Comcast is testing a 1 TB per month data allowance plan, an amount "so high that most of our customers will never have to think about how much data they use," said Marcien Jenckes, Comcast Cable executive vice president-Consumer Services, in a blog post Wednesday. A terabyte "is far more than most of our customers will ever use in a month," Jenckes said, saying its typical data customer uses 60 GB/month. "What can you do with a terabyte? You can stream about 700 hours of HD video, play 12,000 hours of online games, and download 60,000 high-res photos in a month," Jenckes said. Comcast said all data plans in its unnamed trial markets will go from 300 GB to 1 TB by June 1, regardless of speed, while customers who want more than 1 TB can sign up for unlimited plans or buy data in 50 GB increments. AT&T said in March that by May 23, most customers would automatically see increases in their monthly data allowance plans that range from 300 GB to 1 TB (see 1603290065)
Proponents of FCC-proposed changes to set-top box rules TiVo and Public Knowledge support an exemption for pay-TV carriers with 1 million or fewer subscribers, the American Cable Association said in a news release Wednesday. “TiVo['s] and Public Knowledge's stance sends a strong signal to the FCC that, if it moves forward with its proposal, relief for smaller [multichannel video programming distributors] is justified.” The FCC should “terminate” the set-top proceeding without creating any new rules, but if set-top regulations change, they should include a carve-out exempting smaller providers, ACA said. It cited Public Knowledge and TiVo comments on the set-top proceeding (see 1604220063).
Former Epix Chief Digital Officer Emil Rensing was charged with defrauding his former employer of more than $8 million, in a federal indictment announced Tuesday by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Manhattan. The U.S. Attorney's Office said Rensing, 42, of Manhattan, used his position to have the company contract with two vendor companies he owned for various digital media services they never performed. The indictment also said the vendor personnel designated in the contracts often were former associates or partners of Rensing, but they had never heard of the vendors and were unaware of their names being used on the contracts. The indictment never names Rensing's employer, but his LinkedIn profile says he was with Epix during the five years in question, April 2010-August 2015. In a statement, Epix said Rensing was terminated by the company then and it's "cooperating fully" with the investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office said he's charged with one count of wire fraud, which carries a 20-year maximum sentence, and one count of aggravated identity theft, which carries a maximum of two years. Rensing couldn't be reached for comment Wednesday
Comcast is backing the plaintiffs suing it in saying a 2015 decision by a U.S. District judge in Philadelphia denying certification of a proposed settlement class should be reversed. In a brief (in Pacer) Monday in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Comcast said the District Court erred in rejecting a proposed $15.5 million settlement in a set-top box class-action lawsuit against Comcast when it said it lacks a reliable and feasible means for figuring out who falls within the class definition (see 1511060011). Those concerns "may prevent class certification in a litigation context [but] do not preclude class certification in a settlement context," Comcast said, adding the District Court wrongly applied 3rd Circuit precedent on litigation classes to the settlement class issue. "This Court has made clear that settlement classes raise different certification issues than litigation classes," Comcast said. It said that in agreeing to settle, Comcast also had agreed that claimants can prove class membership by less-rigorous methods than necessary in court. Appellants in the Comcast set-top litigation filed a similar brief in March.
Wawa customers can get free in-store Wi-Fi from Comcast, under a partnership they announced in a news release Tuesday. The regional convenience store chain and Comcast Business switched on Xfinity Wi-Fi hot spots Tuesday in more than 700 stores in Delaware, Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia, the companies said. Unlike most Comcast Xfinity hot spots, users need not be Comcast customers to access free Wi-Fi, they said. Comcast has rolled out more than 14 million Xfinity Wi-Fi hot spots across its territory.
Upgrades to Cablevision's network to give all customers access to broadband service of up to 300 Mbps will begin the instant Altice closes on its takeover of the cable company, the two said in an FCC filing Tuesday in docket 15-257. It was aimed at giving details on planned investments in the Cablevision footprint post-deal, and the two said Altice will also "maintain and advance" Cablevision's low-income Internet commitment by introducing a 30 Mbps offering for $14.99/month. That low-income offering will come without modem fees to households with children eligible for the National School Lunch Program and people 65 and older who are eligible for federal Supplemental Security Income benefits, so long as the enrollee has not been a Cablevision broadband subscriber in the past 60 days and isn't behind on any Cablevision bills, they said. That broadband offering will begin rolling out within six months of the close of the deal, and be available to all Cablevision footprint customers within 15 months of the close, they said. The FCC unofficial 180-day shot clock on reviewing Altice/Cablevision stood Tuesday at day 173.
Any FCC approval of Altice's purchase of Cablevision should be predicated on the Dutch telecom following national security agreement terms similar to those it signed when it bought Suddenlink in 2015 (see 1512160051), DOJ said in a filing Wednesday in docket 15-127. Justice recommendations also include some minor alterations of the Suddenlink letter of agreement dealing with different deadlines and audit procedures for the Cablevision transaction. Altice didn't comment Thursday. Cablevision said earlier this year that it still expects the deal to close in Q2 (see 1602250011) and the New York Public Service Commission is finishing a review, with a May 20 deadline (see 1604050059). The FCC's unofficial 180-day shot clock for review of the deal was at Day 168 Thursday.
Univision is buying ABC's share in their Fusion English-language joint venture, it said in a news release Thursday. Univision said it's immediately taking over ABC's distribution and advertising sales functions, with ownership transfer to come later. In a related move, Univision said it's launching Fusion Media Group, a media holding company for its interests A.V. Club, Clickhole, El Rey, Flama, Fusion, the Onion, Starwipe, Univision Digital and Univision Music.
Dish Network and Viacom agreed to a multiyear carriage contract renewal, heading off a blackout (see 1604200027). They had been operating on a contract extension that expired at midnight Wednesday. In a news release Thursday, they said the agreement also means some Viacom live and VOD content -- including BET, Comedy Central, MTV and Nick Jr. -- being added to Sling TV's single- and multistream lineups in coming months.
The FCC is seeing some push to follow up its notice of inquiry on independent and diverse programming with action. Tuesday was the deadline for replies in docket 16-41, and the FCC's filing systems were partly down. While numerous large conglomerates have argued that the video market is too competitive for them to have any real gatekeeping power, and that they also provide wide programming diversity in their lineups, indie programmers see the opposite, the American Cable Association said in comments to be filed in the docket. Indie programmers' comments also show that forced bundling is a problem since it constrains capacity on multichannel video programming distributors' systems, that penetration requirements often relegate indie programming to higher tiers, and that most-favored-nation clauses end up preventing carriage of indie networks, ACA said. It said the FCC at some point should move to a diversity rulemaking, and it "can and should act now" through addressing bundling involving stations via its current proposed retransmission consent rules changes and by updating its program access rules to let the National Cable TV Cooperative bring complaints. The FCC also could use its authority under Telecom Act Section 706, which allows for regulating practices -- including video service provision -- if they hinder broadband deployment, it said. The FCC's focus needs to not be on surface issues like what genres of networks are on an MVPD's channel lineup, but on ownership diversity and making sure indie networks have access to those linear platforms, One World Sports (OWS) said Tuesday in the docket. MVPDs often don't have the bandwidth and programming dollars to add such networks because of such practices as forced bundling by large media conglomerates, OWS said, saying the agency's next step should be an NPRM on a prohibition of or limits on forced bundling and tying of programming. Not every indie programmer is seeking an FCC fix. National Religious Broadcasters bemoaned the difficulties indie programmers have in getting carriage but cautioned against "a [regulatory] move in the name of diversity towards a subjective, government-favored content regime or so-called 'fairness' censorship on video programmers or any other form of electronic media." Instead, it said in a filing that it hopes the NOI will lead to programmer talks with MVPDs that result in their being more interested in carriage "for the valuable faith and family programming of religious channels."