Should You Cancel Your Phone, TV and Internet Service Contracts?

 | Mar 16, 2015 05:34AM ET

h3 Introduction

Chaos is too strong a term. But communication technologies are rapidly changing and significant regulatory changes are coming. And while humans get locked into habits, a growing number of Americans are opting out of their TV and landline phone contracts. Cell phones are taking over. And it is increasingly apparent that traditional mechanisms for TV delivery are outdated: do you really need to be provided with 200+ TV channels when you only watch 7? This article explains what has happened and what you should do.

h3 /h3 h3 The History of TV Technologies: a Consumer’s Perspective/h3

TV started in the late ‘40’s with TV “ears” and “The Ed Sullivan Show”. Next came the roof antenna. In the late ‘80’s, I purchased a 12’ satellite dish and then cable. In 2005, I bought a And the FCC reports : “By December 2011, there were more than 5300 systems serving approximately 60 million subscribers in more than 34,000 communities.” And today, Roku and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) TV and other devices stream Internet to TV sets.

h3 /h3 h3 Background on the “Big 3” Communication Vehicles/h3

Most US households communicate electronically via “Internet Service Providers (ISPs)” for three services: landline phones, TV, and Internet. Recently, cell phones have developed a huge market via separate contracts. Table 1 indicates there are now more cell phone contracts than landlines, and the latter continue to decline. There appear to be relatively few Internet contracts, but that is primarily because so many now get to the web via their cell phones.

h3 /h3 h3 Table 1. – US Communication Customers by Vehicle (1,000)/h3