FCC: Cable Operators Can Continue To Bulk Bill MDUs
The Federal Communications Commission says that cable operators and other multichannel video programming distributors may continue to bulk bill appartment sand other multiple dwelling units (MDUs) and secure exclusive rights to target market their customers, but it also expressly reserved the right to change its mind down the road if circumstances warrant.
That came in a follow-up order Tuesday to its original order banning exclusive contracts between building owners and MVPDs as unfair competition.
The FCC had sought comment in that original order about whether the prohibition should extend to bulk billing and marketing. But after mulling that comment, it concluded that bulk biling "predominantly benefit consumers, through
reduced rates and operational efficiencies."
The agency also cited the advantage of "enhancing deployment of broadband," which is arguably its primary goal at the moment.
The FCC conceded that bulk billing could harm some consumers, subjecting them to "questionable prices, low quality, and slow innovation," but it concluded that it benefited "far more" by significantly lowering prices.
As to marketing, the FCC said it would not prohibit targeted marketing deals because the record did not support some commenters arguments that they prevented other MVPDs from providing service to MDUs. Unlike the cost-benefit trade-off for bulk billing, the commission said it could find no "significant harms" in targeted marketing, while saying some of the benefits included making information about video services available to them.
That usually comes in the form of exclusive branding in common areas, on a building's Web site, brochures in welcome packs for new residents and door-to-door, or at least Slipped-under-the-door-to door distribution of info.
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But while the FCC said the practices are OK for now, it left some wiggle room. The commission said the decision was based on the current marketplace and evidence before it.
"We may re-examine one or both of these practices in the years ahead to see if those effects have changed," the commission order concluded. "If, at that time, marketplace conditions and consumer effects appear markedly different, we will make appropriate changes in our regulations."
Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.