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So far, Altice's promise to revolutionize the American cable market doesn't look much different from the cable industry of years' past. Users in our Optimum forum note that Altice, which owns both Suddenlink and Optimum, is pushing a bevy of new rate hikes onto Optimum broadband and cable TV customers starting November 1. Among the hikes is an expansion of the company's "Broadcast TV fee," a misleading surcharge cable companies hide below the line to covertly jack up the advertised rate post sale.

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"Yay, MORE FEES. Altice is getting better every month," complains one user.

Altice is also jacking up the price of the company's basic cable tier at a time where more users than ever are cutting the traditional cable TV cord -- largely to avoid endlessly paying more money for the same service. The company says it's also raising the company's "Sports Surcharge,"

The hikes aren't entirely Altice's fault, of course. Broadcasters continue to raise rates hand over fist, and the company just signed off on a massive new rate hike requested by Disney during contract negotiations for its channels. That said, cable providers aren't blameless, often rushing to also raise rates on broadband services and a wide variety of additional hardware and service-related surcharges. Often while simultaneously making dramatic cuts to essentials like customer service.

This fall's price hike comes on the heels of a 3.4% Altice price hike across the board in October of last year.

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Users in our forums ponder an age old question: do you prefer buying your modem and router seperately, or do you prefer an all-in-one modem and router combination gateway, usually provided by your ISP?

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A flaw on T-Mobile's website allowed hackers to access T-Mobile subscriber information using just a phone number. The flaw, discovered by security researcher Karan Saini, allowed intruders to obtain users' email addresses, T-Mobile account numbers, and the their phone's unique IMSI identifier.

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Donald Trump has threatened to pull Comcast NBC Universal's broadcast license after the news outlet reported the President was seeking a ten fold expansion in the country's nuclear arsenal. The report cited three military officials that were in the room at the time of the request, who all stated that advisors, Joint Chiefs of Staff and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson were collectively "surprised" at Trump's request, and struggled in explaining how the request was logistically cumbersome and could run afoul of disarmament treaties.

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Dish has announced that the company is suspending all TV services to both Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands as both try to recover from the utter devastation from Hurricane Maria. In a statement, Dish said the company would be suspending all services to ensure that customers on the island are not being billed for services they can't receive.

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While Microsoft's Windows Phone has been on life support for several years now, the company this week formally acknowledged the death of the marginally-popular handset. Speaking on Twitter, Microsoft’s corporate VP for Windows, Joe Belfiore, acknowledged that while Microsoft would continue to release security updates for the platform (for now), the company is no longer actively trying to improve the platform.

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Dish has failed to reduce a historic fine levied against the satellite TV provider for robocalling customers that had signed up for the national Do Not Call Registry. The company was hit with a record $280 million fine back in June, the largest robocall-related settlement of its kind. But Dish was also hit with another, $61 million judgment for violating telemarketing rules. So far, Dish's attempts to reduce the penalties have gone nowhere, with a federal judge in North Carolina this week refusing to reduce the $61 million penalty, rebuking Dish's claim that the fines are "grossly excessive," and insisting the massive fines are "necessary for deterrence in light of Dish’s actions."

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Hulu has introduced a new one-year promotional monthly price for the company's base streaming tier for new customers. According to the Hulu website, the company is dropping the price of its introductory tier -- which includes commercials -- from $8 to $6 per month for new users.

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So far, the FCC has refused to release any data that would identify the bulk public comment submitters (legitimate or not) to their recent Net Neutrality proceeding. However, based on emails obtained from the agency in response to a FOIA request, I can now confirm the name of one previously unknown bulk submitter -- CQ Roll Call.

Problem is, the Economist Group-owned, influential Beltway organization -- who actually had one of their reporters pinned to a wall by FCC guards in May after a press conference -- won’t tell me anything about the “client” they were submitting comments to the FCC for.

According to the records, CQ Roll Call’s SVP of Technology and Chief Digital Officer, Dan Germain, sent an email to ECFSHelp@fcc.gov, the FCC’s help account for their Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), on April 18.

Titled “ECFS - API and limits”, Germain quoted a portion of the FCC’s API Terms of Service explaining how use of the agency’s Application Programming Interface is “subject to certain limitations on access, calls, or use as set forth within this Agreement or otherwise provided by the FCC.”

He asked where the API and “web form” limitations could be found, noting that CQ Roll Call was “working on a campaign for one of our customers that might have us submitting millions of individual comments to a forthcoming proceeding” and that they didn’t “want to create any technical problems in your environment.”

Germain then asked if they would “prefer to receive a csv file that you can upload directly in to your system?” I should note here that these emails were given to me last Friday in response to the final part of my FOIA request, asking for “All e-mail inquiries to ECFSHelp@fcc.gov regarding .CSV comment submissions in response to Proceeding 17-108, ‘Restoring Internet Freedom’” between April 26 and they date they received my request, June 5.

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Users in our Canadian broadband forum discuss the Canadian government's ongoing attempts to impose a "Netflix tax." More specifically, all members of the Quebec legislature voted to “ensure the Quebec sales tax (TVQ) is imposed on all foreign companies that offer products and services online, notably in the cultural sector, as soon as possible.” That was a response to the federal government's recent decision to exempt Netflix from sales taxes in exchange for a $500 million investment in Canadian productions over the next five years.

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