What Free Cable? 585
suckass writes: "Apparently if you've got a cable broadband connection from AT&T you can get free basic cable just by splitting the line that goes into your cable modem. News.com has a story about it here."
Single tasking: Just Say No.
Not for long. (Score:5, Insightful)
Crappy moderation... (Score:2, Insightful)
Thanks a lot to news.com for posting this story. Give AT&T more reason to tighten their grips!
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Re:Traps don't work so well... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:3)
All that's needed to block cable TV to cable-modem-only subscribers is a trap. If you had read the article, you would've known this.
I used to live under the approach to one of the runways at McCarran Airport in Las Vegas. I pretty much had to subscribe to cable to get a decent signal; every time an airliner passed overhead, TV signals would bounce off of it and produce some really bad ghosting. At the time, a "broadcast-basic" plan was available that would get you the first 15 or so channels (including all local channels) for about $3 per month (this was back in '92 or '93). Since that was all I really wanted at the time, I signed up and put the rabbit ears away. A trap was installed in the line to block all of the other channels...tuning to them produced only static.
You can't "steal" what the cable company doesn't make available to you in the first place.
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2, Funny)
Right... because obviously Cox, AT&T, Comcast, et. al. were completely unaware until they read about it on news.com and Slashdot.
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:2)
Why solve a problem when it's not a problem? Now it's a problem. Now they'll have to solve it.
Re:Crappy moderation... (Score:3, Interesting)
Uh, crack down on what exactly? They know damn well you're going to watch the basic cable that comes along with it. That's why the friggin service costs $50.
Check with all the other posts in this article: most of their cable companies make you subscribe to basic service and then add like $20 on top of that for broadband. Either way, it works out to around $50. I subscribe to Comcast, and the only difference here is that they charge $50 for the boardband and then imply that basic cable service comes free with the deal.
To wit: There's nothing sneaky going on, there's nothing the cable companies don't already know. You can't pirate that which is offered for free. It seems clear that C|net has written a very troll that the slashbots latched onto right away.
Re:Not for long. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but slashdot is doing what it always does - playing link-zilla to the mainstream press, which is doing ITS job by reporting consumer issues like this. This was on news.com, so that means it hit the Associated Press, and other mainstream press outlets will pick it up from the wires in the same fashion.
But yeah, troll slashdot, and blame Malda and Co. for making it like 1% more widely known now.
Actually... (Score:2)
Doing this to ALL cable modem subscribers would be a pretty big task... I think you have time...
Either way though... who want's "Basic" cable... I don't know about the U.S., but here in Canada, it is often reffered to as Trailer Vision... 22 channels... Yuck!
Re:Actually... (Score:4, Informative)
If I were to show up at a new house without cable, I would run a new line to the ped (short for pedestal, also known as a consumer interface or a million other terms). At the ped, if this person didn't already have cable tv and it wasn't part of my work order, I'd slap a 400 trap on the line. The 400 trap blocks everything but the cable modem's frequency range. Trust me, these things work.
Since the pedestal is locked and requires one of three unavailable-to-the-public keys, you won't be pulling this filter anytime soon. Some of you may have access to a broken pedestal but when the cable guy shows up, he'll call it in and it'll get replaced.
Some installers, in a rush, neglect this filter, but it's standard practice to put one on each house/apt/whatever when the customer doesn't already have cable. It's also common practice to split the incoming (master) line to the home and put upstream traps on half the split and connect all t.v. lines to this half of the split. The cable modem gets alot of power (anywhere from -10 to +13db) from this half of the split and the rest of the lines don't send rf interference upstream so the cable modem has a clean path upstream.
I'm mentioning the split/upstream trap because some of you might go rooting around in your attic or somewhere poking around on filters and getting creative with the setup. Don't touch anything. If there's a 400 trap you don't have access to it anyway and if you pull the upstream trap you're setting your cable modem up for poor performance.
So basically, I'd say you probably have a 20% chance of getting cable tv over your cablemodem line, and when you split it, you'll be dumping rf interference into your room because your crimping tools will inevitably be inferior, and your tv will be dumping upstream noise into your cable modem stream. You've been warned, proceed at your own risk.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
See Napster thread. (Score:3, Insightful)
I made a similar point regarding Napster yesterday. Someone went as far as comparing music theft on Napster to the life of Jesus Christ.
Knocking...my...head...into...the...wall...
Yesterday taught me one thing. If people can find a way in their brain to justify an act, they will change their perception from it being "wrong" to "well, why shouldn't I? Who am I REALLY hurting?"
Re:Slashdot: News for thieves. Like ethics matter. (Score:4, Insightful)
So, you have a cable modem hooked up to your cable. This doesn't mean that you are allowed to splice that cable and run it to another device.
Re:Not for long. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not for long. (Score:2)
An ounce of circumvention... (Score:4, Funny)
Not for long... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not for long... (Score:2)
Re:Not for long... (Score:2)
Re:Not for long... (Score:2)
Not true in San Diego. In fact, they just recently knocked $5/month off of my roadrunner bill because I don't have cable TV. That was about the strangest letter I have ever received from a company.
Then they called up to offer me a month of basic cable for free. I said sure what the hell. That was about 4 months ago and I'm still getting basic cable. No, I don't have my modem line split. I have 2 seperate cable lines.
And how is this legal? (Score:2)
RoadRunner (provided by Time Warner in Austin, TX) requires you to purchase basic cable in addition to your cable Internet service.
Windows (provided by Microsoft in Redmond, WA) requires you to purchase a basic media player in addition to your operating system.
I wonder why nobody has yet investigated local cable monopolies for illegal tying under the antitrust laws, especially in areas where the telephone monopoly does not offer DSL. Zathrus agrees with me [slashdot.org].
That explains it (Score:2, Interesting)
Easy to catch (Score:2, Informative)
First, they normally install a filter on such lines that blocks the analog signals, so in many cases, it won't work.
Second, they can detect the signal leakage and see that you're receiving the signal. Considering that it's simply a matter of pointing an antena at your house from a van, and they have a list of who are Internet-only subscribers, it's not hard for them to check.
Using unauthorized cable signals simply isn't worth the risk.
Re:Easy to catch (Score:5, Informative)
The tinfoil on my roof will protect me.
But seriously, point an antenna at my house to find out if I'm wathching cable? I can see checking the neighborhood branch cable's impedence to see if its within the range of what they would expect from the number of subscribers they have, but even that's a ballpark figure (neighbor buys new TV, etc etc). Please explain how they can find anything by pointing an antenna at my house.
A microphone maybe, when I curse them for shitty reception.
Re:Easy to catch (Score:5, Informative)
I've also heard that you can play the same game and use a high-gain antena to steal cable by capturing the leaking signal from your neighbor's house. I don't know how well that works, though in theory it is possible.
It's a trivial matter to instead of looking for leakage beyond their regular tollerance level to look for any leakage whatsoever from non-subscribers.
Re:Easy to catch (Score:3, Interesting)
Nonsense.
You don't have any signal amplifiers, and what "unshielded cables" you are talking about? Coax cable is shielded.
What one could possibly do is to use a reflectometer to measure where the signal reflects off of irregularities in the line. Unterminated coax connector would reflect everything; a connected TV would absorb everything and reflect nothing. However this is far from being reliable, and is very laborous, and depends on who installed the cable and when and how, and so on... It is much cheaper to just go on with your life and sell more cable packages to someone who pays, rather than chasing ghosts of people who don't want to pay and are skilled enough to get away with that.
On a different note, there is nothing to watch on cable anyway. Why would anyone want one?
Re:Easy to catch (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Easy to catch (Score:2)
Yes, that is a possibility. Though, why would they want to have air signals as well as cable? Usually cable carries all local air signals already, and if you are aiming at remote transmitters then you use antenna amplifier, and that isolates the antenna.
Re-broadcasting the signal (Score:4, Interesting)
In 1981 we got our first VCR and a camera (dad's business needed a major writeoff). Since I was in 8th grade, I was in charge of hooking it up. According to the documentation, you were absolutely not to hook up the RF Out of the VCR to your rooftop antenna -- it'd make you into your own TV station and the FCC would take away your bike, your baseball glove and make you eat unsweetened cereal for the rest of your life.
Naturally the idea of a video camera and the chance to be our own TV station was too tempting. However, it didn't really work. We had the highest house in our neighborhood and a big antenna on the roof, but we couldn't get our home TV channel (playing lip-sync videos and slow-motion Lego crashes) to come in on any of the neighborhood TVs, all of which were broadcast based since we didn't have cable in Minneapolis.
I guess its a good thing that I didn't know about amplifiers then...
Re:Easy to catch (Score:2)
Tim
Re:Easy to catch (Score:4, Interesting)
The also have handheld units for checking apartment buildings too.
Re:Easy to catch (Score:5, Interesting)
What's kinda interesting though is that the area around 500 Mhz shows some leakage, maybe the filter is not perfect, or maybe they need to leave that area open because somehow internet hookup requires it -- but in any case that leakage leaves a few channels through. Didn't bother to drop the filter though since nothing interesting was ever on anyway
(BTW this is all with UPC in Europe)
RE, How they found out (Score:5, Informative)
The second method used are using a TDR and measuring the distance to the end of the cable. A splitter tries to keep the impedance to the source to 75 ohm, but it isn't perfect and show up well on a TDR (Time Domain Reflectometry a type of in cable radar checking distance to splitters connections, ends, breaks etc.) A teltale sign of theft of service is the presence of a splitter in the TDR return and two or more diffrent distances to the terminations (6ft to cable modem and 35 foot to TV for instance).
The Third method used is the least reliable. At the head end they run one of the channels through a time base corrector with a set drift (slightly off spec horizontal frequency). During a popular program (superbowl, HBO) the van sniffs for TV's exactly matching this offset sweep speed. The catch here a TV with a noisy sweep circuit from a subscriber can swamp a bootleg reciever's signature as it gets buried in the background noise level. Getting a match in sweep frequency from a TV in a house not subscribing to ESPN or HBO in suburbia can result in enough evedince for a search warrant for the illegal decoder. This is very hard to do in apartments, but not too difficult in surburban areas. They only catch those who happen to be tuned in at the time of the sweep. Those who time shift tape are not detected. The head end stuff is very expensive for this so this is a tool of larger cable companies and cable companies that hire the survey from a 3rd party.
Leakage tests are the most common theft detection when done in conjunction with tap sweeps. TDR's are used in apartments because the temptation to run a wire to the next apartment is high. With the high density, the time to do a TDR audit has high payback results. Changes in cable response can be tied to duration of a tenant stay to make good cases of theft. The arguement of that was the way it was when I moved in doesn't work if they get two recorded TDR records that show the change after you moved in.
As you can see, two of the 3 common detection methods do use an antenna on a van pointed at your house. They look for leakage of the raw cable signal and check the sweep frequency of your TV. TDR sweeps require a tempory outage of the signal and are not done with an antenna on a van.
I hope this helps explain it.
Re:Easy to catch (Score:2)
Re:Easy to catch (Score:2)
Really? According to the article, this is what they do if they catch you.
Oh boy, the risk/benefit ratio for that one isn't hard to figure out....
definitely worth the risk (Score:2, Interesting)
Grr! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Grr! (Score:2)
Could be. Also, the existing cable was probably old enough to cause problems. The installer was probably pissed that he had to run new cable from their box into your house, and just ran it to the modem so he wouldn't have to run it to the rest of your jacks.
Free Cable (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Free Cable (Score:2)
As soon as this story broke... (Score:2, Funny)
They Get Money Anyway (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're not ordering cable, and only the cablemodem they charge you an extra 10 dollars.
So... my total comes out to about $55 a month for cablemmodem. Plus tax...
So... Total: $60+ a month for cablemodem
Re:They Get Money Anyway (Score:3, Interesting)
Basic cable modem for cable customers is $39.95/mo.
Basic cable modem for non-cable customers is $54.95/mo
Basic cable is $12.95/mo
Thus, for me, it's actually cheaper to pay for cable, than to steal it.
Re:They Get Money Anyway (Score:2)
Time Warner too (Score:2)
If you don't need a cable box to descramble it, then since the cable is hooked up into your place of residence, you get cable in its full unscrabled glory.
Time Warner even gives you the splitter.
Though it seems Time Warner in NYC has different "basic" packages. In Queens many many channels come in scramble free (though in messed up ordering), while in NYC one basically only gets over the air, tnt, tbs and cable access (though in a somewhat normal ordering)
More information. . . (Score:2)
I read a copy of the article posted on MSNBC [msnbc.com]. This doesn't just affect AT&T broadband: Cox Communications and Comcast Cable also get mentions. The reason you haven't heard about it through the news before, though, is that cable providers are only now figuring out how to circumvent this sort of "freebie."
That said, I can't bring myself to feel sorry for all the people who will now have to pay for their cable TV service. In a word, wahh.
Painfully obvious (Score:2)
Has nobody else ever actually looked at the bill? The real trick is to not only plug your coax cable into your tuner card, but to remove the little inline filter which they describe to you as "the thing that keeps you from getting all the extended cable channels" when they screw it into your cable line.
Re:Painfully obvious (Score:2)
Not Hard To Stop (Score:5, Informative)
yep (Score:2)
Put on your "think like a cable company" hat for a moment... as a straight up cable TV network without broadband, it only makes sense to install line equipment to filter premium channels. Regardless of whatever cable package the customer orders, its always going to contain basic channels as a minimum. Hence, cable companies don't normally have filters installed for basic channels.
Ok, so lets throw in broadband. With the advent of internet access via cable, people who were previously without cable lines are now ordering cable for broadband only. Ok well, the internet access is running over a pre-existing cable network which probably wasn't designed with broadband in mind. Cable lines are coming installed, but carry basic channels at the very minimum because those signals aren't filtered.
Some cable companies play 'hush-hush' about it, and others don't. The good companies will "throw in basic cable" at no extra charge... which isn't really of much value beyond a marketing gimmick, because they probably can't NOT deliver basic cable anyway.
free newspaper (Score:5, Funny)
Its in my cable modem manual for crying out loud (Score:5, Informative)
From page 5 of the Motorola/General Instruments SB3100D cable modem manual:
"If you have a TV set attached to the cable outlet, you may need a 5-900 MHz splitter to use both the TV and the SB3100D."
Thats about as plain and simple as it gets.
by design ? (Score:5, Informative)
I assumed that this was by design. Maybe this "free cable TV" that they gave me was simply an artifact of getting the interenet access and, rather than discourage people from using it, ATT might have decided to be proactive an make the cable TV a free offer to their appreciated customers.
-Derek
Does this mean I can have digital and analog? (Score:2)
However, this may provide an opportunity to have both digital and analog cable. As long as I can still capture the stuff off the analog cable, Digital Cable may become something worth experimenting with. Heck, I may even find a way to wire a remote up to my computer to use it.
Anybody think I'll have luck with having both analog and digital cable?
*thinks it'd be heaps easier if AT&T would just have a PVR built to use the Digital Signal.*
Same in Canada with Shaw (Score:2, Informative)
Comcast knowingly does this (Score:2)
video traps... (Score:3, Insightful)
Time Warner: Line Filters (Score:3, Informative)
One bad thing about this filter is that it really degrades your signal strength, and can cause your cable modem to desync sometimes. Hell, they even unfilter it if you are having alot of problems.
IT'S FREE ANYWAY! (Score:2)
In this case, you would gain nothing by splitting the cable and canceling the TV contract, because you would just pay the difference for the 'net connection. I now understand why they chose this price arrangement in the first place. Now, with a descrambler box, things change...
How strange... (Score:2)
Doing this for 1 year... (Score:2)
I think they realised this after seeing that they couldn't put a video trap on the same line as your cable modem. This happened to me when I discontinued their free-digital TV trial back in Jan 2000. I had to have them come out and remove the trap to get my internet to work again.
So, I have cable going to both my cable modem and my TV-tuner card, and haven't felt like it was "free" at all, especially since I've been paying for it.
Where does all the $$ go? (Score:5, Interesting)
Monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
And the "free cable" described here isn't really piracy, as other posters have pointed out. The broadband customers are paying a bit more than those who just want basic cable, and the "free" cable is part of the deal. In fact, this is another reason why the basic bill is so much: The company wants the incremental cost of extra services (Net access, premium channels, etc.) to be so low compared to the $40 you're already paying that you will choose to buy them.
Quebec (Score:2)
Basically, if you are not a cable television subscriber but want cable internet service, they charge you an additional 10$ (well they claim that you get 10$ off if you are a cable subscriber) and thus they basically offset the cost of also providing basic cable television service to those who will splice the line and route it to their tvs as well. They've been doing this for years.
Probably the reason why. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Probably the reason why. (Score:2)
No harm, no foul? (Score:2)
First off, what's the difference in equipment necessary to "steal" basic cable from a cable modem connection? A splitter and some extra coax. Who pays for these? The consumer. What's the cost to the cable company? Zero.
Second, who's losing out when someone "steals" basic cable? Is it the cable company? I suppose, if a significant percentage of people hooking into that service would otherwise choose to pay for basic cable. I personally feel that wouldn't be a large number; when you've got broadband, TV is less entertaining, at least to me.
Are the networks losing money when people do this? A little, maybe. These people aren't being counted in ratings shares, so it means less ad revenue. These companies might be getting a small share of the revenue from the cable company if those connections were legitimate, but I believe they mostly get their money from the advertising.
So what's the solution? How 'bout requiring people with cable modems to buy basic cable service, but at a price they won't object to? Say, an extra $10-15 per month? That's enough for the cable company to pay off any rebroadcast royalties, with no additional investment in equipment needed for them. Even people with satellite dishes might find the cable TV useful, as it would carry local channels their dishes wouldn't supply.
Re:No harm, no foul? (Score:2)
Are the networks losing money when people do this? A little, maybe. These people aren't being counted in ratings shares, so it means less ad revenue. These companies might be getting a small share of the revenue from the cable company if those connections were legitimate, but I believe they mostly get their money from the advertising.
but advertisers are getting MORE for their money because they are paying for X impressions, but there are X+Y TV viewers.
Bait and switch (Score:5, Informative)
When I first moved here, I got the cable modem, and when I hooked my TV up to the outlet... it worked. I have extended basic channels. About a month after they put in my cable modem, a door-to-door guy came and offered a 30-day trial of the premium basic (as many channels as you can get without going digital). We tried the cable for about 20 days, and then I called them to cut it off (cause I'm a cheep ass). They can't and turned it ALL off. It took to weeks to get my cable modem back on, but they never turned back on the basic cable. I called to argue with them, because I thought that basic cable was included. They said that it wasn't included with the modem, and that I was lucky they didn't seek for me to pay them for the months that I was "stealing" cable.
I ended up paying them to turn basic cable back on (which is what they want).
I ended up moving to another apartment, and to do so I basically had to set up new service. Then again, they put the cable modem in and Boom! I had extended basic again. Like clockwork, a month after they put in the cable modem, they sent a door-to-door guy around to offer extended basic. To test my theory (I knew I wasn't going to be there long anyway) I signed up for the 30-day trial. The rest went as expected. 20 days later I called to have the free trial turned off. Off went the cable modem and the TV. Again I paid to have basic service turned back on.
Once again, I moved to yet another apartment. Once again, the cable modem was installed, and magically, the extended basic was as well. 30 days later, I told the door-to-door day 'No Thanks', and I've had extended cable to this day.
Word to the wise... the cable company wants you to get used to the cable, and then rip you for it later.
13 million thieves ! (Score:2)
You have to really wonder how did they come up with this number. Seriously. 13 million people are getting free cable? wtf....
Re:13 million thieves ! (Score:2)
Reminds me... (Score:2)
(Recently, they figured it out, and now you do in fact have to pay for cable modem access.)
Aww, poor AT&T. NOT. (Score:2, Insightful)
Old School (Score:2)
What are the "new school" methods of doing this? This is the same way the cable monkeys from $CABLE_MONKEY_CENTRAL (Comcast for me) do it. Is there a new, better way to do this instead of getting a coax splitter, and connecting it to the cable?
it doesn't work here :( (Beaverton Oregon) (Score:2)
But other then that no free tv. And I pay the extra 10$ for the cable modem.
Not quite as simple as it may seem... (Score:3, Informative)
Slashdot Story: Get a Cable Modem...Go to Jail [slashdot.org]
Google cached link to subject's web page [216.239.39.100]
Same story, different folks... [wsrcc.com]
Reminds me a of a story from the old days . . . (Score:2)
Anyone know what happened to that woman?
BTW Amazon has Cable Modems from $49.99 [amazon.com]!
This isn't news... (Score:3, Insightful)
-Pete
Apparently, by cutting your own throat you get (Score:2)
You can break the law, and do all kinds of stupid things that seem fun for a second. But then you realize, or someone else makes you realize, that there was a reason why it is not wanted behaviour. Stealing is stealing, even if you steal bytes or a free porn channel.
Piracy? PIRACY? (Score:2)
I was going to post something really witty about cable piracy costing the brodband industry billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs a year [slashdot.org], but I realized that there's a serious language phenomenon happening today centered on the word "piracy."
I don't have a problem with the word itself, but the word has been raised recently to the lofty status of "buzzword." I'm waiting for the day when politicians start saying things like, "We MUST pass the CBDTPA or the pirates will have won," or "If we don't buy 50 more B-2 bombers than the pirates will have won."
It is interesting to note two additional things: (1) The term "pirate" has not been used much. Mostly it's "consumers engaged in piracy" or "hackers." (2) The bad-guy noun being thrown around constantly is "terrorists."
The coincidence of imagery is undeniable: technically, hijacking an airplane is an act of piracy. Pirates have the image coincident with that of a terrorist--marauding, violent, destructive, counter-culture and counter-establishment, lurking out there somewhere and vaguely unidentifiable until it's too late.
Is this one of the reasons that "piracy" of digital music, video, and software has seemed to capture the imagination of mass media (and held it hostage, I might add)? It's just a word, but a word with imagery associated that plays conveniently to the current fears of the uneducated masses, who look to The Government for guidance and security.
I predict that more and more mostly harmless activities that go against someone's agenda will be marked with the term "piracy." I can't wait until the day when Critical Mass [bapd.org] is referred to as being engaged in "traffic piracy," or environmental groups are refferred to as being engaged in "land piracy" by (for example) forcing certain areas not to be drilled for oil.
Of course, this term can cut both ways. Senator Hollings is engaged in "freedom piracy" and Aschroft and the FBI are engaged in "privacy piracy" (say that three times fast). Wondrous will be the day when we can label large campaign contributors as "vote pirates" engaged in "election piracy."
Why now? (Score:4, Insightful)
News: Free Satellite!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yes yes... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Yes yes... (Score:2, Interesting)
1) You can get cable modem service for $45 a month if you already have basic cable service.
2) If you don't wish to subscribe to basic cable service your cost is going to be $55 a month for cable Internet connection.
Re:Yes yes... (Score:2, Informative)
bling bling!
Re:Get a Cable modem, go to Jail (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Get a Cable modem, go to Jail (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What a hack! (Score:2)
My local cable subscriber actually installed these little filter "thingy's" on the coax that filters out select analog singals to prevent you from doing this but the kicker is that they have to be installed on a per house basis so a lot of people would buy both cable and tv then go cancel their internet and they wouldn't come put the filter on for some reason.
The other scam is to just remove the filter yourself since it's not hard but this takes a little more technical know how. A lot of my friends are doing this.
I prefer to stay on the legal path though because if they catch you they're going to back charge you for all the time you were paying for one but not the other and when I can't pay it they'll cut my tv and my 2 year old daughter will kill me in my sleep for taking her Caillou away from her
--
Garett
Re:What a hack! (Score:5, Insightful)
I prefer to stay on the legal path though because if they catch you they're going to back charge you for all the time you were paying for one but not the other and when I can't pay it they'll cut my tv and my 2 year old daughter will kill me in my sleep for taking her Caillou away from her ;O)
The article mentions "Free Cable", but it strikes me as being Free as in Beer; not Free as in Speech.
A quotation which has deeply influenced my decision making seems apropos:
This is not intended as a troll, though I have maxed out my karma, but the point is that there is a price to be paid for everything I do. In some things, the price is monetary. In other things, I pay the price out of my moral character. And, for me, character is important.
--
If I had an interesting sig I would put it here.
Re:It's also on my Cox Cable... (Score:2)
The "individal tap" line is a load of crap. The cable guy installed a second wall plate at my house. We took the cable modem out of the box and it came with a splitter. Carefully following the cable connection outside, we see that it connected to a splitter outside anyway. We called the cable company and had the $70 install charge removed from the bill.
Re:You've ruined it! (Score:2)
They can install filters at the pole. A little more effort than on the side of a house, but fewer people are going to get out the ladder for free cable.
Re:Is this news? (Score:2)
Re:Oh boy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, either that or a cable subscription is built into the rent and you just don't realise it.