Originally published: October 21, 2010
Last updated: October 21, 2010 - 9:16pm
Cable subscribers should brace for ballooning Internet bills. A new report suggests that cable companies will have to double charges for Internet service if "cord cutting" -- opting to watch shows online instead of through traditional TV -- catches on with consumers.
According to Morgan Stanley media analyst Ben Swinburne, a plethora of Web-enabled TVs and other Internet viewing options are making it easier for consumers to cancel their cable. For instance, Internet-connected TV sets offer consumers the ability to access not only traditional TV but also movies on Apple's iTunes, Google's YouTube and TV networks' own Web sites. Already, programmers including Time Warner's TNT and TBS, are creating apps for Google TV, a new service that is incorporated into Sony's Web-connected TV set. If a "material" number of households cut the cord, Swinburne said cable and satellite-TV providers will have to make up for the lost profits -- most likely by jacking up the cost of the broadband services they provide alongside cable packages. Swinburne said the migration to the Web will also push cable and satellite operators to offer more flexible pricing based on broadband consumption.
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