 aaronwtPremium join:2004-11-07 Woodbridge, VA Reviews:
·Verizon FiOS
| reply to Rick
Re: It's not hard to see where landline customers are The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. This is one of the reasons I'm in the process of dropping my landline and just using my cell number. |
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 | said by aaronwt:The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. This is one of the reasons I'm in the process of dropping my landline and just using my cell number. Yeah, I think we'd save roughly $40/mo if we dropped the landline and bumped our wireless minutes up a little bit. |
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 RickPremium,MVM join:2001-02-06 Waterbury, CT | reply to aaronwt said by aaronwt:The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. This is one of the reasons I'm in the process of dropping my landline and just using my cell number. I'd venture a guess that bundle pricing is the bigger incentive luring people away. With the triple play products offered it many times allows people to drop their phone costs to about zero for the bundle term.
That and less taxes is a big thing these days. -- The Coyote captured the RR! Roadrunner Rick is now Comcastic! |
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 roozy join:2004-09-30 Casper, WY | reply to aaronwt said by aaronwt:The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. This is one of the reasons I'm in the process of dropping my landline and just using my cell number. Exactly! The playing field is not level. The telcos are severly regulated and the cable companies are not... If cable and other VOIP providers had to play by the same rules as Qwest, Verizon, AT&T and other telcos, this mass movement of services would not be happening. Some of them would not be able to stay in business if they had to compete fairly.
Either tax and regulate it all, or don't!!! |
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 | said by roozy:said by aaronwt:The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. This is one of the reasons I'm in the process of dropping my landline and just using my cell number. Exactly! The playing field is not level. The telcos are severly regulated and the cable companies are not... If cable and other VOIP providers had to play by the same rules as Qwest, Verizon, AT&T and other telcos, this mass movement of services would not be happening. Some of them would not be able to stay in business if they had to compete fairly. Either tax and regulate it all, or don't!!! QFT! |
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 en102Canadian, eh? join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA | reply to Rick For me (and I suspect many others), it all depends on the bottom line.
TWC gives a good deal at $89 triple play. AT&T attempts to offer triple play at $90, but then then haven't deployed VoIP, so its null and void.
Taxes/fees aren't that far off between Telco and CableCo. One has lots of taxes/unfees, the other has franchise fees.
Personally, if I had a decent unlimited cellphone plan, I'd drop cable altogether, and use OTA HD. -- Canada = Hollywood North |
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 | reply to roozy That isn't an either or.
The taxes will come to the VOIP and cable phone. It's inevitable. Most of those phone taxes are local and go directly to the state or municipality you live in. As a result for those taxes to go down or away the system would have to reallocate the tax burden and your property or sales tax or both will have to go up. I doubt that will happen so expect those local phone taxes to show up the cable and VOIP bills. Either that or fire half your police force or DOT. |
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 Sammer join:2005-12-22 Canonsburg, PA | reply to aaronwt said by aaronwt:The telcos are at a disadvantage because of taxes. Taxes on my landline from Verizon are almost $12. If I switched to Comcast taxes would be under $2. It's not all taxes, they're called tariffs and a large portion of that $12 goes right back to Verizon. The archaic tariff system for landline phone service should finally be called what it really is, false advertising, and meet its well deserved demise. |
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