Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Report: Trump Spells Doom For Set-Top Box Reform


Donald Trump's election as president has likely killed proposed reforms for the TV set-top boxes that could save consumers billions of dollars, reports Bob Fernandez at philly.com.

Trump's deregulatory views combined with difficult politics at the Federal Communications Commission now make it nearly impossible to enact reforms, according to sources.

Dismantling the FCC's set-top box proposal would benefit Philly-based Comcast Corp. and other pay-TV operators that earn about $20 billion a year renting the devices to pay-TV subscribers.

Comcast, the nation's largest cable-TV operator, which has invested heavily into its voice-controlled X1 set-top box, had no comment on Monday.

Critics call the set-top boxes a pay-TV monopoly that costs consumers about $230 a year in those rental fees. The changes were designed to bring competition to set-top boxes or do away with the need to rent them.

Said a Wall Street analyst on Monday: "There is a pretty slim likelihood that this goes forward."

Chris Lewis, vice president with the nonprofit group Public Knowledge, which has advocated for new rules, said that the FCC would still be under a congressional mandate to bring competition to the set-top boxes in a Trump administration.

"We don't know what Trump thinks about set-top boxes," Lewis said.

Championed by FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, the reforms were struggling at the Democrat-controlled federal regulatory agency even before Trump was elected. Pay-TV giants and Hollywood content companies lobbied against them.

Wheeler had scheduled a vote on his set-top box proposal in late September but then canceled it because he did not have the three Democrat votes on the commission to pass it.

The new set-top rules continue to circulate at the agency but they are not scheduled for a vote at the next FCC meeting this Thursday.

FCC spokeswoman Kim Hart declined to comment on Monday.

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