new unified nationwide television lineup, coming soon to your Time Warner Cable system. (2 minutes)

The new genre categories and their channel numbers:

Genre Starting at Genre
Starting at
Entertainment Ch. 100 Movie Channels Ch. 600
Life & Style Ch. 160 Pay-Per-View + 3D Ch. 650
News & Info Ch. 200 Sports Packages Ch. 700
Kids & Teens Ch. 250 Latino Ch. 800
Music Ch. 285 On Demand Ch. 1000
Sports Ch. 300 Local Programming Ch. 1200
Inspiration Ch. 460 International Ch. 1400
Shopping Ch. 480 Adult Ch. 1800
Movies On Demand Ch. 500 Radio Ch. 1900
Premiums Ch. 510 TWC Info Ch. 1998

The new lineup no longer includes separate HD and SD channels of each network. Instead, Time Warner’s HD set-top boxes will be programmed to show the best signal available, usually HD. SD converters, meanwhile, will show only SD channels.

Time Warner Cable premiered its new lineup in Syracuse and surrounding areas in central New York back in June. The company will continue to gradually roll out the channel changes in other cities this fall and winter.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WRGB Albany TWC Changing Channels 9-5-13.flv[/flv]

WRGB in Albany reports some Time Warner customers looking for their local television stations after the channel realignment will instead end up on the cable company’s adult entertainment tier, invited to subscribe with the push of a few buttons on the remote control. (2 minutes)

Comcast Raising Rates in Pacific Northwest: $70.49/Month for Cable TV

Phillip Dampier August 28, 2013 Broadband Speed, Comcast/Xfinity, Competition, Consumer News, Data Caps, Online Video Comments Off on Comcast Raising Rates in Pacific Northwest: $70.49/Month for Cable TV

Comcast oregonComcast rates are going up again this fall in the Pacific Northwest, now exceeding $70 a month.

At least 600,000 cable customers in Oregon and southwestern Washington will pay 4.4 percent more for 100-channel television service beginning this October, raising the cost of Standard basic cable to $70.49 a month.

Despite threats of cord cutting, customers in the Pacific Northwest have remained loyal to the idea of paying for television, according to Fred Christ, policy director for the Metropolitan Area Cable Commission in Washington County.

“Subscriber numbers remain steady,” Christ told The Oregonian. “People still don’t see an easy alternative to Comcast, Frontier (FiOS TV), or the satellite providers, all of which cause more or less the same amount of pain.”

Comcast Rates (Image: The Oregonian)

The newspaper notes sports programming may not be the cause of this year’s rate increase.

The cost of Comcast’s discounted “Digital Economy” cable package, which excludes most expensive sports networks, is rising at nearly double the rate of Standard Cable, up 8.6 percent this fall to $37.95 a month.

For those who cannot afford traditional Standard cable television, Comcast’s limited basic service, which primarily consists of local TV channels, runs $12-22 a month depending on the customer’s location. It also increased in price by about $1.30 a month in August.

Comcast may not mind cord cutters too much, because it reaps significant profits from the broadband service that powers online viewing. Comcast raised speeds from 15 to 20Mbps last spring along with the price. The popular “Performance” tier now costs $53.95 a month.

Comcast is testing the reintroduction of usage caps in a handful of service areas, typically providing up to 300GB of usage per month before overlimit fees kick in. But those Internet usage limits do not yet apply in the Pacific Northwest.

Comcast blamed the rate increases on network enhancement investments including faster Internet speeds, more multi platform video and better customer service. Comcast is currently introducing its new X1 cable box that makes finding programming easier.

Customers can avoid the worst of the price increases by choosing a bundled service package, which will see a lower rate increase. Current customers can also call Comcast to negotiate a better deal by threatening to cancel service.

Bell’s Idea of Cost Savings: Fire 100 “Redundant Workers” at Acquired Astral Media

Phillip Dampier August 22, 2013 Bell (Canada), Canada, Competition, Consumer News, Public Policy & Gov't Comments Off on Bell’s Idea of Cost Savings: Fire 100 “Redundant Workers” at Acquired Astral Media
Astral Media... digested by Bell.

Astral Media… digested

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission’s approval of Bell-BCE’s $3.4 billion acquisition of specialty broadcaster Astral Media has resulted in the loss of at least 100 jobs in Toronto, with more to come in Montreal, all deemed “redundant” by the Canadian telecom giant.

A union representing many of the workers indicated Bell had posted notice of the workforce reduction in Astral’s offices and notified the Minister of Labour “approximately 100 people will be laid off in Toronto” as the merged companies restructure.

The layoffs are expected to include Bell Media workers at locations in downtown Toronto and the Agincourt neighborhood of Scarborough and at newly acquired Astral stations and networks.

Local 723M president Kelly Dobbs told the Toronto Star that the cuts at 299 Queen St., where she represents Bell Media workers at MuchMusic, CP24 and BNN and other television employees, haven’t hit union employees yet. So far, she said, the cuts are in management.

“So far we haven’t been hit. It doesn’t mean we won’t be,” Dobbs said Thursday, adding the notice went up about two weeks ago. “At this moment, we haven’t.”

Bell committed to spend $246.9 million on what the CRTC calls “tangible benefits” over the next seven years to create more Canadian content for its networks and stations after the CRTC initially objected to the merger last fall.

Those tangible benefits do not include Canadian employees.

Last fall, the CRTC claimed the merger would have brought no benefits to Canadian radio and television audiences and would result in the creation of an over-dominant entity, particularly in Montreal, controlling an excessive amount of Canadian media, undermining competition and diversity.

By this spring, the CRTC changed its mind.

Bell’s acquisition includes 84 Astral radio stations — 52 of which were acquired in a $1.08-billion purchase of Standard Radio in 2007. Bell now owns 107 radio stations in 55 markets across Canada as well as the CTV television network and more than three dozen major cable networks.

bell television

Bell’s television outlets include the CTV television network and many of Canada’s largest cable networks.

bell radio

Bell’s radio stations often use the same logos, formats and identities in different Canadian cities.

Sony Has Preliminary Agreement With Viacom to Offer Online Cable TV Alternative

Phillip Dampier August 15, 2013 Competition, Consumer News, Data Caps, Online Video, Sony 1 Comment

sony_logoSony’s bid to enter the “over-the-top” online video business has gotten a shot in the arm with news it has reached a preliminary agreement with Viacom, Inc., to carry its popular cable networks on the Japanese electronics giant’s planned online subscription TV service.

Sony wants to build its own virtual cable television service, offering live and on-demand programming delivered over broadband lines in direct competition with cable and phone companies Comcast, Time Warner Cable, AT&T and Verizon.

Getting agreements with traditional must-have cable networks like Comedy Central, ESPN, and USA have been difficult because the networks fear alienating their traditional customers — large cable, telco and satellite TV companies.

viacomThe Wall Street Journal reports Viacom’s agreement remains preliminary at the moment and the final details have yet to be worked out. If a final agreement is reached, it will be a breakthrough for so-called online cable systems which have gotten nowhere with other cable network owners, including Comcast-NBC, Walt Disney, Time Warner, and CBS.

Cable executives have repeatedly warned that a wider distribution of cable network programming would make them more reluctant to pay higher prices for the cable networks because of the loss of relative exclusivity. Many cable programming contracts restrict the ability of network owners to sell to would-be online competitors.

Viacom has had contentious relationships with cable and satellite companies in the past, so observers suggest it is no surprise Viacom would be among the first to break with tradition. Viacom’s CEO, Sumner Redstone, also controls CBS which is currently off Time Warner Cable systems in three major cities and has had its pay movie channels Showtime and The Movie Channel blacked out on Time Warner systems nationwide. If Sony’s service gets off the ground, CBS could ask Time Warner customers to sign up with Sony instead to get those networks back.

Cord Cutting is Real (Graphics: The Wall Street Journal)

Cord Cutting is Real (Graphics: The Wall Street Journal)

Competing online video services from Intel and Google have largely gone nowhere because of stalled programming negotiations. How Sony managed a breakthrough remains a mystery. To secure rights, Sony may have been asked to sign a lengthy contract with favorable financial terms for Viacom, or Sony might have agreed to carry the full roster of Viacom-owned cable networks, which include:

The next generation of the Sony PlayStation may be your next cable box.

The next generation of the Sony PlayStation may be your next cable box.

  • BET
  • CMT
  • Comedy Central
  • Logo
  • MTV
  • MTV2
  • Nick at Nite
  • Nick Jr.
  • Nickelodeon
  • Nicktoons
  • Palladia
  • Spike
  • TeenNick
  • Tr3s
  • TV Land
  • VH1

A source told the Journal Sony hopes to launch its new venture by the end of the year, perhaps on the next generation of Sony’s PlayStation gaming console due soon. Sony also could offer the service on its line of Bravia high-definition televisions, as well as tablets and smartphones.

The Journal:

People who have seen demonstrations of Sony’s system say it has some features that are appealing in comparison to traditional pay TV distributors, including one that recommends shows for users based on what they’ve previously watched. Content providers are allowed to supply some of those recommendations, so they can steer users to other episodes on their channels, according to the people familiar with the matter. Sony provides other content suggestions for viewers based on an algorithm.

The development of online cable television in direct competition with large cable and phone companies could spark a new wave of broadband usage restrictions including usage caps and metered billing. The same telecom companies that earn a substantial part of their revenue selling cable television service are likely to find it unsettling to discover Sony undercutting them on price and using “their” broadband lines to do it. Placing restrictions on the amount of broadband traffic a customer can use each month would deliver a significant deterrent to would-be cord cutters.

Sen. Schumer Warns Your Internet Enabled Smart TV May Be Spying on You

Sen. Schumer

Sen. Schumer

That new Internet-enabled television in your living room may be allowing virtual Peeping Toms to watch and listen to you because manufacturers never bothered with adequate security measures to keep unwanted guests out.

Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) is calling on major television manufacturers to create a uniform security standard to stop the hacking before it becomes widespread.

A security research group recently highlighted security flaws in so-called “smart” TVs that make it simple for anyone to hack the television’s internal microphone and embedded camera originally designed for video chatting. The security group warned that almost anyone could begin eavesdropping within minutes of identifying a vulnerable television — most lacking any significant security measures to prevent unauthorized video spying.

“You expect to watch TV, but you don’t want the TV watching you,” said Schumer. “Many of these smart televisions are vulnerable to hackers who can spy on you while you’re watching television in your living room. Our computers have access to firewalls and other security blocks but these televisions do not and that’s why manufacturers should do everything possible to create a standard of security in their internet-connected products.”

The security vulnerability exists because many modern “smart” TVs are now connected to the Internet. To enhance the social experience, many of these televisions are equipped with microphones and unobtrusive video cameras similar to those found in a laptop. But many consumers do not realize these devices could allow anyone on the outside to activate the camera and microphone unbeknownst to the owner and quietly watch and listen in on what is happening inside a home.

Particularly vulnerable

Particularly vulnerable

Samsung televisions starting with the 2012 model year were called particularly vulnerable to hacking. Researchers found they could not only access cameras and microphones, they could also tap into the television’s web browser, steal user accounts and passwords, and redirect consumers to hacked websites designed to capture personal information including credit card numbers and bank account information.

Some manufacturers have not taken responsibility for the security flaws, suggesting worried consumers put black electrical tape over the camera or unplug the TV when not in use. Samsung has issued patches for many of the affected devices and promises more changes in future models.

Schumer called current measures inadequate and too often leave the burden solely on consumers. He wants an industry security standard implemented that includes a firewall and other security measures that keep unwanted visitors out without forcing consumers to disable features they paid to have on their television.

[flv width=”368″ height=”228″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WTEN Albany Schumer Says TV Could Be Watching You 8-4-13.mp4[/flv]

Your Internet enabled television set may be vulnerable to hacking. WTEN in Albany reports Sen. Schumer wants manufacturers to create a uniform security standard to keep unwelcome visitors out of your living room. (2 minutes)

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