Cord Cutting 2.0: Starting To Affect Comcast And Spectrum

in #hive-16792210 days ago

We saw the idea of cord cutting entering the realm of entertainment a little more than 15 years ago. This was the idea of forgoing cable television for Internet. As rates for cable (and satellite) got more expensive, people started to cut the cord.

This is now expanding in other ways. We have what is being called "Cord Cutting 2.0". Here is where people are ditching Internet service from the traditional cable operators while opting for other services.

It is something that is starting to have an impact.


Source

Comcast and Spectrum Losing Market Share

Entertainment is not separate from telecommunications. The "pipe" coming into the house is what is crucial. While this is an expensive process, we are seeing disruption.

5G is now eating into the market share. The cable companies have continually raised rates, causing Internet to rival what the television packages were decades ago.

Customers are starting to push back.

Cord Cutting 2.0 is the movement that is seeing Americans ditch their cable TV internet services from companies like Comcast and Spectrum for other options like Fiber and 5G home Internet.

Recently we surveyed more than 1,000 of our readers about what internet service they use. Only 45% of them use internet from a cable TV company. That is down from 51.7% at the end of 2023.

If this is reflective across the entire industry, we are looking at a huge drop in just 9 months.

This comes as Fiber and 5G Home Internet have seen strong growth with cord cutters. Fiber now Accounts for 29.1% of cord cutters, up from 25.5% at the end of 2023. 5G Home Internet also saw growth to 12.8%, which is up from 8.4% at the end of 2023.

Source

Like other industries, as these companies start to lose revenues, their operations suffer. They have a lot of cost in upkeeping their existing system.

Across The Board Disruption

We cover Hollywood a great deal. The distribution of content, i.e. films, is one layer of the stack. However, we have to look deeper to see where things are going.

The success of Starlink, by SpaceX, is well known. Jeff Bezos is looking to match this with Blue Origin.

This is rivaled by the mobile companies. Many of them are offering 5G home Internet. In the United States, this is done by Verizon and T-Mobile.

Another option to watch is Amazon. They reportedly are working on Project Kuiper. It is a home internet service that is powered by thousands of satellites which were launched.

The key here is consumers are getting more choices. Traditionally, telecommunications infrastructure was limited to only a few companies. This was true for local telephone, long distance service, mobile phones, and Internet service.

Like media, we are beginning to see a fragmentation. Do we see someone like Meta or Apple eventually get into something like this? While that is just speculation, it is not the craziest thought in the world.

Eventually, we are likely to see a multiple of telecommunication services offered by the same companies. The barriers are changing. It is likely that the next few years see these satellite carriers also adding phone service.

The stack is also fragmenting.


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Consumers may soon have access to bundled services , including internet, TV , phone and streaming from a single provider .

People are abandoning the Internet service of the traditional cable operators and opting for other services, because of how expensive they are, in Venezuela, the cable service is equal to what they earn monthly.

https://inleo.io/threads/view/omarrojas/re-leothreads-33x2kreng?referral=omarrojas

Have you looked into Helium sir? They were trying to build a decentralized network. I've looked into it from time to time, but I've never pulled the trigger.

No I havent. What is their focus?

They started out trying to build a decentralize wifi network using Helium Hotspots. Some people were making good money by setting up a hotspot at their home. You're rewarded with Helium (HNT) tokens when people use your hotspot.

Now they are also working on a wireless (phone) network. You can get Helium as your cell phone provider (they piggyback on the T-mobile network). It looks like it's only $20 a month though for phone service and they incentivize you to pay your bill in HNT. I'm thinking about doing it. I think your phone then acts as a Helium hotspot, but I might just be making that up.

We get fiber through our power company, freaking brilliant move in my opinion. I mean they already had the infrastructure with the power lines, so why not build out a telecom sector? It's a co-op too which is even better. When I moved back out to the family farm and I heard about this because my uncle got it hooked up, I demanded it, lol. The lines were already waiting at the pole on us to call and have it hooked up. I am literally paying the exact same but getting 100x download and literally 300x upload speeds than I was getting with ATT DSL... Yep, they were only getting 3mb down and 1 up, lol. We are now getting 300mb both way, with the option to go to a gig for only 100 a month!

That is brilliant of the power company. And it sounds good for you too.

My only issue is they haven't set up IPv6 yet so I can't run my Hive-Engine witness locally... Other than that, it's screaming speeds.

I want to set up a Hive node. I have no idea how to start though.

You can get started with a Hive-Engine node which is the second layer that all the community tokens, NFTs, and such is built on by starting with this guide:

https://peakd.com/engine/@rishi556/how-to-set-up-a-hive-engine-witness-step-by-step-guide

Thank you! I'm bookmarking this guide.

There are a lot more options appearing. It is good you were able to take advantage of it.

As technology expands, more entrants appear with the barriers starting to crumble. The duelopoly that existed for so longer in the US is starting to crumble.

What is funny is being in a rural area, I got fiber before my friends in the city, lol.