FCC May Finally Act To Ease The Pain Of Stupid Cable TV Content Negotiation Blackouts

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For the consumer, these fights usually go something like this: you’re bombarded with on-screen tickers and ads from both your cable operator and the broadcaster telling you the other guy is being a greedy villain during a contract standoff. After the programming contract expires, content you’re paying for gets blacked out (which you’re of course never given a refund for) by one side or the other in the hopes of pushing negotiations along. After a month or two the two sides then ultimately strike a confidential new programming deal. A few weeks later your cable bill sees a price hike — potentially your second of the year. It’s kind of a lose-lose scenario for consumers, who get used as public relations pinatas (call your cable operator to complain!), lose access to content they’re paying for, and then get accosted with an endless series of rate hikes. – Karl Bode, Techdirt