Photos from the Cable & Telecommunications Human Resources Association's annual Symposium and Awards Luncheon, held in Atlanta on May 2.
Charter Seeks FCC Waiver to Help in Its Digital Transition
Charter Communications has asked the FCC for a two-year waiver of its prohibition on integrated set-tops, saying the waiver is necessary for the company to make the transition to all-digital networks.
The FCC granted a similar waiver to Cablevision and has taken steps to promote the transition to all-digital cable, which frees up bandwidth for broadband, including lifting its ban on encryption of the digital basic tier.
Charter said it plans to deploy boxes with a chip that would eventually be used for non-integrated downloadable security and one for traditional integrated security, said the FCC, to be used during the two-year transition period to downloadable security.
The FCC back in 2007 instituted the prohibition on set-tops that combine channel surfing with security. Cable ops were required to use a removable CableCARD security add-on, a move the FCC hoped would promote a retail market in boxes, though it conceded a downloadable software security option would be preferable to the hardware.
Charter points out that it has 2.75 million CableCARD set-tops deployed, so it has an incentive to continue to make sure its system works with the relative few CableCARDS -- 33,000 -- it says have been requested by customers for their retail boxes (the FCC has conceded that the prohibition has not led to a booming retail box market).
The commission has set a Nov. 30 deadline for comment on Charter's request and a Dec. 10 deadline for replies.












