The Alternative Facts of Cable Companies
Charter’s renaming of itself—after a megamerger with Time Warner Cable in 2018—as “Spectrum.” But changing your name doesn’t mean that you aren’t liable for misbehavior under your previous moniker. This is what Charter…er, Spectrum… found recently when, following a lengthy investigation, New York’s attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, filed an extraordinary lawsuit against the company. The company’s 2.5 million New York subscribers (of its 22 million nationwide) have been told they’re getting X (in terms of download and upload speeds) when actually they’re getting a lot less than X.
The AG is not a regulator. All his office can do is call Spectrum on its fraudulent and deceptive behavior. His lawyers can’t make rules or lower the barriers to actual competition. Indeed, in a world in which Spectrum faces little to no competition, now expects even less regulation than before, and has no need to spend money on better services, the lawsuit won’t by itself make much of a difference.
[Susan Crawford is a professor at Harvard Law School]
The Alternative Facts of Cable Companies