Comcast Accidentally Admits It's Unsure Of The Competitive Impact Of Its Own Merger

from the trust-us-we're-the-cable-company dept

While debate over the Comcast merger had hit a bit of a lull for Thanksgiving, it was revived this week with the launch of a group calling itself the Stop Mega Comcast Coalition. Formed by a combination of companies like Dish and consumer advocacy groups like Public Knowledge, the group is lobbying to stop the merger on the grounds it harms competition, price and innovation across a number of markets, including broadband, television, and advertising. Of course, group participants Fairpoint Communications and Dish would likely give a limb to wield the kind of market power Comcast enjoys, but you’re apparently supposed to ignore that and just applaud their selfless dedication to consumer welfare.

The unveiling of the group resulted in Comcast penning a blog post in which it slammed the new group for trotting out complaints that “weren’t found to be credible” in the company’s past transaction reviews (like when Comcast acquired NBC, then ignored the merger conditions crafted by itself). To hear Comcast tell it, the company found at least 600 “thoughtful and positive” people who think Comcast getting immensely more massive is a great idea:

“While it?s no surprise that the same competitors and special interest groups who?ve gone after Comcast in the past are at it again, the record tells a very different story. Over the last several months, the FCC has received an outpouring of nearly 600 thoughtful and positive comments about the transaction from a wide range of supporters. Unlike most of the criticism, the support has been very transaction-specific.

This support includes more than 100 Chambers of Commerce and business organizations, as well as a wide array of small businesses, start-ups, and technology companies. It includes more than 20 programmers, nearly 200 diversity groups and community partners, and over 150 state and local leaders of both parties.”

Did we mention we pay most of these people for their support? I think we might have forgotten to mention that.

Kind of amusingly, Kate Cox at the Consumerist noticed that when Comcast originally blasted telecom reporters and analysts with an e-mail copy of its blog post, the company apparently forgot to proofread it and actually included some internal editing notes. Comcast has proudly and repeatedly stated that because Comcast and Time Warner Cable don’t directly compete, the merger can’t possibly be bad. Except, in its accidentally-included blog note, Comcast indicates that it wasn’t entirely sure of this fact:

“We are still working with a vendor to analyze the FCC spreadsheet but in case it shows that there are any consumers in census blocks that may lose a broadband choice, want to make sure these sentences are more nuanced.”

That’s essentially Comcast accidentally publicly admitting that, even after a year of merger prep and defense, that it doesn’t actually fully understand the impact of its own deal proposal. The note suggests Comcast had to pay an outside vendor to double check FCC data (provided to the FCC by Comcast), and then would have softened its rhetoric depending on what the analysis found. In a follow up e-mail to me, Comcast denies that it doesn’t understand its own $45 billion mega-merger, but then adds to truly do so would take actually visiting some neighborhoods:

“Karl, our filings have detailed this issue in the past. It would literally take someone walking the streets or going down to a house by house map to find out if there is any actual overlap – and this would be if any likely in only a very very small number of homes.”

Perhaps you should maybe go do that before repeatedly insisting there’s no competitive overlap? Sure, it’s true that the merger is more about vertical integration, programming leverage and monopsony concerns than direct market competition, but that doesn’t make Comcast’s stumbling, bumbling defense of the deal any less entertaining.

Filed Under: , , , ,
Companies: comcast, time warner cable

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Comcast Accidentally Admits It's Unsure Of The Competitive Impact Of Its Own Merger”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
15 Comments
Anonymous Anonymous Coward says:

Nuance

Comcasts’ idea of nuance is: ‘If you want to split hairs, we’ll shave the skull, now where is that next step in our plan for world (give us time) domination? We are owed for all the marvelous things we’ve done already, don’t you want moar? Oh, and we want to take over both Verizon and AT&T next. BTW, ISP’s should be content providers and content providers should not be ISP’s. No doublespeak shall pass our pipes unless we double down on it.’

PRMan (profile) says:

As much as I am against the merger...

As much as I am against this merger, you really are splitting hairs here. What they are saying is that when two companies “don’t overlap” there may be some guy on a corner somewhere whose address technically qualifies for both Comcast and Time Warner. And they are afraid somebody will dig this guy up and parade him across the media saying, “See! Here’s a guy that will lose his choices!”

Of ALL the things you could be against in this merger, you wrote an article about this potential one guy?

Chronno S. Trigger (profile) says:

Re: As much as I am against the merger...

They have software (that you have access to right now) that can give a yes/no answer on if an address can get service or not. It would be just a matter of coding the software (that their marketing company probably already has) to make a map more accurate than most government work.

Hell, they already have software that tells their sales specialists how much cable would need to be run to provide service to a specific location and how much it would cost.

How many houses they currently have cable to or how many houses they could run cable to. Take your pick, they should have both (especially after a year of supposedly getting it).

pixelpusher220 (profile) says:

Re: Re: As much as I am against the merger...

Sorry, this is what the OP said. The statement is clear, ‘we don’t want to outright lie and say there’s no competitive impact..so if we find an edge case where there might be we should acknowledge that in our statements’.

That’s them being normal and human (for a cable co. anyway) rather than proclaiming something they would know isn’t true…if they found something that invalidated their statements.

And while there might be some software that could tell them, the person writing this ‘note’ likely doesn’t have any access to that is putting it here to handle cases that could possibly crop up.

there are LOTS of things to be upset about, but this is missing the forest for the trees.

Karl Bode (profile) says:

Re: As much as I am against the merger...

“Of ALL the things you could be against in this merger, you wrote an article about this potential one guy?

Which one guy? Sena Fitzmaurice? Their female top PR representative? Also reread the last paragraph. I agree the overlapping competition with Time Warner Cable is the very least of this merger’s problems.

DB (profile) says:

The competitive impact isn’t the minor overlapping service area. It’s the extension of the monopoly and the reduction of valid pricing comparisons.

We know that most U.S. consumers pay far more for internet service than consumers in other well-served countries. This merger will further lock in that high pricing, with no potential competitor able to reach a scale that can challenge the monopoly.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »