Time Warner Cable: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[Time Warner Cable]] is the second-largest cable television provider in the United States (a distant second, behind [[Comcast]]). It was formerly owned by Time Warner, the parent company of cable networks such as [[CNN]], [[Cartoon Network]], [[TBS]], and [[TNT]]. TWC was recently spun off into a separate company from Time Warner
[[Time Warner Cable]] is the second-largest cable television provider in the United States (a distant second, behind [[Comcast]]). It was formerly owned by Time Warner, the parent company of cable networks such as [[CNN]], [[Cartoon Network]], [[TBS]], and [[TNT]]. TWC was recently spun off into a separate company from Time Warner


TWC has recently ignited an internet controversy with a pilot program, tested in select markets, that places a 50 GB (or lower, depending on service tier) monthly cap on internet subscribers' downloads. Strangely enough, this pilot program was never tested in any market where Verizon's [[Fi OS]] is available. User outrage has led TWC to suspend the program... for now.
TWC has recently ignited an internet controversy with a pilot program, tested in select markets, that places a 50 GB (or lower, depending on service tier) monthly cap on internet subscribers' downloads. Strangely enough, this pilot program was never tested in any market where Verizon's [[FiOS]] is available. User outrage has led TWC to suspend the program... for now.


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Revision as of 16:32, 9 April 2014

/wiki/Time Warner Cablecreator

Time Warner Cable is the second-largest cable television provider in the United States (a distant second, behind Comcast). It was formerly owned by Time Warner, the parent company of cable networks such as CNN, Cartoon Network, TBS, and TNT. TWC was recently spun off into a separate company from Time Warner

TWC has recently ignited an internet controversy with a pilot program, tested in select markets, that places a 50 GB (or lower, depending on service tier) monthly cap on internet subscribers' downloads. Strangely enough, this pilot program was never tested in any market where Verizon's FiOS is available. User outrage has led TWC to suspend the program... for now.