Verizon Sues Time Warner Over Misleading Ad... Has To Drop Its Own Misleading Ad
from the funny-how-that-works dept
Remember earlier this year when Verizon Wireless sued competitor Alltel Wireless for false advertising? That came right after the company had been fined for false advertising itself -- and the suit basically ignored the fact that Alltel's ad was accurate until Verizon Wireless (just a couple months earlier) had changed its policy. Now it looks like Verizon Wireless' parent company is doing something similar. Broadband Reports points us to the news that Verizon is suing Time Warner Cable over an incredibly dopey ad that suggests in a very misleading manner that Verizon's FiOS fiber optic offering was just catching up to Time Warner's use of fiber (confusing fiber in the network with fiber to the home) and also suggesting that FiOS-TV requires a satellite dish (which is simply untrue -- though, the company does offer satellite TV service for areas that can't get FiOS yet). Still, it does seem a bit aggressive to sue over this.And, this situation is made even more amusing by the fact that Verizon itself just got caught running misleading advertising. In this case, Verizon credits CNET "experts" with claiming that FiOS is "near-flawless," which is taken entirely out of context. CNET's article wasn't a review, but about the service, and the context was: "This fierce competition reinforces how important it is for Verizon to offer a near-flawless TV experience." In other words, CNET was saying that FiOS TV needs to be near-flawless to compete -- not that it is. To its credit, Verizon admits that it was wrong in using the phrase in advertising, and won't be using those ads after its initial run is done next month. It also claims that TWC's ads are much more egregious, though I'm not sure that's true. It's quite easy for anyone investigating their options to understand that TWC's claims are false. But it may be much more difficult to confirm whether or not CNET's review really called FiOS "near flawless." Either way, these are industries that have a long history of stretching the truth as far as it can go in advertising messages. It makes you wonder if anyone takes either of their commercials seriously.
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Filed Under: advertising, stretching the truth, truth in advertising
Companies: time warner cable, verizon
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fierce stupidity
and the only thing it suggested in comparing cable to verizon is that verizon has just started to use fiber in their network, while TWC has been using it for a decade.
it never suggested fiber to the home, and never even hinted anything near a satellite dish.
so.. uh.. verizon basically just cant deal with competition. which, hints to me, that they are doing far worse than they admit to the public eye
and besides, i havn't heard any news about TWC's fiber catching homes on fire
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Re: fierce stupidity
There's a longer version of the ad that has the satellite part:
http://www.timewarnercable.com/MediaLibrary/4/50/Content%20Management/HomePage/Reskin%20Vid eo/Fiber%2060%20SEC%203%2018%20VERS.swf
Where it does imply that you need a satellite dish (which is true for most Verizon customers right now).
But... yeah... I agree. Verizon complaining about this is pretty silly.
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Re: Re: fierce stupidity
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Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity
I think you
1.) Have bought in the marketing machine of your local cableco.
2.) Don't understand that over 90% of tv programming is actually originated from satellite. (Drive by your local headend, and I guarantee that you'll see a small farm of dishes)
It'd be interesting if cable utilized all it's 42Mhz-1GHz cable in a fully digital method. For a moment, think about what the overall throughput be, it's the equivalent of 158 standard analog channels. The recent 700MHz spectrum was the equivalent to roughly 7 (of 158) standard analog channels, but this spectrum is still available to the CableCo.
I imagine total consumable data would be greater on the RF-based system until the Fiber guys find some a cost-effective way to get multi-wavelength unmultiplexing CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) to the house.
But returning to your point, we've been using satellite since 1995 and it's only gone out 10 times (in a 13 year span!) Much less than what we experienced with cable.
And when it does go out, the weather is so bad that trees are falling down, fences are blowing away, and if the TV was on, it'd probably blow up from a nearby lightning strike, so it's unplugged.
Sure sat may not work all the time, but in the times it doesn't work, the last thing we're concerned about is watching TV.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity
I had satellite for a couple of years. The signal would become poor under heavy clouds. If it was raining hard, the signal would usually be gone entirely. The snow was the worst. The signal was gone until we cleaned out the dish. It was really annoying because we couldn't watch TV at the times that people watch the most TV (when we can't go out).
We switched to digital cable as soon as it was available. Now the only times we lose service if a falling branch breaks the line. I wouldn't go back to satellite if you paid me.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity
Maybe there's a difference between the output power of each satellite in orbit. Maybe the low end set top boxes don't perform as well as the high end. Use existing cabling? That can affect quality too. Hmm. Oh well.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity :Iron Chef
and yea, we use satellite, but on a much grander scale. redundancy covers 2 states, if its storming in one area, to a point where that headend cant get feed, it switches to redundancy and gets the same feed from another headend, and then another, and then another, only until all 20ish 'satellite farms' are completely used up, will it then switch to a fiber feed from another division, which, ive never even seen it switch to a double redundancy. so basically, its covered.
my comparison was the fact that for an individual satellite customer who wants to watch during a storm, they don't have 2 states worth of satellite dishes to cover with, they've just got the one 18" dish on the back of their porch.
but anyway, im glad you live in Cali, where the weather never changes.
oh, and another fyi, since youve been out of the loop for 13 years, you may want to read up on cable again.
1gz spectrum, integrated fiber, digital feed, supports ~900 simultaneous channels. adding switched digital (which, i do not know of any cableco that dosn't use that yet, heck, even most of the mom&pop shops use it) you can more than triple the output. and then with simulcast, analog customers arnt left out, but are ofcourse limited to the maximum capacity of their tv.
but i used to be a satellite fanatic, until i started working for the cableco. and got my cable, and that first friday when i sat down to watch my shows in the middle of the season, i was taken, i was able to watch 3 hours worth of shows without the rain killing the feed. then the beer took effect, and i passed out on the couch, don't remember what happend after that
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity :Iron Chef
Not quite, but I have family there. It'll be weird when the big earthquake comes.
we use satellite, but on a much grander scale.
Great! So you know about Comcast's HITS.
redundancy covers 2 states, if its storming in one area, to a point where that headend cant get feed, it switches to redundancy and gets the same feed from another headend, and then another, and then another, only until all 20ish 'satellite farms' are completely used up, will it then switch to a fiber feed from another division, which, ive never even seen it switch to a double redundancy. so basically, its covered.
I accidentally took a dirt road to the DirecTV uplink center in Castle Rock, Colorado. I was amazed it was only 3 miles from my house. Maybe I should have worked for them. Anyways, your analysis leads me to believe you are familiarized with DirecTV's uplink center in El Segundo too. That's awesome.
my comparison was the fact that for an individual satellite customer who wants to watch during a storm, they don't have 2 states worth of satellite dishes to cover with, they've just got the one 18" dish on the back of their porch.
Now, AC, you missed the point of my post- who cares if TWISTER is on TV when you can see the real thing?
i used to be a satellite fanatic, until i started working for the cableco. and got my cable, and that first friday when i sat down to watch my shows in the middle of the season, i was taken, i was able to watch 3 hours worth of shows without the rain killing the feed.
Sorry to say it, but again, your missing the point of my commentary-- It doesn't matter about the technology. Take a few minutes and think about it..
Here's an example, do you honestly think customers care if it goes through 15 transducers and 7 re-encoding engines before it goes to a fiber link where it's re-encoded to aLAW at 12kb/s over a CDMA air interface syncronized via GPS where, due to cell breathing, you may be served on cellid 8477. From there, the mobile terminal will re-encode the signal into a 65kb/s aLAW stream, all via an NPANXX allocated to ratecenter CMTNGRDN and CLLI SNANCAPCCM3?
No! Not at all! I don't give a shit what you had to do to give me service. Quit thinking that adds value, because they don't! These are YOUR terms, not mine!
The real question that should be asked is missed- "What can a company deliver to our customers 99.999% of the time and reduce variables through the process?"
Yikes!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity :Iron Chef
The real question that should be asked is missed- "What can a company deliver to our customers 99.999% of the time and reduce variables through the process?"
yea, i thought of it, one cloud in the sky, and ah crap, theres goes espn.
id rather live in a $100k home that has a sturdy floor, then a $100k home that will risk me falling though the floor just b/c i decided to take my 6pack in the living room.
thats my variable, same cost between the 2, but one, dosn't go out on a cloudy day. and i have awesome ondemand
13 years of useing satellite, 11 years of dish network, and 2 years of directtv. 3 years of cable.
satellite=80% reliability (any weather other than sunny caused downtime)
cable = 99.999% reliability. (total of 1 hour downtime in the 3 years (power outage))
and thats speaking as a customer, those are my personal figures from my own experiences with it, working for a cableco had no factor
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: fierce stupidity :Iron Chef
Huh? Wow. I knew I was born yesterday, I just didn't know you could tell.
I'm glad you enjoy onDemand. It's pretty slick! But if that was truly the case, I am sure people would be quite unsatisfied. But a little research leads me to believe that possibly the opposite is happening.
2007
http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pressrelease.aspx?ID=2007137
2 006
http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pdf/2006135.pdf
2005
http://www.jdpa.com/new s/releases/pressrelease.asp?ID=2005117
But I digress.
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Re: fierce stupidity
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Why show the ad at all?
Translation: "yeah we know the ad is misleading but what the hell were going to use it anyway, just to, you know, mislead people"
If James bond were faced with a ticking timer counting down to an event a month in the future, he'd continue flossing, sort through his junk mail and defrost the fridge before he bothered discussing it with MI6
How pathetic are Verizon that they can't react within a month?
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Re: Why show the ad at all?
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Who cares...
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--Glenn
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Cable and Satellite
I have had Satellite TV yes it does suffer from poor reception during heavy storms. But when I had Satellite TV I also had the ability to watch shows from both coasts. If I missed it from the east coast, I got it from the west coast.
I liked that.
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No to FIOS
Here's how my relationship to FIOS has gone...
1. Heard about it and researched what it was.
2. Started seeing ads for it and got really excited that I could get it!!!
3. Figured surely they wouldn't be advertising it in my locale if it wasn't available there.
4. Found out it wasn't available there.
5. Also found out that the prices they advertise on the commercials bear NO resemblance to what you'll eventually pay after the first x-number of months.
6. Also found out that people who already have it were having major difficulties in finding out how much they would be paying for it.
7. Slowly but surely began hating Verizon and FIOS and now change the channel whenever I see a FIOS commercial, because it doesn't pertain to me!
Congratulations, Verizon!
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People are Dumb
While quite easy to do, it's not what 'normal' people will do. I find in tech news / blogs that the techies seem to forget that users never RTFM. Users do not read, users do not research, users do not understand. Thus why IT workers have a job. I know enough to use Help, they don't. Users do not research, and even if they DID they probably wouldn't understand it anyway.
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VERIZON SUES TIME WARNER!!!
: the service is only two years old. Plus, they have been called the company of creative fees. They have more installation and fees than any company I know. Let's get to the point - Verizon Fios tv is nearly "flawless" - If I saw that endorsement from well respected C/NET - It would make me pick up the telephone and generate a sale for verizon. Case in point!
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VERIZON SUES TIME WARNER!!!
: the service is only two years old. Plus, they have been called the company of creative fees. They have more installation and fees than any company I know. Let's get to the point - Verizon Fios tv is nearly "flawless" - If I saw that endorsement from well respected C/NET - It would make me pick up the telephone and generate a sale for verizon. Case in point!
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Whatever...
Why The Fuck Should I Pay $65+ A Month For A 10mb Internet Connection That I Can Only Use For HTTP, SMTP, And POP3?!
I Can't Even Download A Fucking Linux ISO From BitTorrent, Or Any Other P2P Program/Protocol At More Then 10-30KBps Thanks To TWC's Traffic Shaping.
For The Less Then Tech Savvy 10 Megabits = 1.25 Megabytes A Second Download Speeds.
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Fios is DEAD
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False Advertising?
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verizon is false
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